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Ohio Attorney General says 'it's fair' to call Arizona man a serial killer

DNA links Samuel Legg to several Ohio cold cases
Posted at 3:54 PM, Feb 21, 2019
and last updated 2019-02-21 17:54:44-05

Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost said, "it's fair" to call Samuel Legg a serial killer and believes more indictments are coming against the former long-distance truck driver.

Legg lived in Arizona for years after the murders and a rape in the 1990s. Records show Legg lived at multiple addresses in Southern Arizona, including in Tucson, Sierra Vista, Benson and in Chandler.

During an interview at the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation lab in Richfield, Yost was asked how many murders Legg could be connected to.

"It's an open question at the moment. There may be more than three (in Ohio)," Yost said.

Yost praised scientists at the Richfield and London labs for using familial DNA to unlock multiple cold case mysteries.

"The familial DNA is how we were able to work step by step by step to Samuel Legg," he said.

The AG explained that BCI agents had a DNA sample from an unsolved murder that happened in the '90s. The location of that homicide hasn't been revealed.

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Investigators didn't have a DNA match to link a suspect, but a few months ago, scientists used specialized computer software program to compare the DNA sample against a database that stores DNA records of 800,000 Ohio offenders.

The results revealed an intriguing family connection — a shared DNA profile.

"There was a brother who had been convicted of a completely unrelated crime, so his DNA was already in the database," Yost said.

After that, an extensive family tree investigation was launched, and police zeroed in on Legg, who had been a possible suspect in a 1997 rape of a 17-year-old girl in Westfield Township but wasn't prosecuted.

Armed with the new familial information, Medina County detectives flew to Arizona and obtained a DNA swab from Legg.

BCI did further testing and got a match that linked Legg to not only the 1997 rape but also to four unsolved homicides — three in Ohio and one in Illinois.

RELATED: Samuel Legg's DNA linked to 4 homicides, and authorities say it's possible there are more< /span>

Legg, 49, appeared in Medina County Common pleas last week on two counts of rape.

Hours later, he was indicted for the 1992 Mahoning County murder of Sharon Kedzierski. Her badly beaten body was found behind a truck stop.

Yost declined to release the other Ohio jurisdictions that are investigating Legg for old murders.

"We think that the other homicides, in due course, will be indicted as well."

In the meantime, Yost stressed the work in the crime lab and by multiple agencies is bringing justice to several families that have waited decades to get it.

"Justice happens one case at a time. Never on accident. Always on purpose."