An American forensic lab announced Monday that it confirmed through DNA testing that the remains recovered from a German ossuary in France are those of Army Pfc. Lawrence S. Gordon, who was mistakenly buried with the enemy after World War II.

DNA was extracted from bones by the national crime lab in France after Wisconsin filmmaker Jed Henry’s research through military records led to a crypt of an unknown soldier identified as a German, interred in France.

The French crime lab announced in February that it had a mitochondrial DNA match, meaning the results matched DNA from maternal relatives of Gordon’s.

Samples then were sent to a DNA testing facility at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and to Bode Technology Group in Lorton, Va., for independent confirmation.

Bode not only confirmed the French crime lab’s results Monday, but also announced that it did a more specific nuclear DNA profile for further proof of identification – all within eight days of receiving the DNA samples from France.

The DNA facility at University of Wisconsin-Madison will begin its testing this week. In addition to confirming the Virginia lab’s results, the UW-Madison lab is working on refining techniques for recovering DNA from bones and teeth that are 70 years old and older.

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Henry became interested in the Gordon case because his grandfather, Staff Sgt. David L. Henry of Viroqua, served in the same reconnaissance company, and Gordon was the only member of the company who died and was not identified for a proper burial.

The U.S. military refused to help confirm the remains in the German crypt in France were Gordon’s, but French and German officials agreed to allow DNA to be extracted and tested in hopes of identifying the soldier.

U.S. military anthropologists and historians typically work for years on an unidentified soldier case. Exhuming remains for DNA analysis does not happen often.

In this case, Gordon’s remains were in a German cemetery in France and identified as those of a German. So the United States could not prevent the remains from being removed and tested.

The Bode Technology Group has assisted with testing in thousands of missing-person cases, including those stemming from the 1970s “Dirty War” in Argentina, mass graves in Guatemala and Peru, and victims of Hurricane Katrina, earthquakes and air crashes.


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