Valerie Nagle, whose DNA recently helped to confirm the remains of her sister Marion Vinetta Nagle McWhorter, who disappeared in 1974 in Oregon, poses for a portrait with a photo of her sister Thursday, Sept. 18, 2025, in Seattle. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
A school photo of Marion Vinetta Nagle McWhorter, who disappeared in 1974 in Oregon and whose remains were recently confirmed by DNA from her sister Valerie Nagle, is seen over notes taken by Nagle about McWhorter’s disappearance Thursday, Sept. 18, 2025, in Seattle. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
Valerie Nagle, whose DNA recently helped to confirm the remains of her sister Marion Vinetta Nagle McWhorter, who disappeared in 1974 in Oregon, poses for a portrait Thursday, Sept. 18, 2025, in Seattle. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
A family photo of Marion Vinetta Nagle McWhorter, back center in white, who disappeared in 1974 in Oregon, and whose remains were recently identified, is held by her sister Valerie Nagle Thursday, Sept. 18, 2025, in Seattle. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
Family photos of Marion Vinetta Nagle McWhorter, who disappeared in 1974 in Oregon and whose remains were recently confirmed by DNA from her sister Valerie Nagle, are seen over notes taken by Nagle about McWhorter’s disappearance Thursday, Sept. 18, 2025, in Seattle. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
A woman’s remains were found in Oregon in 1976. They’ve been identified 49 years later thanks to DNA
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) 鈥 Valerie Nagle spent decades wondering what happened to her older sister who was last seen in Oregon in 1974. She searched online databases of unidentified persons cases looking for her and sent DNA to a popular ancestry website in the hopes of finding a match.
Valerie Nagle, whose DNA recently helped to confirm the remains of her sister Marion Vinetta Nagle McWhorter, who disappeared in 1974 in Oregon, poses for a portrait with a photo of her sister Thursday, Sept. 18, 2025, in Seattle. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) 鈥 Valerie Nagle spent decades wondering what happened to her older sister who was last seen in Oregon in 1974. She searched online databases of unidentified persons cases looking for her and sent DNA to a popular ancestry website in the hopes of finding a match.
That all changed in June when authorities in Oregon called Nagle 鈥渙ut of the blue鈥 to ask about comparing her DNA to a known as 鈥淪wamp Mountain Jane Doe,鈥 she said. Nagle鈥檚 DNA ultimately helped confirm that the remains of a woman found near a mountain creek in Oregon鈥檚 Central Cascades in 1976 were that of her sister, Marion Vinetta Nagle McWhorter.
Oregon State Police publicly released the news this week after the remains were identified in June.
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鈥淚 was very surprised that they called,鈥 Nagle, a 62-year-old who lives in Seattle, told The Associated Press. She was 11 when her sister went missing. 鈥淚 was really glad that they found me through DNA.鈥
McWhorter was last seen at a shopping mall in the Portland suburb of Tigard when she was 21.
She was the oldest of five siblings, and Nagle was the youngest. Their mother was Alaska Native of the Ahtna Athabascan people, Nagle said, and her big sister had been named for an aunt who died in a boarding school for Indigenous children in Alaska in 1940.
High rates of , particularly women, have amid inadequate public safety resources.
Nagle, who lived in New York with her parents and one of her brothers at the time of her sister’s disappearance, said her mother may have contacted authorities but that she wasn鈥檛 sure of the exact extent of the efforts made by her parents to find her sister.
鈥淚 mean, there were, you know, efforts to search, but it was limited,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 have that much to go on.鈥
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She does know her sister had come from California to Oregon with plans to continue on to Seattle and eventually Alaska when she called an aunt who lived near the Tigard shopping mall for a ride in October 1974 鈥 but the aunt didn鈥檛 end up meeting up with her, Nagle said.
Nearly 20 years later, the aunt shared another detail with Nagle: When McWhorter called her that day, she told her that a man in a white pickup truck had offered to give her a ride. It was unclear why her aunt waited that long to share that information.
Nagle said that when she learned this puzzle piece, she 鈥渟tarted in earnest with more searching,” including by checking databases with unidentified persons cases.
鈥淚 remember spending a lot of time on those pages, just scrolling through and trying to look,鈥 she said.
In 2010, a bone sample from McWhorter’s remains was sent to the University of North Texas Center for Human Identification, and a profile was created in the national missing persons database NamUs, state police said. An additional bone sample was submitted for DNA extraction in 2020, allowing for a unique genetic marker profile to be produced.
In 2023, Nagle did a DNA test when she signed up for Ancestry, a genealogy company with a DNA database, hoping it would yield a clue about her sister, she said.
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But the breakthrough came in April when a first cousin once removed uploaded their genetic profile to FamilyTreeDNA, another genealogy company with a DNA database, Oregon State Police spokesperson Jolene Kelley said in an email Thursday. That allowed genealogists to get a better idea of McWhorter’s family tree and led them to find that Nagle was a surviving family member.
鈥淭his case was cold for 49 years. That means that family members lived and died without ever knowing what happened to their missing loved one,” State Forensic Anthropologist Hailey Collord-Stalder said in a statement, adding that McWhorter 鈥渓ikely did not go missing voluntarily.鈥
The Linn County Sheriff’s Office is working to determine the circumstances of McWhorter’s death, state police said.
For Nagle, an important piece of the puzzle is solved.