The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Search for missing student continues

No suggestion of criminalit­y in disappeara­nce, but police are refusing to rule anything out

- AILEEN ROBERTSON arobertson@thecourier.co.uk

Police investigat­ing the disappeara­nce of St Andrews student Duncan Sim say there is no suggestion a criminal act has been involved.

However, Chief Inspector Steven Hamilton told a press conference yesterday that he was not ruling anything out.

“At this stage nothing in my investigat­ion suggests any criminalit­y whatsoever,” he said.

“That doesn’t mean that at any stage I am ruling that out.

“I remain completely open-minded in relation to this investigat­ion.

“At the moment it is a missing person inquiry and absolutely nothing in the inquiry has suggested that there has been any criminalit­y.”

Mr Hamilton spoke to reporters just yards from the Madras Rugby Club pavilion, which has been used as a base for volunteers helping the search effort and is where Duncan was last seen nearly a week ago.

The army has been assisting police and the Coastguard in the search for Duncan.

The 19-year-old had attended a social event at the pavilion last Wednesday and has not been seen since leaving the venue at around 11pm that night.

The alarm was raised after he failed to arrive back at his accommodat­ion at Agnes Blackadder Hall.

An image captured on CCTV of Duncan leaving the halls on the night he went missing has been released by police.

Duncan is described as being 6ft tall and of medium build.

He has brown hair and green eyes, and when he was last seen he was wearing a grey suit jacket, a white shirt and a blue and white tie.

Mr Hamilton made a renewed appeal for the public’s asistance in helping officers trace Duncan, who is a first year chemistry undergradu­ate at the university.

He said: “Both the family and obviously ourselves, the police, are very concerned for Duncan’s safety.

“We have a substantia­l team of officers involved in trying to find Duncan.

More than 100 officers are involved in the investigat­ion and the search, with numerous specialist­s resources from across Scotland assisting.

“Our concerns, now that it’s nearly a week since he went missing, are growing significan­tly.

“I would appeal to any members of the public who were in the area of Madras Rugby Club or further afield within the St Andrews area who may have seen anybody fitting Duncan’s descriptio­n that they contact us on 101.”

 ?? Picture: Dave Johnston ?? Chief Inspector Steven Hamilton, who is leading the hunt for missing St Andrews student Duncan Sim, 19.
Picture: Dave Johnston Chief Inspector Steven Hamilton, who is leading the hunt for missing St Andrews student Duncan Sim, 19.

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