0:00 But he was really like a good kid. Like I can show you pictures of him playing soccer and he's got artwork here, his writing. 0:11 Did he always want to go to U of T? 0:12 Well he said he did it was his dream. 0:21 Yeah? 0:23 Because I remember sitting down with him at the computer and choosing the selections. Yeah, sociology, and philosophy. I remember the weekend he came home. And he said, Oh, Mom, I met these brothers thinking, what brothers? Some fraternity brothers and I'm going to move into their house. What exactly was going on in the house? What did they do to him? What did he do? He talked about experimenting with drugs with those guys. Like, like, I don't know. So there's a there's an air of something really traumatic had happened to Dovi in, in between the time that I saw him in August, and the time that he ended up back home at Christmas time. So he was drunk in one of the parties at that house, and some guy came on to him. And what else did the guy do to you when you were stoned out your mind and drunk? Okay, so he was talking about it like, like, traumatize talk, like he was talking about if somebody had would been sexually assaulted. That's how that's how Dovi seem to me. We're at like an impasse. So we're stuck at with people at Beta Theta Pi. Okay and those people at Beta Theta Pi will not talk. And I don't know if you know Ralph Nader. Okay, he was a psychologist in Toronto. And then I called Ralph and said, Ralph, like, have you heard from Dovi? I think at one point he said he had heard from Dovi. And he said Dovi was supposed to come in and see him. We both communicated with him and saw him, let's say March right then. And I think I might have been emailing him and calling him to find out where he was no response. And then we were contacting friends, no response. And then from there, I kept calling my mother and sister and asked me Have you heard from Dovi? Have you heard from Dovi? Friends...have you heard from Dovi then we contacted the Salvation Army. And the Salvation Army did a family find? And they couldn't locate him either. And then I call my mother and sister and say, we need to report dovie missing and they say no, you can't call the Toronto Police. Because if the Toronto Police phone, find him, they're gonna kill him or they're gonna hurt him. Because she said that was at that point, that was when the Toronto Police were killing all those black boys and people with mental health issues. I call the Toronto Police to record it. We don't know where Dovi lives. And then this is the they said that they were gone contact Facebook to see if they could get the IP address. nothing was ever done. So we hired the private investigator. 3:34 May I please speak with Gary Foxwell? Well, can I please ask who's calling? Yeah, it's Nicole Edwards, we had a call scheduled for 1030. 3:44 We're kind of a boutique investigative firm. We're a one stop shop pretty much for almost anything you can think of it has to be investigated. A lot of people do come to us, because they want they have the resources which vis a vis money and they want things done like yesterday. 4:04 He told us it would cost us $15,000, so far, we spent over six. They're kind of at a standstill and so we thought these guys would be efficient. And we would find out more than what we did, but so far, we haven't really found anything. 4:22 Because we're all retired police officers here we fall back on our police training. Primarily, it's kind of almost mirrors, what would you expect from a police department when they're taking a missing persons complaint. So you know, we try and get as much evidence and the most identifying factors as possible from whoever's making the request. And the more information that they can provide a higher success rate we have. 4:48 All he did was contact the people that I directed him to. So So throughout the two years until I found him, I call the Toronto Police, then I phoned jails and then I phoned the big mental institution in Toronto. Yep, couldn't find him. Then I phoned, who was it I phoned? Then I phoned the morgue. He wasn't speaking to me because he was dead. 5:25 There should be a national database for DNA on missing people. I know that there's been talk about it for years. And I think a lot has to do with a lot of people out there that are really maybe over concerned about people's privacy. And I get that I totally understand people's privacy rights and all that, but just be specific about Dovi's case. You know, if Dovi's mom had been, you know, said okay, he's missing. So here's here's a sample of my DNA, which should match up to my son's DNA. Well, maybe she got a sample of DNA on a hair brush, or whatever it may take. So any kind of missing persons remainder, okay, that's the first thing that goes the database and run the DNA. 6:12 The coroner's report says his death was undetermined. The Toronto Police say suicide. Like they really pissed me off every single time I call. They're telling me that Dovi committed suicide and they just keep parroting and mocking. He committed suicide. He committed suicide. He committed suicide over and over and over like a broken record. 6:34 He was just wonderful. 6:37 He didn't he didn't give trouble. He read books. We would have amazing conversation. He would cook He was really for me. Right. I had decided I was going to give him the best life that I could have and I and I tried my best.