Calgary Herald

‘FOR SURE IT SHOWS MURDER.’

Ontario woman, U.S. partner had wrists bound

- ADRIAN HUMPHREYS

Police in Belize confirm a Canadian woman and her American boyfriend were murdered shortly before they were scheduled to leave the Central American country where they were wintering.

The police theory is that it was a robbery gone wrong.

The bodies of Francesca Matus, 52, of Keswick, Ont., and Drew DeVoursney, 36, from Georgia, were found Monday afternoon near a sugar cane field in the Corozal district near Belize’s northern border with Mexico.

“For sure it shows murder, this is a homicide investigat­ion,” said a police official in Belize who did not wish to have his name published.

“Both bodies were found together in some bushes and were starting to decompose by the time they were found.” He said the bodies were on top of each other.

“We believe they had a lot of money in their possession and someone tried to rob them.”

Decomposit­ion made it difficult to determine the cause of death without an autopsy, the police officer said; there were obvious signs of trauma. Local news source Breaking Belize News reports the cause was strangulat­ion.

DeVoursney’s mother said the American embassy told her that the pair was found with duct tape wrapped around their wrists. Bound wrists suggest an abduction or an attempt to get them to do something or go somewhere against their will.

DeVoursney was a former U.S. Marine and his close friend and fellow veteran expressed dismay that he would be killed in this manner.

“Someone had killed a United States Marine, my brother in arms, who survived Fallujah, Iraq and Afghanista­n,” Brandon Barfield wrote on a GoFundMe campaign, first establishe­d to help the search for a missing couple but now dedicated to bringing DeVoursney’s body back to the United States.

DeVoursney had been living in Corozal since December, Barfield said.

“It breaks my heart knowing that Drew and I have survived so many near-death situations and laughed about it, and now I have to bring his body home.

“Today is the day where I demand answers to so many questions all of us have about this whole mysterious abduction and their senseless deaths.”

Barfield and DeVoursney’s brother were en route to Belize Tuesday.

Matus had also been living in Belize since December, said her cousin Ivana Pucci, enjoying life on her waterfront property. She used to spend winters in the central American country and return to the Toronto area for summer and fall to be with her mother and her two twin sons, aged 22, Pucci said.

“She loved it there and felt safe,” Pucci said. “She did tell us it was lawless there, but she felt safe in her little community.”

Her boys, brother and mother are grieving together in the Toronto area.

Matus grew up in Sault Ste. Marie as part a big Italian-Canadian family, Pucci said. She moved to Toronto after college and became a mortgage broker, which she still did for half of the year. She loved the water and boating in Belize, she said.

“She was 52 in a 35-yearold body,” Pucci said. “She really was such a beautiful person — both inside and out — and she did not deserve this,” Pucci said. “Nobody does.”

Pucci didn’t know much about Matus’s relationsh­ip with DeVoursney, but said she appeared to be happy.

DeVoursney and Matus had been dating for a few months before they were last seen last Tuesday night leaving Scotty’s Bar and Grill in Corozal.

Friends says Matus was to fly back to Toronto the next day, but she wasn’t home when a friend arrived to drive her to the airport.

She was reported missing to police.

A large contingent of Canadian and American expats had been scouring the area in the past week in a desperate search to find the couple.

The car they were driving, a white 1998 Rodeo Isuzu SUV, was found on Sunday.

SHE REALLY WAS SUCH A BEAUTIFUL PERSON — INSIDE AND OUT — AND SHE DID NOT DESERVE THIS

 ?? FACEBOOK ?? Francesca Matus, 52, of Keswick, Ont., was found dead in Belize on Monday.
FACEBOOK Francesca Matus, 52, of Keswick, Ont., was found dead in Belize on Monday.

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