closed starter for @dr-crxne.
There are ten sets of skeletal human remains in the lab Dr. Moone leads him to, each laid out on a separate table and arranged in the correct order. At the end of each table is a binder, the front of which is labeled. The two nearest the door he could read as "Jane Doe #3" and "Baby Doe." Not all of the remains display a full body, in fact one tray was simply a skull, some teeth, and a set of legs. June hands him his own binder, not unlike the ones that accompany each table, this one labeled "Dr. Crane."
"It's a lot of information, so I took the liberty of making you your own binder of my findings. Please feel free to take notes, or request anything I may have left out. So as you can see here, the first three sets of remains by the wall were the ones found on the first beach, and the next four were found on the second beach. It's important to note that while Jane Doe #3 was found at the second location, her torso had been found fourteen years earlier in the state park, and the two finding's weren't connected until we ran DNA. The DNA process also revealed that she is the mother of Baby Doe here, who was found at the second location. This is incredibly common with all the remains, parts found in multiple locations, some of which found over a decade apart."














