Advertisement
Advertisement
A photo of Sherri Ann Jarvis

Sherri Ann Jarvis 1966 - 1980

Sherri Ann Bremer Jarvis of Forest Lake, Washington County, Minnesota United States was born on March 9, 1966 to Melvin Lloyd Bremer and Karolynn Jean Zinski. She had siblings Danny Lee Zinski, Jodi Lynn Bauer, and Don Jarvis. Sherri Bremer Jarvis died at age 14 years old on November 1, 1980 in Huntsville, Texas, and was buried on January 16, 1981 at Oakwood Cemetery (Adickes Addition) - in Huntsville, Walker County.
Sherri Ann Bremer Jarvis
“Tati”, Walker County Jane Doe
Forest Lake, Washington County, Minnesota United States
March 9, 1966
Minnesota, United States
November 1, 1980
Huntsville, Texas, United States
ADVERTISEMENT BY ANCESTRY.COM
This page exists for YOU
and everyone who remembers Sherri.
Share what you know,
even ask what you wish you knew.
Invite others to do the same,
but don't worry if you can't...
Someone, somewhere will find this page,
and we'll notify you when they do.

Sherri Ann Bremer Jarvis' History: 1966 - 1980

Uncover new discoveries and connections today by sharing about people & moments from yesterday.
  • Introduction

    Sherri Ann Jarvis was born on March 9, 1966, to Karolynn "Kerry" Jean Zinski and Melvin "Tim" Lloyd Bremer Jr. Her stepfather was Donald Jarvis, and she took his last name along with at least one of her siblings. She grew up in Forest Lake, Minnesota, and went to Forest View Elementary and Central Junior High School. Around 1979, Sherri was removed from her parents' care because of chronic truancy. She was sent to a youth crisis shelter in Stillwater, Minnesota. However, around her 14th birthday in 1980, she ran away before a court hearing. She spent months on her own, and in August 1980, she wrote to her mother, saying she planned to come home between the ages of 18 and 21. Unfortunately, by Halloween, she was killed by an unknown assailant. On November 1, 1980, a truck driver found her body near the Sam Houston National Forest, lying face-down in the grass about 20 feet from Interstate Highway 45, two miles north of Huntsville. The driver called the police at 9:20 a.m. to report his discovery. She had been dead for about six hours, putting her time of death around 3:20 a.m. She was wearing a rectangular brown pendant with a smoky blue or brown glass stone on a thin gold chain around her neck. High-heeled red leather sandals with light brown straps, which she had been seen carrying earlier, were also found nearby. The rest of her clothing was missing. The coroner determined that she died from asphyxia due to ligature strangulation, likely with pantyhose. Fragments of the pantyhose and her underwear were found inside her vaginal cavity, probably to prevent bleeding while her body was moved. She had been sexually assaulted with a large blunt object both vaginally and anally before her death. There was no biological evidence of conventional rape. She was also severely beaten, with visible bruises, swollen lips and right eyelid, and a deep bite mark on her right shoulder. On January 16, 1981, Sherri was buried in the Adickes Addition at Oakwood Cemetery after an open-casket funeral. The cemetery is in the same city where her body was found. She was buried under a tombstone that read, "Unknown white female. Died Nov. 1, 1980." Recently, a new tombstone was placed at her grave, see Sherri Ann Jarvis Gravesite, including her name, nickname, photograph, and the inscription "Never alone and loved by many." Read more at Walker County Sheriff's Office and Othram Team to Identify Walker County Jane Doe.
  • 03/9
    1966

    Birthday

    March 9, 1966
    Birthdate
    Minnesota United States
    Birthplace
  • Ethnicity & Family History

    Polish, German ancestry
  • Nationality & Locations

    She grew up in Forest Lake, Minnesota.
  • Early Life & Education

    She attended Forest View Elementary and Central Junior High School. Known as "Tati" to her friends, Jarvis had been placed under state custody at age 13 due to habitual truancy and ran away shortly after her 14th birthday. Her last contact with her family was a letter sent to her mother from Denver in August 1980, expressing frustrations with being in state custody but intending to return home eventually.
  • Personal Life & Family

