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A photo of Tamara Lee Tigard

Tamara Lee Tigard 1959 - c. 1980

Tamara Lee Tigard of Las Vegas, Clark County, Nevada United States was born on April 18, 1959 in Alameda County, CA to Patricia Joann Tigard and James Lee Tigard. She had a sister Cynthia Rae Butts. She married Chadwick Ryan Carr on February 24, 1979 in Las Vegas, Clark County, Nevada and they later divorced. Tamara Tigard died at age 20 years old circa March 1980 in Jones, Oklahoma County, OK, and was buried at Valley View Cemetery 683 Valley View Rd, in Sutherlin, Douglas County, OR.
Tamara Lee Tigard
“Tammy”, Tamara Lee Carr, Lime Lady
Las Vegas, Clark County, Nevada United States
April 18, 1959
Alameda County, California, United States
circa March 1980
Jones, Oklahoma County, Oklahoma, United States
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Tamara Lee Tigard's History: 1959 - circa 1980

Uncover new discoveries and connections today by sharing about people & moments from yesterday.
  • Introduction

    Tamara Lee "Tammy Tigard was born on April 18, 1959 in Alameda County, California to parents James Lee "Jimmy" Tigard (1935-2006) and Patsy Joann Young Tigard (1933-2001). She had one sister Cynthia Rae Butts (1961 - 2010). She served in the U.S. Army. Tammy married Chadwick Carr in 1979, though their marriage reportedly only lasted a few months before they divorced. For unknown reasons, Tammy went missing during a walk near her home in March of 1980. She was found several weeks later on April 18, which would’ve been her 21st birthday, but her identity was unknown at that time. Her mummified body was discovered along the North Canadian River near Jones in Oklahoma County, Oklahoma. She had suffered three gunshot wounds, indicating her death was a homicide. One of the wounds contained clothing fibers and a dime, believed to have been embedded by a .45 caliber bullet. Despite quicklime being used on her remains, intended to hasten decomposition, it paradoxically helped preserve her body, leading to her being dubbed "Lime Lady." Her case was unsolved for more than four decades, until an unlikely DNA match with her cousin was used to finally identify the Lime Lady as Tammy. See more at Home at Last . On April 18, 2022, she was finally laid to rest at the Valley View Cemetery next to her parents.
  • 04/18
    1959

    Birthday

    April 18, 1959
    Birthdate
    Alameda County, California United States
    Birthplace
  • Ethnicity & Family History

    Tammy was born in California and had one sister, Cynthia Rae Butts (1961 - 2010). Her mother Patricia was born on December 7, 1933 and passed away on May 20, 2001. Her father James Lee Tigard was born on August 18, 1935 and passed away on May 28, 2006.
  • Military Service

    She served in the U.S. Army before she married a man named Chadwick Carr in 1979, though their marriage reportedly only lasted a few months before they divorced.
  • Personal Life & Family

    For unknown reasons, Tammy went missing during a walk near her home in March 1980. She was found several weeks later on April 18, which would’ve been her 21st birthday. Tammy had been shot by an unknown assailant and disposed of in Jones, Oklahoma. The killer covered her body in quicklime, presumably because they thought it would speed up decomposition. However, the lime had an opposite effect and preserved much of the body. After fishermen found her body and reported the crime, investigators began their case. During the autopsy, a heart tattoo could be seen near her left breast, and a dime was in her pocket, but there was not much else to go off of. She was dubbed “Lime Lady” for 40 years before DNA testing identified her.
  • 03/dd
    1980
    circa

    Death

    circa March 1980
    Death date
    Homicide
    Cause of death
    Jones, Oklahoma County, Oklahoma United States
    Death location
  • Gravesite & Burial

    mm/dd/yyyy
    Funeral date
    Valley View Cemetery 683 Valley View Rd, in Sutherlin, Douglas County, Oregon 97479, United States
    Burial location
  • Obituary

    On April 18, 1980, the mummified corpse of a woman was discovered on the banks of the North Canadian River close to Jones in Oklahoma County, Oklahoma. The presence of three gunshot wounds upon her body clearly indicated her death was a homicide. One of these wounds contained clothing fibers and a dime that had been driven into the body by a .45 caliber bullet. Due to the fact quicklime that had been poured onto her remains in a likely attempt to accelerate decomposition, the woman became known as "Lime Lady". (The quicklime had actually helped preserve her remains.) She was between the ages of 18 and 25, five feet six inches tall and weighed approximately 115 to 120 pounds. She had a heart tattoo on her chest as well as an appendectomy scar. It is believed that she may have been murdered by a biker gang earlier in the year or in 1979, although some contemporary reports indicate she may have been deceased for as little as ten days. Multiple facial reconstructions of the decedent have been created, and her DNA has extracted for profiling in 2014. ∼ Tamara Lee Tigard was found deceased April 18, 1980. Her true date of death is unknown. She was born on April 18, 1959 and was followed unto death by her parents, Patsy Joan Tigard (née Young) and James "Jimmy" Lee Tigard, and her sister, Cynthia "Cindy" Rae Butts (née Tigard). ∼ She was interred in Oklahoma temporarily. On April 18, 2022, she was interred at her final resting place in Valley View Cemetery next to her parents. You can find a slideshow of her reinterment here: and more of her story here:
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9 Memories, Stories & Photos about Tamara

