In a heartbreaking development that has shaken the Downriver community, authorities have recovered a body from the Detroit River near John Dingell Park in Ecorse, Michigan, strongly believed to be that of 25-year-old Tyler Bojanowski from Wyandotte.

The grim discovery occurred around 1 p.m. on March 30, 2026, when a fisherman spotted the unresponsive male floating face down in the water. Responding officers from Ecorse and Wyandotte police confirmed that the physical description and clothing matched Bojanowski exactly. While positive identification awaits the Wayne County Medical Examiner’s Office, police have already notified the family, stating “all indications are that it is Tyler.”

Tyler Bojanowski vanished under mysterious circumstances on February 5, 2026. His truck was found abandoned near a Best Western hotel in Allen Park, and surveillance footage captured him walking away from the scene of a minor car accident. Hours later, his passport was discovered under a bench in the gazebo at Dingell Park — the very area overlooking the Detroit River where his body was later found. He had no phone or wallet with him at the time of disappearance.

The case gained urgency because Bojanowski was recovering from a previous traumatic brain injury sustained in an earlier car crash. His mother had noticed subtle changes in his memory and behavior afterward, raising concerns that he might have been disoriented or vulnerable. Community searches, drone operations, and even helicopter assistance from Homeland Security Investigations were launched along the river and surrounding areas, but yielded no results until this week.

Now, a new layer of intrigue has emerged. The family has agreed to a full autopsy after noticing unusual marks on the victim’s arm. These strange traces have sparked intense speculation: Could they be defensive wounds, evidence of restraint, or something more sinister? Or are they simply post-mortem artifacts from the river’s strong currents and debris?

The Detroit River is known for its powerful flows, especially near Ecorse, which complicates determining whether the death was a tragic suicide, an accidental drowning, or something far more suspicious. Tyler’s family has repeatedly rejected the idea that he would intentionally jump into the icy waters, pointing out that he knew the way home and had been trying to walk back after the accident.

This case highlights the vulnerabilities faced by individuals with recent head injuries, who may wander confused without proper support. It also underscores the challenges of river recoveries, where bodies can drift for weeks and evidence can be washed away or altered by water exposure.

As the medical examiner prepares to conduct the autopsy, the community waits anxiously for answers. Was this a desperate act by a young man struggling with invisible injuries? Or do the mysterious marks on his arm point to foul play that police must now investigate thoroughly?

For now, the Bojanowski family is left grieving while pleading for anyone with information from February to come forward. The coming days could determine whether this remains a tragic missing-person case closed by drowning — or opens a full criminal investigation.