Barber, 75, Pleads Guilty in 1976 Killing of World War I Veteran

Barber, 75, Pleads Guilty in 1976 Killing of World War I Veteran
Anthropologist Dr. Bradley Adams, of the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, examines buried human remains of World War I veteran George Seitz, on March 12, 2019. Office of the Chief Medical Examiner via AP
The Associated Press
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NEW YORK—A 75-year-old New York City man pleaded guilty to manslaughter in the 1976 killing of a World War I veteran whose dismembered remains were found in 2019.

Martin Motta’s guilty plea Tuesday in the death of George Seitz represented the first successful use of genetic genealogy by any of the city’s prosecutors, Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz said. Seitz had been a customer at the Queens barbershop where Motta worked.