'LIME LADY' COMES HOME: After more than 40 years, random DNA test reveals identity of mystery woman
'LIME LADY' COMES HOME: After more than 40 years, random DNA test reveals identity of mystery woman
On April 18, 1980, some fishermen were making their way to a favorite fishing hole along the North Canadian River outside of Jones, Oklahoma.
Before casting a line, they would stumble onto what would become one of the most infamous cold case murder mysteries in American history.
The fishermen discovered a young woman who appeared to have been murdered. Her body was coated in a substance called "quicklime," which under normal conditions should have increased the rate of decomposition. In-stead, with the help of the water from the North Canadian River, the lime was a preservative.
Authorities were stumped. The Oklahoma County medical examiner reported the woman had been shot three times with a suspected 45-caliber pistol. Neither the suspect nor the murder weapon have been identified.
The mystery woman would go down in the annals of cold case crime lore as "The Lime Lady."
Fast forward nearly 40 vears and a random DNA test would finally reveal her true identity.

'Gone without a trace'
At the time of her death, Tamara "Tammy' Lee Tigard was not believed to have any living relatives. The 21-year-old had lost both of her parents, and forensic technology in the early
1980's was nowhere near what it is today. Because Tigard's body was so well preserved from the lime, investigators were successful in acquiring a viable DNA sample.
Tigard's disappearance from her Las Vegas home was also puzzling, All authorities could
confirm was that Tigard had left her home for a walk and reportedly wasn't seen again. An estimated 10 days later, the fisherman spotted her body along the bank of the North Canadian River northeast of Oklahoma City. Her arms were stretched above
her head, giving investigators the indication she had been dragged to her final resting place.
Then-Captain Bob Green of the Oklahoma County Sheriff's Office told the Associated Press in 2020 that he "always just wanted to bring dignity to the victim in this case. All of these years she has been gone without a trace, with none of her family or acquaintances knowing what happened to her."
At that time, investigators believed Tigard had no living family members. Nor did she have an identity.
For nearly 40 years, she lay in an unmarked grave in an Ed. mond, Oklahoma, cemetery, until a connection was finally made.

'The ties that bind'
In 2019, Kylie Tigard was attempting to build a family genealogy chart for her niece, Cierra.
Kylie, her brother Conan and Cierra were believed to be the last three of their Tigard family tree, but Kylie wanted her niece to know more of their family's history.
Kylie Tigard submitted her DNA test to the online registry 23&Me. It would not be long before she received a phone call that would change her world. Little did she realize that a woman missing for 40 years, whose DNA also had been logged in the DNA Doe Project, had similar markers.
The woman who had been missing for 40 years was Kylie Tigard's cousin.
"I'm not sure if it was her first or me first, but about a month later my DNA was flagged," Kylie Tigard said. Open and shut? Not even close.
"We knew she had gone missing, but we were told she was in witness protection," Kylie Tigard said. "At that point, it becomes not missing: "When I got the call from Oklahoma, it was shocking." Kylie Tigard said the call from Oklahoma authorities was, in a sense, both heartbreaking and gratifying.
"She had been unidentified for so long, and just laying (in a grave) with no name," Kylie Tigard said. "I'm so grateful to the people in Oklahoma for stepping in and taking her case, and for the DNA Doe Project for not giving up. "It's hard when people say,
'Oh, you're the Lime Lady's cousin, and that's her name, Kylie Tigard said. "She'll be
known as that forever, but a lot of people worked very hard to give her back her real name."
Her name is Army Specialist Tamara Lee Tigard. She would have been 63 years old this month.

Let's throw a party
The day Tamara Tigard's body was found, April 18, 1980, would have been her 21st birthday. Monday, on her 63rd birthday, she will be laid to rest next to her mother and father, who are both buried at Valley View Cemetery in Sutherlin. She will finally be reunited with them, with her newly-discovered family there to celebrate her return.
All military personnel, both active and retired, are invited to celebrate her life at Valley View Cemetery to "throw a party," for Tamara, Kylie Tigard said.
The Patriot Guard Riders have accepted an invitation to take part in a processional for Tamara Tigard. The service is scheduled for 11 a.m.

By Donovan Brink The Spokesman-Review • Page c4
Thursday, April 14, 2022 Spokane, Washington
Date & Place: in Spokane, Spokane County, Washington United States
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Tamara Lee Tigard Burial
Tamara Lee Tigard Burial
Sgt. Austen Poland, of the Oregon National Guard, presents an American flag to Kylie Tigard, cousin to Tamera "Tammy" Lee Tigard, during a burial in Sutherlin, Oregon, on Monday. The service with full military honors was the final chapter for the US Army Specialist whose death remained a mystery for more than four decades.

