A Campbell County homicide victim - whose death has long been associated with the so-called Redhead Murders - has been identified as an Indiana woman more than 33 years after her body was discovered off Interstate 75.

Tina Marie McKenney Farmer, who was reportedly missing from Indiana, has been positively identified through fingerprinting, according to a Tennessee Bureau of Investigation news release Thursday.

Last month, TBI agents learned that Farmer's disappearance was featured on a blog publicizing missing persons, and determined that her description matched that of a homicide victim whose body had remained unidentified since it was found Jan. 1, 1985 near Jellico. Tenn.

A comparison of Farmer's fingerprints with the postmortem prints of the Jane Doe victim revealed a match.

An autopsy previously determined she was the victim of a homicide, and likely had been killed several days before her body was discovered. The cause of death has not been specified.

The autopsy also revealed she was two to five months pregnant.

According Farmer's date of birth, she was 21.

The case was among a series of at least 11 unsolved homicides involving young women with red or reddish hair and slight builds, whose bodies were found close to major highways in Tennessee and several other states between 1978 and 1992.

In May, a group of students in a sociology class at Elizabethon High School in Carter County, Tenn. developed a detailed character profile of a single suspect they believe may have been responsible for at least six of the murders, including Farmer's death.

The students deemed their suspect, "The Bible Belt Strangler."

Authorities have not said whether Farmer's homicide may have any connection to other cases.

The TBI is asking anyone with information on Farmer - specifically any knowledge about who she may have been with before her death - to call 1-800-TBI-FIND.