Sorry to keep posting on this thread, but i've just seen that quebec has a completely different police force than the RCMP. So, maybe we should be looking within the Quebec police system for missing persons. I'll try to do some today.
https://www.lepinecloutier.com/necrologie-avis-de-deces/42510-jean-pierre-paquet
Obituary for Canadian Doctor Jean Paquet.
Survived by (as far as I can tell) his wifes child Jacques?
I found about 30 people named Jacques Paquet on Facebook aloneAnd I thought it was going to be such a good clue.
I'm pretty sure now that the translation says, "besides his wife he is survived by him childen..."Wait. Would his last name even be Paquet if he was this gentleman's stepson?
Wait. Would his last name even be Paquet if he was this gentleman's stepson?
Sorry to keep posting on this thread, but i've just seen that quebec has a completely different police force than the RCMP. So, maybe we should be looking within the Quebec police system for missing persons. I'll try to do some today.
Yes, it's so sad. I dont want to derail the thread with my ramblings though. I just get overly excited! I was trying to think about this in a different way, that maybe there was a reason why we couldnt find Jacques in the canadian database.The more I check the internet, the more I realize that there are people missing everywhere that fall through the cracks of recordation in public database systems. Had the Anthony Child in Florida not been reported as missing by her grandmother (who actually suspected her daughter of murder), no one would have been looking for the child or questioning the mother. If the daughter had given her mother a reasonable answer for the whereabouts of the granddaughter or had completely estranged herself from the grandmother, would the crime have been discovered or even identified if the remains had been found? When you stop to think about what goes into declaring someone missing, or identifying some cases of remains found, there is a big disconnect--you have to have someone looking and someone finding in most cases to really be solved--otherwise it remains either a "missing" or "Unidentified" cold case. It is sad to think that some people can go missing, and no one cares, or laws refused to accept missing reports from people who have no "family connection" to the missing person. In cases of unidentifiable remains, someone has to be "seeking" and "missing reports have to be accepted and distributed" in order to make an identification. Think about it; In some evil cases, a knowledgeable person about a "missing" may not want the remains found or identified. The missing may go unreported; and publicity of found remains may be ignored. We still have a long way to go in meshing our Missing Persons Information/Unidentified Remains databases. And, in some cases, the "missing" are living but presumed to be dead. Sad, but real thoughts.
I think they're all his children and the funny wording is a translation issue with French pronouns. But I could be wrong.
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I am pretty sure I just found Jacques Paquet on FB and he is still alive. It doesnt seem as if a missing persons report was filed in that area.I think the question is could Jacques be the son of the Urologist? Is there a missing report filed on this doctor's son or stepson? The next step would be to connect timing, location, physical characteristics, or any other kind of information in the two cases (assuming there are two cases to connect).
Yes, it's so sad. I dont want to derail the thread with my ramblings though. I just get overly excited! I was trying to think about this in a different way, that maybe there was a reason why we couldnt find Jacques in the canadian database.
Months after the murder, an employee of a Santee, South Carolina campground claimed that he had met the couple weeks before the two's deaths. He said that the man's name was either Jock or Jacques and that he and his companion were going to Florida. The man and the employee soon became friends, and later told him that he was the son of a doctor in Canada
The initials JPF were engraved inside the ring, which had a Florentine finish
Both the ring and the watch were rather expensive. This, together with the man's elaborate dental work, suggested that he had come from an affluent family