Recovery of human remains underway at Eastway Tank

Identification process could take weeks, police say

Image | Eastway Tank hat left at gate 1995 Merivale Road

Caption: An Eastway hat hangs at the explosion site as part of a makeshift memorial. Retrieval efforts were hampered in recent days by difficult working conditions at the site. (Francis Ferland/Radio-Canada)

Authorities have begun to recover human remains found at the Eastway Tank plant on Merivale Road, the site of last week's fatal explosion.
Retrieval efforts were hampered in recent days by difficult working conditions at the explosion site, investigators previously said.
As of Monday, five sets of human remains were found, but the site's hazardous conditions made it too treacherous to retrieve them.
The Coroner's Office, the office of the Ontario Fire Marshal and Ottawa police are working jointly on the operation, police said.

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On Monday, Dr. Louise McNaughton-Filion, the coroner overseeing the Ottawa and eastern Ontario regions, said the next step is to identify the remains as quickly as possible.
Police said the forensic identification process may take days, if not weeks.
CBC News has independently verified the identities of those missing and presumed dead: Rick Bastien, Etienne Mabiala, Danny Beale, Kayla Ferguson and Russell McLellan.
Three people were also taken to hospital, including one man, Matt Kearney, who later succumbed to his injuries.

Image | Police vehicle by entrance to Eastway Tank January 18 2022

Caption: Ottawa police continue to work with other agencies at the explosion site and to recover the remains of five people. (Francis Ferland/CBC)