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Buried in anonymity, boy gets his identity back

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Later, safe in foster care, the girl asked police to find out what happened to her missing little brother. The teen said she last saw Atcel in Mexico before he left for the United States with their mother and stepfather while the others remained in Mexico with their grandmother, according to a U.S. Justice Department document. When the parents returned, Atcel was not with them. The girl said her grandmother told her in May 2006 that the stepfather and her mother had killed Atcel, put his body in a bag and “dumped him,” according to the same report.

The family moved to the Chicago area sometime in 2006. The girl said she and her siblings were punished if they asked about their missing brother, state records said.

Acting on the Cicero tip, forensic experts obtained a DNA match after comparing the unidentified boy’s remains with the genetic profile of another sibling, according to various documents. But by then, his mother and stepfather had disappeared. The Chicago Tribune, which revealed the boy’s identity in a February 2011 story, is not naming the parents because neither has been charged in Atcel’s death.

The boy would have turned 10 on Nov. 5. His six siblings range in age from 5 to 18 and still live in the Chicago area, officials said. They said the five youngest, adopted last year, are being raised together.

Even before the boy’s name was added to his gravestone, visitors found his final resting place. Mourners regularly left flowers, Matchbox cars and other mementos.

“It’s a sense of closure and justice,” said Henry “Hank” Ebeling III, president of the DuPage County Funeral Directors Association. “At least they found out the identity of the poor kid and buried him with some dignity. It shows someone cared.”

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