    Sherri Ann was born on March 9, 1966 to Melvin Lloyd Bremer and Karolynn Jean Zumbrunnen. She had siblings Danny Lee Zinski, Jodi Lynn Bauer, and Don Jarvis. She was removed from her parents’ care circa 1979, due to chronic truancy. She was sent to a youth crisis shelter in Stillwater, Minnesota, but around her 14th birthday in 1980, she ran away prior to a court hearing she was due to attend. Sherri spent months on her own. Around August 1980, she sent her mother a letter, stating her intentions to return home when she was between 18 and 21 years of age. By Halloween, she met unfortunate circumstances and was killed by an unknown assailant. In 2020, the Walker County Sheriff's Office teamed up with Othram Incorporated to try to identify Walker County Jane Doe through genetic genealogy. Initially, they couldn't extract usable genetic material from her remains, but testing on her preserved tissue samples produced usable DNA. This DNA helped create a genetic profile and build a family tree, leading to the identification of her living relatives. DNA swabs from these relatives confirmed the identity of Walker County Jane Doe in 2021. On November 9, 2021, the Walker County Sheriff's Office officially announced that Walker County Jane Doe was 14-year-old Sherri Ann Jarvis, who had run away from Stillwater, Minnesota, in 1980. At the formal announcement, her family thanked those dedicated to identifying Jarvis and providing them with long-awaited answers. They also thanked those who visited her grave while she was unidentified and expressed hope that her murderer(s) would be brought to justice.
  • 11/1
    1980

    Death

    November 1, 1980
    Death date
    Homicide by ligature strangulation
    Cause of death
    Huntsville, Texas United States
    Death location
  • 01/16
    1981

    Gravesite & Burial

    January 16, 1981
    Funeral date
    Oakwood Cemetery (Adickes Addition) - in Huntsville, Walker County, Texas United States
    Burial location
  • share
    Memories
    below
Advertisement
Advertisement

8 Memories, Stories & Photos about Sherri

Sherri Ann Jarvis Gravesite
Sherri Ann Jarvis Gravesite
Date & Place: at Oakwood Cemetery in Huntsville, Walker County, Texas 77320, United States
Comments
Leave a comment
The simple act of leaving a comment shows you care.
Walker County Sheriff's Office and Othram Team to Identify Walker County Jane Doe
14-year old Sherri Ann Jarvis was found hours after being sexually assaulted and murdered in 1980, but it took decades to restore her identity

In the early morning of November 1st, 1980, a truck driver traveling past the Sam Houston National Forest, came upon the body of a young girl lying face down, in a grassy area adjacent to Interstate Highway 45. The young girl was found without clothes and there were few items recovered at the crime scene. There was a necklace found around her neck, a pair of red leather sandals, and some pantyhose that were likely used to strangle her. A forensic investigation revealed that she was viciously sexually assaulted, beaten, and then strangled -- likely only hours before her discovery.

News of the brutal murder traveled swiftly and many people came forward with stories of a teenager that was seen the day before, in the area, asking for directions to the Ellis prison unit. She had been described as wearing jeans and a yellow shirt with large pockets. Others reported that she might have been hitchhiking near a truck stop and looking to meet up with a friend. In spite of the many accounts and sightings, no one was able to identify who the young girl was. Weeks after her discovery and with all leads exhausted, she was buried at the Adickes Addition at Oakwood Cemetery, in January 1981. Although no one knew her name, she was never forgotten, and she became known as Walker County Jane Doe.

In 1999, the young girl's body was exhumed to perform updated forensic testing, including DNA testing that included STR and mtDNA markers; however there were no matches found in the forensic databases. There were multiple forensic facial reconstructions prepared, including sketches by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children in 2012 and then again in 2015, but none of these ever yielded productive leads, and the case remained cold. Her case was entered into NamUs as UP4630. In 2015, the case was officially reopened by the Walker County Sheriff's Office. Walker County Detective Tom Bean has tirelessly worked the case since then, and in the course of the investigation, dozens of missing girls have been excluded through DNA testing as being Walker County Jane Doe.

In 2020, the Walker County Sheriff's Office contracted Othram to employ advanced DNA testing to help generate new leads in the case. A multi-agency team consisting of the Walker County Sheriff's Office, the Houston FBI office, the Texas Rangers, and the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children worked together to identify suitable evidence that might be used to identify Walker County Jane Doe. Early attempts to derive suitable DNA extract from skeletal remains disinterred in 1999 were unsuccessful.

