Lethbridge Herald

Gun that killed healer matches Canadian’s

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The gun that killed a plant healer in Peru matches one purchased by a Canadian man who was slain in the Amazon rain forest earlier this month, local authoritie­s said this week.

Peru’s justice ministry said Thursday that Sebastian Woodroffe, 41, purchased the gun on April 3 — a few weeks before Olivia Arevalo Lomas, an octogenari­an from the Shipibo-Konibo tribe of northeaste­rn Peru, was killed.

Peruvian authoritie­s have said the Vancouver Island man was dragged by the neck to his death shortly after he was accused of killing Arevalo Lomas.

Two people have been arrested in connection with his death.

The suspects were identified in a cellphone video showing the moment Woodroffe was killed last week, prosecutor­s have said.

Officials have also said forensic experts were studying Woodroffe’s body to determine whether he had any involvemen­t in Arevalo Lomas’s death.

Woodroffe posted online ahead of his trip to Peru, saying he hoped that an apprentice­ship with a plant healer would help his goal of changing careers to become an addiction counsellor using hallucinog­enic medicine.

Global Affairs Canada has confirmed that a Canadian killed in Peru was linked to the alleged assassinat­ion of Arevalo Lomas, and has said it’s providing consular assistance to the Canadian’s family.

The government also extended its condolence­s following Arevalo Lomas’s death.

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