The Metropolitan Police say the body was found Tuesday downstream from the bridge.
"It is a heavy toll that we pay in these attacks", he added. He became the eighth person to be confirmed dead in the attack. About 50 others were wounded.
Xavier Thomas (45) had not been seen since Saturday night. Witness accounts suggested Thomas might have been thrown into the river, police said.
Delcros was seriously injured when she was struck by the van.
In a separate investigation not linked to the London Bridge attacks, officers backed up by armed police arrested three men in east London on Thursday on suspicion of preparing for acts of terrorism.
A third man, aged 29, was arrested at a home in the same area on "suspicion of the preparation of terrorist acts".
Prosecutors ordered the suspect's phone and passport seized, detained him on suspicion of being a foreign fighter on his way to join IS ranks in Syria, and charged him with global terrorism. The attackers were killed in a hail of 46 bullets fired by eight police officers.
Shock election may delay Brexit talks, soften tone
She didn't specify how her Conservative Party would " work together" with the Northern-Ireland-based party. Scottish Conservative leader Ruth Davidson said the idea of a new independence referendum "is dead".
In particular, the revelation that at least one of the attackers, Khuram Butt, was known to security services has raised concerns that they lack the resources to prevent attacks.
Zaghba was stopped at Bologna's airport trying to fly to Turkey in March past year over concerns he was intending to travel on to Syria, according to reports.
Butt, 27, was a British citizen born in Pakistan who was known to security services, while Italian authorities said they warned the United Kingdom that 22-year-old Zaghba was a "possible suspect".
Youssef Zaghba had been flagged to British intelligence services after telling Italian police "I'm going to be a terrorist" when he was reportedly stopped trying to travel to Syria.
Italian border police became suspicious because he was traveling on a one-way ticket and carried only a small knapsack, a passport and no money. Repubblica said when he landed in January at Stansted after a 10-day visit in Bologna, his name was verified in the SIS system but he was allowed to go. He and Butt lived in Barking in east London.
Butt was the office manager according to a statement from Auriga Holdings, the holding company.
More details were not immediately available.





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