Ultimately, formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue was key to enabling her identification. This material was sent to Othram's laboratory, where Othram scientists used a proprietary DNA extraction and damage remediation approach to develop enough suitable DNA to proceed with DNA testing. Othram used Forensic-Grade Genome Sequencing® to develop a comprehensive genealogical profile from the tissue. The tissue had been formalin-fixed and this preservation process had chemically damaged the DNA that was recovered. Multiple rounds of testing were required to collect enough information to build a suitable DNA profile. The Othram genealogy team then used the DNA profile to perform a genealogical research, and returned investigative leads to Detective Tom Bean.

Empowered by fresh leads, Detective Tom Bean located candidate family members of Walker County Jane Doe and through discussion with the family determined a possible identity of the young girl. DNA swabs of a close relative were collected and sent to Othram and a government lab. Othram used KinSNP™ testing to confirm that familial relationship and this relationship was secondarily confirmed again by the government lab.

After 40 years, Walker County Jane Doe was confirmed to be 14-year old Sherri Ann Jarvis, who went missing from Stillwater, Minnesota in the early part of 1980. The Walker County Sheriff's Office is continuing its investigation into the circumstances of Sherri's disappearance and brutal murder. They hope to identify the person or persons responsible for her death. If you know anything that might aid the investigation, you are encouraged to contact the Walker County Sheriff's Office at 936-435-2400.

Published November 09 by Michael Vogen
Comments
Leave a comment
The simple act of leaving a comment shows you care.
After being found dead in Huntsville in 1980, we finally know this teen's name
Sherri Ann Jarvis was from Stillwater, Minnesota. When she arrived in Texas, she asked for directions to a prison

WALKER COUNTY, Texas (KTRK) -- A young teen known as the "Walker County Jane Doe" has finally been identified in a cold case that has haunted a Texas town and pained a family for the last 41 years.

Investigators said the girl, who was 14 when she was found dead, has been identified as Sherri Ann Jarvis of Stillwater, Minnesota.

Jarvis' naked body was discovered in Huntsville, Texas, more than 1,100 miles away from her home on Nov. 1, 1980, and now authorities are shedding light on how they learned her name.

ABC13 first reported on the cold case in November 2015, when Det. Thomas Bean was assigned to the case.

According to the Walker County Sheriff's Office, Jarvis arrived in Huntsville on Friday, Oct. 31, 1980 after running away.

Witnesses reported seeing her in two separate locations: a gas station on the south side of Huntsville and the Hitchin' Post Truck Stop.

On both occasions, she asked for directions to the Texas Department of Corrections Ellis Prison Farm.

She also told people that she was from the Rockport/Aransas Pass area.

The next morning, on Nov. 1, 1980, a truck driver discovered Jarvis' naked body on the side of I-45 near FM 1696, just north of the truck stop.

She had been raped and strangled.

Investigators would later discover that Jarvis was removed from her home in Minnesota for habitual truancy. Her surviving family members say she was just 13 years old when the state removed her.

She ran away from the agency that had custody of her at the time. It was also the agency that reported her missing, but records have been purged so detectives have been unable to contact them.

Jarvis' family says that she did write them a letter shortly after her departure from home, explaining that she'd return.

The Walker County Sheriff's Office said that in July 2020, investigators sent samples to a lab to begin forensic DNA testing.

In March 2021, six people were identified as being direct relatives or aunts and uncles of Jarvis, still known then as "Jane Doe."

Investigators used internet resources to fill out a family tree and interviewed her family members.

That's how detectives discovered that Jarvis was removed from her home in Minnesota.

Othram Inc. worked with officials to identify Jarvis through the DNA testing.

The company describes itself as the "first lab purpose-built to apply the power of genome sequencing to forensics."

"We can take evidence that is very old. DNA that was previously unsuitable or unusable in other methods of traditional testing, and we can pull genetic information, markers and such from this evidence, and use that as you've heard from the sheriff to build out long-distance relationships," said Othram's CEO David Mittelman.

Othram Inc., a Woodlands-based forensic DNA lab, provided more insight, explaining that the teen's body was exhumed in 1999, but attempts to derive suitable DNA extract from skeletal remains at the time were unsuccessful.

Othram says it was formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue that was the key to identifying Jarvis.

According to the company, scientists used proprietary Forensic-Grade Genome Sequencing to develop a comprehensive genealogical profile from the tissue.

Once investigators connected with family members, they collected DNA swabs and confirmed the relationship.

A full breakdown of the DNA process used to identify Jarvis can be read on dnasolves.com.

