The most infamous murder case in the history of Vancouver, British Columbia was unearthed on January 15, 1953 when the tiny skeletons of two children were found under leaves and a woman's "oilskin" coat deep in Stanley Park. For 45 years these children were thought to be a boy and a girl under 10 years of age. Dubbed the "Babes in the Woods," there was renewed interest in 1998 when DNA testing on the teeth of the skeletons revealed they were actually half-brothers. Can you help identify them?
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Friday, October 14, 2005
Original article in The Vancouver Province. January 15, 1953 (read text)
it Police Constable Brian Honeybourn who had the boys tested out at UBC. I believe he and me ran Police Boats at the same time. We both have mutual friends who worked the case,and who went to their graves wishing that the case could of been solved.I feel that after 5 years of research...That I know who the killer is and how it went down..and its not what it seems
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it Police Constable Brian Honeybourn who had the boys tested out at UBC. I believe he and me ran Police Boats at the same time. We both have mutual friends who worked the case,and who went to their graves wishing that the case could of been solved.I feel that after 5 years of research...That I know who the killer is and how it went down..and its not what it seems
I'll bite! WHO? I've never heard of this before, this is the second article I've read on it, what really happened??? 8/28/12
Those boys never had a grave. They still don't.
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