Redfearn said Colorado Police have since partnered with the Colorado Cold Case Review Team, a "panel of outside experts," to review the case, generate recommendations, and determine if updated technologies or forensic testing might produce new leads. They've since digitized all evidence into a searchable database.
"Those files include more than 21,000 tips, over 1,000 interviews which were conducted across 17 states and two foreign countries, samples from more than 200 different individuals — including handwriting, DNA, fingerprints and shoe prints — nearly 2,500 pieces of evidence and roughly 40,000 reports with more than one million pages documenting the investigation," Redfearn said in his update.