While the teen has finally been identified, the case isn't over yet.

The sheriff's office is still continuing its investigation to figure out the circumstances of her disappearance and murder.

They are hoping to identify whoever is responsible in her death.

If you have any information, you're urged to contact the Walker County Sheriff's Office at (936) 435-2400.

Wednesday, November 10, 2021
Comments
Leave a comment
The simple act of leaving a comment shows you care.
Teen murder victim identified 41 years later
A teenager known as “Walker County Jane Doe” has been identified, Texas officials said Tuesday, 41 years after she was murdered.

The girl’s name was Sherri Ann Jarvis, and she was 14 when she showed up at a Huntsville truck stop on Halloween of 1980 asking for directions to the Ellis Unit prison, Walker County Sheriff Clint McRae said at a news conference.

The girl said she was from Rockport, Texas, but she was in fact from Stillwater, Minnesota, McRae said.

On Nov. 1, a body was found on the shoulder of an interstate. The cause of death was asphyxia by strangulation, he said.

Detectives interviewed inmates and employees at the prison and spoke with authorities in Rockport, but no one knew who the girl was.

Last year, Walker County investigators began working with Othram, a company that specializes in analyzing DNA from trace or degraded samples. Using tissue samples from Jane Doe’s autopsy, they were able to find six relatives, McRae said.

Investigators spoke with five family members, who identified Jarvis and said she ran away in 1980.

In a statement read at the news conference, Jarvis’ family thanked the people who worked to find her.

“We lost Sherri more than 41 years ago and we’ve lived in bewilderment every day since, until now as she has finally been found,” the family said.

The statement said Jarvis had been removed from her home because she was frequently absent from school.

“Sherri never returned to our home,” the statement said.

“Sherri Ann Jarvis was a daughter, sister, cousin and granddaughter. She loved children, animals and horseback riding,” the family said. “She was deprived of so many life experiences as a result of this tragedy.”

The family added that Jarvis’ parents died before they got a chance to find out what had happened to her. “We love and miss Sherri very much. You are with mom and dad now, Sherri, may you rest in peace,” the family said.

Now investigators will focus on finding her killer.

“I know we like to refer this case as being a cold case,” McRae said Tuesday. But “it has always been a top priority — we loved her, as well.



Nov. 9, 2021, 12:32 PM PST / Updated Nov. 9, 2021, 9:48 PM PST By Elisha Fieldstadt
Comments
Leave a comment
The simple act of leaving a comment shows you care.
Sherri Ann Jarvis
06/09/2024
Sherri Ann Jarvis
Sherri’s last yearbook photo, eighth grade
Date & Place: in Forest Lake, Washington County, Minnesota United States
Comments
Leave a comment
The simple act of leaving a comment shows you care.
Sherri Ann Jarvis
06/09/2024
Sherri Ann Jarvis
Sherri either prior to or after being removed from her parents’ custody in 1979
Date & Place:
Comments
Leave a comment
The simple act of leaving a comment shows you care.
Sherri Ann Jarvis
05/13/2024
Sherri Ann Jarvis
Younger Sherri - appears elementary school aged
Date & Place: in Forest Lake, Washington County, Minnesota United States
Comments
Leave a comment
The simple act of leaving a comment shows you care.
I have seen her before. Can't figure her out.
Facebook Fan
via Facebook
06/02/2024
She’s a murder victim from Forest Lake, Minnesota, who’s been shown online and in the news in recent years. Maybe that’s why you recognize her? Or do you mean in person? If it’s the latter, you may want to contact the Walker County Sheriff’s Office
Sherri Ann Jarvis
05/13/2024
Sherri Ann Jarvis
Younger Sherri
Date & Place: in Forest Lake, Washington County, Minnesota United States
Comments
Leave a comment
The simple act of leaving a comment shows you care.
Loading...one moment please loading spinner
Be the 1st to share and we'll let you know when others do the same.
ADVERTISEMENT BY ANCESTRY.COM
Advertisement

Sherri Bremer Jarvis' Family Tree & Friends

Advertisement
Advertisement
Friendships

Sherri's Friends

Friends of Sherri Friends can be as close as family. Add Sherri's family friends, and her friends from childhood through adulthood.
Advertisement
Advertisement
 Followers & Sources
ADVERTISEMENT BY ANCESTRY.COM
Advertisement
Back to Top