Bones found in planter boxes belong to child and adult, were cut apart

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ByVic Lee KGO logo
Wednesday, January 13, 2016
EXCLUSIVE: Bones found in SF belong to child, adult
Last month a child's bones were found in planter boxes outside an apartment building in San Francisco. Now reporter Vic Lee has learned exclusively that investigators have learned that the bones belong to not only a child, but also an adult.

SAN FRANCISCO -- Last month, a child's bones were found in planter boxes outside an apartment building in San Francisco's Alamo Square. Now, investigators have actually found bones from an adult as well.

"The piece I saw was a section, which looked like a jawbone, and the teeth definitely seemed similar to the molars," said apartment resident Natasha Koscak.

In late November, Koscak saw the mandible, the partial jawbone when police were called by the neighbor who found them.

That bone fragment and part of a tailbone were among other remains discovered in the planter boxes next to the apartment building's front door.

Police quickly sealed off the planter boxes and the dirt in front of the building.

They called anthropologists from Chico State University to help. They set up a makeshift lab, sifting through the dirt, looking for other bones.

VIDEO: Retired SF homicide inspector hopes child's bones solve cold case

Some preliminary results indicate the bones most likely belong to two individuals. First, the jawbone.

"It is a juvenile bone," said Sgt. Nico Discenza. "Age varies from eight to 14 or 10 to 14, somewhere around there. The other stuff, it's not a juvenile I can tell you that. Just how old the person is, I couldn't tell you that."

Discenza, the lead homicide investigator on the case, is trying to determine how the body was cut up.

"Whether it was a surgical saw or maybe a home improvement saw, we don't know yet," he said.

Discenza says they've been unable to make a match using dental records.

So now they're hoping they'll get a hit from the DNA.

"They'll be uploaded to the database and then they'll try to match it," Discenza said. "See if there are any missing persons, homicides, or anything like that to see if there's a match."

But if the bones are from someone whose DNA is not in the database, the remains may forever be a mystery.