Guys, they updated the FB. It was Cameron in the water.
I will see if I can find MSM. FB is open still o think.
Heartbreaking.
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Family confirms body pulled from lake in Oshawa Saturday night was Cameron Bailie
The notice read: Our family is deeply saddened to announce that the body recovered from Lake Ontario on Saturday June 17th 2017 was Cameron Bailie. We would like to thank Officers Sean and Mike, of the Durham Region Police Service for all their hard work and effort. Thank you to all the volunteers that searched and brought awareness. Your time and efforts do not go unnoticed. At this time, we are asking for privacy, but will announce a future date and place for a public memorial.Thank You Marion, Jimmy, Amanda, Nicole, Chris, Michelle. and the entire family
Durham Regional Police say the body of a man pulled from Lake Ontario on the weekend has been identified as an Oshawa man missing since January.
Cameron Bailie, 27, was reported missing on Jan. 10, 2017. He was last seen at his home on Oxford Street in Oshawa.
http://www.cbc.ca/beta/news/canada/toronto/body-lake-ontario-oshawa-1.4168760An autopsy on Monday confirmed his identity. Toxicology tests will be done to confirm cause of death.
I haven't seen anyone post this yet. Although the police are maintaining "no foul play suspected" toxicology reports have been ordered and the family maintains this is out of character and they will find out what happened. There are posts on his memorial pages "#JusticeforCam" which may indicate this is a crime.
http://oshawaexpress.ca/body-of-cameron-bailie-found/
Welcome to Ws siliconrod!Does anyone know if the toxicology report for Cameron has been released to the family and to the public yet
Staccato scenes play out in Jody McLennan’s mind on loop: her husband slumped in his chair, paramedics pumping his chest, his lifeless body splayed on their living room floor.
Only four hours earlier, McLennan and Oghenovo Avwunufe had been munching on chips and drinking beer before she fell asleep on the couch while he sat in front of the computer, working on a business project. Unbeknownst to McLennan, Avwunufe had snorted cocaine earlier with a friend.
He was still in the same chair when McLennan woke up at 6 a.m., she recalled in a recent interview.
“I thought he was sleeping, so I went over and shook him, and I knew when I shook him that he wasn’t alive,” she said.
Paramedics arrived within minutes and immediately began pumping Avwunufe’s chest, but they were unable to revive him. A coroner arrived about five hours later and pronounced the 25-year-old dead.
The coroner told McLennan her husband’s blood was sent to the Centre for Forensic Sciences — the scientific arm of Ontario’s justice system — for a toxicological analysis. Once the results were in — the turnaround time is 37 days, according to the lab — the coroner would determine the cause of death and notify the victim’s family. The whole investigation takes months to conduct, according to a spokeswoman for Ontario’s Office of the Chief Coroner.