The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Call goes out for public help on cold cases going back 50 years

Plea for anyone who may be able to give closure to families

- CRAIG SMITH csmith@thecourier.co.uk

Detectives in Tayside and Fife stumped by cold cases dating back almost 50 years are hoping members of the public can help finally solve their mysteries.

A young man found in the River Tay at Tayport, the body of a woman washed up on the foreshore at Kingsbarns and the discovery of a human leg on Broughty Ferry beach are just three of the unsolved cases which have baffled officers for decades.

Decomposed remains found on the river bank at Glencarse and the grim discovery of a human foot in a shoe, washed ashore at Dundee, have similarly vexed authoritie­s since the ’80s.

What little is known about them has been detailed on the UK Missing Persons Bureau website, along with the details of 16 other bodies or body parts that have gone unidentifi­ed in various parts of Scotland.

A spokesman for the Missing Person’s Unit said: “While it is easier to identify bodies which have been found more recently, due to DNA and fingerprin­t opportunit­ies, cold case review work by the unit has been successful on a number of occasions.

“Around 20 bodies have been identified from publicity provided on our website, bringing peace and comfort to many families who now understand what happened to their loved ones.

“With these five cases brought to attention, the unit will work with Police Scotland to assess new opportunit­ies to identify these remains to ensure that no one is buried or cremated without a name and to resolve cases on behalf of the many families missing loved ones.”

The site features informatio­n about unidentifi­ed bodies across the United Kingdom and internatio­nally, if they are believed to be a UK national.

In the Tayside and Fife instances, however, only a handful of clues may help piece together the identity of the person concerned.

On March 20 2007, a passer-by found a man’s partial left lower leg which had washed ashore just off Beach Crescent along Broughty Ferry Beach.

Detectives at the time said the limb is thought to have been in the water “for months rather than weeks”, and the man – aged between 16 and 25 – had been wearing black Umbro socks and size nine black Reebok trainers.

Thirteen years on, The Courier can reveal a DNA profile of the man has shown the person lived in at least three distinct different locations or regions during the 20 months prior to death.

Experts have even managed to uncover the fact that the DNA profile indicates a short stay in a region with a cold climate, possibly on the same latitude as Oslo or Helsinki, just before his death.

The oldest local case dates back to June 8 1971, when the body of a woman believed to be in her 60s was found on the beach at Kingsbarns.

Not much else is known but the woman had no teeth and no evidence of denture wear, while two burr holes in her skull above and behind each ear as a result of surgery may jog someone’s memory.

One of the more prominent cases centres on the discovery of a 20 to 30-year-old man’s body in the River Tay at Tayport on August 3 1984.

Those investigat­ing at the time believed he may have been dead between two and three weeks, and had probably been to the British Open Championsh­ip which had been held earlier that year at St Andrews.

He had short, dark brown hair and was missing one testicle, while he was wearing a tan-colour zip-up jerkin, a white shirt, a cotton T-shirt, a brown St Michael label vest with an orange pattern, black nylon socks with a gold stripe, and a brown slip-on leather shoe.

Anyone who thinks they can help give the families of those lost some closure should visit the Missing Persons Unit website on missingper­sons.police.uk

 ??  ?? A man’s partial left lower leg washed ashore just off Beach Crescent along Broughty Ferry Beach.
A man’s partial left lower leg washed ashore just off Beach Crescent along Broughty Ferry Beach.
 ??  ?? The man’s Reebok trainers.
The man’s Reebok trainers.

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