• The body of
Amy Mihaljevic (10) was found in
Ruggles Township, Ohio, on 8 February 1990. She had been abducted from a
Bay Village shopping center three months earlier. No suspects have ever been named, although police have been exploring some leads in recent years. •
Chaskel Werzberger was shot in the head during a carjacking in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, on 8 February 1990. David Ranta was wrongfully convicted of the murder in 1991 and served 23 years before his conviction was vacated and the indictment dismissed in 2013 due to police misconduct and unreliable testimony. The perpetrator remains unidentified. • Despite extensive investigation and publicity, the gunmen who
killed five people, including two children, at a
Las Cruces, New Mexico, bowling alley on 10 February 1990, have never been identified or apprehended. • Michael Fleming (19) was shot and killed on 24 February 1990 by an assailant near a
reggae nightclub on the North Side of
Chicago; despite having an
alibi and physical differences from a description of the killer,
Lathierial Boyd was picked out of a lineup and later convicted. Subsequent investigations and media reports found significant flaws in the initial prosecution, and Boyd was later exonerated after more than 20 years in prison. Following his exoneration, the original murder case remains unsolved. •
Cornell Gunter (53), an American
rhythm and blues singer from
Coffeyville, Kansas, died after being shot on 26 February 1990 while he sat in his car. Who killed him is unknown. •
Çetin Emeç (54–55) was a Turkish journalist and columnist, who was assassinated on 7 March 1990, by persons unknown. The case has not been solved. • John Evers Robinson, also known as "Rokked" (24), a musician in a Connecticut
hardcore trio named Sold On Murder, was bludgeoned to death on 12 March 1990. His body was found two days later in a locked office space in downtown
New Haven, Connecticut. The case is currently unsolved. • Canadian-American weapons designer
Gerald Bull (62) died in
Brussels, Belgium, on 22 March 1990, two days after being shot several times near his apartment. It has been speculated that the Israeli
Mossad was behind his death, as they may have believed his work for
Saddam Hussein's Iraq might allow that country to develop weapons that could be used against their country, after he had refused to work with Israel. Other theories have implicated Iraq itself, Iran, the U.S. or other countries he was known to have dealt with. The identities of the killers remain unknown. •
Lü Wei (23–24), a female Chinese
diver who was a gold medalist in
Universiade and
Asian Games from 1982 to 1987 who while at her friend's house on 9 May 1990, was murdered along with the friend. The killers were never found. •
Mami Matsuda (4), a Japanese girl from
Ashikaga,
Tochigi Prefecture,
Japan, went missing on 12 May 1990 from a
pachinko parlor, and was later found dead at the
Watarase River which was located nearby. Whoever killed Matsuda is unknown. •
Kelly Tan Ah Hong (21) was a Singaporean who was killed by one of the two men who attacked both Tan and her boyfriend while they were having a date at Amber Beacon Tower inside
East Coast Park on May 15, 1990. Although the male victim, 22-year-old James Soh Fook Leong, survived despite being stabbed on the back, Tan died after her assailant(s) knifed her on the neck, causing her to bleed to death. The motive for the attack was suspected to be robbery despite the victims not losing anything. A coroner's court issued a verdict of murder by an unknown person(s) two years after Tan's killing. Despite extensive police investigations and public appeals by the family and authorities, the killer(s) were never caught and the murder remains unsolved as of today. • French Baptist minister
Joseph Doucé (45) disappeared on 19 July 1990 and was found dead in a forest in October 1990, two months after he was last seen being led away from his apartment by men who claimed to be police officers. No suspect has ever been identified. •
Alexander Men (55) was a
Russian Orthodox priest, theologian, biblical scholar and writer on theology, Christian history and other religions. He was murdered early on 9 September 1990 by an ax-wielding assailant outside his home in Semkhoz, Russia. The case is currently unsolved. • The
Bowraville murders is the name given to three deaths that occurred over five months from 13 September 1990, to 18 February 1991, in
Bowraville, New South Wales, Australia. All three victims were
Aboriginal. All three victims disappeared after parties in the Aboriginal community in Bowraville, in an area known as The Mission. Two of the victims were later found dead. A local labourer, who was regarded by police as the prime suspect, was charged with two of the murders but was acquitted following trials in 1994 and 2006. On 13 September 2018, the
New South Wales Court of Criminal Appeal decided that the man could not be retried for the murders. The murders remain unsolved. •
Roy Francis Adkins (42), English gangster from
