
Mystery deepens as body discovered during search for missing American in island paradise
The Royal Turks and Caicos Islands Police Force (RTCIPF) said in a press release that it had discovered the body of a deceased man in a "state of decomposition" just after 9 a.m. on Saturday, in the Grace Bay Police District.
Additional partner agencies were notified, and the scene was secured, according to police.
But the RTCIPF made it clear that the identity of the body has not been established, adding that once the identification process is complete and next of kin is informed, officials will provide further updates.
"The Royal Turks and Caicos Islands Police Force extends sincere condolences to the family and friends of the deceased," Acting Commissioner of Police Rodney Adams said while commenting on the discovery of the body. "We urge family members of the public to refrain from speculation and allow the investigative process to confirm the identity through official channels."
The investigation into the matter remains ongoing.
The news comes nearly a week and a half after 51-year-old Brian Tarrence, of Monroe, New York, went missing on June 25.
Tarrence was last seen leaving his condominium around 3:30 a.m. at the Paradise Inn in Grace Bay, Providenciales, Turks and Caicos, according to a missing persons flyer from the RTCIPF.
Tarrence, who recently moved from Monroe to Manhattan, arrived in Turks and Caicos with his wife of one year on June 22, and they planned to leave on June 29.
The Tarrence family's private investigator, Carl DeFazio, told Fox News Digital last week that the couple seemed to be having a normal couple of days, and he walked out of his condominium in a very safe place, and in the middle of Grace Bay Road.
DeFazio said Tarrence was on camera when he walked into town and disappeared.
"We haven't heard from him since," he said.
DeFazio said the Turks and Caicos police force is using every resource it has, including drone technology and CCTV to try and locate the 51-year-old man.
He left his rental with his phone and wallet. He was wearing a T-shirt, shorts and sneakers, DeFazio said.
The day before his disappearance, he and his wife had gone on a boat trip. That evening, his wife went to bed, and when she woke up, he was gone. She hadn't noticed he left, DeFazio said.
Turks and Caicos police are asking anyone with information about Tarrence's disappearance to contact 911 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477.
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CNN
39 minutes ago
- CNN
He traveled 8,000 miles to attend his first grandson's high school graduation. The next day he vanished
Reuben Waithaka traveled 8,200 miles to watch his first grandson graduate from high school in Alabama. He arrived from Kenya six daysearly with sentimental gifts tucked in his suitcase: faded photos of his own son at a young age and matching African print shirts for his son, grandson and himself. But they never got a chance to stand together — three generations of men — proudly wearing colorful, coordinated outfits. The morning after he and his wife, Elizabeth Barua, landed in the US, Waithaka walked out of his son's house in Calera, Alabama, and vanished. The home's doorbell camera captured the 72-year-old stepping out ontothe driveway at 11:08 a.m., dressed neatly in khakis, a checkered blue-and-white shirt and black shoes. About half an hour later, surveillance footage recorded him walking intoa gas station almost two miles way. He waved at the store attendant,headed into a rest room and left through the back door, never to be seenagain. 'He just got here. And then he was gone,' says his grandson, ByronBarua, 17, who graduated five days later without his grandfather present. Seven weeks later, there's been no sign of Waithaka. Police have scoured wooded areas around Calera – a city of about 19,000 people some 30 miles south of Birmingham – using helicopters, drones, off-road vehicles, tracking dogs and infrared heat-seeking cameras. So far, they have found nothing. 'Sometimes I regret why I asked my parents to come for my son's graduation. I find myself wondering, 'What would I have done differently'?' says Waithaka's son, Willington Barua. 'Maybe if I hadn't invited them, my dad would still be with us.' The family has retraced Waithaka's steps and watched the surveillance footage over and over, searching for clues. How does a 5-foot-5, 160-pound man disappear in broad daylight — in a foreign country where he barely knows anyone? They've considered the possibility that Waithaka had undiagnosed dementia or another condition that was triggered by the stress of being away from home. It's not uncommon for people with dementia to wander away from home, especially when they're in unfamiliar surroundings, experts say. He must be so scared, says his daughter, Emily Barua, her voice trailingoff as she draws a long breath. 'I want to be hopeful, I really do,' she says. 