Bones Confirmed as Those of Missing Atheist O'Hair

Authorities confirm identities of remains found on a Texas ranch as those of murdered Madalyn Murray O'Hair and kin.

BY: Jim Vertuno

AUSTIN, Texas, March 15 (AP) -- Ending the mystery of the 1995 disappearance of Madalyn Murray O'Hair, federal authorities confirmed on Thursday that bones dug up from a ranch in January are those of the atheist leader and two family members.

O'Hair was America's best-known atheist. In the 1960s, she took part in successful court battles to ban prayer and Bible-reading in U.S. public schools. She called herself the most hated woman in America.

Forensic scientists used medical and dental records to identify the remains of O'Hair, 76, her son Jon Garth Murray, 40, and Robin Murray O'Hair, 30, her granddaughter.

A stainless-steel artificial hip that was pulled from the ground was among the evidence used to identify the elder O'Hair, who had hip replacement surgery in 1988.

"This certainly gives us some closure," Roderick Beverly, agent in charge of the FBI's San Antonio office.

The family disappeared from San Antonio in 1995 along with $500,000 in gold coins. Investigators believe they were kidnapped, robbed and killed, and their bodies were cut up and dumped on a ranch near Camp Wood, about 125 miles (200 kilometers) from San Antonio.

Of the four suspects believed to have taken part in the plot, one is dead, allegedly at the hand of his partners, and three others have been convicted of various charges, including extortion. None of them has been convicted of kidnapping, and no murder charges have been filed.

The cause of death could not be determined with certainly for any of the victims, though Jon Murray appeared to have suffered a blow to the head. And a plastic bag found over his skull suggested he might also have been suffocated, said David Glassman, chairman of anthropology at Southwest Texas State University, who worked on identifying the remains.

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