Hammersmith,
London, was murdered in
Amsterdam on 28 September 1990 by unknown people after being shot. •
Danny Rodriguez (22), whose stage name was "D-Boy Rodriguez", was an American
Christian rap artist who was murdered in
Dallas, Texas on 6 October 1990 by persons unknown. The murder remains unsolved. •
Bahriye Üçok (70–71) was a
Turkish academic of theology, left-wing politician, writer, columnist, and
women's rights activist whose assassination on 6 October 1990 remains unresolved. •
Janie Perrin (73) was sexually assaulted and murdered on 2 November 1990, in her home in
Bourke, a town in the
Far West of the Australian state of
New South Wales. The crime remains unsolved and the
New South Wales Government offered a reward of $100,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of those responsible. •
Carole Soltysiak (13), French teenage girl was found dead on 18 November 1990 was discovered in a forest that is close to
Montceau-les-Mines. Her killer is unknown. • On 20 November 1990, the body of
Susan Poupart was discovered in Wisconsin's
Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest, six months after she had last been seen leaving a party in
Lac du Flambeau. The two men she was last seen with have been considered suspects. Charges against one led to several hearings in 2007, but were dropped after witnesses failed to testify. • The
Teteringen Girl (15–25) is an unidentified female murder victim discovered on 25 December 1990 in
Teteringen, in a forest and was missing certain clothes. Her killer is not known. •
Enrique Bermúdez (58), also known as "Comandante 380", was a
Nicaraguan who founded and commanded the Nicaraguan
Contras. In this capacity, he became a central figure in one of the most prominent conflicts of the
Cold War. On 16 February 1991, Bermudez was assassinated in
Managua, by persons unknown. •
Five boys aged 9 through 13 went to the woods around South Korea's Mount Waryong on 26 March 1991, to hunt for
salamanders (which became known as frogs because salamanders were not known that well at that time) and never returned. Despite a massive search of the mountain and surroundings, their bodies were not found until 2002, after an anonymous phone call led police to an area that had already been searched near the boys' village. At first, it was theorized that they had died of exposure, a conclusion disputed by their families since the boys knew that area well and their clothes had been tied in knots. An autopsy showed that four had died of blows to the head and the other had been killed with a shotgun. Although the
statute of limitations on the case expired in 2006, police continue to investigate for historical reasons. • On 1 April 1991, at 23:30,
Detlev Rohwedder, president of the German organization
Treuhandanstalt, was shot and killed through a window on the first floor of his house in the suburb of
Düsseldorf-Niederkassel by the first of three rifle shots.
West German far-left militant group
Red Army Faction (RAF) claimed responsibility for this act, but the sniper was never identified. In 2001, a DNA analysis found that hair strands from the crime scene belonged to RAF member
Wolfgang Grams. However, the attorney general did not consider this evidence sufficient to name Grams as a suspect of the killing. •
Karmein Chan (13) was abducted from her family's home in
Templestowe, Victoria on 13 April 1991 by an unidentified man who was later dubbed "
Mr. Cruel" by
Melbourne newspapers. Her body was discovered on 9 April 1992, in
Thomastown; she had been shot in the head. Although
Victoria Police knew a great deal about the perpetrator from previous, non-fatal child abductions and rapes dating back to 1985, there has never been enough evidence to charge any of the 27,000 men interviewed at the time. The case is still open, with a second police operation, Taskforce Apollo, formed in 2010 to examine new evidence and material from the original Operation Spectrum. If the perpetrator is still alive, he would be between approximately 60 and 75 years old in 2014. The murder of Karmein Chan is still one of the most extensive and expensive investigations in Victorian history, with a combination of investigative errors and the perpetrator's precautions preventing his identification and arrest. •
Mary Joe Frug (50), a feminist professor teaching at
New England Law Boston, was attacked and stabbed to death by an unknown assailant on the streets of
Cambridge, Massachusetts on 4 April 1991. Her killer has not been found. •
Tuula Lukkarinen (28) disappeared on the morning of 17 April 1991 after leaving a
Kellokoski psychiatrist hospital where she had been staying as an inpatient, planning to travel to
Hyrylä to attend a meeting about her son's custody case. The following day, Lukkarinen's mutilated body was discovered by a landowner in Hikiä. Police also recovered her handbag and a possible murder weapon at the scene. •
Ioan P. Culianu (41), a
Romanian American professor of religion at the
