Police have made a significant breakthrough in a case that has haunted Austin, Texas, for three decades, linking the notorious criminal Robert Brashers to the 1991 murders of four teenage girls in a local yogurt shop through the utilization of genealogy DNA.
Brashers, a serial killer and rapist with a known history of at least three murders between 1990 and 1998 in South Carolina and Missouri, ended his own life in 1999. The victims in Austin included Amy Ayers, aged 13; Eliza Thomas, aged 17; and sisters Jennifer and Sarah Harbison, aged 17 and 15, respectively. These young girls were bound, gagged, and shot in the head at the “I Can’t Believe It’s Yogurt” store where two of them had been employed. The establishment was subsequently set on fire.

Both the weapon with which Brashers chose to end his life and a bullet casing discovered in a drain inside the yogurt shop are believed to be consistent, according to retired Austin detective John Jones, as revealed to CBS News.
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According to reliable sources, namely a press release from the city of Austin, the investigative team has shown unwavering commitment to this case for nearly 34 years, never losing sight of their goal to bring justice for the families of the innocent lives that were taken far too prematurely and without reason.
The evidence suggests that Robert Eugene Brashers has been identified as a suspect in these murders through a comprehensive range of DNA testing. Despite Brasher’s demise in 1999, this remains an open and ongoing investigation.