Crime & Safety

Man Convicted In 1986 Murder Of Stafford Co. Woman Sentenced

A 67-year-old man who was convicted in June in the 1986 murder of Stafford County resident Jaqueline Lard was sentenced on Friday.

In March 2024, Elroy Harrison, right, was indicted in the1986 killing of Stafford County resident Jaqueline Lard. He was sentenced on Friday to three life sentences plus 40 years in prison.
In March 2024, Elroy Harrison, right, was indicted in the1986 killing of Stafford County resident Jaqueline Lard. He was sentenced on Friday to three life sentences plus 40 years in prison. (SCSO)

STAFFORD, VA — A 67-year-old man was sentenced on Friday to three life sentences plus 40 years in prison in connection to the 1986 killing of Stafford County resident Jaqueline Lard, according to reports. The life sentences will be served concurrently.

On June 16, a jury found Elroy Harrison of Stafford County guilty of second degree murder, abduction with intent to defile, breaking and entering with intent to commit murder, rape or robbery, according to court records.

With the help of DNA evidence, investigators were able to link Harrison to Lard's murder, according to the Stafford County Sheriff’s Office.

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On March 4, 2024, Harrison was indicted by a grand jury for the first-degree murder, abduction with the intent to defile, and aggravated malicious wounding of Lard, who was 40-years-old when she was killed.

Harrison was arrested at his Stafford County residence on March 5, 2024, and placed in the Rappahannock Regional Jail without bond, the sheriff’s office said.

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Meanwhile, the analysis of DNA linked Lord’s murder to the unsolved 1989 murder of Amy Baker in Fairfax County, according to the sheriff’s office.

Cold case detectives from the Fairfax County Police Department are working alongside the Fairfax County Office of the Commonwealth Attorney to seek charges against Harrison for Baker’s murder, officials said Tuesday.

In the case of Lard’s death, she was working at Mount Vernon Realty on Garrisonville Road on Nov. 14, 1986. She was last seen that evening at 9 p.m. as the business closed.


Related: Cold Case Murder: Arrest Made In 1986 Killing Of Jaqueline Lard In Stafford Co.


On the morning of Nov. 15, 1986, the Stafford County Sheriff’s Office said employees of other businesses in the area prepared to open for the day but “discovered a crime scene at the realty office, which indicated a horrific struggle.” Lard and her vehicle were both missing.

The following day, two juveniles were playing in a wooded area near Railroad Avenue in Woodbridge and discovered a body beneath a pile of discarded carpet. Police identified the body as Lard. Her missing vehicle was found abandoned in Fairfax County on Dec. 18, 1986.

As part of the investigation, the FBI created a task force combining the efforts of the Stafford County Sheriff’s Office, Prince William County Police Department, the FBI and the Drug Enforcement Administration.

DNA was extracted from the evidence, but repeated searches of the Virginia and National DNA Databanks via CODIS in addition to direct comparisons against submitted persons of interest and familial searches failed to identify a suspect.

After leads were exhausted, the investigation into Lard’s killing was moved to cold case status, the sheriff’s office said.

More recently, though, Stafford County Sheriff's Detective D.K. Wood explored forensic investigative genetic genealogy to help identify the killer, according to the sheriff's office.

Thirty-seven years later, on Dec. 14, 2023, a family name for Harrison was identified using DNA evidence. Detectives ultimately obtained a search warrant for DNA from Harrison. Last month, the Department of Forensic Science reported the DNA was a match.

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