Close X
Sunday, September 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Boys identified in Vancouver's oldest cold case

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Feb, 2022 01:17 PM
  • Boys identified in Vancouver's oldest cold case

VANCOUVER - The child victims in what police say is Vancouver's oldest unsolved murder case have been identified as two young brothers.

Police say David and Derek D'Alton were six and seven when they were bludgeoned with a hatchet and left in Vancouver's Stanley Park in a case known as the "Babes in the Woods."

Their bodies were discovered in 1953 under a woman's fur coat by a groundskeeper who was clearing brush near Beaver Lake in the park.

Police say the case has haunted investigators for decades and the breakthrough came after the department partnered with a U.S.-based forensic genetic genealogy company.

They say Redgrave Research Forensic Services compared DNA taken from the victims' bones with genetic information submitted by people to ancestry databases that are used to reconstruct family trees.

Police say the person who likely killed the boys was a close family member who died about 25 years ago, but given the passage of time and lack of remaining DNA evidence it is unlikely the killer will be confirmed.

“Although significant folklore has surrounded this case for years, we must not forget that these were real children who died a tragic and heartbreaking death," Insp. Dale Weidman said at a news conference Tuesday.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

All miners on surface following rescue operation

All miners on surface following rescue operation
Lewis said the last miner to emerge from the ground was taken away in an ambulance as a precautionary measure, but "walked onto the ambulance and was giving fist bumps to the mine rescue team in the warm room."

All miners on surface following rescue operation

Alberta and Saskatchewan need COVID lockdowns: CMA

Alberta and Saskatchewan need COVID lockdowns: CMA
Dr. Katharine Smart, president of the national association, is urging the federal and provincial governments to take immediate action. The association is calling for short, controlled lockdowns, often called "firebreakers" or "circuit-breakers," which would close schools and non-essential businesses.

Alberta and Saskatchewan need COVID lockdowns: CMA

Bloc says unvaccinated Tory MPs should 'stay home'

Bloc says unvaccinated Tory MPs should 'stay home'
Questions remain about what the return to Parliament will look like for Canada's 338 representatives after the recent federal election saw the Liberals re-elected to a minority government.    

Bloc says unvaccinated Tory MPs should 'stay home'

B.C. overdose crisis unrelenting in July

B.C. overdose crisis unrelenting in July
The report comes less than a month after chief coroner Lisa Lapointe said January to June was the deadliest ever for drug toxicity in B.C. With data from July added, the report says the 1,204 suspected illicit drug toxicity deaths are the highest ever in the first seven months of a year — 28 per cent above the same period last year.    

B.C. overdose crisis unrelenting in July

652 COVID19 cases for Tuesday

652 COVID19 cases for Tuesday
British Columbia has recorded another 652 cases of COVID-19 and 2 related deaths, according to an update posted after officials announced new regional restrictions for part of the Lower Mainland. There has been an uptick in coronavirus hospitalizations to 316, up from 303 on Monday, with 141 patients in ICU.

652 COVID19 cases for Tuesday

Long-term care residents need boosters: NACI

Long-term care residents need boosters: NACI
The committee recommends long-term care residents and people living in seniors' homes receive another shot of an mRNA COVID-19 vaccine — like Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna — as long as it has been six months since their last shot.

Long-term care residents need boosters: NACI