Queen's Estate Body Mystery: Police Share New Details

DNA results have thus far proved inconclusive in the investigation of the human remains discovered on property belonging to the queen of England, though there is speculation that the body may be that of a 17-year-old girl who went missing last year.

Police in the U.K. are still unable to identify the body found on Sandringham Estate on New Year's Day, saying that it could take another three days. The DNA may match that of Alisa Dmitrijeva from the town of Wisbech, near Cambridge, U.K., who vanished last August and was last seen 10 miles from the royal grounds.

Investigators were able to analyze bone development and other samples, which have helped detectives identify the body as that of a white woman aged between 15 and 23. Police also said that the absence of ivy growing over the body means it was not put there earlier than August.

Detective Chief Inspector Jes Fry said despite the remains showing no obvious signs of injury, investigators in Norfolk, U.K. were still treating the incident as a murder inquiry, the BBC reported. Officers have asked the public for any information about people who organized events in the area in August and September of 2010.

"Speculation about the identity of the victim is unhelpful, particularly for the families involved. We are in touch with a number of families and are particularly focused on missing persons' cases in Norfolk and neighboring counties, he said at a Friday press conference. "My job is to remain objective and deal in facts to ensure the right outcome."

Fry said the decomposed state of the body had complicated efforts to compile a DNA profile, and that samples taken from teeth, bone and muscle tissue have now been sent for analysis with results expected back on Monday.

"We have not been able to establish how the victim died because of decomposition," Fry said. "For example, it is possible she was stabbed but the absence of flesh means we cannot identify that at this stage."

Police issued a further description of the victim, saying she was between 5'4" and 5' 6" tall, with high cheek bones.

The remains were discovered Sunday by a dog-walker in a woodland area at Anmer, a tiny village northeast of London that is part of the Sandringham Estate property used by the British family as a vacation retreat.

The body is that of a young adult female, detectives with the Joint Norfolk and Suffolk Major Investigation Team said Tuesday after conducting a post-mortem examination on the remains.

Without giving further specifics, officials involved in the examination said Tuesday that it is "highly unlikely" the death was a result of natural causes. Detectives also found no evidence of accidental injury, damage because of firearms or bladed weapon at the site.

The human remains were found near the Royal Stud where the queen oversees the breeding and training of race horses, and less than three miles from the queen's main residence on the estate, Sandringham House.

Sandringham House has served as a private residence for British monarchs since 1862 and is a favorite of the royal family's as a holiday retreat. The royals, including Prince Charles, Prince William and Kate Middleton, had gathered there with the queen and Prince Philip to celebrate Christmas this year.

In addition to housing the queen, Sandringham Estate is a 20,000 acre property that includes public gardens, villages and cottages with sitting tenants, horse grounds and fully operating farms.

The queen and Prince Philip had joined other royals in attending the traditional New Year's Day service at the Church of St. Mary Magdalene on the estate hours before the discovery was made.

The royals have not spoken publicly on the discovery, but police reportedly alerted them to the discovery Monday night.

"My understanding is that the queen is being kept informed of these developments when there is news to tell her," Duncan Larcombe, royal editor for the UK's Sun newspaper, told ABC News.

The Queen and Prince Philip have not announced plans to leave the estate due to the discovery, instead, for now, choosing to remain through to their planned February departure.

The grounds surrounding the queen's residence at Sandringham are particularly busy this time of year with extra security personnel on hand to guard the royal family from the flock of tourists who travel to the estate in hopes of catching a glimpse of the family.

While the murder investigation might be the first to happen directly on the grounds of a royal palace, the storyline is eerily similar for the queen and her family.

The body of Robert James Moore, a U.S. man described as a loner and obsessed with the queen, was discovered in March on an island in St. James's Park near Buckingham Palace, roughly three years after Moore was believed to have died.

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626 comments

  • jim 11 hours ago
    Everyone is making fun of a misprint by yahoo when the fact remains, a young girl is dead. And this is not a laughing matter.
  • C 9 hours ago
    May they discover the identify of the remains so the family can have closure.
  • steve 7 hours ago
    so basically no real updated other than female and rehash of the initial find.
  • Wendy 2 hours 37 minutes ago
    This was a young girl, someone's daughter,granddaughter, sister and she probably died alone and scared. I think we need to stop being so concerned about how the words are spelled and more with what the story is about, a life taken too soon, and families that are left to find out there is no more hope for her to walk through the door into the loving arms of her family and loved ones. I hope they find justice for her and her grieving family.
  • Dave 12 hours ago
    "While the murder investigation might be the first to happen directly on the grounds of a royal palace"
    Wrong again, Bucking Palace is a Royal palace, Sandringham is the Queen's own property.
  • Jeff 9 hours ago
    Write the article after you know that it IS the missing 17 year old girl. You may as well write 100 articles that all have the headlines May be the missing girl and just change the name for the specific missing girl.
  • MrNetvestor 12 hours ago
    When someone goes missing an effort should be made to collect and post that individual's DNA to a central Database of some type. Then when a body is found, ANYWHERE, it can be matched up relatively quickly.
  • The Truth 2 hours 33 minutes ago
    It was Prince William in the drawing room with a night stick.
  • Star 7 hours ago
    For all of whom are suggesting the royal family had anything to do with this... would it not be kind of stupid for them to leave the body of the victim on their property? Let's leave this investigation to the professionals, shall we?
  • Kent 7 hours ago
    This is making the headlines and causing such a stir, wonder what would happen if, heaven forbid, they should ever find a dead body within a mile of the white house. hmmm!
  • Jason S 123 3 hours ago
    Ritual sacrifice within the royal reptillian bloodlines? Nothing new here folks been going on for ages except it leaked out this time. They own the media so you will never get the true story.
  • Chalis 15 minutes ago
    Two bodies in two years? Maybe they should look around for more bodies.
  • 13 hours ago
    Does anyone check these things?
  • UCANTFIXSTUPID 13 hours ago
    " Boyd found on Queen's estate may be missing 17-year-old girl." Wow, someone who spells as poorly as I do.
  • BeatsMe 16 minutes ago
    I wonder if every retarded person on Earth is somhow drawn to posting here.
  • dont have a clue 22 minutes ago
    I have always wanted -to say this "the bulter did it"
  • Anthony 1 hour 17 minutes ago
    Anyone that does not support the freedom movement is asking for a KING.
  • yesiinhale 13 hours ago
    The boyd is the woyd.
  • Ol_gnome 3 hours ago
    Seriously, y'all mean their nose cannot tell the different between decomposed body and smoked carps.
  • MovingOn 4 hours ago
    Mr Mustard in the library with a candlestick
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