Found Deceased Canada - Jeff Surtel, 17, Mission, BC, 29 Apr 2007

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https://mcsc.ca/cases/jeffrey-stuart-surtel/
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Lengthy article with additional links concerning DNA, UID and missing persons.

http://globalnews.ca/news/3403717/a...-after-son-jeff-surtel-vanished-10-years-ago/
April 26, 2017



‘A nightmare’: B.C. family struggles for answers after son Jeff Surtel vanished 10 years ago

For an entire year, Dawn Surtel thought about ending her life following the disappearance of her son from their home in Mission, B.C.

Seventeen-year-old Jeff Surtel vanished just after midnight on April 29, 2007. He was last seen by neighbours riding a blue CCM mountain bike, with a yellow fork.

Despite weeks of searching in the heavily wooded areas of Mission and Hatzic, just over an hour’s drive from Vancouver, neither he or the bike have ever been found.
“It’s been a nightmare,” Dawn Surtel told Global News. “I didn’t eat for a week. Not one drop of food, I couldn’t sleep.
“I tried different things to find out what happened like psychics and what not, but nothing ever [amounted] to anything.”

Gary remembers sitting and quietly talking with his teenage son in the front room of their home in Mission the night before he vanished. Jeff had been upset after being grounded from the computer for a week after receiving poor grades on his report card.

“I said ‘Goodnight,’ and I went up to bed and that was the last time I ever saw him,” he said. “It was absolute dread. Just in the pit of your stomach
.

With the 10-year anniversary of his disappearance on Saturday, the Surtel family and police are hoping someone will come forward with new information.

Dawn says she’s convinced something happened that night in April of 2007, and that he didn’t just run away.
“He got hit by a car, something happened and somebody covered it up,” Dawn said. “I think those people that know what happened, need to come forward and just tell somebody. Tell the police.”
But with so few answers in their son’s disappearance, the Surtel family is wondering if Jeff could be among the hundreds of unidentified remains lying in morgues and cemeteries across Canada.

“If my son is somewhere in an unmarked grave, laying there because there is no DNA to match his, that is just a terrible thing,” Gary said. “[The federal government] needs to get this done now.
The RCMP said in a statement there are currently 588 sets of unidentified remains in Canada. The Ontario Coroner’s Office said in an email the province currently has 245 unidentified remains, while the BC Coroners Service says it has 182 unidentified cases.
Victims’ families say the DNA databank could be instrumental in helping coroners and police solve cases by comparing the DNA of missing persons with samples taken from unidentified human remains across the country.
 

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http://mission.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/ViewPage.action?siteNodeId=225&languageId=1&contentId=42086
Jeff Surtel, missing from Mission BC since April 28, 2007

Jeff Surtel left the family home in Mission BC after being grounded from the computer for a week, a consequence of his grades falling on his last report card. He took with him his distinctive CCM blue mountain bike with yellow forks.

“I dream about him all the time,” says Dawn Surtel. “He is always around the age of 12. I think I dream about him young, because I can’t move forward….I can only look back.”
47227_Jeff_Surtel_age_17.jpg


47228_Jeffrey_Surtel_age20web.jpg

At the time of his disappearance his father described him as a quiet boy, who spent a lot of time at home – and was interested in programming computers. But his mother adds that Jeff also loved camping and fishing, and said for the most part things seemed to come easily for Jeff, such as baseball and skiing.

She confesses that Jeff’s disappearance has “pretty much ruined our lives.” After he went missing one of the first dreams she had of Jeff was him coming to their bedroom with a big grin on his face, and telling her and her husband how much he missed them, and that he even missed his brother Rob.

“We miss you Jeff and love you and we are still waiting for you to come home…”

Police have followed up on several leads and possible sightings, but despite this work Jeff remains missing. Jeff Surtel is Caucasian, and at the time of his disappearance was 17, 6’1” tall, and weighed 150 pounds with medium length brown hair, brown eyes, and with glasses. He was last seen wearing dark coloured jeans, a navy coloured t-shirt and a blue hooded sweater.

A photo of Jeff at age 17, as well as an age-enhanced photo, is attached.
 
Rbbm. intriguing and strange, wonder if it was a prank or something more?
imo, speculation.
http://footprintsattheriversedge.blogspot.ca/2010/08/042907-jeffrey-surtel-mission-bc-canada.html
The search for Jeffrey Surtel
The night before Jeffrey disappeared, he had helped his father pick a movie from the video store around 6 p.m. The family had planned to watch the movie after Gary and his wife returned from a birthday party. But when they returned home, at about 9 p.m., Jeff had changed his mind.

