HALLANDALE BEACH, Fla. - Police in Florida believe two women
were involved in the killings of a Canadian couple found dead in their winter
home one year ago.
David Pichosky, 71, and Rochelle Wise, 66, of Toronto were
found dead of asphyxiation on Jan. 10, 2013, in their Hallandale Beach home,
and police say their bodies were bound.
The DNA profiles of two females were found at the crime
scene, which is unusual, said Police Chief Dwayne Flournoy.
They did not match DNA in a databank of profiles collected
by law enforcement agencies, nor did it match any profiles in Canada's national
DNA databank, he said.
"The science tells us that there are two females that
are involved in this homicide — at least two," he said Wednesday at a news
conference.
"It's only a matter of time before we get our match,
and we will get our match."
The DNA profiles also do not match anyone in the Pichosky or
Wise families or anyone who would have had access to the couple's home, such as
workers, housekeepers or maintenance crews, Flournoy said. The two profiles are
not related to each other, he said.
The killings may have been motivated by robbery, police have
said, as Wise's wedding band — valued at $16,000 — was the only thing missing
from the couple's condo. Flournoy described it as white, with five diamonds and
a half-shaped moon.
It was also designed with a special clasp to accommodate
Wise's arthritis, he said. Searches of local pawn shops and jewellers have not
turned up the unique ring, he said.
But police still do not know why the well-liked couple was
apparently targeted, Flournoy said. Pichosky and Wise had no enemies, were not
flashy and did not carry around large sums of money, he said.
"So we just have not been able to pinpoint the reason
why someone would either target them, or was it a crime of opportunity?"
Flournoy said. "I think it's more likely that they did not know their attackers."
Members of Pichosky and Wise's families were on hand for the
news conference and appealed for anyone with information to come forward.
"Over the past 12 months we have learned to live in a
new reality. The sun comes up, the birds may be singing, but for our family
every day is a nightmare," said Pichosky's daughter, Sari Rosenblum.
"We have no peace, we have no closure, we have no
understanding of why this has happened. I still have nightmares. I can't put
aside what happened to them and have no chance of moving on. Nothing in our
lives is normal anymore."
The couple's marriage — the second, for each of them — was
their second chance at love, Rosenblum said. They loved each other and in turn
were well-liked in their Toronto and Florida communities, the family said,
adding that 1,500 people attended their funeral.
Pichosky made weekly visits to the elderly and the sick in
Toronto and would telephone them weekly from Florida, his daughter said. In
Florida, Wise volunteered once a week at a Hebrew academy teaching children who
needed remedial help, her friend Pearl Gladman said.
Despite the amount of time that has passed since the deaths,
police are still waiting for some lab results, the chief said.
Investigators collected an "inordinate" amount of
evidence and the lab processed it in three rounds. Police are waiting for the
results on the final round, Flournoy said.
Police have not yet been able to identify a woman seen on
surveillance video walking around the couple's home the morning police believe
they were killed, but she may hold the key to solving the double homicide.
"We believe that identification of this female is
critical and important to this case," Flournoy said. So far, no one in the
close-knit community has been able to identify her.
"With her being in and around the home and with two
female DNA profiles being inside of the crime scene, she's particularly someone
that we want to speak with."
A partial shoe print that was found at the scene has been
identified as an Adidas shoe out of production since 2000. The largest model of
shoe that sole was used on was the Supernova, Flournoy said. Investigators were
not able to determine its size, nor whether it was a man's or woman's shoe, he
said.
Private donations have now increased the reward offered
through Broward County Crime Stoppers to US$57,000, Flournoy said. He vowed to
the family that the killers would be found.
"I told you guys we're going to solve this case,
right?" he said. "We're going to solve this case."
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