1989 homicide victim found in Warwick ID’d through genetic testing, but some mysteries remain – The Recorder

Posted: May 4, 2024 at 2:41 am

GREENFIELD It took nearly 35 years, but the human remains found just off Route 78 in Warwick in 1989 have been identified as belonging to Constance (Holminski) Bassignani, who was 65 years old at the time of her murder.

The Northwestern District Attorneys Office held a press conference Thursday morning to announce that the victims identity was learned about eight months after her DNA was submitted to Othram, a Texas corporation that specializes in using forensic genetic genealogy to resolve unsolved murders, disappearances and identification of unidentified decedents or homicide victims.

According to the DAs office, Bassignani was born in Hawaii in 1924 and was living with her second husband, William Bassignani, in Woonsocket, Rhode Island, at the time of her death. William reportedly told family that she had moved back to Hawaii, though the DAs office stated investigators found no evidence of this. William, who died in 1993, is considered a person of interest in the case.

The State Police Detective Unit attached to DAs office collaborated with the State Police Crime Laboratory to submit the genetic material to Othram. This led to living potential relatives, who submitted their own DNA and confirmed the victims identity.

Were all very appreciative of the dedication, the hard work and the perseverance in this case, Northwestern District Attorney David Sullivan said. Seeking justice for the unknown victim has been their driving force from Day 1.

Bassignanis body was found on June 24, 1989, by a passing motorist. Her remains were found 10 to 20 feet off the roadway of Route 78, in a lightly wooded area near a small gravel pit about 1 miles south of the New Hampshire state line and about the same distance north of the entrance to Mount Grace State Forest. Sullivan said local and State Police responded to the scene, documenting evidence and collecting the remains.

First Assistant District Attorney Steven Gagne explained that identifying the victim is the first step in any homicide investigation.

From there, investigators can determine who the victims circle of family, friends and co-workers were and attempt to retrace their last known steps and contacts, he said. In this case, investigators were hampered from the start in their efforts to solve this homicide without an identification of the victim.

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Gagne said investigators have learned Bassignani got married and divorced in the 1940s before marrying William in 1945. Authorities have tracked down and spoken with the three grandchildren born to a son that has died, as well as a daughter who lives on the West Coast. Gagne said the DAs office was assisted by law enforcement in Washington state and in Hawaii.

So this investigation, which is now reinvigorated, has literally spanned half the globe, he said.

Gagne explained Bassignani and her husband lived in an apartment in Woonsocket, Rhode Island, approximately 80 miles from Warwick. The couple had previously lived in Franklin, Massachusetts. Sullivan said there is no known connection between the couple and Warwick, and it is unknown where the murder took place.

According to the DAs office, the victim was last seen alive on Memorial Day weekend in 1989. Gagne said William reportedly told relatives that his wife had decided to move back to Hawaii and that they would not be seeing or hearing from her again.

Gagne said he hopes this news provides some closure to the victims family, shedding some light on what may have been a looming cloud of doubt surrounding her disappearance for decades.

Retired Warwick Police Chief Brian Peters, who was at the departments helm in 1989, said it is refreshing to get some answers.

Its a big relief, he said. [We] never had anything like this happen in town, and hopefully never will [again].

Paul Marguet, the State Polices lead investigator on this case, said the victims grandchildren initially did not believe authorities, having long believed their grandfathers story about his wifes abrupt disappearance. But, he said, their DNA was used to confirm the truth.

Michael Vogen, an Othram representative, appeared via Zoom during Thursdays press conference and lauded the DAs office and the State Police before briefly speaking about his companys mission.

We were purpose-built to do just this, he said. Thats to generate human ID from forensic evidence.

Gagne previously told the Greenfield Recorder the decision was made to reach out to Othram due to the companys success in identifying the so-called Granby Girl as Patricia Ann Tucker, a 28-year-old woman found shot to death in 1978, but who went unidentified until a little over a year ago. Gerald Coleman, Tuckers husband when she died, is a person of interest in that murder. He died in state prison in 1996, and prosecutors say he never reported his wife as missing.

Othram also helped identify the Lady of the Dunes a 37-year-old woman found murdered in Provincetown on July 26, 1974 as Ruth Marie Terry. Her now-deceased husband, Guy Muldavin, was officially named as the killer in August 2023.

David Mittelman, founder and CEO of Othram, previously told the Recorder that his company tests DNA based on hundreds of thousands of markers, whereas the FBIs Combined DNA Index System (CODIS) uses 20. He also said victims are often not in CODIS because it was designed about 30 years ago to track the repeat offenses of known criminals. But Othram, which employs 60 people, can work from evidence generally considered unusable because it is too old or too degraded.

Gagne mentioned authorities hope to bring renewed attention to the Warwick case and trigger some new leads that have a domino effect that ends with additional answers. Anyone with information that might be helpful in this case is encouraged to call the State Police Detective Unit attached to the Northwestern District Attorneys Office at 413-512-5361. Messages can also be submitted anonymously through northwesternda.org.

Its like were trying to piece together an ancient puzzle here, Gagne told reporters, but any small piece would certainly help.

Reach Domenic Poli at: dpoli@recorder.com or 413-930-4120.

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1989 homicide victim found in Warwick ID'd through genetic testing, but some mysteries remain - The Recorder

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