The bomber's wallet was recovered containing a pair of handcuff keys, 176 dollars, and a receipt from the Kenricia Hotel. He had checked into the hotel under the name Paul Higgins with a false address on April 23, and apparently took a bus to Winnipeg two days later. He left a steamer trunk – which also bore the name "P. Higgins" – stored at the hotel while he was gone. He checked back in on May 5. The remains of Old Port, Dutch Prince, and Teuros-Havanas cigars and cigar packages were also found in his room. The name and address he gave were followed-up with negative results. The perpetrator wore a mask during the robbery and his features were destroyed in the explosion. Nineteen-year-old Joe Ralko, who wrote a book based on the incident, had seen the man in town in the days beforehand and described him as being in his 40s, with brown hair and a reddish-coloured beard. An initial suspect was ruled out when DNA samples from his brother did not match those taken from the crime scene, and that suspect was later found to be alive and well in France. Joe Ralko's book, ''The Devil's Gap: The Untold Story of Canada's First Suicide Bomber'', was released in 2017. The unidentified man is buried in an unmarked grave in Kenora Cemetery. The
CTV News documentary show
W5 profiled the Kenora bank robbery in 1983 and 2023. [https://web.archive.org/web/20231110151923/https://www.ctvnews.ca/w5/who-was-the-kenora-bomber-w5-digs-up-clues-that-could-reveal-his-identity-1.6638597 ==See also==