Four-year-old Cameron March disappeared from Blind Line area of north Burlington on May 7, 1975.
This age progression sketch by forensic artist Tim Widden was commissioned by volunteer organization Please Bring Me Home. It shows what Cameron March, who went missing on May 7, 1975 when he was four years old, might look like today — at the age of 53.
Victoria Pope, a volunteer for
Please Bring Me Home told the Burlington Post she is currently investigating the cold case of Cameron March, who went missing on
May 7, 1975 when he was four years old, after he went to visit a friend near his home in the Blind Line area of north Burlington.
“I was assigned this case just over a year and a half ago when I began volunteering for Please Bring Me Home,” Pope stated in an email. “The last time an age progression sketch was done was in the 1980s and was quite dated. We recently raised funds on behalf of Cameron’s family to have a forensic artist complete an age progression sketch. We were able to start a fundraiser for the total cost of $900.”
She said the organization has also, within the last six months, uploaded a DNA sample from Cameron’s father, Gerry March, to
ancestry.com, but no matches have come up so far.
“We keep checking though, in hopes one day something will,” Pope said.
She said Halton Police have also uploaded Gerry’s DNA to a database of family members for unidentified remains, should remains be found one day.
“Cameron’s case is one of the most challenging cases we have at PBMH, but we are hoping one day a tip will come in, or a match from the genealogy sites will show something,” said Pope.
She hopes publishing the new sketch will help bring some information.
Four-year-old Cameron March disappeared from Blind Line area of north Burlington on May 7, 1975.
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