“Something happened between six and nine when, all of a sudden, he didn’t want to watch it. I don’t know what happened, Gary Surtel said.” [Mission City Record, April 24, 2008]

Gary said Jeffrey instead stayed up late watching television, and when the family checked his bedroom the next morning, Jeffrey's bed hadn’t been slept in.

The family does not think Jeff ran away or was contemplating suicide. He left behind $200 in cash, his bank cards, and didn't take any clothes.

One strange occurrence has caught the family's attention. In 2008, The Record reported on the theft of a valuable cross from Westminster Abbey. The report also mentioned that the thief left behind a missing person's poster, as well as some other items. Gary Surtel told the paper that he learned from someone at the monastery that the poster left behind was of his missing son.

Police did not confirm whether the report was accurate and it was Jeff Surtel's missing poster, but the idea that it might be true has haunted the Surtel family
.
 
Missing Children Database: Jeff Surtel
197

"The questions never end. Our hearts are forever broken, If anyone knows anything, please, it is time to come forward"
— Jeff's mother
Date of birth:
Feb. 24, 1990
Missing since:
April 29, 2007
Missing from:
Mission, British Columbia, Canada
Eyes:
Blue
Hair:
Brown
Height:
6'1" / 186 cm
Weight:
151 lbs / 68.4 kg
Additional information:
Jeff Surtel was last seen leaving his home in Mission, BC. At the time of his disappearance, Jeff was wearing thin rimmed glasses and may have been riding a blue CCM mountain bike with yellow front forks. Jeff also has a number of moles on the left side of his chin.''
 
Sept 1 2023 rbbm
''Jeff Surtel was 17 years old when he went missing from Mission in 2007. An aged-up rendering (right) shows what Surtel could look like now. /Submitted Photo
In April 2007, 17-year-old Jeff Surtel left his home in Mission at midnight on a bicycle and hasn’t been seen since.
Over 16 years later, his family is still searching for answers.
Gary and Dawn Surtel, Jeff’s parents, say until they find out what happened and get closure, the pain will never end for them.

“It’s probably any parent’s worst nightmare basically. It doesn’t get any worse,” Gary said.''

“Any time we can get Jeff out there in public’s thoughts again, it’s a good thing. Maybe someone is holding back on some information and due to passage of time, maybe they’re willing to bring information forward now,” Gary said.

Jeff is described as 6’1 with brown hair and eyes and several moles on the left side of his cheek. At the time of his disappearance, he was wearing dark blue jeans, a navy blue t-shirt, a navy hoodie and black runners.

His bike is described as a blue CCM mountain bike with yellow front forks.


For Angela Heino, Surtel’s disappearance is her first case as a volunteer investigator with Please Bring Me Home.''
 
Doesn't say where or how he was found. I wonder if the remains were in NamUs.

On August 5, 2008, a beachgoer walking near the former Silver King Resort, west of Port Angeles, Washington, discovered a shoe containing a sock and what appeared to be human remains. Detectives from the Clallam County Sheriff’s Office responded to the scene, and forensic experts at the King County Medical Examiner’s Office later determined that the remains consisted of a human foot. Despite efforts to identify the individual through conventional forensic methods, the case remained unsolved for years, with no definitive leads as to the identity of the person or the circumstances surrounding their disappearance.

In 2023, the Clallam County Sheriff’s Office partnered with Othram, a forensic laboratory specializing in forensic genetic genealogy, to leverage the latest advancements in forensic DNA analysis to establish the decedent’s identity. Utilizing Forensic-Grade Genome Sequencing®, Othram’s scientists were able to extract and sequence DNA from the skeletal remains, generating a comprehensive genetic profile. A DNASolves crowdfunding campaign was launched to support the casework, allowing members of the public to contribute to the effort. With funding secured, Othram conducted a forensic genetic genealogy investigation, which ultimately led to the identification of Jeff Surtel.

Surtel was last seen on April 29, 2007, when he departed from his home in Mission, British Columbia, at approximately midnight, riding his bicycle. His family subsequently reported him missing, prompting an extensive search effort that continued for years without success. While details surrounding his disappearance and how he arrived in Washington remain unclear, his identification provides a critical breakthrough for his family, who had sought answers for nearly two decades.

This case underscores the growing network effect that emerges as more law enforcement agencies integrate Othram’s forensic technology into their investigations. In this instance, the Clallam County Sheriff’s Office required coordination with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) to facilitate confirmatory DNA testing. Given Othram’s extensive collaboration with agencies across jurisdictions, Othram was able to expedite the necessary connections between investigators in both the United States and Canada, ensuring that the appropriate DNA comparisons could be conducted efficiently. As more agencies leverage this technology, the ability to solve cases is not only improving but accelerating, as each new agency that joins the effort strengthens the collective capability of forensic investigators worldwide.

