Man. It appears they took down the find Linnea fb page. Beautiful young mother goes out jogging with her dog (maybe taken for protection?) in an affluent neighborhood having only lived there a few months, and she is killed. Nobody is safe in this world, it seems. Thoughts are with her family, especially her two young sons that now have to grow up without their mother because of garbage.
Dang it...
Oh gosh. Wish I hadn't even logged on to see this tonight. The memorial page has me in tears.
Rest in Peace, Linnea. Prayers for the family and all those that loved her.
Lawmen are still awaiting the autopsy results to determine the cause of death of the 36-year-old married mother of two, who was a lecturer at St. George’s University.
Her husband - who was her high school sweetheart - thanked all those who helped with the search in an emotional Facebook message on Saturday.
‘Thank you’ isn’t enough… and when I have time to reflect, I hope to be able to say thank you in a way that truly reflects how thankful I am to everyone over the past six days,' wrote Mr. Veinotte.
He then said of his losing his wife; 'It does not seem real; I am waiting and hoping that I’ll wake up from this 5 days of agony. I’m hurt… lost… angry… empty… and lonely.
.....
Ms. Veinotte's cause of death is expected to be revealed on Monday afternoon following an autopsy.
Authorities in Grenada say Linnea Veinotte, a Canadian woman who disappeared on Dec. 6, died as a result of "blunt force trauma to the chest and lower limb due to a vehicular accident."
ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada - A 26-year-old man accused in the death of a New Brunswick woman who disappeared while jogging in Grenada is due in court today.
Akim Frank is charged with non-capital murder in the death of Linnea Veinotte, who was last seen with her dog on the small Caribbean island earlier this month.
Police say the cause of death was blunt force trauma to the chest and lower limbs as a result of being struck by a vehicle.
Akim Frank made another appearance in court in Grenada on Tuesday, accused in the disappearance and death of 36-year-old Linnea Veinotte, born in New Brunswick and more recently a resident of Nova Scotia...
Williams said Frank is due back in court on Feb.1, "when the preliminary inquiry is set to begin."
Akim Frank, the Grenadian man charged in the death of New Brunswick native Linnea Veinotte, has pleaded not guilty to non-capital murder.
Non-capital murder is similar to a first-degree murder charge in Canada. It carries a maximum penalty of life in prison.
The Grenada man accused of killing 36-year-old Linnea Veinotte in a fatal hit-and-run last December on the Caribbean island may not go to trial until 2017.
"More than likely it would be in the latter part of 2017, as we do have a number of other defendants on remand before the accused who are awaiting trial," said Howard Pinnock, senior Crown counsel in the office of the Director of Public Prosecutions, in a written statement in response to inquiries from CBC News.
The Grenadian man accused of killing New Brunswick-born Linnea Veinotte in 2015 and ditching her body near a golf course will go to trial on Nov. 21.
That date was set after a status hearing in a courtroom in St. George's, Grenada, last Thursday.
Akim Frank, who was 26 at the time of Veinotte's death, has remained in jail since he turned himself in to police six days after Veinotte disappeared Dec. 6, 2015.
Police say it was Frank who led investigators to the partly decomposed body of Veinotte, 36, some six kilometres from where police found collision debris. He allegedly struck Veinotte with a borrowed SUV.