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Investigators hope a new autopsy will show whether Joe Grozelle met with foul play.
JONATHAN SHER, Free Press Reporter 2004-10-19 04:11:23
Eleven months after the remains of a Chatham-area cadet washed ashore near Kingston, his body will be exhumed by investigators unable to determine if he died as a result of foul play. Provincial police don't know how Joe Grozelle, a third-year student at Royal Military College in Kingston, ended up in a frigid river last Nov. 13.
But OPP Det. Insp. Ian Grant said he's getting closer to the answers he hopes a second examination will bring.
"I think we're quite a bit closer (than we were 11 months ago)," Grant said yesterday.
The OPP have gathered new evidence since Ontario's chief coroner asked them to take over the investigation from the military and local police in March, deputy chief coroner Dr. Jim Cairns said.
"OPP have in their investigation found some things that need to be evaluated further," Cairns said.
Asked about new evidence, Grant said he wouldn't discuss it for fear it might taint future statements by witnesses.
Grozelle, 21, was last seen Oct. 22, 2003, in his dorm room by his girlfriend, Melissa Haggart, who told authorities she fell asleep at 1 a.m. and awoke at 5:30 a.m. to find him gone, his wallet and cellphone left behind.
That timeline hasn't been contradicted by any evidence gathered since, Grant said.
A medical examiner found signs Grozelle drowned, but didn't establish whether he slipped, jumped or was pushed into the Cataraqui River, Cairns said.
The examiner found no trauma to the body, which was so badly decomposed it was identified with dental records.
The decision to exhume Grozelle's body, to be done in the next two to three weeks, wasn't made lightly because it can be so upsetting to family, Grant said.
"It's not very often we do that," he said.
But that doesn't mean police believe Grozelle was killed by someone else, Grant said. If that were the case, OPP would take over the investigation, which is still being directed by the coroner's office.
Nor does it mean the first autopsy was lacking, he said. As a case progresses, new questions can arise about old evidence that a second autopsy may address.
The bottom line is police still don't know if Grozelle was the victim of homicide, suicide, an accident or death by natural causes, said Cairns.
The lack of answers has been difficult for Grozelle's parents and siblings.
Police haven't shared details of their probe, Grozelle's father, Ron said yesterday.
"The length of time this investigation has been going and the lack of information is extremely frustrating," Ron Grozelle said. "This is 2004, not 1904, and I would hope we could get some resolution."
Grozelle's family believes he didn't commit suicide. The lead military investigator uncovered no unusual pressures on him beyond that which was typical for a 21-year-old.
Hopefully some closure for his family soon.

JONATHAN SHER, Free Press Reporter 2004-10-19 04:11:23
Eleven months after the remains of a Chatham-area cadet washed ashore near Kingston, his body will be exhumed by investigators unable to determine if he died as a result of foul play. Provincial police don't know how Joe Grozelle, a third-year student at Royal Military College in Kingston, ended up in a frigid river last Nov. 13.
But OPP Det. Insp. Ian Grant said he's getting closer to the answers he hopes a second examination will bring.
"I think we're quite a bit closer (than we were 11 months ago)," Grant said yesterday.
The OPP have gathered new evidence since Ontario's chief coroner asked them to take over the investigation from the military and local police in March, deputy chief coroner Dr. Jim Cairns said.
"OPP have in their investigation found some things that need to be evaluated further," Cairns said.
Asked about new evidence, Grant said he wouldn't discuss it for fear it might taint future statements by witnesses.
Grozelle, 21, was last seen Oct. 22, 2003, in his dorm room by his girlfriend, Melissa Haggart, who told authorities she fell asleep at 1 a.m. and awoke at 5:30 a.m. to find him gone, his wallet and cellphone left behind.
That timeline hasn't been contradicted by any evidence gathered since, Grant said.
A medical examiner found signs Grozelle drowned, but didn't establish whether he slipped, jumped or was pushed into the Cataraqui River, Cairns said.
The examiner found no trauma to the body, which was so badly decomposed it was identified with dental records.
The decision to exhume Grozelle's body, to be done in the next two to three weeks, wasn't made lightly because it can be so upsetting to family, Grant said.
"It's not very often we do that," he said.
But that doesn't mean police believe Grozelle was killed by someone else, Grant said. If that were the case, OPP would take over the investigation, which is still being directed by the coroner's office.
Nor does it mean the first autopsy was lacking, he said. As a case progresses, new questions can arise about old evidence that a second autopsy may address.
The bottom line is police still don't know if Grozelle was the victim of homicide, suicide, an accident or death by natural causes, said Cairns.
The lack of answers has been difficult for Grozelle's parents and siblings.
Police haven't shared details of their probe, Grozelle's father, Ron said yesterday.
"The length of time this investigation has been going and the lack of information is extremely frustrating," Ron Grozelle said. "This is 2004, not 1904, and I would hope we could get some resolution."
Grozelle's family believes he didn't commit suicide. The lead military investigator uncovered no unusual pressures on him beyond that which was typical for a 21-year-old.
Hopefully some closure for his family soon.


