Researchers are looking for a landfill for missing women Shalini Singh, according to Hamilton police.
Friends and family spoke for the last time with Singh, 40, at 7:10 pm et on December 4. They informed her that she disappeared days later. The homicide unit was assigned to investigate after the initial information raised concerns, police said.
On Tuesday morning, the police announced the search in the Glanbrook landfill in 1500 Haldibrook RD.
“The police are investigating the possibility that Singh was killed in their department and removed from the building through the building’s garbage elimination system,” said a press release.
The detectives tracked the garbage of the Hamilton Center building to the Kenora Waste Transfer Station, which the police sought on December 15, they said. There was nothing there, since the garbage of the Apartament building had already been transferred to the Glanbrook landfill.
“In recent weeks, investigators have been planning and coordinating a systemic search for the landfill,” police said.
They started the search there on Monday and will continue for several weeks. They advised on a great police presence, but they said the traffic will not be affected.
Singh was originally informed of disappearing with his boyfriend of customary law on December 10. It was located on December 11 after visiting a family member’s house on the outskirts of Hamilton.
“It is not cooperating with the investigation and has not provided information that can help locate Shalini,” police said.
Researchers have not been able to find any evidence related to their disappearance in their apartment, despite looking for it several times. They have obtained hundreds of hours of creating security images “to track the movements of Singh and her boyfriend in the days surrounding her disappearance.”
But there are no images that show Shalini leaving their building after December 4, police said.
The friend calls Singh ‘an incredible person’
Singh is described by family and friends as intelligent, cheerful and friendly, the type of person who is anxious to help anyone who needs it.
I was working as a mental health worker in the Halton region for the Canadian Mental Health Association (CMHA), according to her LinkedIn profile. She is also director of the Board of the Community Council for Suicide Prevention of Hamilton, a non -profit defense group, volunteer in the community and makes comedy.
In a vigil earlier this month in honor of Singh, her friend, Amanda Bobbitt, described her as “peculiar” with an “exceptional sense of humor.”
“She is close to an incredible person,” Bobbitt said. “You want to keep waiting [she’s safe] But as time passes, it is more difficult to do. ”
Singh is described as five feet four inches high and 120 pounds. She has brown eyes and black hair to her shoulders.
Any person with information about Singh’s whereabouts must communicate with the police or the detainees of the crime.
If you are in immediate danger or fear for your safety or that of others around you, call 911. If you are affected by family or couple violence, you can seek help Crisis lines and local support services.