Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
International

In Ukraine Jet Crash Aftermath, A Veteran Mountie Helped With A Grim Task

The Canadian Press, 18 Jul, 2015 11:34 AM
    OTTAWA — A year after a Malaysia Airlines flight crashed in Ukraine, killing 298 people, sorrow runs deep and many questions linger.
     
    RCMP Insp. Tony McCulloch, a forensic expert, helped shattered families begin healing in the days after the disaster by assisting with the grim task of matching names on the passenger manifest with human remains.
     
    The plane, heading to Kuala Lumpur from Amsterdam, came down in strife-ridden eastern Ukraine near the Russian border. It carried 196 Dutch nationals, sending a country into mourning.
     
    Many believe a missile or other hostile weapons-fire downed the aircraft. The Dutch Safety Board continues to investigate.
     
    Soon after the crash, RCMP liaison officers abroad were in touch with counterparts in the Netherlands, Malaysia, Australia and the United States — closely monitoring developments to see if Canadian assistance was required.
     
    A lone Canadian was killed, and although the Netherlands had an advanced disaster victim identification program, it reached out through Interpol to other countries touched by the crash, McCulloch said in an interview.
     
    On July 27, McCulloch was dispatched to the Dutch town of Hilversum where the chore of identifying bodies was underway at a military installation.
     
    "They were very quick in ramping up their efforts," McCulloch said. "The people were well-trained, well-prepared. It came together in a very impressive manner."
     
    A key element of identification involves gathering sufficient information about a victim from family members and sometimes workplaces. That can include the person's last-known clothing, dental and medical records, fingerprints, and DNA from a toothbrush or hairbrush.
     
    At the same time, human remains are catalogued with these details in mind to help make comparisons and positive identifications. A little later, DNA information, which takes time to process, begins to become available.
     
    McCulloch set to work in the Dutch operation's "reconciliation unit" — attempting to match victims' data with information found at the crash scene.
     
    The Interpol match protocol requires positive identification through fingerprints, dental records or DNA, but investigators usually like to use a personal physical trait — such as a tattoo or medical implant — to corroborate a finding, said McCulloch, the RCMP officer in charge of national forensic identification support services.
     
    The Canadian victim, medical student Andrei Anghel of Ajax, Ont., was identified promptly, McCulloch said.
     
    In another case, a Dutch woman died on the plane with her three daughters, he recalled. "There was a very quick identification of the mother and the older daughter. But the other two were still unidentified."
     
    McCulloch's examination of the database investigators had built led to positive matches — the sort of discovery that helps give a measure of comfort to a family amid overwhelming sadness. 
     
    "Those are the types of events that make it all kind of come together for you, and make it worthwhile."
     
    All but two of the passengers have since been identified.
     
    McCulloch also lent his expertise abroad after Typhoon Haiyan devastated the Philippines two years ago. He and another RCMP colleague joined an Interpol team that toured disaster areas and made recommendations.
     
    Collaboration with international colleagues is an important element of disaster victim identification.
     
    For instance, McCulloch said, France and Japan have become adept at working in environments contaminated by radiation.
     
    "It really is international in scope and we benefit from those relationships because it allows us not to not have to reinvent the wheel," he said.
     
    "You never stop learning in this industry. It's an ever-evolving environment."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    India, China To Pursue Early Settlement Of Border Issue, Ink 24 Pacts

    India, China To Pursue Early Settlement Of Border Issue, Ink 24 Pacts
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi held talks with Premier Li Keqiang here on Friday, the second day of his China visit that saw both sides ink 24 agreements.

    India, China To Pursue Early Settlement Of Border Issue, Ink 24 Pacts

    Amid Large Dollops Of Culture, Modi, Xi Discuss Border, Trade Deficit

    Amid Large Dollops Of Culture, Modi, Xi Discuss Border, Trade Deficit
    The over 90-minute talks between the two Asian leaders, held at the Shaanxi Guest House, were "very substantive and the atmosphere was very comfortable", said Foreign Secretary S. Jaishankar, briefing newspersons.

    Amid Large Dollops Of Culture, Modi, Xi Discuss Border, Trade Deficit

    Chinese Media Lauds Modi, Sino-Indian Ties

    Chinese Media Lauds Modi, Sino-Indian Ties
    After being critical of Prime Minister Narendra Modi days ahead of his three-day visit to China, the Chinese media was fullsoe in his praise on Thursday as he landed in Xi'an.

    Chinese Media Lauds Modi, Sino-Indian Ties

    Four Indian Americans Elected To American Academy Of Arts And Sciences

    Four Indian Americans Elected To American Academy Of Arts And Sciences
    Four Indian Americans - Sanjeev Arora, Sangeeta N. Bhatia, Ravindran Kannan and Renu Malhotra - are among 197 new members of the prestigious American Academy of Arts and Sciences, a leading centre for independent policy research.

    Four Indian Americans Elected To American Academy Of Arts And Sciences

    Canadian Man Abid Gilani Among The 7 People Killed In Amtrak Train Crash In Philadelphia

    Canadian Man Abid Gilani Among The 7 People Killed In Amtrak Train Crash In Philadelphia
    Abid Gilani was a senior vice-president for Wells Fargo in New York City and had been with the company for about a year, according to his profile page on LinkedIn.

    Canadian Man Abid Gilani Among The 7 People Killed In Amtrak Train Crash In Philadelphia

    Harper Government Keeps Pitching Oil Pipelines In U.S., Even If Alberta Won't

    Harper Government Keeps Pitching Oil Pipelines In U.S., Even If Alberta Won't
    OTTAWA — A new political reality surfaced Wednesday in which Ottawa is aggressively marketing an Alberta pipeline project that the new provincial government says it won't promote and doesn't even want.

    Harper Government Keeps Pitching Oil Pipelines In U.S., Even If Alberta Won't