The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Human remains: Police reconstruc­t man’s face

- CLAIRE WARRENDER

Police investigat­ing the discover y of human remains in Glenrothes have released a facial reconstruc­tion.

Experts from John Muir University, in Liverpool, have compiled a representa­tion of the man’s face, which has now been released to the public.

Officers say he was at least 35, had lost several teeth and had a surgical plate fitted in his left ankle.

A major investigat­ion was launched following the grim find at disused units in Whitehill Industrial Estate on September 27.

Officers believe the body had been there for at least two years.

Detective Chief Inspector Kevin Houliston, of Police Scotland ’s Major Investigat­ions Unit, urged anyone who recognised him to come forward.

“This man clearly had family,” he said.

“He may have been a father, a brother, an uncle.

“My appeal today is for any informatio­n that would assist us in establishi­ng who this man is and how he came to be in Whitehill Industrial Estate.”

Police have been working with a number of forensics experts, including those at the Liverpool-based Face Lab.

“There are a number of distinctiv­e features that we have been able to establish about the man,” said Mr Houliston.

“We know that he was at least 35 years of age but may have been significan­tly older.

“He was 5ft 8in or 5ft 9in, of slight build and had lost a number of teeth.

“In addition to that, what we do know is that he had also sustained a fracture to his left ankle at some point and had a surgical plate fitted.

The plate’s batch number indicates it may have been fitted in a hospital in Fife, Sheffield or Ashford in Kent in December 1998.

Mr Houliston said he hoped somebody would look at the image and recognise him or the informatio­n given.

“I want to unite him with his family and find out what happened to him,” he said.

Following the discovery, officers sealed off a section of the industrial estate and spent five days on- site before the body was exhumed and a post mortem examinatio­n carried out.

It did not establish a cause of death and further forensic work is ongoing.

Families of long- term missing people, including those of Glenrothes men Allan Bryant and Kenneth Jones, were contacted and faced an agonising wait for news.

It was later establishe­d the remains were not those of either of the two men.

Police also consulted the missing persons’ database in a bid to establish an identity.

“We have been

proactivel­y reviewing missing persons reports to no avail,” said Mr Houliston.

In addition, officers appealed to anyone who had used the industrial estate in the previous few years to get in touch, including members of the Trav e l l i n g c o m m u n i ty, youths who had congregate­d there and former workers.

“We had a number of responses to the appeals for informatio­n we put out,” Mr Houliston said.

Anyone with relevant informatio­n can make an anonymous call to Crimestopp­ers on 0800 555 111.

Informatio­n can also be sent by email to operationr­imau@scotland. pnn.police.uk or submitted through the Major Incident Public Portal website via https://mipp. police. uk/ operation/SCOT20S26-PO1

 ??  ?? PUBLIC APPEAL: Chief Inspector Kevin Houliston reveals the poster in a bid to help identify the human remains.
PUBLIC APPEAL: Chief Inspector Kevin Houliston reveals the poster in a bid to help identify the human remains.

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