This young Edmonton entrepreneur is helping to reunite families with DNA genealogy - Action News
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Edmonton

This young Edmonton entrepreneur is helping to reunite families with DNA genealogy

Bradley Pierson, 25, founded a company that uses genetic genealogy technology to track DNA of unidentified victims in cold cases. He's using the technology to help reunite people with lost family members.

Bradley Pierson, 25, collaborates with law enforcement agencies to solve cold cases

Portrait of student entrepreneur smiling.
Entrepreneur Bradley Pierson founded Trouvay, an investigative genetic genealogy company. (Submitted by Bradley Pierson)

A 25-year-old Edmonton entrepreneur is using genetic genealogy technology to track the DNA of unidentified victims in cold cases.

Bradley Pierson started his companyTrouvayin 2022to help people identify their families and is nowexpanding his workto help law enforcement services solve crimes.

"I realized there was a huge crisis of unidentified human remains and unsolved violent crime cases, and this technology had emergedthat allowed us to solve them finally," Pierson told CBC in an interview.

Toronto forensic genealogist James Atkinson said investigative genetic genealogy is a technology that uses DNA testing in combination with research methods and historical records to determine biological relationships.

He says genetic genealogy has become a growing tool for many people looking to learn more about their heritage, solve family mysteries, or connect with distant relatives.

Pierson's journey into genetic genealogy began with a personal interest in family history.

At the age of 13, he started tracing family trees. Tenyears later he realized he could help people who were adopted to find their birth parents. He made 100 identifications and realized he could use the same technology to solve cold cases.

In 2023, Pierson collaborated as a volunteer under Det. James Atkinson on an Ontariocase that was being handled by the Toronto Police Service.

Known as the Deep River John Doe, the case involved a man from Drumheller, Alta., who was found dead in 2001 on a bench in the Laurentian Hills, near Deep River, Ont.

Over the summer, Pierson worked alongside Atkinson and other volunteers to identify the man using investigative genetic genealogy. Twenty years after the man died, the team was able to bring closure to his family. The man's name was withheld from the public per his family's request.

Volunteers like Pierson were vital to the solving of this case, Atkinson said in an interview.

Investigative genetic genealogy uses DNA testing in combination with research methods and historical records to determine biological relationships.

Atkinson saidgenetic genealogy has become a growing tool for many people looking to learn more about their heritage, solve family mysteries, or connect with distant relatives.

Working with Indigenous communities

Piersonrelies on public DNA databases to help him find answers to questions that have remained unsolved in some cases for many years.

Some of his work is withfamilies in Indigenous communities, in part becausemanylack access to DNA testing services or are leery of using thembecause ofinjustices they have experienced in the past.

He said he has learned about hundreds of unidentified people buried in Edmonton cemeteries going back as far as 1910,and that the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner has manysets of unidentified human remains.

"I look at those numbers and think, that's a huge unknown crisis," he said.

Earlyin 2023, Pierson came across two similar cases involving a missing woman.

One was Caucasian and the other was Indigenous. He was disappointed to see the Indigenous woman's case get much less media attention than the other case.

Although Trouvay did not help with thatparticular case, Pierson was pleased to see that Louise Laderoute's body was later found and identified by the Edmonton Police Service.

"When I was introduced to her story, [Laderoute] was Edmonton's oldest outstanding missing person file," he said. "What really fascinated me is that there was nothing out there about her, other than a short police release."

A month later, Pierson spoke with Laderoute's family while they were advocating for missing and murdered Indigenous women.The case ignited his passion to help others in the same situation as hers and use a victim-centred approach to solving these cases.

Trouvay is now collaborating with an Alberta Mtis settlementto further the mission of advocating for increased resources in underrepresented communities.

The company is supporting the settlement through learning about DNA testing, administering DNA tests, and understanding the results of their DNA tests.

In some instances the company is helping people find their biological families, andassisting those who want to share their DNA to help finding missing and murdered Indigenous women. Pierson uploads DNAprofilesto websites that law enforcement can use to make identifications.

He is currently focused on helping to identify the remains of residential school victims and missing Indigenous women.

StudentPreneur summer program

On Aug. 21,Pierson was one of 27young entrepreneurswho got a chance to demonstrate their creativity and innovation at an Edmonton Unlimitedshowcase event.

It was part of the innovation agency's StudentPreneur program, which is designed to bridge the gap between academic learning and real-world business experience for post-secondary students. Pierson is studying business management.

Jeff Shon, the lead executive in residence at Edmonton Unlimited, said the program provides financial and mentorship support to help studentsturn innovative business ideas into reality.

Student presents in front of a crowd.
Bradley Pierson presented his project at Edmonton Unlimited's Student Innovators Showcase. (Submitted by Amanda Sparks/Edmonton Global)

"Students are the lifeblood of any thriving innovation economy, so it is in our collective best interest to make sure that these students are supported, they have the adequate resources to build, test and learn," Shon said.

Pierson pitched his project at the showcase event, hoping to get connected to law enforcement agencies and present his services.

Solving cases requires time and money

Pierson hopes Trouvaycan be a leader in providing investigative genetic genealogy across Canada, providing answers for the public and police agencies.

Pierson's work is not without its challenges. Cases can be stalled for decades and unsolved, as it costs law enforcement a lot of money to keep cases open.

Ashley Allen, the Indigenous entrepreneurship specialist at Edmonton Unlimited, mentored Pierson.

Allen said it can be a challenge to navigate the cost and time needed to work onunsolved cases. She praised Pierson's commitment to collaborating with communities.

"It's really cool to see the traction he's getting," she said.

"What Bradley is able to bring with Trouvay is working with Indigenous communities, where the DNA data isn't held, and they get to have sovereignty over their information again."