University of Chicago, was shot in the back of the head in a bathroom of the university's divinity school building on 21 May 1991. While rightist Romanian nationalists in the then-new Romanian government of
Ion Iliescu, some of whom openly celebrated his death, and members of the Communist-era
Securitate intelligence service were suspected, along with occultists who also clashed with Culianu, no one has ever been formally identified as one. •
Timothy Wiltsey (5) disappeared on 25 May 1991 while visiting a carnival in
Sayreville, New Jersey with his mother, Michelle Lodzinski. His body was found in
Edison in April 1992. His death was ruled to be a homicide. Lodzinski was convicted of Timothy's murder 23 years later, but her conviction was overturned in 2021; no other suspects were identified. •
Penny Bell (43) was an English businesswoman who was murdered on 6 June 1991 in the car park of Gurnell Leisure Centre,
Greenford,
London on 6 June 1991. She was stabbed over fifty times as she sat behind the wheel of her car. There were a few witnesses in the case, one of them came forward six months after the murder and claimed he saw Bell driving into the car park with a passenger, and mouthing an appeal for help, which he ignored. Despite some potential suspects, her murder remains unsolved. •
Hitoshi Igarashi (44), a Japanese scholar of Arabic and Persian literature and history and the Japanese translator of
Salman Rushdie's novel
The Satanic Verses, was murdered on 12 July 1991 in
Tsukuba, Ibaraki in the wake of
fatwas issued by Iranian
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini calling for the death of the book's author and "those involved in its publication." • A retired police officer accused of
killing four security guards in the course of stealing $200,000 from the United Bank Tower in downtown
Denver, Colorado on 14 June 1991 was acquitted the following year. He died in 2013; the case remains open. •
Mandy Lemaire (11) disappeared form
Tazlina, Alaska on 22 August 1991 and was found dead ten days later after being killed. Suspect Charles Smithart was charged and convicted with killing her, but the decision was overturned and he later died from
lung cancer, leaving her case unsolved. • The body of
Robert Donati (51), a Boston-area mobster believed to have masterminded the
theft of $500 million worth of art from the
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum the year before, was found beaten and stabbed multiple times in the trunk of his car on 24 September 1991, three days after he had last been seen alive leaving his nearby home in
Revere, Massachusetts. He was likely a casualty of an ongoing war for control of the
Patriarca crime family, but no suspects have ever been charged with the crime. •
Igor Talkov (34) was a
Russian rock singer-songwriter, who was shot backstage at the
Yubileiny concert hall in
Leningrad on 6 October 1991. While Valeriy Schlyafman, Talkov's one time manager, was found guilty of the murder by a
Russian court, he fled via Ukraine to Israel before he could be arrested. He remains in Israel to this day, insisting he is not guilty of the crime while Israel refuses to extradite him. Schlyafman and his supporters have claimed that the
KGB orchestrated the murder. Since no one has been charged and it is unclear for sure who the true killer is, the case remains unsolved. •
Wilson dos Santos had served as the representative of the National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (
UNITA), a rebel group in
Angola, to
Portugal. He was murdered in November 1991 by unknown persons. The case remains unsolved. • Three-month-old
Kristie Fischer was killed in a house fire at her family home in
Thornwood, New York on 1 December 1991. The authorities concluded the fire had been deliberately set by someone inside the house. The only other person in the house at the time was Olivia Riner, the Fischer family's nanny, who was prosecuted the following year but was acquitted after the defense argued that the fire was likely started by an intruder, possibly the boyfriend of Kristie's sister. • On 5 December 1991, the dead body of
Heinz Bonn, a professional German football player who today is considered the
first professional German football player known to be homosexual, was found in his apartment in the
Hanover district of
Linden. After last being seen alive in Hannover on 27 November 1991, it was estimated that Bonn, who had been stabbed multiple times, had died a week prior to his body being found. The culprit for Bonn's murder has never been found. •
Katrien De Cuyper (15) disappeared on her way home in
Antwerp, Belgium, on the night of 17 December 1991. Her body was found buried in the
port of Antwerp six months later. In 1997,
Regina Louf confessed to killing De Cuyper while being part of a "paedophile network", but no concrete evidence was found to support her testimony. In 2006, a 35-year-old man was arrested and charged with De Cuyper's kidnapping and murder after it was established that he had written anonymous letters about her to a magazine, but he was later released due to a lack of evidence. •
