April 1, 1988
April Tinsley is eight years old and lives in Grabill, a small town in the state of Indiana where, for better or worse, everyone knows each other.
The little girl goes out to play with a friend and shortly after disappears into thin air.
The search begins and ends only three days later when her body is found in a field, about thirty kilometers from the place of the disappearance, with some sex toys at her side.
The investigations and the expert report lead to biological traces of the murderer on April's underwear.
A few days after the incident, a witness comes forward, declaring that he saw the potential culprit, leading the police to release an identikit of the murderer.
Investigations, laboratory tests and interrogations but no certain correspondence: the murder of little April remains unsolved.
Two years after the incident, in 1990, the culprit decides - defying the authorities - to leave a message on the door of a barn a few kilometers from where the little girl's body was found:
"I killed April Marie Tinsley, 8 years old, I will kill again".
The investigation is reopened a second time but the efforts are in vain, the police are unable to solve the case.
It is 2004 and the killer, in an act of exhibitionism, leaves in the bicycle baskets of some little girls a bag containing Polaroids of shots of his genitals, a used condom and a note that reads:
"Hi honey, I am the same person who kidnapped, raped and killed April, you will be my next victim".
The case is reopened again and attracts the attention of the FBI, officially becoming one of the most famous cold cases in America.
In all this, the culprit continues to have no name or face.
Thirty years later, the Fort Wayne police detective decides to use, for April's case, the same DNA analysis technique used to arrest the "Golden State Killer" in California.
In the forensic genetics laboratory of "Parabon Nano Labs", researcher CeCe More identifies two brothers whose DNA is compatible with that found on the girl's underwear.
The search begins and the FBI gets on their trail, tailing them for days until they find a match with the genetic profile of John Miller - 59 years old and living in the same town as his victim.
Knock-Knock
The police knock on the door of the man's trailer.
"Do you know why we're here?"
John Miller will only say two words: "April Tinsley" Continue reading
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