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{ "item_title" : "The Name At Cedar Ridge", "item_author" : [" Ricky Indrawan "], "item_description" : "A cemetery gave investigators a body before it could give them a name.On July 15, 1982, a cemetery worker at Cedar Ridge Cemetery in Blairstown Township, New Jersey, found a young woman near the north end of the grounds, close to woods, an embankment, and a stream. Her face and head had been so badly injured that recognition was impossible, and the earliest record could offer only fragments: clothing, jewelry, a death window, and the aching question of who she had been.For forty years, the public knew her as Princess Doe. The Name At Cedar Ridge returns the story to Dawn Olanick, a seventeen-year-old from Long Island whose identity was separated from her case by violence, time, false leads, and the limits of older forensic work.This is true crime written with restraint, focused not on spectacle but on the discipline of the record. It follows a cold case from Cedar Ridge to Long Island, from a reported possible A&P sighting to the first unidentified-person file, from wrong doors and superseded theories to the later forensic genealogy that helped restore Dawn's name.What can a red shirt, a patterned skirt, a cross necklace, one painted hand, and a missing route tell investigators? What happens when a homicide investigation has a place, a body, and a public name, but not the real name that would lead back to a life?The book traces the forensic through-lines without pretending certainty where the public record remains incomplete. A molar and an eyelash become part of the path toward identification. DNA work opens a door, but the manuscript is careful about what that door did and did not prove: the testing identified Dawn Olanick; the public record does not establish that DNA identified the accused.The legal thread is just as measured. Arthur Kinlaw was charged with first-degree murder in connection with Dawn's death after her identity was restored. Prosecutors alleged that he tried to lure Dawn into prostitution and killed her after she refused, while reported statement material dating to 2005 remains one of the case's central tensions. Yet a charge is not a conviction, and the book keeps allegation, admission, theory, and proof in their proper lanes.This book contains no images-only cinematic narrative written in the style of a detective-investigator.Inside, readers follow the long passage from an unidentified victim to a named young woman, from a New Jersey murder scene to a national memory, from a missing person question to a record that still refuses to close completely. Where was Dawn last reliably seen alive? How did a Long Island teenager reach Blairstown? Was Cedar Ridge the murder site, the disposal site, or both?The Name At Cedar Ridge does not invent Dawn's thoughts, final moments, or private life. It restores the human center of the case while examining the stakes left behind: the route nobody can draw, the reports that cannot be made stronger than they are, and the difference between finding a name and finishing a murder record.This Book Is For Readers Who...Want a victim-centered account that treats Dawn Olanick as a person, not a case labelFollow forensic breakthroughs, family DNA comparison, and careful identification workPrefer investigative pacing over sensational scenes or unsupported reconstructionAre drawn to unresolved timelines, reported sightings, and records that leave hard questions openPerfect For Fans Of...Victim-centered investigative nonfictionForensic identification narrativesUnsolved-to-identified case historiesNew Jersey and Long Island crime historyCourtroom-adjacent reportingAtmospheric documentary-style storytellingThe name came back. The full answer has not.Read The Name At Cedar Ridge and follow the record from the cemetery edge toward the truth still waiting to close.", "item_img_path" : "https://covers2.booksamillion.com/covers/bam/9/79/819/637/9798196374937_b.jpg", "price_data" : { "retail_price" : "14.99", "online_price" : "14.99", "our_price" : "14.99", "club_price" : "14.99", "savings_pct" : "0", "savings_amt" : "0.00", "club_savings_pct" : "0", "club_savings_amt" : "0.00", "discount_pct" : "10", "store_price" : "" } }
The Name At Cedar Ridge|Ricky Indrawan

The Name At Cedar Ridge : Dawn Olanick, the Princess Doe Case, and the Murder Record Still Waiting to Close

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Overview

A cemetery gave investigators a body before it could give them a name.

On July 15, 1982, a cemetery worker at Cedar Ridge Cemetery in Blairstown Township, New Jersey, found a young woman near the north end of the grounds, close to woods, an embankment, and a stream. Her face and head had been so badly injured that recognition was impossible, and the earliest record could offer only fragments: clothing, jewelry, a death window, and the aching question of who she had been.

For forty years, the public knew her as Princess Doe. The Name At Cedar Ridge returns the story to Dawn Olanick, a seventeen-year-old from Long Island whose identity was separated from her case by violence, time, false leads, and the limits of older forensic work.

This is true crime written with restraint, focused not on spectacle but on the discipline of the record. It follows a cold case from Cedar Ridge to Long Island, from a reported possible A&P sighting to the first unidentified-person file, from wrong doors and superseded theories to the later forensic genealogy that helped restore Dawn's name.

What can a red shirt, a patterned skirt, a cross necklace, one painted hand, and a missing route tell investigators? What happens when a homicide investigation has a place, a body, and a public name, but not the real name that would lead back to a life?

The book traces the forensic through-lines without pretending certainty where the public record remains incomplete. A molar and an eyelash become part of the path toward identification. DNA work opens a door, but the manuscript is careful about what that door did and did not prove: the testing identified Dawn Olanick; the public record does not establish that DNA identified the accused.

The legal thread is just as measured. Arthur Kinlaw was charged with first-degree murder in connection with Dawn's death after her identity was restored. Prosecutors alleged that he tried to lure Dawn into prostitution and killed her after she refused, while reported statement material dating to 2005 remains one of the case's central tensions. Yet a charge is not a conviction, and the book keeps allegation, admission, theory, and proof in their proper lanes.

This book contains no images-only cinematic narrative written in the style of a detective-investigator.

Inside, readers follow the long passage from an unidentified victim to a named young woman, from a New Jersey murder scene to a national memory, from a missing person question to a record that still refuses to close completely. Where was Dawn last reliably seen alive? How did a Long Island teenager reach Blairstown? Was Cedar Ridge the murder site, the disposal site, or both?

The Name At Cedar Ridge does not invent Dawn's thoughts, final moments, or private life. It restores the human center of the case while examining the stakes left behind: the route nobody can draw, the reports that cannot be made stronger than they are, and the difference between finding a name and finishing a murder record.

This Book Is For Readers Who...

  • Want a victim-centered account that treats Dawn Olanick as a person, not a case label
  • Follow forensic breakthroughs, family DNA comparison, and careful identification work
  • Prefer investigative pacing over sensational scenes or unsupported reconstruction
  • Are drawn to unresolved timelines, reported sightings, and records that leave hard questions open

Perfect For Fans Of...

  • Victim-centered investigative nonfiction
  • Forensic identification narratives
  • Unsolved-to-identified case histories
  • New Jersey and Long Island crime history
  • Courtroom-adjacent reporting
  • Atmospheric documentary-style storytelling

The name came back. The full answer has not.

Read The Name At Cedar Ridge and follow the record from the cemetery edge toward the truth still waiting to close.

This item is Non-Returnable

Details

  • ISBN-13: 9798196374937
  • ISBN-10: 9798196374937
  • Publisher: Independently Published
  • Publish Date: May 2026
  • Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.59 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 0.83 pounds
  • Page Count: 280

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