'But sometimes I wonder — did he sit somewhere and fall asleep in the heat and never (wake) up?' The family has replayed the moments leading up to Waithaka's disappearance and wondered: Did they miss signs that something was wrong? Looking back, Waithaka seemed restless on his trip to the United States. At the time, his family figured it was just exhaustion from the 18- hour journey, his son says. His parents' flight took off from the Kenyan capital of Nairobi on May 13. Waithaka drove his small sedan to the airport, where they boarded a Lufthansa flight through Frankfurt, Germany, to Atlanta. Just before heading to the airport, he did his usual routine –- picked up some yard litter, fed his five German Shepherds and cleaned up their space. He'd hired someone to care for the dogs while they were gone, his son says. The flight to Frankfurt went fine, but things went downhill on the journey's second leg to Atlanta. Waithaka became incoherent and agitated, and a flight attendant had to step in to help his wife keep him seated, his son says. Waithaka's unease didn't end after landing in Atlanta. He appeared confused, and fell and hurt his knee when he tried to go the wrong way on an airport escalator, his son says. His limp from that fall is visible on the gas station security footage. Barua took his father to the ER once they arrived in Calera. He was discharged in the early morning after a CT scan of his head and some bloodwork came back normal, Barua says. Jetlagged and exhausted, Waithaka showered, took a nap and ate a breakfast of fried eggs and tea. Then he stepped outside. His wife followed initially, but when sherushed back to close the garage door, he was gone, his son says. Waithaka got two rides from motorists after he left his son's home that morning, giving him a significant head start. His family believes those rides changed everything. Investigators interviewed both people who gave him rides, says Calera Police Chief David Hyche. Waithaka first asked a neighbor to drop him off eight houses away, mistakenly thinking it was his son's home. There, he flagged down a DoorDash driver and asked for a ride 'to town.' The driver stopped at a gas station and Waithaka told him that location was fine, Hyche says. His last confirmed sighting was at the gas station — at 11:43 a.m. A resident later reported seeing someone matching Waithaka's description entering a hunting club near the gas station. The woman told police that he crawled under a gate and disappeared into a wooded area, Hyche says. Police have interviewed the people who live in the area several times. Investigators speculate Waithaka may have caught another ride at a truck stop behind the gas station — potentially out of town, Hyche says. Shortly after he was reported missing, his family went on local television and begged people to stop giving him rides. They feared each ride was taking him farther from home — and from them. 'It is still a possibility that he's in that wooded area because it is just so large,' Hyche says. 'But we were searching with many resources as fast as possible because it's a very hot and very thick area. And someone of his age, we needed to find him as fast as possible. So after several days of intensive ground searching, we moved … to the hope that someone had given him a ride.' After Waithaka went missing, many of the town's police officers worked 18 straight days without a day off, Hyche says. The leads have tapered off, but he's promised the family that detectives won't stop search searching until he's found. In the days since Waithaka vanished, residents have distributed flyersand combed wooded trails. Hyche says offers for help poured in. 'We couldn't even respond to them all,' he says. 'We had to turn away well-meaning citizens during the nighttime infrared searches and K-9 searches to avoid a false positive.' Waithaka had his Kenyan phone with him when he disappeared. Hychereached out to the FBI in Nairobi to ask the local carrier to help track it, a process that took several days. It said the phone last pinged in Frankfurt, indicating it may be in airplane mode, making it difficult to track, Hyche says. The Kenyan did not have his passport, which contains his B-2 visitor's visa to the US. He may have had some money in Kenyan currency but none in US dollars, his family says. Calera detectives have searched abandoned buildings in the area and are regularly reaching out to homeless shelters, hospitals and immigration officials to check whether Waithaka has appeared in their databases, Hyche says. Hyche says his father suffered from dementia and he understands thefamily's anguish. The case has introduced him to the area's Kenyancommunity — a relationship he hopes to maintain, he says. 'It was urgent to really do all we could to try to find him,' he says. 'It's just such a sad case, but it's also given us an opportunity. I did not know we had Kenyans living here. Well, maybe because none of them have ever been in any trouble.' Waithaka has four children: two in Kenya and two in the US, including daughter Emily Barua, who lives in Renton, Washington. Willington Barua has mostly lived in the Birmingham area since he immigrated to the US about 25 years ago. He was drawn to Calera by its small-town charm and mild winters. On May 20, five days after his grandfather vanished, Byron Barua graduated from Calera High School. The family joined hands and had a moment of silence for their missing patriarch before the ceremony. As Byron, 17, crossed the stage to get his diploma, his relatives clapped and cheered, determined to stay strong for him. 