Back on Halloween night in 1981, a young woman was brutally murdered and left on the side of the road. Although police caught the criminal who committed the grisly crime – and even got him to confess to the act – they never were able to squeeze the identity of the victim out of the killer. The murderer went to his grave, never revealing the name of his victim, which has left the case a mystery for the last thirty-nine years.
The Georgia woman who was found dead in the cornfield was nicknamed “Jane Doe,” as no one knew who she was. But now her identity has been correctly linked to that of the traveling carnival worker, Cheryl Hammack.
When police found Hammack’s corpse in the cornfield outside of the town of Dixie in Georgia, she was so badly beaten and disfigured that it was tough to identify her. The autopsy report indicated that she had been both stabbed in the stomach and strangled to death.
Although investigators did what they could to link the woman’s details to the database of missing persons, they never came up with a match. The cops even released a sketch of the victim to the public with the hopes that someone would come forward with an identification – or at least a lead. But no one knew anything about “Jane Doe” who had been brutally murdered and left for the crows in the cornfield.
The woman was subsequently buried with an inscription on her tombstone that read: “Known only to God.”
For three decades, the case went cold. Then someone called in with a tip that led to a positive ID. She saw the police sketch pop up on Facebook. The woman believed the victim was her missing friend, Cheryl Hammack. Police did a DNA test with those supplied by Hammack’s relatives and found a match. Finally, she may rest in peace.