4 decades later the the parents, camp councilors and community members revisit the memories of three young girls and their brutal murder at Camp Scott.
TULSA, Okla. â The case against the main suspect in the 45-year-old murders of three Tulsa-area Girl Scouts is only growing stronger with time, authorities say, with DNA testing results recently made public pointing right at him again.
Gene Leroy Hart, who died in 1979 while in prison on unrelated charges, was acquitted for the slayings two years earlier of Lori Farmer, 8, Michele Guse, 9, and Denise Milner, 10, at Camp Scott near Locust Grove.
But over four decades later, the latest DNA testing in the case, although officially inconclusive, strongly suggests Hartâs involvement, officials say, while eliminating several other potential suspects.
Keep scrolling for our 7-part podcast series chronicling the Oklahoma Girl Scout murders in 1977
Mayes County Sheriff Mike Reed said, âUnless something new comes up, something brought to light we are not aware of, I am convinced where Iâm sitting of Hartâs guilt and involvement in this case.â
Reed said the results of the DNA tests have been known since 2019, part of an effort to raise private funds from Mayes County residents to have evidence reexamined.
He didnât go public with them, however, until asked to do so by the victimsâ families as part of an upcoming ABC News documentary series about the case.
The four-part series, which will release on Hulu, is expected to premiere around the 45th anniversary of the crimes on June 13, although no official release date has been announced.
The Tulsa World also participated in the series.
Reed, who spoke at length to ABC, said the latest DNA testing resulted in several partial profiles of the killer.
No full DNA profile has ever been developed in the case, so officially the testing results are considered âinconclusive.â
But inconclusive does not mean unhelpful, Reed said, and partial profiles can be used to eliminate suspects.
Reed said authorities originally questioned over 130 potential suspects in the case, and other names have surfaced through the years.
Over time, DNA has been collected from potential suspects.
The latest testing was able to eliminate several who had not been previously eliminated, he said.
In fact, Reed added, at this point, Hart excepted, âthereâs no suspect attached to this case that has not been excluded in one way or another, whether itâs DNA, whether itâs alibi, whether itâs polygraph test, whatever.â
Meanwhile, significantly, the latest testing could not eliminate Hart, whose DNA matched the partial profiles, Reed said.
One previous DNA effort, in 1989, also produced a partial profile matching Hart.
Officials said at that time that only 1 in 7,700 Native American males would have matched the profile.
Reed said the latest DNA tests most likely are the last that will be done in the case, as testable evidence has been all but exhausted.
He said you can never rule out âtouch DNAâ â or DNA from skin cells left behind by human contact.
But evidence collection and preservation in the 1970s was not done with the care and precision that would make touch DNA valuable in this case, he said. Every piece of evidence likely has picked up skin cells from dozens of people over the years.
Reed said the only reason he decided to relook at the decades-old case was that the families asked him to after he was elected in 2012.
He shared the DNA results with them in 2019 and only recently decided to make them public at their request.
It was also at their request that Reed, who previously declined to do interviews on the case, participated in the ABC News series.
Even without DNA, he added, the case against Hart remains rock-solid.
âEverything else that Iâve been able to see and look at and dissect points to him,â Reed said. âAnd that actually carries more weight for me.â
While satisfied of Hartâs guilt, he remains open to new information.
âMy ears are open, and I will listen to what anybody has to say.â
CRIME BEAT CHRONICLES: THE OKLAHOMA GIRL SCOUT MURDERS
A look back at the Tulsa World, Tribune archives during Girl Scout murder case
Locust Grove aerial
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The photo shows an aerial view taken of the Great Hall on June 24, 1977 at Camp Scott, the camp where three girl scouts were murdered earlier in June 1977.
Girl Scouts from Camp Scott
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A car carries several Girl Scouts from Camp Scott, which was closed following the slaying of three campers. Published on June 14, 1977.
Girl Scout murders
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Lori Farmer, Denise Milner and Michele Guse
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To make sure none of the Girl Scout campers returning to Tulsa from Camp Scott were unaccounted for, each was checked off a list when her parents came by to pick her up on June 13, 1977.
Girl Scout Murders
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An aerial photo of the scene where Lori Lee Farmer, 8; Michele Guse, 9; and Doris Denise Milner, 10 were murdered when they camped out at Camp Scott during a Girl Scout outing 40 years ago.
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Girl Scouts get off their bus in Tulsa after returning from Camp Scott, where three Scouts had been murdered on June 13, 1977.
