In a remarkable turn of events, officials have finally identified a Pennsylvania teenager nearly 26 years after her untimely death, in a case where the killer was known long before the victim’s name came to light.
This Wednesday, the FBI’s Boston office, in collaboration with Massachusetts State Police and the Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office, revealed that “Chelsea Jane Doe” was actually Tiffany Bradley, a 16-year-old from Allentown, Pennsylvania. This breakthrough was achieved through cutting-edge DNA analysis and investigative genetic genealogy.
The man responsible for Bradley’s death, Eugene McCollom, confessed to the crime years ago and is currently serving a life sentence. However, despite his conviction, authorities have spent decades trying to uncover the identity of the young victim.
“Today marks a significant moment we have long awaited,” stated Massachusetts State Police Col. Geoffrey Noble at a press briefing. “It’s uncommon to encounter a case like this, where the perpetrator’s identity is known before the victim’s.”
Bradley’s remains were found on November 13, 2000, in a parking area at the Soldier’s Home in Chelsea, Massachusetts, located approximately 315 miles from her home in Pennsylvania.
During the news conference on Wednesday, Suffolk County District Attorney Kevin Hayden recounted the scene that investigators faced upon discovering Bradley’s remains.
“They found a body of an unknown female,” Hayden said. “Tragically, she had been cut in half. She was without her head and without any hands.”

Family members and law enforcement officials participate in a news conference announcing the identification of Tiffany Bradley, a Pennsylvania teenager who was known as “Chelsea Jane Doe” for nearly 26 years. (Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office)
Authorities said McCollom, who remains incarcerated, admitted to killing Bradley after she arrived in the Boston area and later told investigators where additional remains had been buried.
According to the FBI, Bradley had been trafficked across state lines before her death.
Authorities said advances in DNA technology and genealogical research ultimately allowed investigators to identify Bradley and notify her family nearly 26 years after her death.
“Today, we can finally state her name: Tiffany Bradley of Allentown, Pennsylvania,” the FBI Boston office wrote in a Facebook post announcing the breakthrough.
For Bradley’s family, the identification brought an end to decades of unanswered questions.
“Her last conversation with her favorite cousin was cut short with her voice trembling, saying, ‘I’ll call you later. I have to go,’” Bradley’s relative, Shakirah Wiggins, said during the news conference. “That call never came and was replaced with 26 years of waiting, wondering why.”
Wiggins thanked investigators for continuing to pursue the case long after the killer had been identified.
“It is totally amazing that, after 26 years, people cared enough to give her a name and return her to our family,” she said. “The wheels of justice run slowly, but surely.”
News Agency reached out to the FBI’s Boston field office for additional comment but did not immediately receive a response.
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