Mystery severed foot found in Bath park 'a teaching aid' By Jon Kay

BBC News correspondent Published duration 18 May 2016

image caption Police said the foot was probably an anatomical specimen and they were "satisfied" no crime had been committed

A severed human foot found in a park in Bath earlier this year was probably an anatomical specimen used in teaching, police have said.

The left foot found by dog-walkers on top of bramble bushes in Weston Park East on 19 February prompted much speculation about its origins.

Police said they were now satisfied no crime had been committed, but they are keen to find out how it got there.

They said they would follow up any new information they receive.

Initial tests proved the foot was human, but subsequent forensic examination found very little DNA.

A Home Office pathologist told BBC News the item's genetic material appeared to have been "killed by something" which made further identification very difficult.

'Fixed with chemicals'

Avon and Somerset Police have spent three months consulting a number of scientific experts.

One of them, Dr Heather Bonney, a forensic anthropologist at the Natural History Museum in London, told BBC News she believed the foot had probably been "fixed" or preserved with chemicals, which could explain the lack of DNA.

Dr Bonney explained that the appearance of the foot was "very unusual" because it did not look like it had recently been severed from a body.

image caption The foot was found in Weston Park East in Bath in February

She said the state of the bones suggested the foot came from an adult, but there was no way of knowing the sex, age or ancestry.

She added there was no evidence of any injury or disease and the item was "entirely consistent with being either a medical, anatomical or museum specimen."

Other experts agreed, including Dr John Troyer who runs the Centre for Death and Society at Bath University.

He said the foot may have come from a private collection and the owner may not have known how to dispose of it properly.

'I want answers'

Det Insp Paul Catton from Avon and Somerset Police said he accepted the consensus of scientific opinion and was now "satisfied" that no crime had been committed.

He said the foot was no longer thought to be linked to any recent missing persons cases, but he still wanted to hear from any "training establishments" in the Bath area which may have stored anatomical specimens in the past.

"The public really want answers and I want answers," he said.

"I want to hear from any colleges or buildings that were previously schools and may have owned items like this.

"I'll be asking them if they've cleared out any cellars recently, that kind of thing."

He added that, despite recent findings, he would keep "an open mind" and his team would follow up any additional information they receive.