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Missing for 2 years, wife of former S'pore basketball coach confirmed dead in Japan

Missing for 2 years, wife of former S'pore basketball coach confirmed dead in Japan

Straits Times22-05-2025

Ms Patricia Wu-Murad was confirmed dead on May 9, more than two years after she went missing during a solo hike in Japan. PHOTO: HELP FIND PATTIE/FACEBOOK
Missing for 2 years, wife of former S'pore basketball coach confirmed dead in Japan
SINGAPORE - After more than two years since she was last seen leaving a Nara guesthouse for a hiking trail in Japan, Ms Patricia Wu-Murad, wife of a former Singapore women's basketball coach, has been confirmed dead by her family.
Her family received confirmation of her death on May 9 , said her husband Kirk Murad.
Pattie, as the Taiwanese-American woman was known to those close to her, was reported missing on April 10, 2023 after not showing up at another inn she had reserved. She had planned to stay there after her estimated seven- to eight-hour hike along the ancient Kumano Kodo pilgrimage route in Japan's southern Kansai region.
A search for the 60-year-old retiree had involved dozens of search and rescue professionals from the US and Japan, local police, embassy officials and a personal intervention from US Senator for Connecticut Richard Blumenthal for local authorities to restart the search after initial efforts proved futile.
Over the past two years, there were a couple of incremental discoveries, one of which led to a conclusive finding.
Ms Wu-Murad's backpack and a hiking shoe were found by a local fisherman in a stream near another hiking trail in September 2024.
In April 2025, a rescuer hired by the family found several of her personal items and what appeared to be a femur, or thigh bone, in the area where the backpack was found.
Ms Patricia Wu-Murad's backpack was found by a person fishing in Totsukawa village near a stream in September 2024, around 18 months after she went missing.
FACEBOOK/Help Find Pattie
Checks compared the remains to their daughter's DNA and proved a match, said Mr Murad.
'(The discovery) offers a measure of closure, but many questions remain unanswered, including the exact circumstances and cause of Pattie's death,' wrote Mr Murad, who had led the Singapore basketball team at the 2017 SEA Games and was also a visiting lecturer at Ngee Ann Polytechnic from 2000 to 2003, on Facebook.
'We finally have time to grieve because we never really grieved her passing,' he said. 'It was just... always hoping that 0.1 per cent chance that she might still be alive.'
Now based in the United States, he thanked search and rescue team members who did not accept payment beyond their expenses.
Initial search operations for Ms Wu-Murad in 2023 were conducted by their daughter Murphy Murad. The family raised more than US$200,000 (S$260,000) for the search.
Based in Singapore, Ms Murad had been the family member living closest to Japan. After the latest of her mother's remains were found, she also returned to the Kansai region to tie up loose ends with the local authorities and rescuers.
'Returning to Japan was equally nostalgic and heartbreaking,' she wrote on Facebook. 'Having the American SAR expert guide me through the terrain in which my mother's remains were found was empowering and helped paint a better picture of where it all went wrong.'
Ms Murad is general manager of Fastbreak Basketball Club, which conducts private training programmes in Singapore. She has also won the Women's National Basketball League playing for Siglap Basketball Club.
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