The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Search for Corrie Mckeague has restarted

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A review into the police’s handling of the Corrie Mckeague missing person investigat­ion has concluded that the Fife airman’s body is “most likely” to be in a landfill site.

Suffolk Constabula­ry confirmed that officers involved in the probe have now received a report following the review, which was conducted by the East Midlands Special Operations Unit, and that the report concludes police have conducted a “thorough, methodical and detailed investigat­ion”.

It also suggested that all reasonable lines of inquiry have been explored by officers, with “no new further leads” needing to be pursued.

The news comes just days after the search of the Milton landfill site, which has been the focus of the investigat­ion for several months, restarted in a bid to finally find the 23-year-old RAF gunner.

Corrie went missing after a night out with friends in Bury St Edmunds on September 24 2016 and was last seen on CCTV at around 3.24 that morning.

After receiving the report into the review, a police spokespers­on said that it will not be released due to it containing operationa­lly sensitive material.

The spokespers­on added: “The report concludes that police have conducted a thorough, methodical and detailed investigat­ion and explored all reasonable lines of inquiry with no new further leads needing to be pursued.

“The review also concludes that Corrie is most likely to be in the Milton landfill site and the review also supports the continued search of the eastern end of cell 22 at the Milton landfill site which began on Monday October 23.”

The search of the landfill site was sparked when informatio­n came to light about the movement and weight of a bin lorry which had picked up refuse from the area where Corrie disappeare­d.

His mobile phone, which also has not been found, tracked the same route and at the same pace as the bin lorry.

Corrie’s mother Nicola Urquhart marked the one-year anniversar­y of his disappeara­nce by retracing her son’s last known steps in Bury St Edmunds.

“Now the search has started, we’re back to that again when I daren’t look at my phone every time it rings or I get a text,” she said.

“It’s horrible but then I would rather be waiting for the phone call than not.”

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