‘He knew how to swim’: Family rejects ‘accident’ as Houston bayou death mystery deepens
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The perplexing death of Kenneth Cutting Jr. in a Houston bayou demands further investigation beyond the medical examination, according to specialists who have analyzed the autopsy report.

“I concur with their evaluation,” stated Dr. Priya Banerjee, a board-certified forensic pathologist, referring to the autopsy conducted by Dr. Edward Kilbane from the Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences. “The autopsy does not provide any definitive answer as to why he died or whether it occurred before or after his body entered the bayou.”

Dr. Banerjee refrained from speculating on the circumstances surrounding the incident, emphasizing that the resolution the Cutting family seeks depends heavily on a thorough investigation.

A spokesperson for the Houston police indicated to Fox News Digital that she would review the case as of last week.

Kenneth Cutting Jr. wearing a jacket and T-shirt while sitting at a restaurant, with margarita glasses visible in the foreground

Kenneth Cutting Jr. was last seen alive on June 28, 2024, before his body was discovered in Houston’s Buffalo Bayou on July 1 of the same year, as shown in an undated family photo. The autopsy did not determine a cause or manner of death, and toxicology tests revealed no presence of drugs in his system. (Photo courtesy of the Cutting family)

The official autopsy lists Cutting’s cause and manner of death as undetermined. Although he had fluid in his lungs, Dr. Banerjee said there’s no way to know whether it was present before his death, making the assertion that he had accidentally drowned impossible to confirm medically.

Food particles in his throat but an empty stomach were consistent with normal decomposition, Dr. Banerjee said. It happens naturally as the muscles relax.

“I think his electronic footprint is more important,” she said.

Kenneth Cutting Jr seen on the left of a still image taken from a selfie video inside a Houston bar

Kenneth Cutting Jr., left, took this selfie image at a bar in downtown Houston shortly before he vanished on June 28, 2024. (Courtesy of the Cutting family)

Cutting was last seen alive on June 28, 2024, according to his family. Although he lost his cellphone earlier in the evening, his roommates had it in their possession after he went missing, relatives said. It was later given to police for a forensic analysis, but his father, Kenneth Cutting Sr., said detectives came back with no answers.

Surveillance video reviewed by Fox News Digital places Cutting at Pete’s Dueling Piano Bar in downtown Houston roughly between 8 p.m. and 11:45 p.m. He was with two roommates — and he shouted at one of them to “f— off” as he stormed away from the venue.

They later reunited, however, but for reasons that remain unclear, Cutting never made it home.

First responders wearing PFDs place a sheet over a body recovered from a bayou in Houston

Houston fire and police personnel recover a body from White Oak Bayou near the Heights in Houston, Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025 (Jill Karnicki/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images)

The roommates sent his father a 2 a.m. text message stating he’d gone “crazy” and demanded to be let out on Interstate 10 in Houston. He was later found dead in the Buffalo Bayou, which is part of the city’s 2,500 miles of waterways.

Kevin Gannon, a retired NYPD detective who monitors water deaths around the country, said Cutting’s death doesn’t fit the pattern of the controversial “Smiley Face Killers” theory — but it still seems suspicious.

“I don’t think this young man drowned, though it’s possible,” he told Fox News Digital. “Believe me, this is a tough one.”

shallow muddy water surrounded by trees in one of houston's bayous

The Bayou running through Piney Point Village on Friday, April 18, 2025, in Houston. (Raquel Natalicchio/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images)

Cutting’s father agrees.

“Police told me that they think it was an accidental death, and I said, I don’t think my son fell in the bayou and drowned,” Cutting Sr. told Fox News Digital last week. “First of all, he knew how to swim. Second of all, he shouldn’t have been nowhere near that bayou.”

grass and flowers line the waters of the sims bayou in Houston, spanned by a long bridge

The Sims Bayou Greenway near the Houston Botanic Garden and the Glenbrook Park is shown in Houston, Friday, April 4, 2025. (Melissa Phillip/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images)

He said his son didn’t appear to be blackout drunk in the surveillance video and noted that the toxicology report found no drugs in his system.

“Houston police need to do further investigation,” said Lauren Freeman, Cutting’s cousin. “They need to ping his phone the night he went missing, to see where his location was.”

Houston leaders have been publicly downplaying concerns of a potential serial killer with 16 dead in the city’s bayous so far this year, including five discovered in a one-week span last month.

Mayor John Whitmire gives comments at a press conference

HPD Police Chief Noe Diaz listens as Mayor John Whitmire comments on a recent number of bodies found in Houston bayous during a news conference in Houston, Tuesday, Sept. 23, 2025. (Kirk Sides/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images)

But Mayor John Whitmire’s explanation, in which he blamed homelessness and substance abuse, prompted Cutting’s family to blast the excuse as “gaslighting” and call for thorough investigations into all of the deaths.

Whitmire slammed misinformation and “wild speculation” online and from political candidates surrounding the cases at a news briefing on Sept. 23.

“We do not have any evidence that there is a serial killer loose in Houston, Texas,” he said, calling the number of deaths “alarming” and urging patience from the public.

“Undetermined means kick back to the investigators for more information so that the medical examiner can make a better informed decision,” said Joseph Giacalone, a retired NYPD sergeant and criminal justice professor at Penn State Lehigh Valley. “You treat it like a homicide until proven otherwise.”

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