DNA
links
foot
found
in
B.C.
to
missing
man
Saturday,
July
19,
2008
12:13
PM
CBC
News
One
of
five
human
feet
found
off
the
British
Columbia
coast
since
last
August
has
been
identified
as
belonging
to
a
man
who
was
reported
missing
from
the
B.C.
Lower
Mainland
last
year,
according
to
the
RCMP.
An
RCMP
spokesman
said
familial
DNA
was
used
to
match
the
foot
to
a
depressed
man
whose
name
has
not
been
released.
Foul
play
in
the
case
is
no
More..
t
suspected,
Sgt.
Pierre
Lemaitre
told
CBC
News
on
Saturday.
He
said
police
plan
to
hold
a
news
conference
on
Monday
to
release
more
details.
"We
were
able
to
notify
the
family
yesterday,
and
out
of
respect
for
them,
they
asked
that
we
give
them
at
least
48
hours
to
get
together
as
a
family
with
other
relatives
and
deal
with
this
development,"
Lemaitre
said.
In
the
last
year,
five
feet
have
washed
up
on
small
islands
in
the
Georgia
Strait
and
Fraser
River,
each
encased
in
a
running
shoe.
Police
have
said
that
none
of
the
feet
appears
to
have
been
intentionally
severed,
but
likely
detached
through
a
natural
process.
Police
showcased
the
running
shoes
during
a
news
conference
earlier
this
month
in
the
hopes
of
solving
the
cases.
Lemaitre
said
investigators
told
another
family
on
Friday
that
the
feet
are
definitely
not
those
of
two
relatives
who
died
in
a
plane
crash
off
Quadra
island
in
February
2005.
The
bodies
of
brothers
Doug
and
Trevor
DeCock
were
never
found
in
the
wreckage.
Meanwhile,
a
coroner
in
Washington
state
said
on
Friday
that
he
will
be
talking
to
the
B.C.
Coroners
Service
about
a
body
found
16
months
ago
on
Orcas
Island
in
the
San
Juan
archipelago.
Despite
the
torrent
of
publicity
over
the
five
severed
feet
in
recent
weeks,
San
Juan
County
coroner
Randall
Gaylord
said
he
did
not
advise
B.C.
investigators
about
the
discovery
until
Thursday.
Gaylord
said
the
body
did
not
have
a
right
arm,
left
hand
or
any
feet.
The
body
was
discovered
five
months
before
the
first
of
the
five
feet
was
discovered
on
B.C.'s
Jedidiah
Island.
Ga...
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