Woman who went missing in 2020 found dead on grounds of long-vacant home
Chelsea Poorman disappeared in September 2020. She was last seen by a family member two days earlier in downtown Vancouver.
The police investigation remained active until last month when a contractor found human remains outside the vacant home near Granville Street and West 37th Avenue. “This is not the outcome anyone wanted. We always hoped Chelsea would be found alive, and our sympathies go out to everyone who knew Chelsea, loved her, and hoped she would come home safely,” said Sgt. Steve Addison.
The coroner was brought in to investigate the death and the agency’s finding were recently sent to RCMP. Police said it appears Poorman died at the property the night she disappeared or a short time later. The death is no considered suspicious.twitter.com/stephanie_ipOur in-depth journalism is possible thanks to the support of our subscribers. For just $3.50 per week, you can get unlimited, ad-lite access to The Vancouver Sun, The Province, National Post and 13 other Canadian news sites.
Canada Latest News, Canada Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Stock futures are falling again after the Dow's worst day since October 2020Rout slashed 3.5% off the S\u0026P 500, 5% off the Nasdaq
Read more »
Stocks are falling again after the Dow's worst day since October 2020Gglobal market selloff that saw the S\u0026P 500 post its worst first four months of a year since 1939 has further to run, analysts say
Read more »
Woman forced to land in Belarus gets 6 years in prisonA woman who ran a Belarusian opposition messaging app channel and was arrested along with her activist boyfriend when an airliner they were on was forced to land in Belarus was convicted Friday of charges that included inciting social hatred.
Read more »
New White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre is first Black woman to get the jobPresident Joe Biden said on Thursday he has chosen Karine Jean-Pierre to be White House press secretary, succeeding Jen Psaki and becoming the first Black and openly gay person to serve as the public face of a U.S. administration.
Read more »