State Police say a body found Thursday in Arcadia is that of Kimberly Rouland, the Wayne County mother who has been missing for more than a month. Police say she was found naked and in the fetal position.

Police had been waiting for a positive identification from the Monroe County Medical Examiner's Office.
Rouland was found shortly after 2 p.m. on Martin Road in the town of Arcadia, according to State Police Senior Investigator Christopher Baldwin.

State Police Captain Rick Allen said Rouland "was found by a person walking her dog on the side of the road," according to our news partner, News 10 NBC. Her body was just a short distance from the road, appearing to have become entangled in the trees. State Police brought in their forensic investigation and crash reconstruction units to gather evidence and reconstruct what may have happened there. Allen said the cold temperatures helped preserve the body.

Thomas Rouland reported his estranged wife missing on Feb. 9. He told state police that the last time he saw her, she was walking from their home at the Forest County Trailer Park toward Fairville-Maple Ridge Road at approximately 6:30 p.m. According to Sate Police Senior Investigator John Stubbe, Thomas Rouland informed police that she told him she had to take care of some personal business and she would be right back.

The search for Kimberly Rouland has been complicated by the frigid temperatures and heavy snowfall. With the weather becoming more cooperative the last couple of weeks, members of the State Police and the state Department of Environmental Conservation have been out in force scouring the area on four-wheelers and dispatching K-9 units. A helicopter had also been deployed to search from above.

Police have said Thomas Rouland has not been cooperative in the search for his missing wife.

Thomas Rouland was brought to the police barracks on Feb. 10 for questioning regarding his wife's disappearance, Stubbe said. The questioning stopped when Thomas Rouland requested an attorney after feeling he was being incriminated, according to the senior investigator.

"It was routine (questioning)," the Stubbe said. "What happened, what happened that night, what were you doing, why did she leave, where did she go to."

Andrew Correia, the first assistant public defender of the Wayne County Public Defender's Office, is representing Thomas Rouland, and said Wednesday that his client has done everything he can for police in regard to his wife.

"Tom was the first one to call 911 to report her missing and at that point completely cooperated with the state police," Correia said.

Hank Cole, Kimberly Rouland's stepfather, told News 10NBC his stepdaughter and Thomas Rouland were separated, but had been sharing the trailer while she saved money to get a place of her own.