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Officers and area residents gather on June 23, 1977 at Samâs Corner as the manhunt for Gene Leroy Hart begins unfolding. MEL ROOT/Tulsa World file
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Officers and area residents gather on June 23, 1977 at Samâs Corner as the manhunt for Gene Leroy Hart begins unfolding. MEL ROOT/Tulsa World file
Tulsa World: June 24, 1977
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Gene Leroy Hart identified as a suspect in the killing of three Girl Scouts.
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Glen "Pete" Weaver, Mayes County Sheriff, during the search for Gene Leroy Hart in 1977. The Tulsa Tribune
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Dogs and their handlers move through a pasture near the search perimeter as the search for Gene Leroy Hart continued on June 24, 1977. RICHARD PULLIAM/Tulsa World file
Tulsa World: April 7, 1978
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This April 7, 1978 edition of the Tulsa World chronicles the apprehension of Gene Leroy Hart, the primary suspect in the 1977 killings of three Girl Scouts.
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The cabin in the Cookson Hills in southern Cherokee County where Gene Leroy Hart was captured.
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Gene Leroy Hart was arrested by OSBI agents in this tiny house in a remote part of eastern Cherokee County near Locust Grove on April 6, 1978, after the state's largest and longest manhunt in history. Tulsa World File
GIRLS SCOUT MURDERS SHAFFER
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The cabin that Gene Leroy Hart hid out in a courtesy photo from Ronald Shaffer.
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Gene Leroy Hart (center) is led into the Oklahoma State Penitentiary on April 6, 1978, the night of his capture. On his left is Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation agent Larry Bowles and on Hartâs right is OSBI agent Bud Ousley. Mayes County Sheriff Glen "Pete" Weaver (wearing white hat) is on the far left. Doug Hicks/Tulsa World file
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Gene Leroy Hart (center) is led into the Oklahoma State Penitentiary on April 6, 1978, after his capture. OSBI Agent Larry Bowles is on the left with OSBI Agent Bud Ousley on the other side. Tulsa World File
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Gene Leroy Hart (center) is led into the Oklahoma State Penitentiary on April 6, 1978, the night of his capture. On his left is Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation agent Larry Bowles and on Hartâs right is OSBI agent Bud Ousley. Mayes County Sheriff Glen "Pete" Weaver (wearing white hat) is on the far right. Doug Hicks/Tulsa World
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Gene Leroy Hart, accused of killing three Girl Scouts, struggles with heavy wrist and ankle shackles as he inches his way up the front steps of the state prison between Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation agents Larry Bowles, left, and Bud Ousley, followed by Mayes County Sheriff Pete Weaver (behind Ousley) and Deputy A.D. David. Agents caught Hart on April 6, 1978 in a shack near Stilwell and took him to prison for safekeeping.
Tulsa Tribune: April 7, 1978
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The April 7, 1978, edition of The Tulsa Tribune chronicles the capture of Gene Leroy Hart, the primary suspect in the 1977 killings of three Girl Scouts.
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Murder suspect Gene Leroy Hart is led from the Mayes County Courthouse back to jail following his arraignment on April 7, 1978. Tulsa World File
Gene Leroy Hart escorted to his preliminary hearing
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Oklahoma Highway Patrol officers escort Gene Leroy Hart to his preliminary hearing in the Mayes County Courthouse on June 7, 1978.
Gene Leroy Hart
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Gene Leroy Hart is flanked by attorneys Garvin Isaacs (left) and Gary Pitchlynn at a news conference held at the Mayes County Courthouse on March 20, 1979. Tulsa World File
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Gene Leroy Hart. Tulsa World File
Garvin Isaacs chief defense attorney
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Garvin Isaacs chief defense attorney in the Gene Leroy Hart case. Tulsa Tribune
S.M. âBuddyâ Fallis
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S.M. âBuddyâ Fallis, Tulsa County District Attorney and prosecutor in the Gene Leroy Hart case.
Gene Leroy Hart
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Gene Leroy Hart is led into the Mayes County courthouse for his preliminary hearing on June 7, 1978.
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Gene Leroy Hart is escorted to the Mayes County Jail on April 7, 1978 by state law officer Roger Chrisco.
The March 31, 1979, edition of the Tulsa World
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The March 31, 1979, edition of the Tulsa World
GIRL SCOUT MURDERS
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Gene Leroy Hart covers his face after learning a jury had acquitted him of murder and is congratulated by attorney Gary Pitchlynn. Tulsa World File
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Gene Leroy Hartâs mother, Ella Mae Buckskin, cries as she hugs Hartâs attorney Garvin Isaacs on March 30, 1979, after her son was acquitted of murdering three Girl Scouts.
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Pallbearers walk slowly through a corridor of mourners on June 8, 1979, as a memorial service concludes for Gene Leroy Hart. Hart died on June 4, 1979, of a heart attack at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary. Tulsa World File
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