Police have identified the woman found dead at a popular campsite near Agassiz, B.C., last week as Abbotsford resident Angela Crossman.

Speaking from their home near Moncton, New Brunswick, Crossman's parents say their daughter was due to move to the East Coast in August.

"I was looking at her picture and I can't believe she is gone," mother Dorothy Crossman said.

"They are not telling us much," her father, Gary Crossman, said.

The 39-year-old's body was found on June 11 by a group of people setting out for a fishing trip at a popular Chehalis Lake campground.

Investigators with the B.C. Integrated Homicide Investigation Team ruled Crossman was met with foul play because of marks found on her body. Police have not said if this is a random or targeted attack, but police say her murder has not been linked to gangs, drugs or organized crime.

In Pictures: Agassiz murder investigation

Only 10 days before her death, Crossman had moved into a home on Hillcrest Street in Abbotsford.

"Angela had lived in the region for a couple of years and then left, she came back to the area about a year ago," IHIT's Cpl. Dale Carr said.

Crossman lived in the basement suite of Rajinder Kaur Sairi before the move. Her former landlord describes her as a quiet, gentle woman who struggled with health problems.

Kaur Sairi believes he saw Crossman around 10 p.m. the night before her body was found.

"She was looking very nice that night so I think she was dressed up that night," he said.

Investigators say Crossman was treated for an undisclosed medical issue at Abbotsford Regional Hospital the afternoon of June 10. She left the hospital that evening and is believed to have returned to her home.

IHIT still isn't sure how Crossman got home from the hospital, and is hoping this information will provide clues in the homicide investigation.

Investigators are now working to build a complete profile of Crossman, including identifying her friends and associates, in order to trace back her movements leading up to her death.

Meanwhile, Angela's parents are heartbroken knowing their daughter was coming home for a reunion in only a few short months. She had planned to be in Ontario visiting her brother the day she was killed.

"We're going to miss her," Dorothy Crossman said.

Police are asking anyone who has any information on Crossman's whereabouts leading up to when her body was located to contact RCMP.