Pamela Gail Milam
Pam was born on May 9th, 1953 in Illinois to Helen Love Bird Charles Edward Milam. She was the middle of three sisters.
In the fall of 1972, Pam lived with her parents and two sisters on Terre Haute’s Southside. She was a Hoosier Scholar and involved with clubs and activities at school and church. Her closest friend was younger sister Sam, who she had a twin like bond with.
On Friday, September 15th, Pam went to a rush meeting at Holmstedt Hall. After the meeting, she planned to stay the night at the sorority’s suite in Lincoln Quad. around 11 p.m. Pam left Holmstedt Hall after a party and told some of her sorority sisters she would return to the suite in a few minutes. Pam walked to her car, alone, to move it from Holmstedt to lot 27 across from the Quad. Pam never returned and no one did anything about it.
Pam never showed up for work the next morning and no one heard from her all day. Nearly 24 hours had passed, when Pam’s boyfriend Dave Smith came to the Quad to pick her up for a date. Pam was no where to be found so Smith phoned Sam. It was now around 7 p.m. and while Smith was on the phone to Sam, two of Pam's sorority sisters spotted Pam's 1964 Pontiac LeMans parked in Lot 27, about a block away from where it had been parked the day before. Her glasses were on the rear-window shelf.
The autopsy determined Pam died of strangulation by a rope found around her neck.
Police were left with no witnesses and no description of the suspect. Police questioned many people, including Pam’s boyfriend, Dave Smith.
About seven weeks after Pam's murder, Robert Wayne Austin was arrested for a series of attempted and successful abductions on campus. Police say he sexually assaulted the students and then later returned them to the campus.
In 2008, 21 year veteran of the Terre Haute Police Department, Police Chief Shawn Keen, began working on the case.
The ropes used in the murder helped establish a partial DNA profile. That helped establish it was one male suspect involved.
In 2017, the Indiana State Police lab used advanced DNA testing to indicate the suspect had brown hair, brown eyes and medium complexion.
Parabon was able to create a new composite image of the suspect, this time with light hair and blue-green eyes. It also identified a distant female cousin of the suspect who had family about 70 miles south of Terre Haute. Starting there, Keen found additional relatives, eventually mapped out an extensive family tree and found two potential suspects.
Through more DNA testing, Jeffrey Lynn Hand was then identified as Pam's killer. He was 23-years-old at the time of Pam's murder. Hand was working for a Chicago-based record company, delivering records to stores throughout Illinois and Indiana.
When they arrived, he held the couple at gunpoint and demanded money. They didn't have any, so Hand took them both to a grain bin on the property and told them he wanted $500 in ransom.
When Hand disappeared with Thomas, his wife, somehow was able to free herself from the bin, ran to a nearby home to call for help.
When police arrived, Hand had discarded Thomas' body in a weedy area just over the Posey County line. Thomas’ autopsy revealed he had been shot in the head, stabbed eight times in the abdomen and chest and that his throat had been slit. His hands were tied behind his back.
Hand was found not guilty by reason of insanity on murder and kidnapping charges, but was committed to the state reformatory until 1976.
Pam's younger sister can finally breathe a sigh of relief. She can rest a little easier knowing that the person who robbed her and her family of a lifetime of memories with Pam has been identified and can never hurt anyone again.
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