Three decades after she went missing, the mysterious details surrounding a Michigan woman's death have been unraveled thanks to forensic genealogy.

SEE ALSO:  Forensic Genealogist Solves Decades-Old Cold Case in Just Four Days

New Technology Used to Identify Both the Victim and the Killer

Stacey Chahorski went missing in January of 1989. The then-19-year-old was traveling the country but never returned to her home in Norton Shores. Norton Shores is located just south of Muskegon in Muskegon County.

Her disappearance has remained a mystery ever since Although her body was found nearly 10 years later near Alabama, she was never identified.

Although authorities had what they believed to be her killer's DNA from the scene, they were unable to identify the person who had killed Stacey.

However, earlier this year, the FBI sent DNA to Othram - a private lab in Texas that specialized in forensic genealogy. Using this technology, the lab was able to create a genealogy profile which allowed investigators to begin interviewing potential family members.

Eventually, that roadmap led the FBI to Stacey Chahorski and a man identified as Henry 'Hoss' Wise.

Keri Farley is an FBI special agent from Atlanta, Georgia.

“This case is key because it's the first time that we know of that investigative genealogy was used to identify both the victim and the killer in the same case,” Farley said.

Wise was a truck driver and stunt driver with a criminal history in Florida, Georgia, and North Carolina.

Killer Died Before He Could be Identified

Henry Wise died in a car accident in 1999, about 11 years after he killed Stacey Chahorski.

NBC News reports that Chahorski's family was not present at the news conference when her killer's identity was announced but her mother was at peace knowing that the man who had killed her daughter is dead.

This House in Saginaw Looks Just Like the One in 'Home Alone'

You'd swear this home on Michigan Avenue in Saginaw was the home used to film the movie 'Home Alone.'

It's not, of course, because that home is actually in the suburbs of Chicago.

According to the real estate listing, this Michigan home was built about 74 years before the movie debuted.

You Could Be Bob Seger's Neighbor for a Cool $1 Million

Let's just imagine for a moment that you're neighbors with Bob Seger.

Even though you have a beautiful, $1 million home with five bedrooms and six bathrooms, your house is only one-quarter the size of your neighbor's. Also, the Seger's home is worth about eight times as much as yours, valued at about $8.5 million according to Zillow.

But maybe you could become friends, right?

Check out the pics of this house for sale, right across the road from Bob. He's your friend now. You can call him Bob.

Flint's Historic Capitol Theatre Opened in 1928 - Then and Now

Flint, Michigan's historic Capitol Theatre was built in 1927 and opened in 1928. It was renovated in 2017. See the before and after photos here. 

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