Monday, July 29, 2024

University of Georgia Murder Went Unsolved for Decades

The Ghastly Death of Jonathan Foundling

By Robert A. Waters


Killing an Innocent

On January 8, 1996, in the basement of Oglethorpe House Residence Hall, or O-House as it is called, two janitors working in the ground-floor women's restroom discovered a grisly sight. The Athens Banner-Herald reported that "custodians cleaning the bathroom found blood on and around a toilet and droplets leading to the trash can, where they reported finding an infant covered in blood." 

The boy had been born, and murdered, only hours earlier.

The Columbus Ledger-Enquirer reported: "A baby found in a trash can in a dormitory restroom died of a stab wound to the heart, University of Georgia police said Tuesday. The state crime lab in Atlanta determined that the baby was a full-term white male, and was breathing before being stabbed. The baby had numerous other injuries, police said." Those "other injuries" included several more stab wounds.

Detectives, having no way to identify the child, named him "Johnathan Foundling." Appalled at the circumstances of his death, university police devoted much of its efforts to the investigation. Unfortunately, there seemed little to go on. Hundreds of students and staff were questioned, but none could recall a student who looked pregnant.

UGA police would not let the once-healthy 8-pound baby be buried in a  pauper's grave, as is often the case when an unidentified body is found. Officers led a drive to donate money for a funeral and proper burial. The boy was interred at Evergreen Memorial Park in Athens. UGA police served as pallbearers and more than 200 people attended the funeral. 

The child's marker reads, "Gift of God, Johnathan Foundling."

Despite an intense, decades-long investigation, police were unable to identify the child's mother or father.

Secrets Uncovered

On August 4, 2004, hikers walking the Little River Trail in rural Wilkes County, Georgia, found a young woman's body. Next to her corpse, investigators discovered an empty bottle of sleeping pills. Kathryn Anne Grant had been reported missing by a roommate a few days earlier. Detectives from the Georgia Bureau of Investigation concluded she had driven to the area in her Ford F-150 truck, then walked about 200 yards into a dense forest, and ingested the pills. Grant's death was ruled a suicide.

Investigators found no note. For many years, the reason for her death remained a mystery.

In 2021, University of Georgia investigators still had blood samples and the placenta for Baby Johnathan. In an effort to determine the identity of the child's mother and father, detectives sent the evidence to Othram, Inc., a forensics genealogy lab in Texas. After months of genetic testing, the company got a hit.

The Banner-Herald reported that the lab found the names of two brothers, one of whom would likely be the father of the infant. One of the men (whose name has not been made public) admitted to detectives that in 1995, while a student at UGA, he'd had sex with a student matching the description of the dead girl, but could not remember her full name. He said he thought her last name was "Grant." The man stated that the affair was brief, and he didn't know she was pregnant.

After taking DNA from the father of Kathryn Grant, and comparing it with the murdered child's DNA, UGA finally learned some of the sordid facts surrounding the infanticide. 

Kathryn Grant lived in O-House at the time where she majored in Veterinary Science. Somehow, she was able to hide her pregnancy from roommates and others. After the child's murder, Grant's grades began to fall, and she soon left UGA. Grant later got her degree from another university and worked as a veterinary technologist for the Exotic Animal, Wildlife and Zoological Medical Service at the UGA College of Veterinary Science until her death.

Somehow, Grant managed to live with her conscience for eight years. Then she drove into an isolated patch of woods and killed herself. While there was no note, it's likely the killing of her infant son tore at her soul, night and day, until she could no longer stand it.

NOTE: Webster dictionary defines foundling as "an infant found after its unknown parents have abandoned it."

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