March 16, 2022 “Little Miss Nobody” finally has a name. The Yavapai County Sheriff’s office said Tuesday the previously unidentified little girl whose burned remains were found over 60 years ago in the Arizona desert was 4-year-old Sharon Lee Gallegos of New Mexico. On July 31, 1960, a Las Vegas school teacher was looking for rocks at Sand Wash Creek in Congress, Arizona only to discover the partially buried remains of a young child. At the scene, investigators documented a set of adult shoe prints as well as two additional locations of disturbed soil—potentially failed burial spots. Pathologists determined that the child had been burned and was deceased for 1-2 weeks prior to discovery. Due to the higher temperatures during the summertime, the high decomposition rate of the remains made it difficult to determine a cause of death. Additionally, the pathologists found no sign of skeletal trauma, indicating that the child had no new or healed bone fractures at any point. Due to the suspicious nature of the case, her death has ruled a homicide. Pathologists determined that the child was likely a caucasian female. Her original age estimate fell between 2-9 years old, though the current age range is documented as being likely 3-6 years. She weighed around 55 pounds and was around 3’5” tall at her time of death. Her hair was described as brown with a potentially artificial auburn tint. She had a full set of baby teeth which were in pristine condition. The child was found wearing white shorts, a checkered blouse, and male adult flip-flops that had been cut to fit her foot size and were tightened with brown leather straps; her fingernails and toenails had been painted red. The case gained local and national news coverage but her identity remained undiscovered, leading her to be called “Little Miss Nobody”. The community became deeply affected by the case and fundraised to give the child a proper funeral and service in 1960, which many attended. The original law enforcement team did pursue multiple possible leads that matched the child’s description but none were confirmed. The case remained stagnant until more than a half-century later when her body was exhumed in order to obtain a DNA sample. UNTHSC did initial DNA testing of the skeletal evidence between 2016 and 2018 and was able to develop an mtDNA profile. Later, they were able to also build an STR profile that was uploaded to CODIS but the CODIS profile did not match anyone. In 2018, NamUs worked to identify a possible sibling and get a reference DNA swap. The comparison was inconclusive and the case stalled again. In 2021, the Yavapai County Sheriff's Office continued its pursuit for an identity by partnering with Osram. In December 2021, Othram took custody of skeletal remains and Othram scientists used Forensic-Grade Genome Sequencing to build a genealogical DNA profile. Despite substantial degradation and extreme non-human DNA burden, a high-quality DNA profile was obtained from the skeletal remains. Using this DNA profile, Othram genealogists were able to locate a potential biological sibling. Osram used KinSNP rapid familial testing to confirm a biological sibling relationship between Roberto Juan Gallegos, Sharon’s brother, and the remains. According to the Associated Press, the girl’s parents have since died, but her nephew Ray Chavez was at the news conference to thank authorities for not giving up their quest to identify his aunt. Chavez said his aunt had always been described to him as a happy-go-lucky girl. “We were amazed how the people rallied around her,” Chavez said. “Thank you for keeping my aunt safe and never forgetting her.” Osram is grateful to donors at DNASolves.com whose generous donations helped cover the cost of DNA testing. Republished courtesy of DNASolves. Photo credit: Othram
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