The frigid waters of the Detroit River have finally given up their secret. Nearly two months after 25-year-old Tyler Bojanowski disappeared following a solo night out at a Wyandotte bar, authorities have confirmed through DNA that the decomposed body recovered on March 30, 2026, near Dingell Park in Ecorse is indeed the missing Michigan man. The grim discovery has brought a heartbreaking close to a desperate search – but it has also ignited fresh questions about exactly what happened during those final, lonely hours in the bitter February cold.
Tyler Bojanowski was last seen alive around 2 a.m. on February 5, 2026, after a night that began with friends but ended with him venturing out alone. Police say he had been hitting local bars in Wyandotte with a buddy earlier that evening on February 4. The pair left one establishment around 8 p.m., and Tyler told his friend he was heading home. But instead, he made his way to another friend’s place, trying to convince them to join him for more drinks. When that friend declined, Tyler pressed on solo – stepping into the bar where one of his acquaintances worked and staying until the early morning hours. He even sent a text from inside the venue. Then… silence.
No surveillance footage captured him leaving. No one saw him walk out into the freezing night. By the next morning, concern turned to panic. Tyler’s mother reported him missing on February 6. His empty truck was discovered abandoned on Enterprise Drive in nearby Allen Park, airbags deployed, belongings still inside – as if he had been involved in a minor crash and simply walked away. Security video from a nearby business showed the accident, but what happened after that remains shrouded in mystery.
As the search intensified, a shocking clue surfaced just hours later: Tyler’s passport was found lying under a gazebo at Dingell Park, right along the Detroit River waterfront in Ecorse. Police launched drones, boats, and ground teams to scour the area, but the brutal Michigan winter – with thick ice covering much of the river – hid any trace of him. For weeks, family, friends, and volunteers clung to hope, offering rewards and flooding social media with pleas for information. A dedicated Facebook group became the nerve center for tips and support.
Then, on Monday afternoon, March 30, around 1 p.m., multiple calls flooded emergency lines about a body floating in the Detroit River just off Dingell Park. Ecorse police, assisted by Wyandotte officers, recovered the remains. From the moment it was pulled from the water, investigators had a strong hunch. The physical description, the clothing – everything matched what Tyler was wearing the night he vanished. Wyandotte Police Chief Archie Hamilton publicly stated they “fully suspect” it was him, even before official confirmation.
Now, DNA has removed all doubt. The body is Tyler Bojanowski.
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The confirmation has devastated his loved ones. In a raw Facebook post on the missing persons group, a family member wrote with heavy hearts: “It is with heavy hearts that we share the body found today at Dingell Park is, in fact, Tyler. We are deeply upset that this information was released publicly before many of Tyler’s family had the chance to be notified.” The pain of learning such devastating news through the media only compounded the grief. Tyler’s aunt, Christina Vail, has spoken out, her voice breaking with emotion as the family processes the unimaginable.
But the discovery raises as many questions as it answers. Why was Tyler’s passport at Dingell Park – the exact spot where his body eventually surfaced nearly two months later? Police had searched that area extensively, yet ice and snow concealed what lay beneath. Did Tyler walk there himself in the freezing darkness, perhaps disoriented or in distress after his night out? Or was something more sinister at play?
Chief Hamilton has floated the possibility of suicide, citing the circumstances, but he was quick to caution that nothing is final until the Wayne County Medical Examiner’s full report – including toxicology and autopsy details – is complete. That report could take weeks. Was alcohol or other substances involved? Did the car accident leave him injured or confused? Or did Tyler simply slip into the icy waters, whether by accident or intent, with the strong river currents carrying him until the thaw?
The timing is eerie. His body surfaced in almost the exact location where his passport had been found – as if the river had been guarding its secret until the ice finally relented. In the dead of a Michigan winter, the Detroit River is a treacherous beast: fast-moving, bitterly cold, and capable of hiding evidence for months. Searchers used every tool available, but nature itself worked against them.
Tyler Bojanowski was a young man from Wyandotte, part of the tight-knit Downriver community that rallied around his family during the agonizing wait. Friends described him as someone who enjoyed hanging out, grabbing drinks, and living life in the moment. That night out was supposed to be ordinary – a bit of fun with buddies in familiar local spots. Instead, it became the last anyone saw of him.
His abandoned truck in Allen Park, just a short drive away, adds another layer of intrigue. Airbags deployed suggest impact, yet he apparently left the vehicle on foot. Did he call for help? Hitch a ride? Wander toward the river in a daze? The lack of clear footage from the bar’s exit has frustrated investigators and loved ones alike.
As the family prepares to lay Tyler to rest, the community is left grappling with the fragility of a single night’s choices. A decision to go to the bar alone. A text sent into the void. A walk into the cold that no one witnessed. Now, with DNA confirmation sealing the tragic end, attention turns to the medical examiner’s findings. Will they bring closure, or will they uncover details that force investigators to look closer at every step of that fateful evening?
For now, the Detroit River has surrendered Tyler Bojanowski’s body, but the full story of how he ended up there may never be completely known. In the quiet streets of Wyandotte and the bustling search groups that once held out hope, the mood has shifted from desperate optimism to mournful acceptance. Vigils and tributes are already pouring in online, with friends sharing memories of a 25-year-old whose life was cut short far too soon.
The icy waters claimed Tyler on a freezing February night after he chose to keep the party going alone. Nearly two months later, as spring begins to thaw the region, his family finally has the confirmation they both dreaded and needed. But in the shadow of Dingell Park gazebo – where his passport lay waiting like a silent clue – the questions linger like the river’s persistent current.
What really happened in those missing hours? Was it a tragic accident born of a night that spiraled out of control? A deliberate act hidden beneath the ice? Or something the full autopsy might yet reveal? The DNA match has ended the search for Tyler Bojanowski. It has not ended the search for answers.
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