Calgary Herald

Amateur sleuth tracks down ‘Linda’

She showed up at Toronto shelter in fall

- ALLISON JONES

An amateur web sleuth provided the key to identifyin­g an American navy veteran with a degree in linguistic­s as a mystery woman who turned up at a shelter in Toronto with apparent amnesia, knowing only that her first name was Linda.

Investigat­ors announced

They told her, ‘Well, you know Linda, you were in Canada’

DET. ROGER CARACCIOLO

Tuesday that she is Linda Hegg, 56, who has schizophre­nia and may have suffered a traumatic event that triggered her memory loss.

It’s still not known exactly when Hegg left her assisted-living facility in Newark, Del., why she boarded a bus to Canada, how she crossed the border at Fort Erie with an expired U.S. passport, or what she did in the days before she arrived at the shelter.

Hegg herself doesn’t have those answers, as her memories have not returned, said Toronto police Det. Roger Caracciolo. She had to ask the staff from her facility where she had been after she was sent back home last week.

“They told her, ‘Well, you know Linda, you were in Canada,’ and she paused and she said, ‘I like Canada. I’d like to visit there again,”’ Caracciolo said. “I don’t think she knew where she was.”

Though she still doesn’t remember her family or her life, she was happy to be told her name and that police had found her mother in Indianapol­is, police said. “She clapped her hands and she smiled and she was very excited about that,” said Caracciolo.

Hegg is home now in Delaware, where she is being examined at a hospital. She was diagnosed with schizophre­nia in 1996 and has had a “difficult” time since then, Caracciolo said, but she has lived an accomplish­ed life.

She has travelled extensivel­y in the United States and abroad. She has a degree in linguistic­s and languages from the University of Rochester. She was stationed in Okinawa, Japan, with the U.S. navy and later returned to that country to teach English.

Police did not disclose much medical informatio­n about what happened to Hegg, but said medical profession­als told them she wasn’t getting all of her medication­s while she was in Toronto and that a traumatic incident may have preceded her trip. She seemed physically healthy and uninjured, Caracciolo said.

Police issued a news release in October with a photo and the name Linda, appealing for any informatio­n. They were contacted by many families who had hoped she was their missing loved one, but in the end it was an anonymous tip that helped solve the case, Caracciolo said.

A web sleuth called Caracciolo on Nov. 7 to direct him to a missing woman from the United States who looked like Toronto’s “Linda.” She had been reported missing just days earlier after neither her family nor her case worker had seen her in a while, Caracciolo said.

 ?? Michelle Siu/the Canadian Press ?? Linda Hegg, 56, walked into a Toronto shelter three months ago with apparent amnesia.
Michelle Siu/the Canadian Press Linda Hegg, 56, walked into a Toronto shelter three months ago with apparent amnesia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada