Murders of Pamela Buckley and James Freund
Unsolved murders in Sumter County, South Carolina / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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James Paul Freund (September 16, 1946 ā August 9, 1976) and Pamela Mae Buckley (December 16, 1951 ā August 9, 1976), commonly known as the Sumter County Does, Jock Doe and Jane Doe respectively,[6] were two previously unidentified American murder victims found in Sumter County, South Carolina, on August 9, 1976.[7] They had apparently traveled through various places in the United States before being murdered in South Carolina. This was inferred from some of their belongings.[8]
Murders of Pamela Buckley and James Freund | |
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Location | Unincorporated Sumter County, South Carolina, U.S. |
Date | August 9, 1976; 47 years ago (1976-08-09) |
Target | Pamela Mae Buckley and James Paul Freund |
Attack type | Double-murder, shooting |
Weapons | .357 caliber revolver |
Deaths | 2 (Pamela Mae Buckley, aged 24 James Paul Freund, aged 29) |
Perpetrator | Unknown |
Motive | Unknown |
Accused | Lonnie George Henry (died 1982) [1] Henry Lee Lucas (died 2001)[2][3] |
Arrests | 1[lower-alpha 1] |
Investigation reopened January 21, 2021[5] |
The male victim had been shot three times in the upper chest and the female victim was shot in the upper chest and through the neck. The weapon used was believed to be a .357 caliber revolver.[9]
Sumter County Coroner Verna Moore continued to work on the case until her retirement in 2009. The victims were unidentified for forty-five years, despite the fact that their descriptions, sketches of their faces, dental information, and fingerprints had been distributed across the United States. Their murders remain unsolved.[10][11][12]
The male victim had been referred to as "Jock Doe", which may have originated from the French name "Jacques," an indication he may have been from French Canada. A man who claimed he had met the victims stated that he was told by the male victim that his name was "Jock" and that he had left his Canadian family with his girlfriend. The male victim had furthermore stated that his father was a well-known doctor; this supported the theory that his family was wealthy.[7][8]
It was announced on January 19, 2021, that both victims had been identified. A statement by the DNA Doe Project described the resolution of the case, and that they were withholding additional information, including the decedents' names.[6] A news report published later in the day elaborated that the male victim was from Pennsylvania and the female was from Wisconsin.[13] It was clarified the following day that the female was actually from the state of Minnesota.[14]