logo
Family 'devastated' as body found in missing man search

Family 'devastated' as body found in missing man search

Yahoo04-03-2025

The sister of a missing Bristol man has said her family is "devastated" after confirming his body was found by police divers on Monday.
More than 100 officers had been involved in the search for Luis Piovesana, 26, along with friends and family.
Avon and Somerset Police said the family had been updated after the body was found by officers searching the River Frome in the Napier Road area of Eastville at 18:00 BST on Monday.
In a social media post Lubjana Piovesana said: "Luis has been found. We are completely devastated, but he has passed away."
Ms Piovesana, a judo Olympian, added: "I am grateful for everyone's support. I am so sorry this has happened.
"Luis was my little brother and loved by everyone. I wish he could have seen the love from everyone.
"He will be remembered by us all."
More news stories for Bristol
Watch the latest Points West
Listen to the latest news for Bristol
Avon and Somerset Police said: "At around 6pm today (Monday 3 March), a dive team was searching the River Frome in the Napier Road area of Eastville, Bristol, when they located a body.
"While formal identification has not yet taken place, detectives have met with Luis' family and updated them.
"Our thoughts remain with them during this incredibly difficult time and they continue to be supported by specialist officers."
02:55 on Friday 28 February – Mr Piovesana was last seen by friends getting into a taxi outside the Jam Jar in Little Ann Street, St Jude's.
03:03 – He then made a 999 call to police, lasting 34 seconds. Attempts were made to call him back, police say, but these went unanswered and so a text was sent to his phone asking him to confirm if he was safe. Officers then tried to establish where the call had been made from.
03:04 – Police received a call from a member of the public concerned about a man walking near Junction 2 of the M32. Officers went to the scene but did not find the man, and police say they are "keeping an open mind" about whether this relates to Mr Piovesana.
03:15 – 03:30 – CCTV footage released by police shows Mr Piovesana in multiple locations at Eastgate Retail Park. The last confirmed sighting of him was near the Click and Collect facility at the back of the Tesco Extra car park. His bag, phone and wallet were later found discarded at the retail park by a friend using a tracking app linked to his phone, with CCTV footage later showing him abandoning the items.
07:37 - Mr Piovesana is reported missing and an investigation is launched.
18:00 on Monday 3 March - A police dive team find a body while searching the River Frome.
Mr Piovesana had been seen at around 03:00 GMT on Friday at Eastgate retail Park having travelled there via a taxi from the Jam Jar venue Little Ann Street, St Jude's, a 10-minute drive away.
His family had spent the weekend searching for him and asked people to check their gardens and sheds.
Mounted police officers and police drone teams were also involved in the investigation with police divers searching the River Frome near the M32.
Speaking to the PA news agency while the search was ongoing, Ms Piovesana's partner, Laurin Bohler, said family and friends had travelled from Birmingham to help.
Follow BBC Bristol on Facebook, X and Instagram. Send your story ideas to us on email or via WhatsApp on 0800 313 4630.
Missing man 'called 999 from taxi'
Judo Olympian pleads for help finding missing brother
Avon and Somerset Police

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Los Angeles mayor lifts curfew imposed after immigration raids, protests
Los Angeles mayor lifts curfew imposed after immigration raids, protests

Yahoo

time14 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Los Angeles mayor lifts curfew imposed after immigration raids, protests

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass on Tuesday lifted a curfew imposed on part of the city's downtown to curb crime in the wake of raids on undocumented migrants that prompted protests. The restriction on people's movements went into place last Tuesday, affecting about one square mile of the city's downtown between 8 p.m. local time (0300 GMT on Wednesday) and 6 a.m. the following morning. On Monday, Bass said the curfew would be reduced, with a later start time of 10pm, as acts of violence, vandalism and looting had markedly declined. On Tuesday, it fully ended. "The curfew, coupled with ongoing crime prevention efforts, have been largely successful in protecting stores, restaurants, businesses and residential communities from bad actors who do not care about the immigrant community," she said in a statement. The heightened immigration enforcement in the city prompted the strongest backlash to President Donald Trump since he returned to power in January, pitting the Republican enacting a campaign pledge to deport immigrants against Democratic leaders in California who opposed the tactics.

