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Spokane Police Department Sgt. Zac Storment talks during a press conference Friday about solving the Candy Rogers cold case.
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Spokane police Sgt. Zac Storment stands at the lectern Friday during a news conference about the Candy Rogers cold case while John Reigh Hoff’s daughter, Cathie, talks on the TV screen to his left.
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Spokane Police Chief Craig Meidl sits Friday during the Candy Rogers news conference in downtown Spokane while Candy Rogers’ cousin, who police did not name, appears on the TV screen and wipes tears from her eyes.
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Spokane Police Department Sgt. Zac Storment talks during a downtown Spokane conference Friday about solving the Candy Rogers cold case.
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Spokane police Sgt. Zac Storment points to a map Friday while talking about solving the Candy Rogers case.
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Candy Rogers was just 9 years old in 1959 when John Reigh Hoff raped and murdered her.
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The Spokane Police Department on Friday announced that John Reigh Hoff murdered 9-year-old Candy Rogers in 1959. The case had been unsolved for more than six decades.
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David Mittelman, CEO of Othram, talks Friday during the Candy Rogers press conference about how his company was able to use advanced DNA analysis techniques to help identify Rogers' killer.
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Former Spokane Police Department officer Richard Olberding, second from right, and his wife Dorothy, listen Friday to the Candy Rogers press conference in downtown Spokane. Olberding and his partner found Rogers' body.
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Former deputy prosecutor Frank Hayes Johnson, left, former Spokane Police Department Detective Brian Hamond and Washington State Patrol Forensic Scientist Brittany Wright watch the Candy Rogers press conference Friday in downtown Spokane. Each of the three played a role in solving the Candy Rogers case.
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Spokane Police Department Sgt. Zac Storment talks Friday during the Candy Rogers press conference in downtown Spokane.
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Spokane Police Department Sgt. Zac Storment talks Friday during the Candy Rogers press conference in downtown Spokane.
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Boxes of Camp Fire Girl mints sit on display Friday during the Candy Rogers press conference in downtown Spokane. Rogers went missing while selling the mints.
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Spokane Police Department Sgt. Zac Storment talks Friday about solving the Candy Rogers cold case.
Colin Tiernan The Spokesman-Review Buy this photo
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