
DNA Evidence: From Cold Cases to Serial Killers
How genetic science transformed criminal investigation and brought decades-old killers to justice
In 1988, Colin Pitchfork became the first person ever convicted using DNA profiling after murdering Lynda Mann and Dawn Ashworth in Enderby, England. That watershed moment opened a new era in forensic science—one that would eventually solve crimes spanning decades and continents.
The Pitchfork case began with a false lead. Richard Buckland was arrested for Dawn Ashworth's murder in July 1986 and confessed, but DNA testing exonerated him—a first for criminal justice. When investigators expanded the DNA search, Pitchfork's profile matched evidence from both victims. He pleaded guilty to both murders and received a life sentence, cementing DNA's role in modern policing.
Three decades later, genetic science continues to deliver results that seemed impossible during earlier investigations. The Golden State Killer case illustrates this transformation. Operating across California during the 1970s and 1980s, this offender committed burglaries, rapes, and murders—dozens of attacks linked by DNA evidence from crime scenes. Though a DNA profile existed in law enforcement databases from the late 1980s onwards, the perpetrator had never been previously arrested, leaving no matching name in the system. The case remained unsolved for decades until advanced DNA matching techniques finally identified and apprehended him.
In the United Kingdom, Operation Minstead exposed both DNA's power and systemic failures. Delroy Grant preyed on elderly women aged 68 to 89 living alone across south London, Kent, and Surrey—committing over 146 offences and at least 23 sexual assaults across more than two decades after 1999. Grant's modus operandi was chillingly consistent: night-time attacks through open windows, which he sometimes removed beforehand. A clerical error in 1999 eliminated him as a suspect, allowing a decade of additional crimes before DNA evidence finally secured his conviction.
Another UK cold case broke in 2002 when DNA evidence convicted Jasinskyj of murdering Marion in 1981 in the Aldershot area. Despite his denials and claims that DNA evidence had been planted, Jasinskyj—stationed in Aldershot when the murder occurred—received a life sentence for rape and murder.


