Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Police Discover Ontario Man Used Identity Of BC Boy Who Died In 1970s

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 May, 2015 11:05 AM
    HALDIMAND COUNTY, Ont. — Police say a Caledonia, Ont., man who disappeared in 1992 took the name of a dead boy and lived under the assumed name until his death 10 years later.
     
    James Scott Walton was reported missing after he failed to arrive for a scheduled visit with friends at Syracuse University.
     
    His vehicle and personal effects were found near the airport in Buffalo, N.Y.
     
    Ontario Provincial Police say they've discovered Walton had assumed the name of Michael Debourcier — a four-year-old boy who had died in a car crash in British Columbia — and moved to Toronto in 2000.
     
    After Debourcier's death of natural causes in 2002, a friend worked with Toronto police in an attempt to locate next-of-kin but all attempts were unsuccessful, and the friend eventually hired a private investigator who found the link to the boy.
     
    OPP, working with Walton's mother and the coroner, used DNA from "Debourcier" to determine his true identity was James Scott Walton.
     
    Police say they are pleased to have provided some closure for Walton's  family, but add there are still "many more questions than answers" in the case.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Tory MPs Continue To Share Tales Of Duffy's Star Power As Trial Set To Break

    Tory MPs Continue To Share Tales Of Duffy's Star Power As Trial Set To Break
    OTTAWA — On a summer Friday in 2009, Mike Duffy climbed into former Tory MP Dean Del Mastro's red muscle car and the two drove from Ottawa to Del Mastro's home riding of Peterborough, Ont.

    Tory MPs Continue To Share Tales Of Duffy's Star Power As Trial Set To Break

    Harper Takes The High Road On Alberta Election; Wants To Work With Notley

    Harper Takes The High Road On Alberta Election; Wants To Work With Notley
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Stephen Harper says he is looking forward to working with incoming Alberta premier Rachel Notley.

    Harper Takes The High Road On Alberta Election; Wants To Work With Notley

    3 People Hurt In Surrey Gunfire As Residents Awake To Glass Breaking, Yelling

    3 People Hurt In Surrey Gunfire As Residents Awake To Glass Breaking, Yelling
    RCMP say a man in his mid-20s was found wounded near a house on 128 Street near 104 Avenue where the violence erupted at about 6 a.m., and that it appears to have been a targeted hit.

    3 People Hurt In Surrey Gunfire As Residents Awake To Glass Breaking, Yelling

    Husband Says Wife Held Hostage 2 Years At Penticton, B.C., Care Facility

    Husband Says Wife Held Hostage 2 Years At Penticton, B.C., Care Facility
    David Varcoe of Penticton, B.C., says his wife Nancy was put in "unlawful confinement" in a residential care facility for years despite her wishes to be discharged and sent home.

    Husband Says Wife Held Hostage 2 Years At Penticton, B.C., Care Facility

    Family Alleges Kamloops Seniors Village Covered Up Assault On Disabled 75-year-old

    Family Alleges  Kamloops Seniors Village Covered Up Assault On Disabled 75-year-old
    A document filed in B.C. Supreme Court says the 75-year-old man moved into Kamloops Seniors Village since last spring after a heart condition left him incapable of caring for himself.

    Family Alleges Kamloops Seniors Village Covered Up Assault On Disabled 75-year-old

    Time Is Money, Says Woman Who Sent Ontario Hospital $122.50 Bill For Wait Time

    Time Is Money, Says Woman Who Sent Ontario Hospital $122.50 Bill For Wait Time
    The financial planner recently wrote a letter to a central Ontario hospital demanding to be reimbursed after waiting an hour and a half for a one-minute cortisone injection.

    Time Is Money, Says Woman Who Sent Ontario Hospital $122.50 Bill For Wait Time