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Police move closer to identifying victim in body parts case

Police are linking several body parts found in east Toronto to a woman's head, foot and two hands discovered in a river west of the city - and investigators believe they're closing in on her identity.

Police are linking several body parts found in east Toronto to a woman's head, foot and two hands discovered in a river west of the city - and investigators believe they're closing in on her identity.

"I think we're pretty close to finding out who the victim is," Peel Regional Police Sgt. Pete Brandwood said Monday.

Investigators said two calves, a thigh and an arm that were found Saturday and Sunday in West Highland Creek in east-end Toronto are likely connected to the gruesome discovery earlier in the week in Hewick Meadows Park, which is about 45 kilometres away.

On Wednesday, a group of hikers found a right foot with yellow painted toenails in the park.

The next day, police found a woman's head and then the marine unit found a pair of hands on Friday.

All the body parts have been sent for forensic testing, but police believe they all belong to the same person, said Brandwood.

In the meantime, investigators are poring over missing persons reports from both Toronto and Peel region to try to determine the identity.

"We've pretty much isolated and narrowed down who it can possibly be," he said.

They've been in touch with relatives of people who they think the victim could be.

"We're trying to soften the blow when eventually we do unfortunately have to tell the victim's family that all this is in relation to their daughter or mother or sister," he said.

Two dozen police officers returned Monday to the shoreline of the Credit River, which runs through the Mississauga park, in search of additional severed human remains.

Since the first discovery Wednesday, the officers have been combing the area with cadaver dogs and a marine unit.