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Sister of victim in 1973 cold case murder speaks out after suspect arrested through DNA: 'I've been praying for him'

4:05
Police crack decades-old murder case using DNA
Newport Beach Police
ByEmily Shapiro
February 21, 2019, 5:40 PM

The sister of a little girl who was strangled to death in 1973 didn't expect to see a conclusion to the mysterious cold case, she told ABC News hours after a man's arrest was announced on Wednesday.

"I never really thought that they would actually ever find the individual responsible," Cindy Borgeson, a sister of Linda O’Keefe, told ABC News. "After all this time, finding out there is a face and a name...just brings additional closure."

O’Keefe, 11, was abducted on July 6, 1973, as she walked home from summer school, the Newport Beach, California, Police Department said. Her strangled body was found the next day.

Their mother "carried that guilt the rest of her life," Borgeson said.

Newport Beach police released this undated image of Linda O'Keefe in an effort to get assistance from the public to help solve her murder in Southern California in July 1973.
Newport Beach Police
An undated photo of Linda O’Keefe who was killed in Southern California in July 1973.
Courtesy O’Keefe Family

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(MORE: DNA leads to man's arrest 46 years after murder of 11-year-old Linda O'Keefe: 'We have never forgotten Linda')

James Neal, 72, who lived in Southern California and worked in construction in the 1970s, was arrested this week in Colorado, where he had been living, Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer said at a Wednesday news conference.

DNA recovered from O'Keefe shortly after her death was put into the Combined DNA Index System — the law enforcement database known as CODIS — but there was no hit, said Spitzer.

However, through the genealogical data of his family members, who voluntarily submitted their DNA to genealogy databases, investigators were able to corroborate the DNA from O'Keefe's body and the DNA obtained from the suspect, according to Spitzer. The genealogical hit came in January, officials said.

This undated booking photo provided by the El Paso County, Colo., Sheriff's Office shows James Neal.
El Paso County Sheriff's Office via AP
Newport Beach police released this undated image of Linda O'Keefe in an effort to get assistance from the public to help solve her murder in Southern California in July 1973.
Newport Beach Police

"I had closure when they found her body," Borgeson said about the fateful day 46 years ago. But she added that she was thankful for the "additional closure" brought to her by the investigators who never gave up, as well as the new technology, which made it possible to process the crime scene DNA.

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(MORE: 45 years after 11-year-old girl's unsolved murder, police release new sketches of suspected killer)

"I'm astonished at what they were able to accomplish," Borgeson, 64, said. "My hope is that this [case] brings hope to other families who haven't had closure yet."

O'Keefe, who was seven years younger than Borgeson, was "an old soul" with a "go with the flow" personality, Borgeson said.

Newport Beach police released this undated image of Linda O'Keefe in an effort to get assistance from the public to help solve her murder in Southern California in July 1973.
Newport Beach Police

While their parents did not live to see an arrest, Borgeson said, "I'm sure she [O'Keefe] and my parents are rejoicing."

"I'll get to be with them again," she added.

An undated photo of murder victim Linda O'Keefe and her family.
Courtesy O’Keefe Family
Newport Beach police released this undated image of Linda O'Keefe in an effort to get assistance from the public to help solve her murder in Southern California in July 1973.
Newport Beach Police

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(MORE: DJ admits to cold case murder after being linked through novel DNA technique, apologizes to victim's family in court)

As for her sister's suspected killer, Borgeson said, "because of my profound faith, I've been able to forgive the individual."

"I couldn't carry that burden in my heart of hating an individual even though he committed this horrible crime," she said. "I hope that he has remorse."

This photo shows a poster of James Neal during a news conference at the Orange County District Attorney's office in Santa Ana, Calif., Feb. 20, 2019.
Paul Bersebach/The Orange County Register via AP

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Borgeson said, if she gets a chance to speak to Neal, she would "let him know that I've been praying for him."

Borgeson said she also prayed for Neal's family as his arrest was announced.

"They probably are so shocked," she said. "I'm sure they're going through a lot of grieving of their own."

ABC News' Jenna Harrison contributed to this report.

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