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U.S. authorities arrest man charged with murder in Nation River Lady case

A Florida man charged with murder in one of Canada's best-known cold cases has been arrested by American authorities and made his first court appearance earlier this week.

Rodney Nichols, 81, had been charged with murder in 1975 case last fall

A black and white photo of a woman and a close-up of a clay bust of a woman.
An undated photograph of Jewell Parchman Langford, left, and a bust of the Nation River Lady, which was created by Ontario Provincial Police in the mid-2010s as they were trying to uncover the identity of the 1975 homicide victim. Her alleged killer has been arrested and made his first court appearance. (CBC)

A Florida man charged with murder in one of Canada's best-known cold cases has been arrested by American authorities and made his first court appearance earlier this week.

Rodney Nichols, 81, had beencharged with murder by Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) last fallin the death of Jewell ParchmanLangford, a woman from Tennessee who disappeared in Montreal in 1975.

For decades, she was known only by the moniker "Nation River Lady" as authorities struggled to identify her.

Sources told Radio-Canada Wednesday that Nichols was in the custody of U.S. authorities.

The U.S. Department of Justice confirmed by email that Nicholsmade his first court appearance on Tuesday, but did not answer questions about when he was arrestedor the status of anextradition request.

A gravestone in the grass.
The gravestone of Jewell Parchman Langford at a cemetery in Jackson, Tenn. (Denis Babin/Radio-Canada)

Langfordwas found dead floating in the Nation River after she wasdropped from a bridge onHighway 417 between Montreal and Ottawa in 1975.

She had been reported missing to Montreal police at the end of May that year,after she was last seen towardthe end of April.

Earlier this month, a source told Radio-Canada a "link was never made" between Langford'sdisappearancein Montreal and the body found near Highway 417 in Casselman, Ont., on May 3, 1975.

She was only recently identified withthe help offorensic genealogy.

According to court documents, OPP formally charged Nichols with her death last September.Nichols was a well-known rugby player among English-speaking fans of the sport in Montreal'swest end.

Nichols is currently a resident of Hollywood, Fla., where he was subject to an extradition request by Canadian authorities.

The victim's niece and spokesperson for theParchman family,Denise Chung, told Radio-Canada she was relieved an arrest had finally been made.

Two officers sit at a table with a clay bust reconstruction.
Const. Duncan Way, left, and Const. Guy Prvost, right, said they hoped the bust looked enough like the victim that people would recognize her. In the end, she was identified using forensic genealogy. (Denis Babin/Radio-Canada)

Extradition request

Robert Currie, professor of transnational criminal law at the Schulich School of Law at Dalhousie University, previously told CBCauthorities on both sides of the Canada-U.S. border are likely motivated to bring a case of this nature to a swift conclusion.

Currie said in this case, Canada'sDepartment of Justicewould have made a request under the treaty to the U.S.State Department, which handles suchinternational matters for the U.S. government.

"The extradition treaty between the two countries is set up to do exactly thisto have a person who is suspected of committing a crime in Canada extradited here from the U.S." Currie said. "So there don't appear to be any barriers to extradition at the at the moment that I can see."

Barring legal delays in Florida, where Nichols lives, the only other potential hurdle was the man's advanced age, Currie said.

Sometimes,he said,people resist extradition on the grounds they are too old or too sick and it would inhumane to extradite them.

But theCanadian prison system is able to "reasonably" accommodate seniors withhealth problems, he said.

With files from Denis Babin, Laurie Trudel and Daniel Leblanc