Body found in York river is Bishop Burton student
The body of a Bishop Burton College student has been discovered in a York river.
Jonathan Havron, 18, who was studying uniformed services at the college near Beverley, went missing in the early hours of Saturday, February 27.
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Jonathan Havron
His body was found in the basin of the River Foss earlier today.
Mr Havron, of Huntington, was last seen at the Lowther Arms on Cumberland Street in York.
Inspector Mark Henderson, of York Police, said: “I can confirm that the body of the young man found in the River Foss earlier today has been formally identified by his family as that of the missing York teenager Jonathan Havron.
“Our thoughts are with the family and I ask that they be left alone at this particularly difficult time.
“Although there are no suspicious circumstances surrounding his disappearance we are still trying to establish how Jonathan came to be in the river.”












3 Comments
by Simon, Beverley
Friday, March 12 2010, 5:34PM
“Students are not put in cubicles because the teachers cannot see them and make good eye contact when stood at the head of the class... its proven a more open environment in a teaching spaces provides more proactive integration between students and teacher”
by Michael, Hull
Wednesday, March 10 2010, 10:45PM
“Condolenses to the family, we don't know the details of this case yet, but would L K Tucker translate their gibberish comment into English so we could try to understand please?”
by L K Tucker, Montgomery Alabama
Wednesday, March 10 2010, 9:23PM
“This disappearance matches a long list of them in the United States. Although man;y theories have been put forth including a gang of serial killers, the most likely reason is a little known problem discovered when it caused mental breaks for office workers. The cubicle solved that problem forty years ago in offices.
No school provides Cubicle Level Protection or warns students about Subliminal Distraction and the mental break it can cause.
VisionAndPsychosis.Net has other cases on the Missing Students and Dissociative Fugue pages.”