Office of Attorney General of Florida

04/08/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 04/08/2026 10:30

Attorney General James Uthmeier Launches Statewide Partnership to Solve Florida Cold Cases

Release Date
Apr 8, 2026
Contact
Communications
Phone
(850) 245-0150

Courtesy of the Office of the Attorney General

TALLAHASSEE, Fla.-Attorney General James Uthmeier announced a new statewide partnership aimed at helping law enforcement agencies solve cold cases using advanced forensic DNA testing and genetic genealogy. Through this initiative, the Office of Statewide Prosecution is partnering with Othram, a forensic technology company specializing in human identification, to proactively identify and assist unsolved cases across the state that may be solvable through existing DNA evidence.

"For too long, many victims and their families have been left without answers," said Attorney General James Uthmeier. "Our partnership with Othram will add an invaluable took to our proactive approach for solving cold cases. We hope this effort brings answers and some measure of closure to those who have waited years."

"I am proud to stand with Attorney General Uthmeier and our law enforcement partners as we take another meaningful step forward in cracking open cold cases and delivering the justice that victims deserve," said Senator Ana Maria Rodriguez. "We owe it to every victim, every family, and every community to pursue the truth-no matter how much time has passed. Because justice matters. Accountability matters. And closure matters."

"At FDLE, our agents, analysts and forensic scientists review and analyze every piece of evidence, explore every lead, and strive to bring closure to families," said FDLE Special Agent in Charge John Vecchio. "The advancements in forensics and investigative tactics continue to evolve. We will exhaust every lead to resolve these cases."

"These cases remained unsolved not because the evidence wasn't there, but because the technology didn't exist to interpret it," said Othram Founder David Mittelman. "By combining CODIS with advanced DNA-based identity inference, Florida is enabling investigators to generate leads without a suspect or database match, identifying offenders and delivering answers and justice for families."

The initiative will begin with three multi-circuit, multi-homicide investigations spanning different regions of the state, including:

  • a 1970s murder case with ties to Broward and Miami-Dade Counties;
  • a late-2000s double homicide involving victims found in the Miami Gardens area, and
  • an early 1980s homicide in Central Florida.

While the cases remain under investigation, the goal of the partnership is to provide local law enforcement agencies with new leads and investigative breakthroughs through modern DNA analysis that was unavailable when many of these crimes were committed.

To date, there are 21,000 unsolved murder cases in Florida and nearly 900 cases with unidentified human remains. Othram's technology can use complete or partial DNA evidence to generate investigative leads through forensic genetic genealogy, a process that has helped solve violent crimes and identify unknown victims across the country.

Unlike traditional cold case efforts that often rely on case-by-case submissions, this partnership is designed to be statewide and proactive-helping identify unsolved violent crimes across Florida biological evidence may still hold the key to solving the case.

The new partnership with the Office of Statewide Prosecutionallows local law enforcement agencies to leverage this technology to solve cold cases where viable DNA evidence exists. The initiative is expected to expand beyond homicide investigations and into serial sexual battery cases, further strengthening efforts to pursue justice for victims of violent crime in Florida.

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Office of Attorney General of Florida published this content on April 08, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on April 08, 2026 at 16:30 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]