OPP hopes new 3D portrait helps ID Nation River Lady - Action News
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OPP hopes new 3D portrait helps ID Nation River Lady

An OPP forensic artist has created a 3D facial reconstruction of the Nation River Lady, the name given to the victim at the centre of a 42-year-old cold case, in hopes someone will recognize her.

Warning: Some of the images in this article are of a graphic nature and may be disturbing to readers

An OPP forensic artist has created a 3D facial reconstruction of the Nation River Lady, the name given to the victim at the centre of a 42-year-old cold case, in hopes someone will recognize who she was and help them solve the lingering homicide investigation.

A local farmer discovered the remains of the woman floating in theNationRiver nearthe Highway 417 bridge, just south of Casselman, Ont., back in May 1975.

"When we do the 3D reconstructions, there is a level of subjectivity," said Duncan May, the forensic artist who built the model. "What we're always trying to do is achieve a likeness [so] that someone who would have known her in life may recognize her."

A clay facial reconstruction of a woman.
OPP Const. Duncan Way, an OPP Forensic artist and reconstruction analyst, created a 3D clay facial reconstruction of the Nation River Lady using advanced technology. (OPP)

Police have also released photos of the items found with the woman's body.

Police said her hands andfeet were bound with neckties:a blue tie with small Canada flag emblems, a blue striped silk tie and a red tie with yellow patterns.

Her body was wrapped in two pieces of green cloth and two towels, one with an Irish toast written on it, the other with a flower pattern.

She was wearing a navy-blue body suit which had a collar, buttons down the front, long sleeves and snaps that secured in the crotch area, police said.

A J-Cloth, TV cable and a curtain rod runner were also with her body, said OPP.

She had an appendix operation scar and wore partial upper and lower dentures.

The woman was described as Caucasian, between the ages of 25 and 50 years old, between five foot two inches and five foot eight inches tall with an average build, weighing approximately 100 pounds, and with brown hair that was dyed a reddish blond.

Two officers sit at a table with a clay bust reconstruction.
Const. Duncan Way, left, and Const. Guy Prvost, right, said they hope the reconstruction looks enough like the victim that people who knew her will recognize her face. (Denis Babin/Radio-Canada)

'Maybe this will bring this to a close'

The reconstruction took about 60 hours, Duncan said, and was a group effort with provincial forensic anthropologists.

The OPP officers involved in the case said they hope the reconstruction can provide some clarity as to who the woman was.

"Hopefully today, with this 3D representation, we can bring some people forward with information that will give us the identity of this lady," saidConst.GuyPrvost.

"Maybe this will bring this to a close."

Anyone with information thatcould help identity the woman or to find the person or persons responsible for her homicide are asked to contact the Ontario Provincial Police at1-888-310-1122or theNationRiverLady dedicated tipline at613-591-2296.

The Government of Ontario is offering a$50,000reward for information that leads to anarrest and conviction in the homicide investigation.