Watch CBS News

A woman's headless torso was found at a Missouri highway rest stop in 2004. DNA has led police to her alleged killer.

A man has been charged with murder and jailed in a case that baffled police for nearly two decades — the death of a woman whose decapitated torso was found at a Missouri rest stop along Interstate 70.

Mike A. Clardy, 63, of Maryland Heights, Missouri, was charged Wednesday with second-degree murder and abandonment of a corpse in the killing of Deanna Denise Howland. His bail was set at $1 million.

howland.jpg
Deanna Howland  National Missing and Unidentified Persons System

Police say DNA evidence connected Clardy to the crime, and they say he confessed after his arrest, CBS affiliate KMOV-TV reported.

The remains found on June 26, 2004, down a hill near a picnic area at a rest stop in Warren County were not identified for 12 years. In 2016, DNA samples determined that the victim was Howland, of Alton, Illinois.

DNA evidence also helped find the suspect. Police matched Clardy's DNA to DNA fragments left on Howland's body and a knife found in a sewer near the rest stop, according to charging documents.

Officers who interviewed Clardy on Tuesday say he admitted killing Howland at his home before dismembering her and abandoning parts of her body in St. Louis County and Warren County. Clardy has no criminal record in Missouri, according to online court records.

Howland was a 35-year-old mother of four who struggled with drug addiction, her daughter, Ashley Kinnear, told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch in 2016.

In a statement, Kinnear told KMOV-TV, "It is a good step and good things will come from this, as hard as that is to believe."

View CBS News In
CBS News App Open
Chrome Safari Continue
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.