Daily Mail

Police hunting for body of Suzy Lamplugh dig up garden they searched in 2003

- By Chris Greenwood and Claire Duffin

SUZY Lamplugh’s family said last night they were desperate to ‘lay her to rest’ as police searched a property they first examined 15 years ago.

A specialist team is digging up a garage floor in the former garden of the mother of prime suspect John Cannan.

They are acting on a tip- off claiming the body of the 25-year-old estate agent could be encased in concrete in a vehicle inspection pit. But detectives faced questions over why it wasn’t checked during a search of the semi-detached property in 2003.

As cold-case investigat­ors hoped they may finally crack one of the country’s most notorious unsolved murders:

Miss Lamplugh’s grieving brother said it would be ‘wonderful’ to finally bury her in a ‘place of our choosing’;

The man who has owned the property for the past 26 years said he believes there is a ‘50-50 chance’ her body could be found;

It was revealed that the garden has been searched by at least two forces on two occasions over the deaths of two women and other crimes linked to Cannan;

The retired Scotland Yard detective responsibl­e for the murder inquiry defended his decision not to dig up the garden 15 years ago.

Miss Lamplugh disappeare­d in 1986 after showing a man known only as ‘Mr Kipper’ around a house in Fulham, south-west London.

Detectives have always believed this was killer Cannan, who is serving a 35-year prison sentence for a 1987 murder. An inmate serving time with Cannan told police in December 2002 that Miss Lamplugh may have been buried under a patio he laid at his mother’s home. But a lengthy search of the semi- detached house and its rear garden in Sutton Coldfield, near Birmingham, found nothing.

Miss Lamplugh’s brother Richard, 58, said it was a shame his parents will never see justice for their daughter. Her father Paul, who had Parkinson’s disease, died earlier this year. His mother Diana died in 2012.

Richard Lamplugh, a father of two who works as a technician at an Aberdeen school, said he had endured three decades of having his hopes ‘raised and dashed’. He added: ‘It has been a long time and we have had our expectatio­ns raised before, but it would be nice if we could finally have some closure.

‘After all these years it would be wonderful to finally be able to bury Suzy in a place of our choosing and not have her under some house.’

Phillip Carey, 52, bought the four-bedroom house from Cannan’s mother Sheila in 1992. The marketing executive said it was searched in 2003 and he was contacted again by coldcase officers several months ago. ‘They’ve pulled [the garage] down and I think they’re going to start digging it up,’ he said.

Retired Detective Superinten­dent Jim Dickie, who led the Lamplugh inquiry for six years, said: ‘We didn’t dig up the garden because we didn’t have any specific informatio­n back then that she may be buried there.’

‘It would be wonderful to be able to bury Suzy’

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