Seventh severed foot washed up on B.C. south coast in Canada

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The Living Force
Shoreline walk reveals seventh severed foot washed up on B.C. south coast

RICHMOND, B.C. — Another foot has washed up on B.C.'s south coast, the seventh to be found from Georgia Strait to the northwestern tip of Washington state since August of 2007.

RCMP Const. Annie Linteau says that human remains were inside a New Balance runner spotted Tuesday afternoon.

Diane Johnston says she was walking her dog when she saw the runner sitting on a rock on the banks of the south arm of the Fraser River and called her husband, who summoned Richmond RCMP.

One other New Balance runner - the only one belonging to a woman - has been found since the feet began turning up and it was located May 22 on Kirkland Island, not far from the site of Tuesday's discovery.

Police have determined that two of the seven feet - one found Feb. 8 on Valdez Island and the other found June 16 off Richmond - are a match.

DNA testing linked one foot to a depressed man who disappeared in 2007 but the other remains have not been identified.

_http://canadianpress.google.com/article/ALeqM5gaHj3-fXw5tL8oLuYjOhfFa4hHYQ

Another severed foot washes up on B.C. shore

Updated: Tue Nov. 11 2008 23:48:25

ctvbc.ca

CTV News is reporting another development in a case that has baffled police and the public for over a year, drawing worldwide attention to British Columbia's southwest coast.

Another severed foot has washed up on B.C.'s shoreline, this time in the Vancouver suburb of Richmond, where it was discovered by a woman on Tuesday morning while she was walking near the banks of the Fraser River with her dogs.

"It had been brought up by a high tide,'' said Diane Johnston. Since she was too scared to climb down the river bank to fetch a running shoe that was sitting up on a rock, she notifed her husband Ken, who later phoned Richmond police.

RCMP Const. Annie Linteau has confirmed that the New Balance running shoe contained the remains of a human foot. Those remains will be sent to the B.C. Coroners office for further examination Wednesday.

It is the seventh foot to have been found in a coastal region -- that includes the B.C. west coast, and the northwestern tip of Washington State -- since August of 2007.

The first foot was found on Jedidiah Island, in the strait that divides Vancouver Island from the mainland. It was a right foot inside a Campus-brand men's size 12 running shoe that was mainly distributed in India.

Six days later, another right foot -- inside a man's size 12 Reebok running shoe -- washed ashore on Gabriola Island.

A third -- a right foot in a Nike sneaker -- was found in the area on Feb. 8 on the east side of Valdez Island.

The fourth and fifth feet were both found near the Fraser River.

The fourth came ashore on Kirkland Island on May 22 and was the only one of the five that came from a woman's body. It was found in a New Balance running shoe.

The fifth, a size 10 left foot, was located a kilometre away on June 16. It was later determined to be a match to the foot found months earlier on Valdez Island.

Then, on August 3, a newspaper in Washington State reported that a running shoe, containing bones and flesh had been found at a Strait of Juan de Fuca beach, just south of the U.S-Canada border, about 40 kilometres west of Port Angeles.

Police are expected to answer media questions about the Richmond discovery later today.

"The shoe looked to be in pretty good shape,'' said Ken Johnston during an interview with CTV. He said it was found near the mouth of the Fraser River, behind an old paper plant in Finn Slough.

With reports by CTV British Columbia's Renu Bakshi and Jon Woodward.

_http://www.ctvbc.ctv.ca/servlet/an/local/CTVNews/20081111/BC_missing_foot_November_081111/20081112?hub=BritishColumbia
 
There Back..................................... :shock:

The sessions had a comment about this. That amounted to Just some mentally sick SOB's out there.

Severed feet – still inside shoes – keep mysteriously washing up in US, Canada Date February 12, 2016
http://www.theage.com.au/world/severed-feet--still-inside-shoes--keep-mysteriously-washing-up-in-us-canada-20160211-gms1eo.html?utm_campaign=echobox&utm_medium=Social&utm_source=Twitter#link_time=1455256432

They appear on the sand like any old piece of sea detritus. Sometimes they're found, amid the sweet wrappers and cracked shells, by volunteers cleaning up the area. Other times a holidaymaker might glimpse the grisly discard from the corner of their eye, a serene walk along the beach interrupted just like that.

