ANNAPOLIS, MD — Authorities have identified the murder victim whose skeletal human remains were found Aug. 28 in an Annapolis area park. On Thursday Anne Arundel County Police said DNA was used to confirm the victim is Jose Hernandez-Portillo, 22, from the Annapolis area; officers had been investigating his disappearance since he was reported missing on March 11, 2016.

The medical examiner earlier said signs of trauma to the remains mean the death was a homicide. Homicide detectives believe Hernandez-Portillo was murdered about the time he disappeared and said his death was a targeted crime and not a random act of violence. Officers found the remains in a wooded area of Quiet Waters Park in the 600 block of Quiet Waters Park Road in Annapolis. The skeletal remains were recovered and taken to the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in Baltimore, which ruled the victim was a young man who was killed.

The police department is handling several cases of human remains discovered in remote locations. On Oct. 20 the unidentified skeletal human remains of a woman in her 20s to age 30 were found in Shady Side in the area of Holly Drive and Chesapeake Drive. Authorities said the skeletal remains found on the shoreline had washed ashore and are likely those of someone who went missing within the past year. There is no indication of foul play in the Shady Side case, but the county has had several cases of human remains uncovered in recent months.

In early October, five people were charged with murder after the remains of an Annapolis woman who went missing on June 24 were found buried in a secret grave in Crownsville in August. Police called the murder of Jenni B. Rivera Lopez a gang-related homicide. The suspects charged in her death are: Brenda Argueta, 18, of Silver Spring; Ervin Arrue Figuero of Annapolis; Darvin Guerra-Zacarias, 25, of Silver Spring; Ronald Mendez-Sosa, 19, of Edgewater; and Francisco Ramirez-Pena, 22, of unknown residency.

The Baltimore Sun reported that Lopez was found buried in the area of Camp Barrett, a youth camp near Annapolis. Anne Arundel County Police Chief Timothy Altomare made it clear in an Oct. 6 press conference that his officers are working to mitigate gang-related activity.

"Every level of government is working around the clock nonstop to lessen the dangers to the citizens of Anne Arundel County," he said.

Altomare said Oct. 6 that three recent deaths were murders linked to gang activity, and asked the public to share tips that might lead to arrests. The location where bodies were found and other information was not released at that point for fear that more people would be hurt or killed. The chief declined to say whether bodies found recently in the Quiet Waters area of Annapolis and along the Beltway in the Glen Burnie area were among the three gang victims killed.