A man who was cleared by a polygraph test for the rape and murder of a teenage girl in 1979 has now been linked to the suspect with newfound DNA evidence, authorities revealed.
17-year-old Esther Gonzalez had been walking from her home in Beaumont, Calif., to her sister’s house in Banning, about 85 miles east of Los Angeles, on Feb. 9, 1979, when she was attacked.
The following day, the teen’s body was found dumped in a snowpack off Highway 243, with authorities determining she was raped and then bludgeoned to death, according to the Riverside County District Attorney’s Office.
An unidentified man, described by deputies at the time as “argumentative,” found the body and called the Riverside County Sheriff’s Station, saying he didn’t know if it was a male or female.



Using the semen sample found on Gonzalez’s body 44 years prior and running it through genetic genealogy databases, investigators realized that Williamson had never been cleared through DNA testing because the technology didn’t exist when he passed the polygraph test in 1979.
The sample was sent to the California Department of Justice with the assistance of the Broward County Sheriff’s Office.
“I can’t imagine what it’s like for them,” Corey told the outlet. “That whole family has just been devastated over the years. This is a day in and day in, day out thing. I don’t think this is something that ever got easier for them as time went on.”


