Posted on 02/17/2026 12:54:38 PM PST by rexthecat
The mystery DNA found on a potentially crucial glove found near Nancy Guthrie’s Arizona home — as well as other genetic material in her house — do not match any records in the FBI’s database, officials said Tuesday.
(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...
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Yep. And what these people who voluntarily submit their DNA don't care about is that in doing so, they are essentially serving up the DNA of all their relatives who would prefer not to be databased.
“If the rubber glove don’t fit - you MUST acquit!” ;)
OK
Every occupant of the US will give DNA so we can solve this.
““We’re hopeful that we’re always getting closer, but the news now, I think, is we had heard this morning that, of course, the DNA on the glove that was found 2 miles away was submitted for CODIS. And I just heard that, CODIS had no hits,” the sheriff said.””
Talk about word salad...The article said it should be 24 hour results on the test of the glove at the FBI. I thought it was sent to FL and not the FBI in Quantico....wasn’t that one of the questionable actions taken by the sheriff?
Was the glove made in China?
Check the DNA of all the population of China.
Was the glove made in China?
Check the DNA of all the population of China.
A glove found 2 miles away is not “near” the family home. Where’s Nancy Grace to find the criminals?
They apparently wanted to test the glove because it resembled the one in the door camera. they’ve said the DNA doesn’t match anyone in the family.
I heard there’s unknown DNA in the house. I’m asking if the glove DNA matches this other DNA in the house
RE: I personally know more Black people who have used those sites than White people.
Can I recall a crude and cruel joke?
Doonesbury had a series of strips as the Roots book and TV movies were at the top in popularity.
At a library, the young black guy’s pal was found to be at a work table between tall stacks of thick volumes of ship boarding list records and histories of countries.
“Would all this be Roots related may I ask?”
“I’m, uh, just doing some research about my background.”
“Well, if you ever track down who your father was, let me know.”
I haven’t heard anything about that.
But I imagine there is ‘unknown’ DNA in every house. People are always going in and out to repair things, deliver things, etc.
I had three men in my house today, to repair something.
I think they were interested in DNA that might be related to the person in the door camera images.
A lot of the problem Black people face in trying to trace heredity is that they were here as slaves a couple of hundred years before any real birth records were kept in the States, and many slaves didn’t have the sort of family records that White families may have kept.
A lot of them are interested in where they and their ancestors may actually have come from.
I know you’re right. The tragedy and crime of slavery made black people the only ones who didn’t come willingly to look for a new and better life. No slave traders wanted individuality for the victims by matching names and genealogies.
I don’t remember the movie name (I saw the preview in a theater in probably 1971 or 1972) but it had a black man confidently saying in NYC “Every black person I see go past me I can match their facial looks to their tribe back in Africa.”
No. From the story linked at post #32:
The sheriff confirmed that the DNA on the glove was different from the DNA found inside the home.
FYI, from TMZ:
The glove authorities found 2 miles from Nancy Guthrie’s home has been DNA tested in Florida, but there’s still another step before the DNA profile can be entered in the CODIS system ... sources with direct knowledge tell TMZ.
Under federal law, the FBI cannot use the CODIS system unless the item in question is tested in the state where it was found — in this case, Arizona. Our sources say the glove has already been sent back to Arizona. As for why the Pima County Sheriff decided to send the glove to Florida in the first place, knowing the glove would have to be re-tested in Arizona ... our sources have no idea.
Could someone tell me a couple of things?
1) When there was that controversy about black people who were suspects and then cleared in criminal incidents asking to have their dna taken out of the law enforcement database, did they succeed? That would reduce the records.
2) How many dna records were looked at for a match? Did it include all the ancestry and other genealogy company dna records?
That is interesting.
White people out number Black people in the USA by 4 to 1, according to the Census Bureau.
The sheriff is clueless is the obvious answer, and probably correct.
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