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Case Description
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Randal Paul Gary, a 50-year-old psychotherapist from Ontario, Canada, was last seen on May 16, 2003, while on an Alaskan cruise. His disappearance from the Holland America cruise ship, the MS Veendam, has left his case unsolved for over two decades. The investigation into his whereabouts has been handled by the Vancouver Police Department, as the ship was en route to Vancouver, British Columbia, when he was discovered missing.

The cruise, which departed from Vancouver, included stops in ...Read More
Last Seen: May 16, 2003
Victim Details

Jan 24, 2026

Jan 24, 2026

Randal

Paul Gary

50

50

6'0 inches

200 lbs

White

Male

Gary was last seen on May 16, 2003. He was employed as a psychotherapist and resided in Ontario, Canada at the time of his disappearance. He was on vacation in May 2005 and on the cruise ship Veendam. Gary boarded the ship in Ketchikan, Alaska. He spent most of his nights in the ship's casino, and was a late riser. The ship made stops in Juneau and Skagway, Alaska, but Gary didn't disembark in either place. He was last seen at 10:30 p.m. on the last day of the cruise. When the vessel docked in Vancouver, British Columbia, Gary was nowhere to be found. He has never been heard from again. Gary left behind all his personal belongings, including his passport, credit cards, insulin and other medication, driver's license, wallet, cash, and key card in his cruise ship cabin. He would have needed the key card to get into his cabin, which had a single sealed window and no balcony. He still owed $127 on his bill when he disappeared. The "do not disturb" sign was on the door of the cabin for most of the trip. His bed showed signs that someone had been in it, but it had not been slept in. Three partially empty bottles of different kinds of alcohol were found inside the cabin, but Gary rarely drank and none of the bottles were of a kind he liked. Suicide was looked at as a possible explanation for Gary's disappearance, but this theory was deemed implausible. Gary had no history of mental illness and never indicated he felt suicidal, and if he had wanted to take his own life he could have done so painlessly with his insulin instead of jumping overboard. At the time of his disappearance, he was in good spirits and was not having any personal problems. Gary is described as a very private person. He didn't even tell his family when he won $150,000 in the lottery. His case remains unsolved. Vancouver police are investigating.

May 16, 2003

Ketchikan

Alaska

Ketchikan

13

Vancouver Police Departmen

604-717-2530

01/24/2026