Joe Cole (30),
roadie, was shot and killed on 19 December 1991, during a robbery outside the
Venice Beach, California, home he shared with
Black Flag lead singer
Henry Rollins, who was present and escaped. No suspects have ever been identified. • James Howard Conklin (42), known as
Kane County John Doe, was thought to have been murdered in 1992. His body was found in 1994 and identified in 2024. •
Akio Kashiwagi was a wealthy Tokyo-based real estate investor who was known for the large amounts of money he wagered at Las Vegas and Atlantic City casinos. On 3 January 1992, he was killed by being stabbed as many as 150 times with a samurai sword. His body was discovered in his home in Japan near
Mount Fuji. According to a story published in
Politico magazine, Kashiwagi owed
Donald Trump $4 million in unrecovered gambling debts. The murder remains unsolved. •
Albert Glock (66), a
Lutheran biblical archaeologist who had spent 17 years in
Jerusalem and the
West Bank as a part of various expeditions, was shot and killed in
Ramallah on 9 January 1992. Neither reason for the murder nor who did it was reliably identified, though it is thought that
Hamas could have been responsible. • A
suicide bomber drove a truck filled with explosives into
the Israeli embassy in Argentina on 17 March 1992, killing 29 in the deadliest attack ever on an Israeli diplomatic mission. Argentinian officials said they strongly believed Iran was behind the attack. They have not formally prosecuted any suspects, though they suspected that
Imad Mughniyah was involved in both this attack and the deadlier
AMIA bombing two years later. •
Anjelica Castillo (4) was discovered in a cooler in
Manhattan, New York on 23 July 1991, several days after her death. The victim remained unidentified for 22 years. Her cousin, Conrado Juarez, was arrested for her murder and sexual assault after the remains were identified in 2013. Juarez would later claim his confession was coerced and he died before his trial in 2018, changing his plea to "not guilty". Juarez died in police custody on 19 November 2018, from pancreatic cancer. • Exiled Iranian dissident
Fereydoun Farrokhzad (53) was found dead of multiple stab wounds in his house in
Bonn, Germany, on 13 August 1992. The autopsy established that he had been killed five days earlier. No one has ever been named as a suspect although it is widely believed that he was killed at the behest of the Iranian government. Prior to his murder, Farrokzhad had been involved in producing an opposition radio program and reportedly received death threats. In his show at the
Royal Albert Hall in London, he had criticized
Ruhollah Khomeini and made fun of Khomeini's obsession with sex in his
Ressaleh book. He had consequently received death threats and there were concerns for his safety. • Holly Staker (11), who had been babysitting two younger children in the
Chicago satellite city of
Waukegan,
Illinois, was sexually assaulted and murdered on 17 August 1992. In a series of trials and re-trials upon appeal, nearby resident
Juan Rivera was convicted of the crime and given a life sentence without parole. His conviction was eventually vacated, however, and he was exonerated when a further examination of the circumstances and physical evidence fully ruled him out as a perpetrator. Investigations later established connections between DNA evidence from the case and another home invasion and murder case from 2000, but no subsequent arrests have yet been made. •
Piotr Jaroszewicz (82), a former Prime Minister of Communist Poland, was found murdered along with his wife Alicja Solska at their home in the
Warsaw suburb of
Anin on 3 September 1992. He had been strangled with a belt, which was still around his neck, after being beaten; his wife had been shot several times with one of the couple's hunting rifles after her hands were tied behind her back. She may have injured one of their attackers, who apparently also tried to kill the couple's dog with poison gas, while fighting back. A safe was left open and documents were taken from it while valuables were left behind. The killings were found to have occurred two days before; friends and family say that Jaroszewicz, who was obsessed with security to begin with, had been acting extremely paranoid in the days before the murders. A group of criminals known as the 'Karate Gang' were put on trial in 2021 for the murder of Jaroszewicz and his wife, but were acquitted in 2024. •
Jeremias Chitunda (50) and
Elias Salupeto Pena were both representatives of the National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (
UNITA), an
anti-Communist rebel group that fought against the People's Movement for the Liberation of Angola (
MPLA) in the
Angolan Civil War, to the Joint Military and Political Commission. Chitunda and Pena were killed on 2 November 1992, and their murder remains unsolved. • Hazelle Fenty (76), an
ordained deacon at Indigo Lakes
Baptist Church in
Daytona Beach,
