In an extraordinary twist, a man discovered frozen in a Pennsylvania cave nearly 50 years ago has now been identified.
Known as the “Pinnacle Man,” he was found by hikers on January 16, 1977, at the Appalachian mountain peak.
Initially, the autopsy concluded that he had died from a drug overdose with no signs of foul play. However, the authorities faced challenges in identifying him due to lost or misplaced evidence, including dental records, fingerprints, and personal belongings.
Berks County Coroner John Fielding reported that the case was revisited multiple times over the past 15 years, with detectives comparing information against missing persons records through fingerprints and dental X-rays.
The breakthrough came in August 2019 when dental records linked the body to missing persons reports from Florida and Illinois.
Following the exhumation and forensic examinations at Reading Hospital, Grubb’s fingerprints were finally matched to a missing person case in August 2024.
The FBI confirmed the identification, and a family member later verified it.
Fielding highlighted that this resolution provides much-needed closure for the family, underlining the significance of identifying and providing answers for unidentified individuals.