As more people learned about these discoveries, they attracted morbid scavengers to the Pacific Northwest shorelines, where the Salish Sea connects waterways along the west coasts of the US and Canada.

What these scavengers sought remains a prickling curiosity: severed feet attached to running shoes, washed up from origins unknown.

Sixteen detached human feet have been found since 2007 in British Columbia, Canada, and Washington state. Most of these have been right feet. All of them have worn running shoes or hiking boots. Among them: three New Balances, two Nikes and an Ozark Trail.

The most recent one turned up this week.

Charlotte Stevens, of British Columbia, was taking a walk with her family on Vancouver Island, the CBC reported, when her husband spotted something in the sand.

It was a shoe, that they could see right away. But a closer inspection revealed something more.

"He picked it up and brought it out on to the beach," she told CBC, "and we had a look at it for about five minutes and we thought, 'it almost looks like there is an actual foot bone in it'."

Sure enough, the BC Coroners Service confirmed that the shoe came with a dismembered foot. As with the others, there's no telling for exactly how long the foot was in the water, but the regional coroner Matt Brown said the exact model of shoe had gone on the market after March 2013, indicating that it once belonged to someone who went missing between then and last December.

Mr Brown is working with the police to connect the foot to individuals who disappeared from the area around that time.

If history is any indication, however, the identity associated with the foot will stay a mystery.

Over the years, armchair sleuths and scientists alike have used a number of terms to describe the feet: severed, dismembered, detached, disarticulated.

Found, but still lost.

After the first two feet – both right – were found in British Columbia just six days apart from one another, locals began sounding the alarm, and authorities expressed equal surprise.

"Two being found in such a short period of time is quite suspicious," Corporal Garry Cox, of the Oceanside Royal Canadian Mounted Police, told the Vancouver Sun in August 2007.

"Finding one foot is like a million to one odds," Corporal Cox said, "but to find two is crazy. I've heard of dancers with two left feet, but come on."

Five more were found in the next year, including one near Pysht, in the state of Washington. Speculation increased, as recounted in a 2008 article in the Toronto Star:

"Speculation ranges from natural disasters, such as the tsunami of 2004, to the work of drug dealers, serial killers and human traffickers.

"One theory concerns a plane crash off Quadra Island three years ago with five men aboard. Only one of the bodies has been found.

"Other theorists believe the coastline is being used as a body dump for organised crime activity; a third scenario is a serial killer is at work."

But to the disappointment of many a conspiracy theorist, science suggests more mundane answers.

Writing for the Pacific Standard, Spenser Davis pointed out last year that a study on the Puget Sound found that when a body floating in water is "subjected to the push and pull of its environment", the bones of hands and feet are almost always the first to fall off.

In British Columbia, two of the feet have since been identified as having belonged to people with mental illness, while three others were linked to individuals who probably died of natural causes.

Foul play is not suspected in any of the other cases, though it hasn't been ruled out, either.

"All of the ones who've been identified so far, there's no mystery," Gail Anderson, a criminologist at British Columbia's Simon Fraser University, told the Daily Beast in 2011. "These people were very depressed, unhappy about life, and were last seen heading toward the water. People jump off bridges. They deliberately wish to disappear."

But there are other points of strangeness. For one, why did the feet start turning up only after 2007, and why have they continued to turn up with unprecedented frequency since then?

The Daily Beast considered the power of the "vicious cycle" theory, which suggests that once people became aware of the phenomenon, they started subconsciously – or completely deliberately, in some cases – scanning the shorelines for shoes.

Also a likely answer.

And yet – it's hard not to wonder.

"There are so many coincidences taking place," forensics consultant Mark Mendelson​ told the Daily Beast in 2011. "Everybody who jumps off a bridge is wearing runners? ... Until you can show me something pathologically concrete that this is a natural separation of that foot from a body, then I'm saying you've got to think dirty."

Washington Post

Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/world/severed-feet--still-inside-shoes--keep-mysteriously-washing-up-in-us-canada-20160211-gms1eo.html?utm_campaign=echobox&utm_medium=Social&utm_source=Twitter#link_time=1455256432#ixzz407qJCQLO
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