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Updated: 11:15 p.m. Sunday, May 20, 2012 | Posted: 11:14 p.m. Sunday, May 20, 2012

Montgomery County coroner hopes for lead on body ID

Man’s remains were found in ravine in Dayton on July 29.

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Montgomery County coroner hopes for lead on body ID photo
Forensic artist Joanna Hughes, based at the University of Tennessee, created a likeness of the man’s face using the victim’s skull, white erasers and an oil-based clay. contributed photo

By Joanne Huist Smith

Staff Writer

The Montgomery County Coroner’s Office has put a face to the set of badly decomposed human remains discovered in the ravine of a small creek bed in west Dayton on July 29.

In a final identification effort, Ken Betz, director of the Montgomery County Coroner’s Office, hired forensic artist Joanna Hughes, based at the University of Tennessee, to create a likeness of the man’s face using the victim’s skull, white erasers and an oil-based clay. The cost for the facial reconstruction was $500.

“Obviously, we’d love to get some leads on this,” Betz said. “When you look at this photo, what is your first impression? Does it look like someone you know?”

Hughes has had success. Of the 15 forensic reconstructions in her portfolio, five have resulted in positive identifications.

Dr. Kent Harshbarger, the Montgomery County Coroner, said flyers that include the image have been circulated around homeless shelters and the Veterans’ Medical Center, which is near where the remains were found. No one has stepped forward to identify the victim.

The man is described as a white male, 5’6” to 6’ tall, between the ages of 35 and 60, with small to medium build. The artist did not include a hairline on the facial reconstruction, because it’s an unknown factor.

“Since we don’t know, we didn’t want to put something in the hairline that could detract people from looking at his eyes, nose and mouth,” Betz said.

The victim was seated on a piece of dumped concrete — west of Westown shopping center — with his legs stretched in front of him. On the edge of the concrete, near the victim’s left hand, was an orange safety cap for a hypodermic syringe.

He wore a pair of gray, Columbia-brand cargo shorts, size small, dark socks and white gym shoes, size 9 1/2 along with a medium-size black and brown Puritan T-shirt. Investigators found a red and black Cincinnati Reds baseball cap near the body. The victim also had on a silver Armitron watch with a dark face, but carried no cellphone or wallet. A pair of blue-tinted sunglasses were tucked into his shirt.

“After canvassing local shelters,  the Dayton Veterans Administration facility and area law enforcement agencies, it remains our belief that the subject resided in the tri-state area. This is based on the Reds baseball hat and location the remains were found,” Betz said.

If you can identify this person, please contact the Montgomery County Coroner’s Office, (937) 225-4156.

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