Face of 18th century Connecticut man who was mistaken for a VAMPIRE

Daily Mail - Science & tech 

The face of a Connecticut farmer thought to be a vampire when he died of tuberculosis in the 19th century has been seen for the first time since his corpse was mutilated and tossed into a grave. The disease turns people's skin a pale yellow, their eyes become red and swollen and they sometimes have bloodstains around their mouth from coughing, which was believed to be signs of the undead about 200 years ago. The man's skeleton, buried in a casket with'JB55' engraved on it, was used to performed a DNA analysis that was fed to a machine learning system to predict what he may have looked like before being riddled with the disease. The results showed he had fair skin, brown or hazel eyes, brown or black hair and some freckles. The man, a farmer who lived in Connecticut, died of tuberculosis in the 19th century, which led people to believe he was a vampire.