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Buried in anonymity, boy gets his identity back

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The grave of a boy identified as Atcel Olmedo is adorned with a large blue plastic flower at Assumption Cemetery on Thursday, October 25, 2012. Seven years ago, the body of an unidentified boy was left abandoned along the side of a road off I-88 near Naperville. He was never publicly identified but the Tribune cited sources nearly 2 years ago in reporting his name was Atcel. (Photo by Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune/MCT)

(MCT) — WHEATON, Ill. — Five years after he was buried in a tiny white casket, the unidentified boy known as “DuPage Johnny Doe” no longer lies in a nameless grave.

The mystery behind how he died lingers, but on a recent fall day, authorities quietly gave him back his identity — Atcel Olmedo.

His name was carved into the marble that had long read: “Son. Unknown. But Not Forgotten.”

“The tombstone says so much, ‘Not forgotten,’ and he isn’t,” said DuPage coroner Pete Siekmann, who in one of his final acts in office before retiring this month pushed to make sure Atcel was publicly named.

“It was important to me that we could at least give him his identity back,” Siekmann said.

His remains were found Oct. 8, 2005 — he would have turned 3 the next month — in a drawstring laundry bag near a creek bed in Naperville Township in northern Illinois. Experts determined that the boy died weeks earlier, but could not pinpoint the cause of death because of decomposition.

Two years later, after dozens of leads were exhausted, he was buried at Wheaton’s Assumption Cemetery in a donated casket the size of a toy chest. A teddy bear was tucked under the left arm of his blue blazer, and he was covered by a blue-and-white checkered blanket with stars, clouds and a little plane.

A message on the blanket read, “Sweet Baby Boy.” More than 100 community members and law enforcement officials gathered for the service.

Six months later, in April 2008, detectives in Cicero wondered if DuPage’s Johnny Doe could be connected to a local child abuse case they were investigating, according to a state agency report.

A Cicero girl on her 14th birthday told a social worker that her stepfather was responsible for the cuts, bruises and welts that covered her body, the record states. The teen said he kicked her with his steel work boots, slapped her with an open hand or whipped her with a belt “almost every other day,” the document said.

The Illinois Department of Children and Family Services immediately took the girl and her five younger siblings into protective custody after investigators found similar signs of physical abuse to two of the other children, state records said.

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