Parents mistakenly identify a corpse in Croatia as their daughter
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}ZAGREB, Croatia (AP) — A month ago, a mother and father identified a body in a morgue as their daughter's. A funeral was held and the family mourned its loss.
But it turned out that 39-year-old Tea Buric was still alive. This week police found her when they showed up at an apartment in the southern city of Split to investigate a report of domestic violence.
Buric was disoriented and lacked identification, so police checked her fingerprints and discovered she had been identified by her family as dead.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}The body found floating in the Split harbor on April 15 turned out to be that of a 44-year-old woman who had disappeared earlier that month, Split police said.
Police spokeswoman Marina Kraljevic-Gudelj said in an interview on Thursday that police didn't use DNA to identify the well-preserved corpse because four relatives, including the parents, had identified it.
Local experts also said the DNA procedure, considered expensive in Croatia, is generally only used if a corpse cannot be identified or appears to have been the victim of a crime.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}The parents of Buric and the 44-year-old deceased woman declined to discuss the case.