QUOTE OF THE DAY: "Neal Hamilton, another defense attorney, said in a Friday evening statement that the recent DNA developments confirm what “we’ve always known.” “Doug did not murder Eva Olesen,” he wrote. Hamilton said this “exonerated” Carter, and it was “unconscionable” that he remains in jail and charged with aggravated murder. “It is long past time for Doug to go home,” he said."
-----------------------------------------
PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "In a hearing last month, Deputy Utah County Attorney Erwin Petilos said Utah’s state crime lab had recently developed a suspect DNA profile from key evidence in the killing. DNA testing was not available at the time that victim Eva Olesen was killed. In court Friday, Petilos said the profile has since not matched anyone in the FBI’s national DNA database — and acknowledged that Carter’s DNA was likely already in that database because convicted offenders have been required to submit DNA samples since 1998. During the hearing, an attorney who previously worked on Carter’s case confirmed that she took part in the process of getting the inmate’s blood to those who maintain the federal offender database. Carter’s defense attorney, Richard Gale, said he’s almost certain that his client’s DNA is included."
-----------------------------------------
PASSAGE TWO OF THE DAY: "Gale told the judge Friday that Carter, who is 71, has agreed to give a voluntary DNA sample, but added that the inmate is concerned about possible evidence tampering and wanted extra security measures put in place. Petilos, the prosecutor, said he needed to clear those requests with Utah County Attorney Jeff Gray, who was unavailable this week as he participated in the death penalty-eligible case for the Utah man accused of fatally shooting Charlie Kirk. “The State of Utah stole 42 years from Doug. The only consideration which [ought] to remain is how make right the theft of Doug’s life,” Hamilton said in his statement."
--------------------------------------------
PASSAGE THREE OF THE DAY: "Hamilton said Carter, who is Black, was convicted despite multiple people seeing a white man leave the crime scene, and blonde pubic hair allegedly being found on Olesen. He accused the Provo police department — and its lead investigator on the case, then-Lt. George Pierpont — of framing “a vulnerable young Black man.” Carter is expected to be back in court on July 31. Gale said that if his DNA sample doesn’t match what has been developed from evidence found at the scene, he planned to ask the Utah attorney general’s office to file a petition to have the judge declare Carter factually innocent. "
----------------------------------------------
PASSAGE FOUR OF THE DAY: "The Utah Supreme Court reversed Carter’s conviction and death sentence last year, after a judge found Provo investigators paid and threatened witnesses who later said they lied. Officers built a case against Carter largely around those witnesses and a purported confession — which Carter has recently made a renewed effort to suppress."
----------------------------------------------
STORY: "A man on Utah’s death row for 40 years may not match the DNA profile developed for the first time in a Provo killing," by Reporter Jessica Schreifels, published by The Salt Lake Tribune, on July 11, 2026. (Jessica Schreifels, formerly Jessica Miller, is an investigative reporter at The Salt Lake Tribune, where she has worked since 2011. She was part of the team that won a 2017 Pulitzer Prize. She has collaborated with several national outlets for investigative projects, including FRONTLINE, American Public Media and ProPublica.)
PHOTO CAPTION: "Douglas Carter appears in 4th District Court in Provo, Friday, April 3, 2026. Carter was sentenced to death for a 1985 murder, which was overturned in 2025."
Now, for the first time, it appears DNA evidence may undercut that conviction — in a case already shadowed by allegations of police misconduct.
In a hearing last month, Deputy Utah County Attorney Erwin Petilos said Utah’s state crime lab had recently developed a suspect DNA profile from key evidence in the killing. DNA testing was not available at the time that victim Eva Olesen was killed.
In court Friday, Petilos said the profile has since not matched anyone in the FBI’s national DNA database — and acknowledged that Carter’s DNA was likely already in that database because convicted offenders have been required to submit DNA samples since 1998.
During the hearing, an attorney who previously worked on Carter’s case confirmed that she took part in the process of getting the inmate’s blood to those who maintain the federal offender database. Carter’s defense attorney, Richard Gale, said he’s almost certain that his client’s DNA is included.
Neal Hamilton, another defense attorney, said in a Friday evening statement that the recent DNA developments confirm what “we’ve always known.”
“Doug did not murder Eva Olesen,” he wrote.
Hamilton said this “exonerated” Carter, and it was “unconscionable” that he remains in jail and charged with aggravated murder. “It is long past time for Doug to go home,” he said.
Olesen was the aunt of the then-Provo police chief. She was killed in her home on Feb. 27, 1985, stabbed 10 times and shot in the back of her head. Her husband told police he had been out visiting a friend and found Olesen’s body partially undressed with her hands tied behind her back when he returned home.
