She went missing while attending a play at Viewmont High School in Salt Lake City in 1974. She had left at intermission to get her brother, but never came back, police said.
Hours before he was put to death in 1989, Bundy said he killed Kent and other women, and he told police where he left Kent's body.
Her body hadn’t been found, so police kept the case open.
But in 2015, human remains were found during a search, which prompted police to look through missing persons files. Apparently when police searched a location in Fairview Canyon in 1989, they found a human knee cap among hundreds of animal bones. That patella eventually was given to her family, as closure, KSL reported.
After investigators found out the family had the bone, police retrieved it and sent it for DNA testing to make sure it belonged to Kent. It was a DNA match to her family, proving that it was her bone.
Police announced the more than 3-year-old test results Monday because of renewed interest in Bundy, thanks to the Netflix series "Conversations with a Killer: The Ted Bundy Tapes" and the movie "Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile," KSL reported.
Credit: AP Photo/File
Credit: AP Photo/File
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