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HUMAN REMAINS INVESTIGATION

Montco coroner getting closer to identification of human remains found in Towamencin in March

In April, a forensic anthropologist established the height and gender of the deceased.

In April, a forensic anthropologist established the height and gender of the deceased.

  • Public Safety

The Montgomery County Coroner’s Office is nearing an identification of the skeletal remains found in Towamencin Township in March.

Coroner Dr. Janine Darby said investigators went out to the location where the body was found a second time, and were able to locate a mandible and a cell phone.

“We’re getting close,” Darby said. “We are waiting to get some things back.”

Darby asked that anyone who is missing a male family member who matches the description of the cadaver to contact the coroner’s office.

Back in April, the coroner partially identified the remains as a male, at least 40 years old, 5 feet 6 inches tall, with previously healed trauma to his rib cage.

"Whether there was an accident or they fell, there could be a lot of things that could explain that trauma, but that is also something we can use to identify that individual," said Delaney, in a 6ABC report.

The remains were found just before noon on March 18, after a surveyor doing contract work near the intersection of Welsh Road and Grist Mill Drive reported seeing what they believed to be a human skull inside the retention basin. Upon arrival, police located the skull and secured the scene, according to Towamencin Police Chief Tim Troxel.

In an interview with North Penn Now on last week, Montgomery County Coroner Dr. Janine Darby said her team was called to the scene after the discovery of the skull, and they were able to locate and recover additional remains from the area. Darby noted the skeletal remains were incomplete, adding that both hands, a foot, and other skeletal pieces had not been recovered.

Teeth marks from animals were found on some of the remains, and Darby added the remains had likely been in the basin between one and two years.

"Our goal is to determine who this person was, how they died, and provide some closure to their loved ones,” Darby said.

A joint investigation between Towamencin Police and the Montgomery County Detective Bureau was launched following the discovery of the remains.

"While there were no initial indications of trauma or foul play discovered at the scene of the recovery, final determinations as to the cause and manner of death, as well as identification of the remains, have yet to be made by the coroner’s office,” Troxel said.

According to the 6ABC report, the next step will be to upload Delaney’s report into the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System in the hopes of finding a match.


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Tony Di Domizio

Tony Di Domizio is the Managing Editor of NorthPennNow, PerkValleyNow, and CentralBucksNow, and a staff writer for WissNow. Email him at [email protected]. Tony graduated from Kutztown University and went on to serve as a reporter and editor for various news organizations, including Patch/AOL, The Reporter in Lansdale, Pa., and The Morning Call in Allentown, Pa. He was born and raised in and around Lansdale and attended North Penn High School. Lansdale born. St. Patrick's Day, 1980.