
Authorities in Northern California have confirmed that a severed leg discovered on a Sonoma County beach in 2022 has been identified as belonging to Walter Karl Kinney, a former banker from Santa Rosa who disappeared in 1999, as reported by the New York Post.
The identification closes another chapter in a case that has spanned nearly three decades and involved the same individual being classified as an unidentified person on two separate occasions.
Kinney, who was 59 at the time, vanished without a trace in August 1999. Later that same year, a single leg was discovered near Bodega Head, located about five miles from where the most recent remains were found.
Remains found on Bay Area beach traced back to missing banker Walter Karl Kinney
Probably knew too much about the coming banking collapse https://t.co/y3ob0db4Up pic.twitter.com/yyAdnbqxid
— SynCronus (@syncronus) March 30, 2026
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Investigators at the time had little to work with beyond a size 12 Rockport walking shoe that contained a custom orthopedic insert.
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With no immediate way to identify the remains, the case remained unresolved for several years. In 2003, a tip from Kinney’s daughter, who was living in Ohio, led investigators to examine his medical records.
Authorities compared X-rays of his feet with the remains found in 1999 and confirmed a match. Kinney was subsequently declared deceased.
The case resurfaced more than two decades later in June 2022, when a family walking along Salmon Creek Beach came across a long bone partially buried in the sand.
The discovery was made while the family was searching for seashells along the shoreline.
Officials later confirmed the bone had surgical hardware attached to it. The Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office conducted a search of the surrounding area but did not locate any additional remains or identifying evidence at the time.
For nearly four years, the remains became known as the “Salmon Creek John Doe,” with investigators unable to determine the identity of the individual.
The case remained unresolved until law enforcement partnered with the DNA Doe Project, a nonprofit organization that focuses on forensic genetic genealogy.
The collaboration led to a breakthrough in March 2026. By analyzing DNA profiles and tracing family connections that extended to San Diego, researchers were able to identify the remains.
The DNA from the bone discovered in 2022 matched the same individual who had been identified through earlier evidence in 2003.
“This case was unusual – it’s not often we see someone end up as a John Doe twice,” DNA Doe Project team leader Traci Onders said in a statement.
“But thanks to investigative genetic genealogy, we were able to resolve this mystery and provide some answers to everyone involved in this case.”
Authorities have not released additional details regarding how the remains became separated or how they came to be found years apart along the same stretch of coastline.
The identification marks a rare development in forensic investigations, highlighting the role of advancements in DNA analysis and genealogy research in resolving long-standing cases.
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