A stock image of police tape.Photo:GettyA family who provided a sample for DNA testing has helped forensic experts successfully identify their relative who went missing 31 years ago.The Hamilton County Coroner’s Office in Indiana confirmed in a statement that a “human remain” — discovered in 1996 on suspected serial killer Herb Baumeister’s 18-acre estate in Westfield known as Fox Hollow Farm — matched the DNA sample from the family of Manuel Resendez.“Manuel Resendez was reported missing [in] August 1993,” theJan. 25 statementreads. “The identification of Manuel Resendez was the result of the dedication of many forensic experts working collaboratively in an effort to identify nearly 10,000 human remains recovered from Fox Hollow Farm.”Hamilton County Coroner Jeff Jellison told PEOPLE the human remain that helped identify Resendez was a “bone fragment.“A photo of Manuel Resendez before he went missing.Hamilton County Coroner’s Office/FacebookResendez was 34 when he went missing in the ’90s, according to theIndianapolis Star. The publication said he was originally IDed, via dental records, in the ’90s as one of Baumeister’s roughly two dozen victims, but Resendez’s relatives wanted a DNA match to confirm that finding.The coroner’s office had asked families of young men who disappeared in the ’80s and ’90s to submit DNA samples, which has led to other recent identifications aside from Resendez’s because of matches to human remains found on Baumeister’s Westfield property, according toNBC News.Want to keep up with the latest crime coverage? Sign up forPEOPLE’s free True Crime newsletterfor breaking crime news, ongoing trial coverage and details of intriguing unsolved cases.In his office’s Jan. 25 statement, Jellison thanked forensic specialists and law enforcement for identifying Resendez’s human remain through DNA tests.“A special thanks goes to the hardworking people at the Indiana State Police Laboratory and Dr. Krista Latham of the Biology & Anthropology Department at the University of Indianapolis,” he said.Jellison told PEOPLE that nine identifications have been made since the remains were first discovered at Fox Hollow Farm in 1996, and forensic experts are “continuing to process remains for DNA comparison.”

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Close Up Shot Focused on Yellow Tape Showing Text Police Line Do Not Cross.

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A family who provided a sample for DNA testing has helped forensic experts successfully identify their relative who went missing 31 years ago.The Hamilton County Coroner’s Office in Indiana confirmed in a statement that a “human remain” — discovered in 1996 on suspected serial killer Herb Baumeister’s 18-acre estate in Westfield known as Fox Hollow Farm — matched the DNA sample from the family of Manuel Resendez.“Manuel Resendez was reported missing [in] August 1993,” theJan. 25 statementreads. “The identification of Manuel Resendez was the result of the dedication of many forensic experts working collaboratively in an effort to identify nearly 10,000 human remains recovered from Fox Hollow Farm.”Hamilton County Coroner Jeff Jellison told PEOPLE the human remain that helped identify Resendez was a “bone fragment.“A photo of Manuel Resendez before he went missing.Hamilton County Coroner’s Office/FacebookResendez was 34 when he went missing in the ’90s, according to theIndianapolis Star. The publication said he was originally IDed, via dental records, in the ’90s as one of Baumeister’s roughly two dozen victims, but Resendez’s relatives wanted a DNA match to confirm that finding.The coroner’s office had asked families of young men who disappeared in the ’80s and ’90s to submit DNA samples, which has led to other recent identifications aside from Resendez’s because of matches to human remains found on Baumeister’s Westfield property, according toNBC News.Want to keep up with the latest crime coverage? Sign up forPEOPLE’s free True Crime newsletterfor breaking crime news, ongoing trial coverage and details of intriguing unsolved cases.In his office’s Jan. 25 statement, Jellison thanked forensic specialists and law enforcement for identifying Resendez’s human remain through DNA tests.“A special thanks goes to the hardworking people at the Indiana State Police Laboratory and Dr. Krista Latham of the Biology & Anthropology Department at the University of Indianapolis,” he said.Jellison told PEOPLE that nine identifications have been made since the remains were first discovered at Fox Hollow Farm in 1996, and forensic experts are “continuing to process remains for DNA comparison.”

A family who provided a sample for DNA testing has helped forensic experts successfully identify their relative who went missing 31 years ago.

The Hamilton County Coroner’s Office in Indiana confirmed in a statement that a “human remain” — discovered in 1996 on suspected serial killer Herb Baumeister’s 18-acre estate in Westfield known as Fox Hollow Farm — matched the DNA sample from the family of Manuel Resendez.

“Manuel Resendez was reported missing [in] August 1993,” theJan. 25 statementreads. “The identification of Manuel Resendez was the result of the dedication of many forensic experts working collaboratively in an effort to identify nearly 10,000 human remains recovered from Fox Hollow Farm.”

Hamilton County Coroner Jeff Jellison told PEOPLE the human remain that helped identify Resendez was a “bone fragment.”

A photo of Manuel Resendez before he went missing.Hamilton County Coroner’s Office/Facebook

Hamilton County Coroner

Hamilton County Coroner’s Office/Facebook

Resendez was 34 when he went missing in the ’90s, according to theIndianapolis Star. The publication said he was originally IDed, via dental records, in the ’90s as one of Baumeister’s roughly two dozen victims, but Resendez’s relatives wanted a DNA match to confirm that finding.

The coroner’s office had asked families of young men who disappeared in the ’80s and ’90s to submit DNA samples, which has led to other recent identifications aside from Resendez’s because of matches to human remains found on Baumeister’s Westfield property, according toNBC News.

Want to keep up with the latest crime coverage? Sign up forPEOPLE’s free True Crime newsletterfor breaking crime news, ongoing trial coverage and details of intriguing unsolved cases.

In his office’s Jan. 25 statement, Jellison thanked forensic specialists and law enforcement for identifying Resendez’s human remain through DNA tests.

“A special thanks goes to the hardworking people at the Indiana State Police Laboratory and Dr. Krista Latham of the Biology & Anthropology Department at the University of Indianapolis,” he said.

Jellison told PEOPLE that nine identifications have been made since the remains were first discovered at Fox Hollow Farm in 1996, and forensic experts are “continuing to process remains for DNA comparison.”

source: people.com