Cold Case File Resurfaces: Dentist Accused Of Murder Has Been Found Guilty Of Killing U.S. Navy Recruit 40 Years Ago

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Thomas Garner has been sentenced to life in prison for strangling a Navy recruit to death in 1984, according to Fox News.

State Attorney Anna Valentini stated, “Pamela Cahanes enlisted in the Navy to fight for her county.”

“Instead she had to fight Thomas Garner for more than [eight] minutes, only to lose her life.”

“We’re grateful we were able to win this fight for Pamela and her family.”

“I hope they can rest easier knowing that tomorrow, and every day after, Thomas Garner is going to wake up in a jail cell knowing exactly why he’s there.”

Garner said, he was “pretty promiscuous at that particular point in time,” but denies that he killed Cahanes.

“If I had casual sex with Miss Cahanes, I probably wouldn’t remember, being that long [ago], because it was nothing of a relationship.”

Garner’s DNA was found through traces of semen found on Cahanes underwear.

From Fox News:

A dental hygienist accused of killing a U.S. Navy recruit nearly 40 years ago has been found guilty of first-degree premeditated murder.

Thomas Garner, 61, was convicted by a 12-member jury Thursday at the Seminole County Courthouse in Sanford, about 25 miles northeast of Orlando, according to reports. Garner was on trial for fatally beating and strangling Navy recruit Pamela Cahanes in 1984 before dumping her body in an overgrown field.

He was sentenced to life in prison by Circuit Judge Marlene Alva.

“Pamela Cahanes enlisted in the Navy to fight for her county. Instead she had to fight Thomas Garner for more than [eight] minutes, only to lose her life.” Assistant State Attorney Anna Valentini said in a statement, according to the Orlando Sentinel. “We’re grateful we were able to win this fight for Pamela and her family. I hope they can rest easier knowing that tomorrow, and every day after, Thomas Garner is going to wake up in a jail cell knowing exactly why he’s there.”

Garner and Cahanes were both classmates at the former Orlando Naval Training Center. She had just graduated from boot camp before she was found dead Aug. 5, 1984.

The cold case went unsolved for years. Garner was arrested in 2019 after investigators surveilling him found DNA that matched semen found on Cahanes’ underwear, according to the paper. Advancements in technology also helped the cold case progress years later.

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He was living in a 600-square-foot apartment while working as a dental hygienist in Jacksonville, Florida, at the time of his arrest.