Florida, was found murdered in the church's nursery on December 4, 1992, her 76th birthday. Her throat had been slit and there were indications of sexual assault, with DNA and other evidence collected at the scene; as of December 2024, detectives had not named specific suspects but confirmed there were two persons of interest connected to the crime. •
Clare Morrison (13) was an Australian girl who was murdered on 19 December 1992 in
Geelong, Victoria. Her near-naked body was discovered by surfers early morning on 19 December near
Bells Beach, bashed, strangled and shark-bitten. As of 2019, the murder remains unsolved. •
Kori Lamaster (17), a formerly unidentified female American murder victim, was killed in 1993 after running away from home. Lamaster was later found dead on 29 January 1994, Lamaster's identity was unknown for the next nineteen years and her murder remains a mystery. • In between 1993 and 2005 it was calculated that more than
370 women were killed in northern
Mexico in a city called
Ciudad Juárez. The killers behind these mass murders remain unknown. •
Uğur Mumcu (50), a
Turkish investigative journalist for the daily
Cumhuriyet, was assassinated on 24 January 1993, by a bomb placed in his car outside his home. His murder remains unsolved. •
Archie Butterley was an Australian fugitive and a sidekick of
Peter Gibb who escaped from jail on 7 March 1993 and was shot dead on 13 March 1993 by persons unknown. The murder remains unsolved. • Retired Canadian professional wrestler Adolfo Bresciano (44), who performed under the name
Dino Bravo, was found dead of multiple gunshot wounds in his
Laval, Quebec, home on 10 March 1993. It is believed by law enforcement and those who knew him that he was killed by the Montreal Mafia over his successful cigarette smuggling business. Officially, no suspects have ever been identified. • In the late hours of 22 April 1993,
Black British teenager
Stephen Lawrence (18) was killed by a group of
White British males in a
racially motivated attack in
London. While the exact number of Stephen Lawrence's killers who remain unidentified is not definitively known, it is widely believed that there were at least five people involved and three of the suspected individuals have never been convicted. The five suspects were identified as Gary Dobson, David Norris, Neil & Jamie Acourt, and Luke Knight. Of these, only Gary Dobson and David Norris were ever convicted; they were found guilty in January 2012 and were given
life sentences in prison. The other three suspects were arrested and charged just weeks after the murder but the charges were dropped in July 1993 due to insufficient evidence. •
Madan Bhandari (41), the General-Secretary when CPN (ML) merged into the Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist–Leninist) in 1991, and the husband of Biddha Devi Bhandari, who was the second president of federal democratic Nepal, died in a car accident on 16 May 1993. His death is suspected of being a murder case. •
Jayne Furlong (17) was a New Zealand teenager from
Auckland who disappeared from a street in Auckland on 26 May 1993, while working in the
sex trade. She had been
abducted and murdered. The case remains unsolved. •
Colin Ridgway (56), the first Australian to play in the
National Football League, was murdered in his
University Park, Texas, home on 13 May 1993. Police suspect that a man serving time in Florida for a 2011 murder committed the crime after being hired by Ridgway's wife and his father; however, they have not found sufficient evidence to arrest anyone. •
Chekannur Maulavi (57), an Indian secular Islamist and founder of the Quran Sannath, was kidnapped and likely murdered by ultra-orthodox Muslim sectarians. While two men were arrested for his murder, they have never been brought to trial and the case is considered unsolved. •
Brett Cantor (25), part-owner of the Dragonfly nightclub in
Hollywood, was found stabbed to death in his nearby home on 30 July 1993; no suspects have ever been identified. The case gained renewed attention a year later when
O. J. Simpson's defense team successfully petitioned the court trying him for the murders of
Nicole Brown Simpson, his ex-wife, and
Ronald Goldman, for access to the case file, on the grounds that the way in which all three were stabbed suggested the same killer. Since Goldman had worked for Cantor as a waiter, and Nicole Simpson was a regular at Dragonfly, some books about the case have raised the possibility that the three killings may also have resulted from involvement in drug trafficking. • The body of
Holly Piirainen (10) was found on 23 October 1993 in the woods of
Brimfield, Massachusetts. She had disappeared in August while visiting her grandparents in nearby
Sturbridge. Police have identified two
persons of interest, one of whom died in 2003, the other of whom has been named in connection with the
Molly Bish murder which occurred several years later in the region. Neither has been named as a suspect in the case, however. •
