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New DNA testing in the 1996 Idaho murder of 18-year-old Angie Dodge found genetic material belonging to an unknown man but no DNA matching Chris Tapp, the person who confessed and is in prison for ...
IDAHO FALLS, Idaho — Christopher Tapp was exonerated Wednesday after being wrongfully convicted of the 1996 murder of Angie Dodge. "I hope that things get learned from this mistake, and I hope ...
Friday’s episode of “Dateline” features the Idaho Falls cold case of Angie Dodge, presenting the fatal 1996 incident with the 18-year-old. The episode, according to the show’s teaser ...
An Idaho man was arrested this week for the brutal 1996 rape and murder of an Idaho Falls woman in which another man spent 20 years in prison for after being wrongfully convicted.
Brian Leigh Dripps entered a guilty plea Tuesday morning to the June 1996 rape and murder of Angie Dodge.
Brian Dripps Sr. is in custody for first-degree murder during the commission of a rape and is being held without bond in Bonneville County. The victim in the case, Angie Dodge, was killed in 1996.
Genealogist Cece Moore & Parabon Labs helped crack a 23-year-old Idaho cold case. DNA testing, genetic genealogy led police to Brian Dripps, who confessed to Angie Dodge’s 1996 rape and murder ...
Angie Dodge was killed in 1996. Kelly Marie Dodge Facebook “A young man spent a significant part of his life in prison for no good reason,” Judge Joel Tingey told Dripps Tuesday.
Brian Dripps Sr., 55, of Caldwell, pleaded guilty Tuesday to sexually assaulting and fatally stabbing Angie Dodge in her Idaho Falls apartment in June 1996, the Idaho Statesman reported.
Police in Idaho have used a controversial emerging DNA technique that relies on public genealogy databases to make an arrest in the 1996 killing of 18-year-old Angie Dodge. Idaho Falls Police say ...
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