On Saturday, January 15, the CBC and CTV will air a documentary titled, “The Case of the Missing Bodies”.
The CBC and CTV will be airing this documentary on Saturday, January 15, at 11:30am (EST) on both channels.
The documentary tells the story of a large team of police officers who began an investigation into the disappearance of over 200 bodies found in and around Montreal between 1985 and 2012.
The documentary starts as it does with a single man, the late Jacques Brunet, a man who was murdered in 2009. He was found last week in a river in the Gaspé region of Quebec, and the autopsy has revealed that he had been dead for at least a year. There’s also no evidence that anyone had killed him, meaning the killer is most likely still on the loose.
The documentary shows a couple of cases where the police were able to trace the remains of missing persons to the individuals who were killed.
The documentary opens with Jacques Brunet, the man found dead in the river in 2011, trying to get his family to pay for his funeral. He had apparently been missing for years, with his family saying that he had been in prison for 12 years, and in his case they gave up after he was arrested.
The documentary also tells the story of a homicide detective who was able to track down the killer’s phone number.
In the end, the police were able to trace the remains of the bodies to the individuals who were killed. In the documentary it’s also mentioned that the police are also actively looking into the fact that the remains found in the river belonged to people who died in prison.
The fact that they were able to track down a number of the phone numbers that were in the phone book makes it seems like the police are going out of their way to get to the truth. The fact that the police are actively looking into the fact that the remains found in the river belonged to people who died in prison is likely to be an indication that there is someone who is guilty of this crime.