Missing woman’s home facing demolition order
● Council warn house is not fit for human habitation
0 The former home of missing woman Margaret Fleming in Inverkip, Inverclyde, is ‘unfit for human habitation’ The house at the centre of a search for a vulnerable missing woman is to be demolished after a local authority decided it was in a state of serious disrepair and “unfit for human habitation.”
Margaret Fleming, 36, was reported missing by her two carers in October last year from their home in Main Road in the Inverclyde village of Inverkip.
However, the last independent sighting of her was at a
GLASGOW
family event on 17 December 1999.
Forensic specialists from Police Scotland spent months searching the property Ms Fleming lived in for any documentation of her life over the past 17 years.
As part of the search, a large garden area to the rear of the property was also excavated. Some reports at the time said rooms in the house contained tonnes of rubbish and litter.
The carers moved out of the property and no clues as to Ms Fleming’s whereabouts were found by police as the search was extended to nearby water and woodland.
Inverclyde Council has since inspected the house and on Monday, it served a demoli- tion order, giving the owner six weeks to arrange for the property to be repaired urgently, or to arrange for its demolition.
A spokesman for the local authority said: “Our priority is to prevent anyone living in the property as it is in a serious state of disrepair, below the tolerable standard and therefore unfit for human habitation.
“The owner has six weeks to organise the demolition or arrange with the council to have the property repaired.”
Ms Fleming is thought to have lived with her father in nearby Port Glasgow before he died in October 1995.
She then lived with her grandparents and her mother, but later moved in with carers in 1997 and has been estranged from her mother since.
Earlier this year, police said they are still treating the case as a missing person inquiry but are not ruling out the possibility of “something more sinister”.
Detective Chief Inspector Paul Livingstone said: “Whilst we are keeping an open mind – her carers state that Margaret has a private side to her life, possibly having friends that they are not aware of – we cannot rule out the possibility that she has come to harm in some way.
“By this, I mean that she could have had an accident, possibly wanted to be missing or even something more sinister.”