Current:Home > reviewsNearly 50 years after being found dead in a Pennsylvania cave, ‘Pinnacle Man’ is identified -Elevate Profit Vision
Nearly 50 years after being found dead in a Pennsylvania cave, ‘Pinnacle Man’ is identified
View
Date:2025-04-18 04:39:58
The body of a man found frozen in a small Pennsylvania cave nearly 50 years ago has finally been identified.
The remains of Nicholas Paul Grubb, 27, of Fort Washington, were discovered in January 1977 by two hikers who had ducked inside the cave to escape some inclement weather. Grubb has long been known as the “Pinnacle Man,” a reference to the Appalachian mountain peak near where his body was found.
An autopsy at the time found no signs of foul play and determined that he died from a drug overdose. Authorities, though, could not identify Grubb’s body from his appearance, belongings, clothing or dental information. Fingerprints were collected during his autopsy but somehow were misplaced, according to the Berks County Coroner’s Office.
Detectives from the state police and investigators with the coroner’s office had periodically revisited the case over the past 15 years and Grubb’s body was exhumed in August 2019 after dental records linked him to two missing person cases in Florida and Illinois.
DNA samples did not match in either case, but a break came last month in when a Pennsylvania state trooper found Grubb’s missing fingerprints. Within an hour of submitting the card to the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System, a FBI fingerprint expert matched them to Grubb.
A relative of Grubb was notified of the discovery and family members asked the coroner’s office to place his remains in a family plot.
veryGood! (524)
prev:Sam Taylor
Related
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Climate Change Is Cutting Into the Global Fish Catch, and It’s on Pace to Get Worse
- Uma Thurman and Ethan Hawke's 21-year-old Son Levon Makes Rare Appearance at Cannes Film Festival
- Beyond Drought: 7 States Rebalance Their Colorado River Use as Global Warming Dries the Region
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- 86-year-old returns George Orwell's 1984 to library 65 years late, saying it needs to be read more than ever
- Jennifer Lopez Details Her Kids' Difficult Journey Growing Up With Famous Parents
- All 5 meerkats at Philadelphia Zoo died within days; officials suspect accidental poisoning
- Sam Taylor
- Millions of Google search users can now claim settlement money. Here's how.
Ranking
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- Actor Bruce Willis has frontotemporal dementia. Here's what to know about the disease
- Southern Baptists expel California megachurch for having female pastors
- One state looks to get kids in crisis out of the ER — and back home
- 'Most Whopper
- Which type of eye doctor do you need? Optometrists and ophthalmologists face off
- Some Starbucks workers say Pride Month decorations banned at stores, but the company says that's not true
- Frail people are left to die in prison as judges fail to act on a law to free them
Recommendation
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
Bud Light is no longer America's best-selling beer. Here's why.
Fixing the health care worker shortage may be something Congress can agree on
With student loan forgiveness in limbo, here's how the GOP wants to fix college debt
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
Famed mountain lion P-22 had 2 severe infections before his death never before documented in California pumas
'All the Beauty and the Bloodshed' chronicles Nan Goldin's career of art and activism
Fixing the health care worker shortage may be something Congress can agree on