Sunday, February 1, 2026
ADVT 
International

Police Believe Body Found In Grenada Is That Of Missing Canadian Woman

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Dec, 2015 02:34 PM
    ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada — Police in Grenada say they believe a body found on the south side of the small Caribbean island is that of a missing New Brunswick woman who disappeared while jogging with her dog on Sunday.
     
    Assistant Supt. Sylvan McIntyre of the Royal Grenada Police Force said late Friday that police were still awaiting autopsy results to be sure the remains found were those of Linnea Veinotte.
     
    "There is no positive and expert identification at the moment," said McIntyre. "Based on physical evidence in the area where the body was found we believe it could be her."
     
    Meanwhile, a Facebook page dedicated to the search for the missing woman was renamed "In Memory of Linnea Veinotte."
     
    A post on the page Saturday from a Matt Veinotte, who identified himself as Veinotte's husband, said he is feeling hurt and lost.
     
    "Linnea has had such an amazing impact on the lives of so many people. She touched people in everything she did. Her love for the world was contagious. She truly made this world a better place. And without her in it, it won’t be the same," Veinotte said in the post, adding that she leaves behind two sons.
     
    Matt Veinotte thanked a number of people for their efforts in the search for his wife, including the Royal Grenada Police Force.
     
    St. George's University, where the 36-year-old worked, also released a statement via Twitter saying her body had been found.
     
    McIntyre added that a person of interest in the case was still in custody, although no formal charges had been laid.
     
    Police were questioning a 26-year-old man who had turned himself in after being wanted in connection with the disappearance of Veinotte.
     
    McIntyre said Akim Frank walked into the police station early Friday.
     
    "He's assisting us with the investigation at this point," said McIntyre.
     
    In an earlier release, police said Frank could be armed and was considered extremely dangerous.
     
    Veinotte's father, Rev. Doug Moore, said earlier that his daughter was in Grenada for a year two years ago and then returned to Canada, where she worked as a professor at Acadia University in Nova Scotia. She went back to Grenada after getting a job offer at St. George's University.
     
    "She was a learning specialist. She helped people who were having a hard time to study and get through university," Moore said.
     
    "She liked it there."
     
    On Thursday, police recovered a dark grey SUV about 10 to 16 kilometres from where Veinotte was last seen.
     
    Police have said a witness saw Veinotte, a mother of two young boys, early Sunday morning with her dog Nico in the neighbourhood of L'Anse aux Epines.
     
    Police have said witnesses reported hearing a loud bang and seeing a vehicle drive away quickly from the area.
     
    They say officers found blood at the scene near where her dog was discovered lying on the side of the road after being struck by a car.
     
    McIntyre said they did not have information to suggest Veinotte was hit by the car as well.
     
    They also said a black bandana, sunglasses and broken glass were found at the site.
     
    The Facebook page says Veinotte was born in New Denmark, N.B., and has a home in Nova Scotia.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    California Shooter Attended Islamic School Founded By Scholar Who Lives In Canada

    While in Multan, she also attended a religious school, which Pakistani intelligence officials on Monday identified as the Al-Huda International Seminary

    California Shooter Attended Islamic School Founded By Scholar Who Lives In Canada

    Like Everyone Else, Extremists And Violent Criminals Share Their Acts Via Digital-Age Tools

     Tashfeen Malik, the woman involved in this week's Southern California mass shooting, has another claim to notoriety

    Like Everyone Else, Extremists And Violent Criminals Share Their Acts Via Digital-Age Tools

    Hunt For Indian-Origin Suspected Of Molesting New Zealand Woman

    Hunt For Indian-Origin Suspected Of Molesting New Zealand Woman
    The police called for public assistance to identify a man who grabbed a young woman from behind, covered her mouth before indecently assaulting her at Sunnynook Bus Station - the smallest such in Auckland

    Hunt For Indian-Origin Suspected Of Molesting New Zealand Woman

    'We Feel Ashamed': Pakistani Relatives of California Shooter Tashfeen Malik

    'We Feel Ashamed': Pakistani Relatives of California Shooter Tashfeen Malik
    Tashfeen Malik, 29, and her husband Syed Farook, 28, gunned down 14 people at a social services centre in San Bernardino, an act praised by the Islamic State group who hailed the couple as "soldiers" of its self-proclaimed caliphate.

    'We Feel Ashamed': Pakistani Relatives of California Shooter Tashfeen Malik

    Pakistan To Help In California Shooting Probe

    Pakistan will share information with the US about the California shooting in line with the international obligations, the country's interior minister said on Sunday.

    Pakistan To Help In California Shooting Probe

    India, Pakistan begin talking again - in Bangkok

    India, Pakistan begin talking again - in Bangkok
    India and Pakistan on Sunday quietly resumed their stalled dialogue in Bangkok, with their National Security Advisors discussing an array of contentious bilateral issues and promising to "carry forward the constructive engagement".

    India, Pakistan begin talking again - in Bangkok