Đuro Kurepa (86), a Yugoslav mathematician who wrote over 700 academic papers and 1,000 scientific reviews on scientific theory, was beaten to death by thugs in front of his apartment in Belgrade on 2 November 1993. His killers have never been captured. •
Raúl Esnal (37) was a
football defender from
Uruguay, who was murdered on 15 December 1993, in
El Salvador, on the road between Ahuachapán and Acajutla. The murder case has never been solved. •
David Cox (27) was a
U.S. Marine involved in a 1986 hazing incident which was later dramatized in the film
A Few Good Men; he was the only Marine accused to avoid any punishment after he was acquitted by a
court martial. On 5 January 1994, five years after he was honorably discharged, Cox was last seen at his home in
Medfield, Massachusetts, by his girlfriend as she left for work in the morning; when she returned there were some signs that there might have been a struggle and Cox may have left the house in haste. Almost three months later, his body was found, partially clad in Marine-issued clothing which his family says he had not worn since returning to civilian life, in woods just off the
Charles River, shot several times. While police believe he accompanied his killer or killers willingly, they found it unlikely that he was willingly walking a half-mile (800 m) from the nearest road through woods with of newly fallen snow to the site where his body was found wearing just sneakers. Theories as to possible suspects range from former Marines to co-workers to bookies he owed money to. The investigation is continuing. •
Sergei Dubov (54) was a Russian journalist, publisher and entrepreneur;
The Independent called him a "brilliant businessman". He was murdered in Moscow on 1 February 1994. The assassin waited in a phone booth; when Dubov was going to his car in the morning, he was shot in the back of the head. Earlier, Dubov had received threats by telephone and by mail. Dubov's son, Sergei Dubov Jr, aged 15, was killed the year before by being thrown from a 14th floor window. Both murders remain unsolved as their killers are unknown. •
Miran Hrovatin (44) was an Italian photographer and
camera operator killed in
Mogadishu,
Somalia, together with the Italian journalist
Ilaria Alpi (32), under mysterious circumstances on 20 March 1994. In 2000, Somali citizen Hashi Omar Hassan was convicted and sentenced to 26 years in prison for the double murder. In October 2016, a court in Perugia, Italy, reversed the conviction and Hassan was awarded more than three million euros for the wrongful conviction and nearly 17 years he had spent in prison. Both of the murders remain unsolved. • Rwandan president
Juvénal Habyarimana (57) and Burundian president
Cyprien Ntaryamira (39) were both killed, alongside ten other people, when their plane was
shot down over
Kigali by a
surface-to-air missile on 6 April 1994. The assassination was the spark that ignited the
Rwandan genocide. Responsibility for the attack is disputed, with most theories proposing as suspects either the
Tutsi rebel
Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) or government-aligned
Hutu Power followers opposed to negotiation with the RPF. The true perpetrator remains a mystery. •
Dada Vujasinović (30) was a Serbian journalist and reporter for the news magazine
Duga, published in Belgrade. Vujasinović was found dead in her apartment on 8 April 1994, and the murder remains unsolved. • The
Inokashira Park dismemberment incident happened in Japan on 23 April 1994; the people responsible for it remain unknown. • Rachel Gray (4) was brought to the Kino
Community Hospital in south
Tucson,
Pima County,
Arizona on 2 May 1994 from her home in the Desert Vista
Trailer Park on East Benson Highway, showing signs of sexual assault and a fatal abdominal injury of unknown origin; Barry Jones, the boyfriend of her mother, was convicted of the assault and first-degree murder, for which he was sent to
death row. However, questions were later raised about the medical evidence and timing of the assault given Jones' whereabouts, and it was later shown that he could not have been the perpetrator. Although appeals courts recommended a new trial, exoneration was made more difficult by the
Supreme Court's ruling in the
Shinn v. Ramirez case, that complicated introduction of new evidence not already presented in a state case; the state later changed his conviction to second-degree murder considering a failure to bring the girl into the hospital in a more timely fashion given clearly severe injuries, and he was released as a result of time served for the overturned conviction, one of the longest periods (29 years) for a sentence that was later vacated. As a result of the vacated judgment, Rachel Gray's case is now open again, with re-examination of the original evidence and any subsequent leads to find the actual perpetrator of the assault. •
Provisional IRA volunteer
Martin Doherty was gunned down on 21 May 1994 while attempting to prevent members of the
Ulster Volunteer Force planting a bomb in the Widow Scallans pub in
Dublin. •
Savaş Buldan (32–33), a