Suspected killer of Minnesota lawmaker to face 1st degree murder charges
Suspected killer of Minnesota lawmaker to face 1st degree murder charges

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

Suspected killer of Minnesota lawmaker to face 1st degree murder charges

The suspect, 57-year-old Vance Boelter, allegedly disguised himself as a police officer, then shot and killed Democratic state representative Melissa Hortman and her husband Mark at their home early Saturday. "Our office intends to pursue first-degree murder charges against Mr. Boelter," Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty told a press conference. "The penalty would be life without parole." She thanked law enforcement personnel who mounted the largest manhunt in state history before apprehending him without using force late Sunday. "People were understandably terrified over the last couple days," she said. Boelter is also suspected of shooting state Senator John Hoffman and his wife Yvette in their home. They survived despite multiple gunshot wounds and were being treated for serious injuries, authorities said. Boelter was taken into custody in a rural area about an hour southwest of the Minneapolis suburbs where the killings occurred, police and state officials said. SWAT teams used drones to identify the suspect's location, and officers crawled through ditches in the area's farm fields to confine him, the Minnesota Star Tribune reported. He was being held at Hennepin County jail and was scheduled to appear in court at 1:30 pm (1830 GMT) on Monday, jail records showed. Moriarty said Boelter was due to be handed over to federal officials and that federal charges were also expected. - 'Politically motivated' - A notebook containing the names of other lawmakers and potential targets was found inside a car left by Boelter at the Hortmans' home. The attacks renewed fears of growing political violence in America. "I am concerned about all our political leaders, political organizations," US Senator Amy Klobuchar, who represents Minnesota, said Sunday. "It was politically motivated, and there clearly was some throughline with abortion because of the groups that were on the list, and other things that I've heard were in this manifesto. So that was one of his motivations." As speaker of the Minnesota House of Representatives from 2019 to January 2025, Hortman was committed to legislation that protected reproductive rights in the state, local media reported. - 'Cannot be the norm' - The United States is bitterly divided politically as President Donald Trump embarks on his second term, implementing hardline policies and routinely insulting his opponents. Political violence has become more common. Trump himself survived an assassination attempt last year, with a second attempt foiled by law enforcement. Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro's home was set on fire this year. An assailant with a hammer attacked the husband of then-US House speaker Nancy Pelosi in 2022. "(This is) a moment in this country where we watch violence erupt," Minnesota Governor Tim Walz said after the arrest. "This cannot be the norm. It cannot be the way that we deal with our political differences." The shootings shook the nation on a day when hundreds of thousands of protesters across the United States took to the streets to rally against Trump, as he presided over a military parade in Washington. Trump has condemned the attacks in Minnesota on the lawmakers and their spouses. The president was asked in a Sunday interview with ABC News if he planned to call Walz, who was Kamala Harris's running mate in the election Trump won last year. "Well, it's a terrible thing. I think he's a terrible governor. I think he's a grossly incompetent person," Trump said. "But I may, I may call him, I may call other people too." bur/ksb/dw

Convicted murderer put to death in fourth US execution this week
Convicted murderer put to death in fourth US execution this week

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Yahoo

Convicted murderer put to death in fourth US execution this week

A South Carolina man convicted of a 2005 double murder was put to death by lethal injection on Friday, the fourth execution in the United States this week. Stephen Stanko, 57, was pronounced dead at 6:34 pm (2234 GMT) at the state prison in Columbia, the South Carolina Department of Corrections said in a statement. Stanko had a choice between his method of execution -- firing squad, electric chair or lethal injection. He chose lethal injection. Stanko was convicted of the 2005 murders of his girlfriend, Laura Ling, 43, and Henry Turner, a 74-year-old friend. He also raped Ling's teenage daughter and slit her throat but she survived and testified against him at trial. In a final statement read by his attorney, Stanko said he was "truly sorry for the pain and loss that I caused. "Sorry is never enough but that does not mean it should not be said." Stanko was the fourth Death Row inmate executed in the United States this week. President Donald Trump is a proponent of capital punishment and called on his first day in office for an expansion of its use "for the vilest crimes." John Hanson, 61, was executed by lethal injection in Oklahoma on Thursday for carjacking and kidnapping Mary Bowles, 77, from a mall in the city of Tulsa and then shooting her to death along with a witness, Jerald Thurman. Hanson had been serving a life sentence for bank robbery in a federal prison in the state of Louisiana but the Trump administration approved his transfer to Oklahoma so he could face the death penalty. Anthony Wainwright, 54, convicted of the 1994 murder of Carmen Gayheart, 23, a nursing student and mother of two young children, was put to death by lethal injection in Florida on Tuesday. Gregory Hunt, 65, convicted of the 1988 rape and murder of his girlfriend, Karen Lane, 32, was executed by nitrogen gas in Alabama that same day. There have been 23 executions in the United States this year: 18 by lethal injection, two by firing squad and three by nitrogen hypoxia, which involves pumping nitrogen gas into a facemask, causing the prisoner to suffocate. The use of nitrogen gas as an execution method has been denounced by UN experts as cruel and inhumane. The death penalty has been abolished in 23 of the 50 US states, while three others -- California, Oregon and Pennsylvania -- have moratoriums in place. cl/acb

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store