PLYMOUTH COUNTY, MA — After nearly four decades of unanswered questions, a jury has delivered a verdict in one of the region’s most haunting cold cases, bringing long-overdue justice to a grieving family.
A Massachusetts jury has found Michael Hand guilty of first-degree murder in the 1986 killing of 15-year-old . The conviction carries an automatic sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole.

A Case That Haunted Plymouth County
The case dates back to October 1986, when Gilpin disappeared after leaving a party in . Her sudden disappearance sparked an intense search and widespread concern across the South Shore.

Weeks later, her body was discovered in Plymouth , a vast wooded area in deep inside Myles Standish State Forest, near the Long Pond Road area in Plymouth.. Investigators determined she had died from severe blunt force trauma to the head.
Despite early efforts, the case went cold—leaving Gilpin’s family without answers for decades.
Breakthrough After Decades
The investigation was eventually reopened years later as advances in forensic techniques and renewed investigative work gave authorities a fresh path forward.
Hand was arrested in 2018 in North Carolina, marking a major turning point in the long-dormant case. Prosecutors spent years building the case before finally bringing it to trial.
After hearing the evidence, the jury returned a guilty verdict, closing a chapter that had remained unresolved for nearly 40 years.
A Family’s Long Wait for Justice
For Gilpin’s family, the verdict represents more than just a legal outcome—it marks the end of a painful and decades-long search for answers.
Family members expressed a sense of relief and closure following the decision, saying justice had finally been served after years of uncertainty and grief.
One of the Oldest Cases to Reach a Verdict
This case now stands as one of the oldest murder cases in Plymouth County to result in a conviction. It also highlights the persistence of investigators and the evolving tools that continue to bring resolution to cold cases long thought unsolvable.
Authorities say the outcome sends a clear message: no matter how much time passes, justice can still be achieved.
