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Hvidvaskeren 'Pinky' afslørede alt: 122 millioner kroner

When DNA Solved America's Golden State Killer

Joseph DeAngelo's 2018 arrest ended decades of mystery through genealogy databases

By
Susanne Sperling
Published
April 19, 2026 at 05:06 PM

Quick Facts

LocationOdense

Joseph DeAngelo, the Golden State Killer, murdered at least 13 people across California before vanishing into obscurity—until 2018, when modern DNA technology and family genealogy databases finally caught up with him.

For four decades, DeAngelo operated in the shadows, committing a string of brutal crimes that terrorized California communities. Despite extensive investigations, law enforcement had no suspect. The case went cold, filed away among thousands of unsolved murders in America's criminal archives.

The breakthrough came through an unlikely source: consumer genealogy websites. Investigators uploaded crime scene DNA to GEDmatch, a genealogy database that allows law enforcement to cross-reference genetic information. The database matched DeAngelo's DNA to relatives who had uploaded their own genetic profiles for ancestry research. These familial connections provided the crucial lead that decades of traditional detective work had failed to produce.

Once identified, DeAngelo's arrest in 2018 shocked the public and reinvigorated the cold case. Two years later, in 2020, he entered a guilty plea to 13 counts of murder. Beyond the murders, DeAngelo admitted to committing dozens of sexual assaults, expanding the scope of his admitted crimes far beyond what prosecutors initially expected to prove at trial.

The Golden State Killer case marked a turning point in modern criminal investigation. It demonstrated how DNA technology combined with genealogy databases could solve cases that had stymied investigators for generations. The method has since been adopted by law enforcement agencies nationwide, leading to the identification and arrest of suspects in numerous cold cases.

DeAngelo's case also raised significant questions about privacy, consent, and the use of genetic databases by law enforcement. While the genealogy industry marketed its services to people seeking to discover their ancestry, few users anticipated their genetic information might be accessible to police investigations. The case sparked ongoing debates about the balance between solving crimes and protecting individual privacy rights.

The resolution of the Golden State Killer case provided long-overdue closure to victims' families and communities that had lived in fear for decades. For investigators, it validated the potential of emerging technologies to solve historical crimes. For the genealogy industry, it highlighted both the power and the responsibility that comes with maintaining vast databases of genetic information.

Joseph DeAngelo's conviction stands as a reminder that even the most elusive criminals can eventually be caught—and that justice, though delayed, remains possible in the age of DNA and data.

**Sources** - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8DrCv4HHu9c&vl=en - https://spyscape.com/article/unsolved-mysteries-true-crime-cases-involving-top-codes-and-ciphers

Read more

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Susanne Sperling

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Hvidvaskeren 'Pinky' afslørede alt: 122 millioner kroner

When DNA Solved America's Golden State Killer

Joseph DeAngelo's 2018 arrest ended decades of mystery through genealogy databases

By
Susanne Sperling
Published
April 19, 2026 at 05:06 PM

Quick Facts

LocationOdense

Joseph DeAngelo, the Golden State Killer, murdered at least 13 people across California before vanishing into obscurity—until 2018, when modern DNA technology and family genealogy databases finally caught up with him.

For four decades, DeAngelo operated in the shadows, committing a string of brutal crimes that terrorized California communities. Despite extensive investigations, law enforcement had no suspect. The case went cold, filed away among thousands of unsolved murders in America's criminal archives.

The breakthrough came through an unlikely source: consumer genealogy websites. Investigators uploaded crime scene DNA to GEDmatch, a genealogy database that allows law enforcement to cross-reference genetic information. The database matched DeAngelo's DNA to relatives who had uploaded their own genetic profiles for ancestry research. These familial connections provided the crucial lead that decades of traditional detective work had failed to produce.

Once identified, DeAngelo's arrest in 2018 shocked the public and reinvigorated the cold case. Two years later, in 2020, he entered a guilty plea to 13 counts of murder. Beyond the murders, DeAngelo admitted to committing dozens of sexual assaults, expanding the scope of his admitted crimes far beyond what prosecutors initially expected to prove at trial.

The Golden State Killer case marked a turning point in modern criminal investigation. It demonstrated how DNA technology combined with genealogy databases could solve cases that had stymied investigators for generations. The method has since been adopted by law enforcement agencies nationwide, leading to the identification and arrest of suspects in numerous cold cases.

DeAngelo's case also raised significant questions about privacy, consent, and the use of genetic databases by law enforcement. While the genealogy industry marketed its services to people seeking to discover their ancestry, few users anticipated their genetic information might be accessible to police investigations. The case sparked ongoing debates about the balance between solving crimes and protecting individual privacy rights.

The resolution of the Golden State Killer case provided long-overdue closure to victims' families and communities that had lived in fear for decades. For investigators, it validated the potential of emerging technologies to solve historical crimes. For the genealogy industry, it highlighted both the power and the responsibility that comes with maintaining vast databases of genetic information.

Joseph DeAngelo's conviction stands as a reminder that even the most elusive criminals can eventually be caught—and that justice, though delayed, remains possible in the age of DNA and data.

**Sources** - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8DrCv4HHu9c&vl=en - https://spyscape.com/article/unsolved-mysteries-true-crime-cases-involving-top-codes-and-ciphers

Read more

Mand idømt syv års fængsel for rekruttering af hvide bude
Post

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Børnekrænker begik nye overgreb helt op til retssag
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Mand idømt syv års fængsel for rekruttering af hvide bude

Danish Prison Drug Ring: How Organized Crime Recruits 'Clean' Couriers

Børnekrænker begik nye overgreb helt op til retssag

Danish Court Convicts Serial Child Abuser Who Continued Crimes Until Trial

AI-agenter finder 77% af softwaresårbarheder i automatiserede angreb

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Susanne Sperling

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