Photo printed along with the Home at Last article in The Daily Herald on Wed, Apr 20, 2022.
Date & Place: in Sutherlin, Douglas County, Oregon United States
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Home at Last
Home at Last
Sutherlin, Ore. — It's Monday morning east of Sutherlin, and the wind from the southwest is bearing down, giving advance notice of worse weather to come. Near the top of the hill, several men and women in uniform are gathered, prepared to pay respects to one of their Own.

After nearly 42 years, a U.S. Army specialist finally will get her proper burial.
Close to 100 military veterans and civilians joined remaining family members gathered to remember the life of Tamara "Tammy" Lee Tigard, who was ultimately laid to rest alongside her parents at Valley View Cemetery.

The burial ended at least one part of the story for the woman who for nearly four decades was known simply as "The Lime Lady, on what would have been her 63rd birthday. The memorial came 42 years to the day after the body of Tigard, an apparent murder victim, was discovered along a riverbank east of Jones, Oklahoma.

Tigard is suspected to have been murdered in late March 1980, her body found in a bed of weeds on the banks of the North Canadian River On April 18, 1980 — which would have been Tigard's 21st birthday - of fishermen discovered her body and reported it to authorities.

The body was reportedly heavily coated in a hydrated lime powder. Investigators believe the killer or killers would have likely thought that lime would expedite decomposition. Instead, the body had been preserved, allowing investigators to retrieve evidentiary dots which would take decades to connect.

One of the most puzzling cold cases in Oklahoma history was under way. With no way to identify possible living relatives, detectives in Oklahoma County were unable to establish an identity of the woman they were investigating.

Tigard's remains instead were buried in an unmarked grave in a cemetery in Edmond, Oklahoma.

Her remains would lay there for more than 38 years. No one would know who she was.
In early 2000, a woman from Sisters, Oregon, got a telephone call from someone stating they were from the Oklahoma County Sheriff's Office. The caller was looking for Kylie Tigard. The call was left to go to voicemail.

Kylie Tigard and her partner, Lisa Baker, a retired law enforcement officer, were working in the garden outside of their Sisters home at the time of the call. "(Lisa) said to call back on
speaker to see if it was legitimate!" Kylie Tigard said.
'In an unexpected twist of fate, a DNA test Kylie Tigard had submitted in 2019- while
searching her own family tree - matched up with a sample filed with the nonprofit DNA
Doe Project. The potential match turned out to be Kylie's cousin, Tamara "Tammy" Lee Tigard.

After learning Tammy had served in the Army, military dental records were able to confirm her identity. It was then the effort began to get her home. Not to her geographical home of Las Vegas where she was last seen in 1980 — as there was no record of her living in Oregon — but rather back to her parents.

James "Jimmy" Tigard and Patsy Tigard relocated to the Sutherlin/Oakland area in the mid-1980s, although Kylie Tigard couldn't nail down an exact year.

Patty died in 2001 at age 67 and Jimmy followed in 2006 at age 70. Neither would ever know the fate of their missing daughter.

Monday, they welcomed her "home," as Tammy's ashes were buried next to her parents on that grassy hillside east of Sutherlin.

The Tigard family expressed their gratitude to an "unbelievable" number of people who came out to support a veteran they didn't know.

"We're such a small family," said Kylie Tigard, who in an earlier interview mentioned the only known living Tigards were her brother. Conan, and niece Cierra. "To have all these people show up, embracing us... this just opens the door to a new chapter."

The Oklahoma County Sheriff's Office continues to work with the Clark County, Nevada, Sheritf's Office and Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department continuing to search for the killer of the woman who no longer shall be known merely as "The Lime Lady."

After 42 years, she has her name. She has her family. And, finally, she has her final resting place.

By DONOVAN BRINK The News-Review, Roseburg, Ore.
The Daily Herald • Page A3 Wednesday, April 20, 2022 Everett, Washington
Date & Place: in Everett, Snohomish County, Washington United States
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Cynthia Rae Butts
06/27/2024
Cynthia Rae Butts
Tigard cousins and grandmother (Cindy on right)
Date & Place:
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Tamara Lee Tigard
06/26/2024
Tamara Lee Tigard
Tigard cousins and grandmother (Tammy on right)
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Tamara Lee Tigard
06/26/2024
Tamara Lee Tigard
SPC
Date & Place: Not specified or unknown.
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Tamara Lee Tigard
06/26/2024
Tamara Lee Tigard
Tigard family (Tammy on far right)
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Tamara Lee Tigard
06/26/2024
Tamara Lee Tigard
Tigard children and their grandmother
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Tamara Lee Tigard
06/26/2024
Tamara Lee Tigard
Cindy, Tammy, and grandmother
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Tamara Tigard's Family Tree & Friends

Marriage

Chadwick Ryan Carr

&

Tamara Lee Tigard

February 24, 1979
Marriage date
Las Vegas, Clark County, Nevada United States
Marriage location
Divorce
Cause of Separation
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Friendships

Tamara's Friends

Friends of Tamara Friends can be as close as family. Add Tamara's family friends, and her friends from childhood through adulthood.
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1 Follower & Sources
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