Maui officers are continuing to search for the two people left on their “credible missing persons list” from the Aug. 8 fires.

The death toll of the Aug. 8 fires on Maui rose to 101 on Friday when the Maui Police Department’s newly created cold case unit located the remains of 76-year-old Paul Kasprzycki, officials announced in a news release Tuesday.

He was one of three people remaining on the department’s “credible missing persons list,” which in late August included 388 people. Now there are only two people left: Robert H. Owens and Elmer Lee Stevens.

Paul Kasprzycki was identified as the 101st fatality from the Aug. 8 wildfires in Lahaina. (Courtesy: MPD)
Paul Kasprzycki was identified as the 101st fatality from the Aug. 8 wildfires in Lahaina. (Courtesy: MPD)

Kasprzycki was an artist who lived in the Lahaina industrial area where he had a studio and workshop, according to a Facebook post by a friend.

His remains were located within the industrial area off of Limahana Place, according to MPD.

It is the first time MPD has had a dedicated cold case unit, which includes two officers who served on the Morgue Identification Notification Task Force that painstakingly identified all 100 previously known remains from the wildfire.

During a Feb. 5 press conference to release its preliminary after-action report, MPD Officer Brad Taylor said the creation of the cold case unit shows the families of those still missing that “we have not forgotten you and we are actively working for you.”

The investigations for the remaining missing persons has included pursuing any new leads and searching for eyewitness accounts of where they might have been during the fire.

“We looked at a map and with what we knew about their mobility, we created strategies of where they might have escaped to, and then we sent anthropological teams to go to those estimated escape routes,” Taylor said. “The search is not over.”

On Tuesday, MPD said in a news release that it continues to investigate the remaining cases and “diligently reinvestigate all available evidence.”

It has been an arduous process to find the remains of the fire victims, with more than 40 cadaver dogs meticulously searching through the ash and rubble of the five-mile burn area. Forensic experts spent months working to identify those remains, most badly burned, through DNA, dental records and other methods.

The Lahaina blaze is the deadliest wildfire in the United States in more than a century. While officials had put the death toll as high as 115, DNA testing found that some of the remains were fragmented or commingled and on Sept. 15 the number was revised to 97.

The death toll later rose to 100 with two people identified as dying later from their fire-related injuries and the discovery of an additional person’s remains on Oct. 12.

Civil Beat’s coverage of Maui County is supported in part by a grant from the Nuestro Futuro Foundation.

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