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A World War I veteran went missing in NYC 45 years ago. Now a man has been charged with his murder.

Tracing family trees to catch killers
Tracing family trees to catch killers 01:56

A 74-year-old man was arraigned Wednesday on a murder charge in connection with the death of a World War I veteran who disappeared almost 45 years ago and whose remains were found buried in a New York City backyard in 2019, authorities said.

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George Clarence Seitz Queens District Attorney

Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz said Martin Motta faces 25 years to life in prison if he is convicted in the death of George Clarence Seitz, who was 81 when he was last seen in December 1976.

Motta made an appearance in court after being indicted by a Queens grand jury and is due back in court Friday. His attorney, Russell Rothberg, declined to comment.

"After 45 years, the alleged killer of a WWI Veteran is being held accountable and brought to justice," Katz said in a statement. "We hope the identification of the remains and the indictment in this case will begin to bring peace and closure to his loved ones."

Prosecutors said dismembered human remains were found in the backyard of a Queens home in March 2019, buried under some concrete.

Initially, a DNA profile of the remains was unsuccessful in leading to any identification, authorities said, but advanced efforts by a private lab in February 2021 led to a genealogical profile that authorities were able to use to find the victim's identity.

Authorities said Seitz disappeared Dec. 10, 1976, after leaving his residence, also in Queens, reportedly on his way to get a haircut.

The New York Police Department and the Queens district attorney's office conducted an investigation that included witness interviews and record searches in five states, and which led them to Motta, authorities said.

"The officers of the NYPD's Detective Bureau, its Homicide and Cold Case squads, and its highly trained forensic units, never forget and never give up," NYPD Commissioner Dermot Shea said.

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Prosecutors said dismembered human remains were found in the backyard of a Queens home in March 2019, buried under some concrete. Queens District Attorney
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