National Park Double Murder Cold Case Solved, Authorities Link It to Killer with Near-Total Confidence

FBI

For decades, investigators and sleuths were unable to crack the case of two women murdered while camping at a national park in 1996.

Now, things have taken a radical turn as the FBI says a new round of tests has identified the perpetrator and solved this grim cold case.

The bureau made the announcement on Thursday, nearly 30 years after the murders at Virginia's Shenandoah National Park.

In May 1996, Laura Winans and Julianne Williams were killed at a campsite near the Skyland Resort. Their throats were slashed, according to The Associated Press.

Their bodies were not found until a week later, and then only after park rangers conducted a wide search.

Archival news footage from 1996 covers initial efforts to contact potential witnesses and alert hikers in the park.

https://youtu.be/G930dH0VbL8?si=u6n0FkXV1M9iYRXX

Attempts to find the women's killer were unsuccessful over the following decades.

In 2021, a new team out of the bureau's Richmond field office took over the case.

"FBI special agents, intelligence analysts, and other FBI Richmond employees reassessed hundreds of leads and interviews," the bureau said in its news release. "They spent countless hours to identify and prioritize evidence from the crime scene to retest and submitted the items to an accredited private lab."

Successful DNA extraction on old evidence led investigators to a shocking find, the FBI said.

When put into a national index system, the DNA hit as a match for Walter "Leo" Jackson Sr., a convicted criminal, according to the release.

Stanley Meador, FBI special agent in charge of the Richmond Office, said the match came with a "one in 2.6 trillion" certainty, WTVR-TV in Richmond, Virginia, reported.

https://youtu.be/yDOPZKdblCk?si=kk8gD4hJ-QBqIfD4

Jackson, a longtime criminal, served multiple years-long prison sentences since the 1980s and spent much of the time after the Shenandoah murders incarcerated and right under authorities' noses.

The FBI detailed his criminal history which included kidnapping, rapes and assaults.

#FBI Richmond & our law enforcement partners have been working towards this important announcement for 28 years. We have identified the person who murdered Lollie Winans and Julie Williams in the Shenandoah National Park in 1996. https://t.co/XTPqsUve1l pic.twitter.com/MUN5h0PoGh

— FBI Richmond (@FBIRichmond) June 20, 2024

#Breaking: A suspect has been identified in the 1996 murders of Lollie Winans and Julie Williams in the Shenandoah National Park. Evidence from the crime scene matched Walter Leo Jackson, Sr., of Cleveland, Ohio. pic.twitter.com/7NM7sH5kp3

— FBI Richmond (@FBIRichmond) June 20, 2024

He was a hiker who was known to visit the park where the women were murdered, lending even more credibility to the FBI's findings.

Unfortunately, Jackson died while incarcerated in March 2018 and will not be made to answer for these murders.