MINEOLA, N.Y. — A woman and toddler whose remains were discovered scattered along an oceanfront highway not far from the victims of Long Island's infamous Gilgo Beach killings were identified Wednesday as an Army veteran from Alabama and her daughter.
Tanya Denise Jackson, 26, of Mobile was living in Brooklyn with her 2-year-old daughter, Tatiana Marie Dykes, at the time of their deaths, Nassau County police announced.
The U.S. Army veteran, who police say may have worked as a medical assistant, previously was nicknamed "Peaches" by investigators after a tattoo on her body.

Nassau County police and prosecutors display photos of Tanya Jackson and Tatiana Dykes, whose remains were found near Long Island's Gilgo Beach, during a news conference Wednesday in Mineola, N.Y.
Police who released photos and other images related to the two victims Wednesday said they had no evidence at this point to suggest the unsolved killings are linked to Rex Heuermann, who is charged in the deaths of seven women whose remains were discovered elsewhere on Long Island.
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"Although Tanya and Tatiana have commonly been linked to the Gilgo Beach serial killings because the timing and locations of their recovered remains, we are not discounting the possibility that their cases are unrelated from that investigation," Homicide Det. Lt. Stephen Fitzpatrick said.
"I'm not saying it is Rex Heuermann and I'm not saying it's not," he added. "We are proceeding as if it's not, keeping our eyes wide open."
Some of Jackson's remains were discovered on June 28, 1997, stuffed inside a plastic tub in a state park in West Hempstead on Long Island. More remains, and the skeletal remains of the female child, were found off Ocean Parkway in April 2011.
At the briefing Wednesday, law enforcement officials said they identified the victims through DNA evidence found at the scene and advanced genetic and genealogy research.
"The reality is our work has just begun," Nassau County District Attorney Anne Donnelly said. "Knowing the identities of the mom and the little baby is just a first step to help us get to solving these murders."
Officials said Wednesday they spoke with the child's father, who was cooperating with the investigation and not considered a suspect at this time.

Crime scene investigators use metal detectors Dec. 12, 2011, to search a marsh for the remains of a victim in Oak Beach, N.Y.
Fitzpatrick added that authorities initially identified the mother and daughter in 2022, obtained additional DNA information the following year and notified surviving family last year. The two were laid to rest recently, he said.
Officials said Jackson was estranged from much of her family for some time. She served in the U.S. Army from 1993 to 1995, living on three bases in Texas, Georgia and Missouri, and drove a black 1991 Geo Storm.
Nassau Police said they're offering a $25,000 reward to anyone with information leading to an arrest.
It has long been unclear whether there is any connection between the mother and daughter and other women found slain elsewhere on Long Island.
Since late 2010, police investigated the deaths of at least 10 people — mostly female sex workers — whose remains were discovered there.
Heuermann, a Manhattan architect, maintains his innocence and pleaded not guilty to all counts. His lawyer did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment Wednesday.
Suffolk County District Attorney Ray Tierney's office, which is prosecuting Heuermann, said in a statement he is not commenting on "any topics even tangentially involved to the investigation" while a pretrial hearing plays out.
The two female victims are among three sets of human remains long associated with the Gilgo Beach case that have not been identified, at least publicly, by authorities.
In September, Long Island officials released more detailed renderings of a victim believed to be of Chinese descent whose remains were found off Ocean Parkway in 2011. The victim died in 2006 or earlier, was likely between ages 17 and 23 and about 5 feet 6 inches tall.
Officials for years identified the victim as male, but said they now believe the person may have presented outwardly as female as they were dressed in women's clothing.