Stolen moving truck with family possessions inside found in Brampton

Authored by globalnews.ca and submitted by ZefAntwoord

A stolen moving truck that had Margareta Dovgal’s priceless family possessions, including her deceased mother’s ashes, has been found in a truck repair shop in Brampton.

The eight-metre long Budget truck was stolen on July 1 from the Blue Ocean Moving and Storage Services’ warehouse in Scarborough.

“Two days ago, it really really hit me,” Dovgal said. “It feels like I lost everything.”

Dovgal was moving home to British Columbia after living in Ottawa for just over a year.

READ MORE: Woman ‘heartbroken’ after moving truck filled with personal possessions stolen

Unable to bring all her items on the plane, Dovgal decided to hire a moving company to drive the remainder of her possessions to B.C.

Dovgal’s father died in 2011 after having a heart attack and her mother passed away in 2015. She said the possessions on the truck were important family items.

“[The truck had] everything I had from my parents. My mother passed away two years ago and my dad passed away when I was 15,” she said.

“All our family photos. Everything that was valuable. My parents’ furniture, things like my mother’s ashes even.”

On Monday, Dovgal received a phone call from the movers who said the truck had be located, but police are still investigating the vehicle’s contents and they cannot confirm if all of Dovgal’s items are there.

“I’m really really optimistic that there is something there,” Dovgal said.

“Even if it’s just a couple of boxes with some keepsakes.”

The truck was found at the truck repair shop Brampton and Dovgal confirmed with Global News that while a full inventory needs to be completed, police have found the urn with her mother’s ashes intact.

Police have begun looking for fingerprints and looking at other evidence, including security video, that could help lead them to the culprits.

“Investigators have told me that there is security camera footage in the area that they are reviewing,” Toronto police Const. Allyson Douglas Cook said.

Dovgal said while she doesn’t know what’s inside the truck, she’s hoping there will be some personal mementos returned to her.

“I’m on the edge of my seat. There’s butterflies,” she said.

TemporaryBoyfriend on July 11st, 2017 at 02:52 UTC »

Also, please consider scanning your keepsake photos / negatives and digitizing any films/home movies, and sending them offsite.

c74 on July 11st, 2017 at 01:43 UTC »

Wow.. I saw your threads in /r/Toronto and /r/Mississauga and thought to myself what a shitty situation to be in... while thinking the odds of getting back the unreplaceable items - gotta be close to zero. Really happy for you that this has turned around.

Police have begun looking for fingerprints and looking at other evidence, including security video, that could help lead them to the culprits.

I hope the police are resourced to investigate and look for fingerprints... but in my experience, doesn't happen. Not sure if they are saying this as your story got picked up in the media or if there is a larger investigation... but having your house/car/business broken into doesn't get a police response that fingerprints anything in peel region. My car had about 10k of car stereo equipment ripped off 20 years ago... which would be more like 20k today and the police deflected it to an insurance issue as opposed to even looking at it. resources etc was the explanation.

I guess at the end of the day the important thing is you have back what is important and unreplaceable to you. grats :)

CanadianBeaverluvr on July 10th, 2017 at 22:34 UTC »

Awesome. Glad that you have found peace in recovering your mother's ashes.