Detached feet washing ashore along the Salish Sea have fueled years of speculation, online theories, and true-crime narratives. But from a forensic perspective, these discoveries are not messages of violence—they are the predictable outcomes of biology, footwear design, and aquatic taphonomy.
In this episode of The Forensic Lens Podcast, I examine how modern shoes float, protect soft tissue, and preserve DNA; how water environments naturally disarticulate the human body over time; and why the geography and currents of the Salish Sea create recurring shoreline recoveries. The pattern, unsettling as it appears, points not to a perpetrator—but to physics, decomposition, and environment.
Forensics, in this case, does not reveal conspiracy. It restores proportion. And sometimes, it returns a name to what the sea briefly kept.
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