(Olesen family) Eva Olesen was fatally stabbed and shot during a 1985 robbery of her home in Provo.
Gale told the judge Friday that Carter, who is 71, has agreed to give a voluntary DNA sample, but added that the inmate is concerned about possible evidence tampering and wanted extra security measures put in place.
Petilos, the prosecutor, said he needed to clear those requests with Utah County Attorney Jeff Gray, who was unavailable this week as he participated in the death penalty-eligible case for the Utah man accused of fatally shooting Charlie Kirk.
“The State of Utah stole 42 years from Doug. The only consideration which [ought] to remain is how make right the theft of Doug’s life,” Hamilton said in his statement.
Hamilton said Carter, who is Black, was convicted despite multiple people seeing a white man leave the crime scene, and blonde pubic hair allegedly being found on Olesen. He accused the Provo police department — and its lead investigator on the case, then-Lt. George Pierpont — of framing “a vulnerable young Black man.”
Carter is expected to be back in court on July 31. Gale said that if his DNA sample doesn’t match what has been developed from evidence found at the scene, he planned to ask the Utah attorney general’s office to file a petition to have the judge declare Carter factually innocent.
Being found factually innocent is extremely rare. Only a handful of Utahns have been declared innocent since a state law was passed in 2008 that allows convictions to be reconsidered based on new evidence. No one who was sent to Utah’s death row has ever been found factually innocent.
Misconduct allegations
Prior to the DNA results, Carter’s attorneys had recently asked for the aggravated murder case to be dismissed. They allege that investigators engaged in misconduct, lost evidence and ignored evidence pointing to other suspects, including Olesen’s husband.
The lawyers appeared frustrated at his court hearing in June, with Hamilton telling the judge that crime lab workers had developed a suspect DNA profile from evidence that prosecutors had previously said was missing — including a cutting of possible blood found on a back door and cloth found in Olesen’s bathroom.
“These are evidence we’ve previously been told the state could not locate,” Hamilton said. “We found out late Friday that this evidence not only exists, but has DNA on them.”
Despite years of appeals and re-examinations of the case, there hasn’t been a suspect DNA profile developed until recently.
The Utah Supreme Court reversed Carter’s conviction and death sentence last year, after a judge found Provo investigators paid and threatened witnesses who later said they lied.
Officers built a case against Carter largely around those witnesses and a purported confession — which Carter has recently made a renewed effort to suppress.
Police say Carter confessed to a Pierpont, but there’s no recording of that conversation. Pierpont did draft a written confession, which Carter signed. Carter’s attorneys now argue that confession was coerced, and that police took advantage of him in a moment when he was worried about potential legal ramifications for a woman he had stayed with after he left Utah following Olesen’s death.
Provo police focused on Carter as a suspect after getting two tips, according to a Utah Supreme Court ruling: that Carter was a possible suspect in a “vehicle trespass” offense near Olesen’s home shortly before the murder, and that Carter’s wife had apparently rushed home after learning of Olesen’s killing to see if Carter had been involved.
There was no physical evidence tying Carter to the crime scene, according to the ruling — but prosecutors presented at trial that unrecorded purported confession and witness testimony, including from a couple who told jurors that Carter bragged about the killing and demonstrated how he had stabbed Olesen. The couple later retracted their testimony, sharing that police had told them what to say and threatened to deport them.
Carter was convicted at a 1985 trial and sentenced to die.
Another possible suspect
His defense attorneys in a recent motion argued that the lead investigator also ignored evidence pointing to other suspects, including Olesen’s husband — who died in 2009.
They noted in their court filing that Olesen’s husband, Orla Olesen, was the first and primary suspect for the first several months after her death. His relationship with his wife was troubled, their friends told investigators, and the man “frequently spoke ill of Eva and openly discussed not needing her around,” according to the motion.
And though Olesen was killed in the couple’s living room, investigators found blood-stained cloths in their bathroom, according to the motion. Police noted that her husband appeared to be clean and freshly shaven when officers responded after he alerted authorities.
The husband took a polygraph test, according to the motion, and when the results indicated he was being deceptive, Orla Olesen allegedly stormed out of the room and called Pierpont — who was leading the investigation — to complain.
The day after the test, the county attorney told Pierpont he planned to file criminal charges against Orla Olesen, but Pierpont allegedly asked him to hold off so he could continue investigating.
Charges against Olesen never materialized, and Carter was charged instead."
The entire story can be read at:
https://www.sltrib.com/news/2026/07/11/utah-new-dna-profile-could-upend/