A 10th victim has been recovered from Fox Hollow Farm, where suspected serial killer Herb Baumeister lived in Indiana.

The Hamilton County Coroner's Office said in a news release that the body found at Fox Hallow Farm in Westfield, Indiana, belongs to Daniel Thomas Halloran. According to Fox 59, Halloran was born in 1972, but officials aren't sure when he died.

Halloran is the 10th identified victim from Fox Hollow Farm, but investigators have tied Baumeister to at least 25 victims overall. A spokesperson for the Hamilton County Coroner's Office told Fox News Digital it still has three DNA profiles that haven't yet been identified.

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Daniel Thomas Halloran in an undated picture wearing a t-shirt.

The Hamilton County Coroner's Office said it has identified the remains of Daniel Thomas Halloran. (Hamilton County Coroner's Office)

Halloran's daughter, 32-year-old Coral Halloran, told WTHR that she didn't know how to respond upon hearing that her father was an alleged victim of Baumeister. She said her father went missing in 1993, just one year after she was born.

"I feel kind of like I'm mourning," Coral said. "All my life, I kind of expected my dad to be around and one day hoping he'd come try to find me.

"It makes me sick and weary to my stomach, having to know my dad was brutally murdered. It's hard. And for all the other victims out there, their families, I'm with them. I'm praying hard for them."

Police believe Baumeister lured gay men to his home between the 1980s and 1990s, where he would allegedly kill them and bury their bodies across his 18-acre property. Around 10,000 bone fragments and charred bones were found on the property.

Detectives believe Baumeister often went to gay bars in the Indianapolis area. During periods when his family was out of town, Baumeister lured men into his home where it's believed he killed them. Baumeister owned the Sav-A-Lot shopping chain.

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In 1996, Baumeister killed himself in a Canadian park shortly after bone fragments were discovered on his property, prompting an investigation to be opened.

"This identification is a significant development in our ongoing efforts to provide answers to the families of those who went missing," Jeff Jellison, Hamilton County coroner, said after Halloran's remains were identified. "We are grateful for the expertise of Othram and the advances in forensic science that made this possible."

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Indiana Herb Baumeister is suspected of killing at least 25 victims. So far, 12 victims have been connected to Baumesiter.

Indiana Herb Baumeister is suspected of killing at least 25 victims. (Indianapolis Police Department)

Black and white photo showing sign of Fox Hollow Farm

The original sign at Fox Hollow Farm has been replaced with a replica after the original was stolen. (Michelle Pemberton-USA TODAY NETWORK)

According to a recent documentary from ABC News Studios titled "The Fox Hollow Murders: Playground of a Serial Killer," investigators believe Baumeister filmed his victims using a hidden camera placed in a basement air vent.

"Something to relive… the murders," said retired Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office Det. Cary Milligan. "We’re looking through the bottom of the entertainment area… and we noticed this vent. … I was suspicious that if Herb was videotaping any activity that might have been going on. … That may have been a way that Herb could’ve gained power over the individuals that he was killing."

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"It’s not uncommon for serial killers to keep mementos or trinkets from victims," Milligan added.

Jellison previously told Fox News Digital it's unlikely the video recordings will be recovered.

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Investigators outside a car parked at Fox Hollow Farm

Television news media interview a police officer on July 2, 1996, outside the entrance of Fox Hollow Farm in Westfield, Indiana, where human bones were discovered the previous week. (Rich Miller/Indy Star-USA TODAY NETWORK/Imagn)

Investigators searching on the Fox Hollow Farm grounds.

Authorities dig for human bones in a wooded area on the Fox Hollow Farm in Westfield, Indiana on July 2, 1996. (Rich Miller/Indy Star-USA TODAY NETWORK/Imagn)

The coroner's office said forensic laboratory Othram Inc. played a critical role in identifying Halloran through DNA analysis. The Indiana State Police, University of Indianapolis, Human Identification Center and Marion County Coroner’s Office also assisted in identifying the remains.

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Fox News Digital's Stephanie Nolasco and Audrey Conklin contributed to this report.