Upon receiving confirmation of the identification, Surtel’s family expressed both relief and sorrow, stating, “While the circumstances surrounding his disappearance remain unsolved, we are thankful to finally have answers.” Although aspects of his case remain under investigation, his family now can properly honor and lay him to rest.

This case was solved because of public support and crowdfunding. Individuals can contribute to these efforts by supporting forensic testing initiatives, submitting DNA profiles to the DNASolves database, or sharing information about ongoing cases to raise awareness.
 

On August 5, 2008, a beachgoer walking near the former Silver King Resort, west of Port Angeles, Washington, discovered a shoe containing a sock and what appeared to be human remains. Detectives from the Clallam County Sheriff’s Office responded to the scene, and forensic experts at the King County Medical Examiner’s Office later determined that the remains consisted of a human foot. Despite efforts to identify the individual through conventional forensic methods, the case remained unsolved for years, with no definitive leads as to the identity of the person or the circumstances surrounding their disappearance.

In 2023, the Clallam County Sheriff’s Office partnered with Othram, a forensic laboratory specializing in forensic genetic genealogy, to leverage the latest advancements in forensic DNA analysis to establish the decedent’s identity. Utilizing Forensic-Grade Genome Sequencing®, Othram’s scientists were able to extract and sequence DNA from the skeletal remains, generating a comprehensive genetic profile. A DNASolves crowdfunding campaign was launched to support the casework, allowing members of the public to contribute to the effort. With funding secured, Othram conducted a forensic genetic genealogy investigation, which ultimately led to the identification of Jeff Surtel.

Surtel was last seen on April 29, 2007, when he departed from his home in Mission, British Columbia, at approximately midnight, riding his bicycle. His family subsequently reported him missing, prompting an extensive search effort that continued for years without success. While details surrounding his disappearance and how he arrived in Washington remain unclear, his identification provides a critical breakthrough for his family, who had sought answers for nearly two decades.

This case underscores the growing network effect that emerges as more law enforcement agencies integrate Othram’s forensic technology into their investigations. In this instance, the Clallam County Sheriff’s Office required coordination with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) to facilitate confirmatory DNA testing. Given Othram’s extensive collaboration with agencies across jurisdictions, Othram was able to expedite the necessary connections between investigators in both the United States and Canada, ensuring that the appropriate DNA comparisons could be conducted efficiently. As more agencies leverage this technology, the ability to solve cases is not only improving but accelerating, as each new agency that joins the effort strengthens the collective capability of forensic investigators worldwide.

Upon receiving confirmation of the identification, Surtel’s family expressed both relief and sorrow, stating, “While the circumstances surrounding his disappearance remain unsolved, we are thankful to finally have answers.” Although aspects of his case remain under investigation, his family now can properly honor and lay him to rest.

This case was solved because of public support and crowdfunding. Individuals can contribute to these efforts by supporting forensic testing initiatives, submitting DNA profiles to the DNASolves database, or sharing information about ongoing cases to raise awareness.
Another DNAsolves win! This is a great example of genetic genealogy solving an "unsolvable" case; I would have never assumed a teen from quiet BC would end up, in some form or another, in Washington. Looking at maps, I guess it's more possible he entered the Frasier River and was swept out to the Salish Sea, although its also possible he had travelled to Richmond/Vancouver/etc and entered the sea directly via the Strait of Georgia.
 
I think the most likely scenarios are suicide or foul play.

He was upset. At that age, even small things can feel like the end of the world. When you're 17 and feel like you're letting everyone down, it can feel like things will never get better. He seems to have spent a lot of time alone in his room, his grades were falling, - could he have been depressed and hiding it? He also decided at the last minute not to watch a film with his family, maybe he was worried he'd 'chicken out' if he spent quality time with them. He left at midnight, and (theoretically) he entered the water on purpose, either at the river or travelling to the coast to do so. A year later his foot washes up in WA. The distance via the water isn't much. He could have gone in with his bike, which would explain it never being found.

The other option is that he left to meet someone. He spent a lot of time on the computer it looks like, and he was very upset that he wouldn't be able to use the computer for a week, so could that have been the catalyst for him to meet up with someone he had met online - a predator? Who could have then murdered him and put him in the water.

However I would assume that even in 2007, LE would have checked his internet activity and whether he was talking to anyone or planning to meet up with anyone. Plus, what reason would he have to meet someone if not to leave with them/stay with them - he didn't take his money or clothing, which you would if you planned to live with an online friend.

Occam's razor is telling me this was a suicide, but sadly we will likely never know. At least his family has some kind of closure. RIP Jeff.
 
March 12, 2025 article


[…]

Investigators from both Canada and the U.S. confirmed there is no indication of criminality, though the circumstances of Jeffrey's disappearance and death remain unknown.

[…]
 

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