Turkish citizen of
Kurdish descent, was kidnapped, tortured and killed on 3 June 1994. The murder has never been solved. •
Nicole Brown Simpson (35) and
Ronald Goldman (25) were found dead with multiple stab wounds in front of Simpson's condo in the
Brentwood section of Los Angeles late on the night of 12 June 1994. Her ex-husband, former professional football star
O. J. Simpson, was arrested and charged with the crime two days later; after an
eight-month trial covered heavily by the media, in which the defense argued that there had been extensive mishandling of the evidence and that some investigators were racially biased, he was acquitted. However, strong public sentiment remained that he was guilty, and he was held liable in a suit by the victims' families later. No other suspects have ever been officially named. • David Cullen Bain of
Dunedin, New Zealand, was initially convicted of the 20 June 1994
murder of his parents and three siblings at their home. Prosecutors claimed he had staged the crime to look like his father had committed a
murder-suicide of his family while David was out delivering papers; his defence claimed that murder-suicide was exactly what had happened. With help from former rugby star
Joe Karam, David pursued appeals and was eventually acquitted after a 2009 retrial. Other than David and his father, no other person was suspected. • On July 7, 1994, Bodies of Linda Gibson (21) and Cody Lee Garrett (4) were discovered in high weeds on the edge of a field in
Somerset, Kentucky, On July 3, Linda and Cody were last seen walking at a Dairy Mart on Bourne Ave in Somerset, Kentucky, Some witnesses state that were seen possibly entering a vehicle on Bourne Ave, Family members began concerned and reported them as missing to the Somerset Police Department the next day. No arrests have been made, However, police have found possible suspects. •
Mehdi Dibaj (58–59) was an Iranian former Muslim who later became a
Christian pastor, whose body was discovered west
Tehran in a park on 5 July 1994. after he had been murdered by unknown members of Iran's regime. •
The Gentleman of Heligoland was found beaten and weighed down in waters west of
Heligoland on 11 July 1994. • The 18 July 1994
suicide bombing of a Jewish organization's building in Buenos Aires killed 85, surpassing the similar attack on the Israeli embassy two years earlier as Argentina's deadliest terror attack. Five suspects, four of whom were local police officers, were acquitted in a 2004 trial; the investigating judge was removed from the case and later impeached after it was disclosed that he had paid for evidence. British authorities arrested an Iranian suspect named by Argentina in 2003, but declined to extradite him due to weak evidence. No other suspects have been named although investigations continue, one of which has since led to the unsolved murder of
Alberto Nisman, the investigating prosecutor. • The day after that bombing, another suicide bomber brought down
a plane in Panama, killing 21, 12 of whom were Jews. While an apparently fictitious Arab terrorist organization claimed responsibility, no suspects have ever been identified. • Irish crime boss
Martin "The General" Cahill (45) was shot and killed at a Dublin intersection on 18 August 1994. She was 24 weeks pregnant and showed signs of blunt force trauma. Despite progress in the case in intervening years, police have since been unable to declare a specific suspect or suspects. Her case has helped to draw attention to the hundreds of cases of
murdered or missing indigenous women in the country since 1980, and the work to tackle the many unsolved cases in Ontario and other provinces. •
Dmitry Kholodov (27) was a Russian journalist who investigated corruption in the military and was assassinated on 17 October 1994, in Moscow. His assassination was the first of many
killings of journalists in Russia. The murder remains unsolved. •
Johan Heyns (66), an
Afrikaner Calvinist theologian, was shot and killed from outside his house in
Pretoria, South Africa's capital, while playing cards with his wife and grandchildren on 5 November 1994. While no suspects have ever been identified, it is widely believed the killing was the work of radical white supremacists unhappy with Heyns' increasingly liberal political views, which in addition to opposition to
apartheid had also called for tolerance of homosexuals. •
Segametsi Mogomotsi (14) was a schoolgirl who was found murdered on 6 November 1994, in
Mochudi, Botswana. Her body was found mutilated in an open space. The discovery was followed by many protests at the school she attended. Her murder remains unsolved to this day. •
Igor Platonov (60) was a
Ukrainian–Soviet
Grandmaster of
chess (Soviet Union Grandmaster,
Гроссмейстер СССР). He was active between 1958 and 1984, with his best years from 1967 to 1972, when he earned the Soviet Union Grandmaster title. On 13 November 1994, he was murdered in his
Kyiv apartment by two thieves. The identities of the killers remain unknown. == 1995–1999 ==