'It was tragic, but I tried not to let it get to me or bring me down all the way,' Byron says of his missing grandfather. 'I pray for him to stay safe.' As the days drag on without answers, fear takes over and the family is haunted by endless questions. Was he a victim of foul play? Is he alive? And if he is, how is he surviving with no money? Willington Barua says his parents' flight arrived in the late afternoon, and he wonders whether his father was going through 'sundowning,' a late-in-the-day symptom which can affect people with Alzheimer's disease and other types of dementia, according to the Mayo Clinic. It causes confusion, anxiety and aggression, which in turn leads to pacing or wandering. Waithaka's wife, Elizabeth Barua, returned to Kenya on June 20 to be with loved ones. She declined to be interviewed when CNN reached out to her and is too distraught to speak with the media, her son says. The couple has been to the US twice before: in June 2017 and May 2019. On both previous trips, Waithaka's health appeared fine and he had no issues, his son says. His parents even extended their 2019 visit by several months. June 3 marked Waithaka's 73rd birthday. His son had planned a party forhim on Father's Day — his parents' last weekend in the US before they werescheduled to return to Kenya. He was going to roast a goat – a Kenyan delicacy – and invite friends and family from all over the US to celebrate his dad. Maybe they would have worn their matching shirts. But there was no party. What happened to Waithaka remains a mystery. Barua owns a trucking company, and he tapes flyers at rest areas and truck stops wherever he goes. Every time he passes a wooded area, he slows down and peers into the trees. And every time his phone rings, his heart races. He picks up with anticipation and fear, hoping the call will bring answers. The not knowing, he says, is the hardest part.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Lake District walker found safe and well after searching for missing phone
Mountain rescue volunteers were called out late on the night of Friday, July 4, to assist in the search for a walker who went missing on Glenridding Dodd. Cumbria Police contacted Patterdale Mountain Rescue Team just before midnight on after receiving a report that a man had failed to return from a solo search for a lost phone. The man and his partner had climbed Glenridding Dodd earlier in the evening, returning to their car on Greenside Road around 9:30pm, as light was fading. After realising they had lost their phone during the descent, the man decided to retrace their route to look for it, leaving his partner at the car with instructions to keep calling the phone in hopes it might be located. He set off without a torch or waterproof gear. When he had not returned after two hours, his partner contacted the police. Four members of the rescue team were deployed to search the fell. By 3:00am, with no trace found, the team began coordinating a wider search effort for first light, including a request to the Lake District Search Dogs Association. Fortunately, police received a call from a member of the public in Glenridding reporting that the missing man had been found in the village. He was wet, cold, and had suffered minor cuts and bruises, but did not require hospital treatment. The missing phone was recovered the following Sunday—still working and with 50 per cent battery remaining. The incident lasted four hours and involved six team members in total. A spokesperson for Patterdale MRT said: 'While this incident ended positively, it serves as a reminder of the importance of being properly equipped when heading onto the fells, even for a short trip.'


News24
3 hours ago
- News24
Body found in Port Alfred river during search for missing Rhodes student
A body was found in Port Alfred in the Eastern Cape in the early hours of Saturday during the search for missing Rhodes University student, Fulufhelo 'Lekay' Munzhelele. National Sea Rescue Institute (NSRI) spokesperson Craig Lambinon said the body was found in the Kowie River at about 01:00. He said it was believed to be the body of 22-year-old Munzhelele from Musina, Limpopo, who went missing in the early hours of Friday at East Beach in Port Alfred. However, he added: 'Formal identification is in progress and at this stage the identification is yet to be confirmed.' He said police opened an inquest docket. According to Lambinon, the information the NSRI had received at the time of the missing persons report was that three friends – two men and a woman – had got into difficulty while swimming at East Beach. It appeared that the three friends became caught in rip currents, he said. One man and the woman were able to swim to safety. However, Munzhelele appeared to have gone missing in the surf zone. An extensive search operation was launched, which led to the discovery of the body on Saturday morning.