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Police ID ‘Jane Doe’ found 20 years ago during construction of California outlet mall

VACAVILLE, Calif. – A woman found dead in a Northern California field nearly 30 years ago has finally been identified, police said Monday. Photographs from 1991...
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VACAVILLE, Calif. – A woman found dead in a Northern California field nearly 30 years ago has finally been identified, police said Monday.

Photographs from 1991 show investigators huddled in a field of wildflowers in Vacaville after a 38-year-old woman was found dead on Nut Tree Road as crews were building the Premium Outlets.

Detectives at the time deemed the woman's death suspicious. She had been dead for two to three weeks but there were no obvious signs of trauma or foul play, investigators said.

Police ID ‘Jane Doe’ found 20 years ago during construction of California outlet mall

Several years later, the woman's body was exhumed and a facial reconstruction model was created along with an artist's sketch. The model and sketch were released to the public in the hope that someone would recognize her. Detectives said the images led to several leads, but no identification.

Twenty-eight years later, Vacaville police now know that woman was Cynthia Merkley.

"It's taken us 28 years to get a name, so now we got to put all that information together, kind of backtrack what her life was like," said Vacaville Police Lt. Chris Polan.

Merkley also went by the name Cynthia Bilardi while married to her estranged husband, Dennis Bilardi.

"At one point in time I was in love with her and I married her and I watched her disintegrate," Bilardi told KTXL Monday.

Bilardi says his ex-wife was beautiful and troubled.

"She had major mental and drug and alcohol problems," he said.

The couple had two children and lost touch in 1980.

"I didn’t know she passed away at all," Bilardi said.

Bilardi found out his estranged wife was dead weeks ago from Vacaville police detectives.

"So they scanned the preserved fingerprints through the databases," Polan explained.

Lt. Polan says the Department of Justice and the FBI used new imaging technology to test preserved fingerprints when they got a hit in the system. Merkley's fingerprints were on file from an arrest in the 1980s.

"The photo was actually when she was booked into one of the jails," Polan said.

Technology and determination solved the 28-year-old mystery.

"It's exciting because we have new leads to work off of but that's a double-edged sword because now we've got to try to recreate everything about Cynthia that we don't know," Polan said.

Investigators say Merkley had ties to both Santa Rosa and Santa Cruz. She was estranged from her family for several years before she died, detectives said.

Detectives still want to know why she was in Vacaville and how she died.

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