Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Winnipeg Police Identify Woman's Body 3 Years After It Was Pulled From River

Darpan News Desk, 05 Jun, 2015 07:00 PM
    WINNIPEG — Police have identified the body of an aboriginal woman found in the Red River three years ago and are acknowledging the help of her  daughter who provided the DNA that finally cracked the case.
     
    But the circumstances of Audrey Desjarlais's death remain a mystery.
     
    Desjarlais, who was from the Saddle Lake community in Alberta but was living in Winnipeg, is believed to have died sometime in January 2012 at the age of 52. Her body was found five months later.
     
    "The body was pretty badly decomposed when it was discovered," Winnipeg police Supt. Danny Smyth said Friday.
     
    "The medical examiner was never able to ascertain a positive cause of death. The only thing they could tell us for certain was there were no obvious signs of trauma or injury."
     
    Smyth said the case was complex. Desjarlais had not been reported missing. Police released a composite sketch of the then-unidentified woman shortly after the body was found along with pictures of unique jewelry she had been wearing.
     
    More than 20 tips came in and investigators compared about 300 profiles of women the Winnipeg Police Service had had contact with.
     
    One of the tips pointed them to the possibility that the body was that of Desjarlais, so they contacted her daughter in Regina in September 2012.
     
    But the following month two witnesses reported seeing Desjarlais shopping in the Manitoba communities of Steinbach and Grunthal.
     
    "These sightings of Ms. Desjarlais were believed to be credible. As a result, investigators shifted their focus away from Ms. Desjarlais, assuming that she was still alive," Smyth said.
     
    "We now know that those witnesses were mistaken."
     
    The investigation remained open, but few leads came in. Police credit Desjarlais's daughter, Barb Desjarlais, and the CBC for keeping the case front and centre. After a story broadcast in April, police went back to Desjarlais and obtained a DNA sample from Barb that matched DNA of the body pulled from the river.
     
    Police said their investigation is ongoing and they are asking anyone who had contact with Desjarlais in January 2012 to come forward.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    CityNews Says Man Has Apologized To Reporter Shauna Hunt For Vulgarities

    Toronto television station CityNews says the man fired over hurling sexually explicit remarks at reporter Shauna Hunt last weekend has apologized for his actions.

    CityNews Says Man Has Apologized To Reporter Shauna Hunt For Vulgarities

    Family Of Former B.C. Politician John Slater Angry At Christy Clark For Announcing His Death

    Family Of Former B.C. Politician John Slater Angry At Christy Clark For Announcing His Death

    The family of a one-time British Columbia Liberal is angry with Premier Christy Clark, stating th...

    Family Of Former B.C. Politician John Slater Angry At Christy Clark For Announcing His Death

    Fire Crews Contain 20 Per Cent Of Massive Interior B.C. Wildfire

    Fire Crews Contain 20 Per Cent Of Massive Interior B.C. Wildfire
    More than 240 firefighters are on the ground and crews have managed to contain about 20 per cent of the aggressive Little Bobtail Lake fire.

    Fire Crews Contain 20 Per Cent Of Massive Interior B.C. Wildfire

    Oil Spill In Vancouver Waters Would Quickly Stain Beaches: Analysis

    VANCOUVER — Oil pipeline opponents have developed computer-animated models illustrating how rapidly Vancouver's inlets and beaches could become coated in crude under a worst-case oil tanker spill scenario.

    Oil Spill In Vancouver Waters Would Quickly Stain Beaches: Analysis

    Almost 200 Personnel Battling B.C. Forest Fire That Premier Calls 'Alarming'

    Almost 200 Personnel Battling B.C. Forest Fire That Premier Calls 'Alarming'
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's premier is calling a wildfire that has already scorched more than 130 square kilometres in the central Interior "alarming," and is warning residents of a "bad forest fire season" ahead. 

    Almost 200 Personnel Battling B.C. Forest Fire That Premier Calls 'Alarming'

    Spirit Bear Gets Royal Treatment With New Enclosure In Kamloops

    Spirit Bear Gets Royal Treatment With New Enclosure In Kamloops
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — When John Stark looks out on the fenced bear compound in Kamloops, B.C., he doesn't see 11,000 square metres of trees, pools, boulders and shrubs — he sees a palace.

    Spirit Bear Gets Royal Treatment With New Enclosure In Kamloops