The Scotsman

Mckeague mystery given to cold case squad

● Police change tack on missing Fife airman after 18-month search

- By MARGARET DAVIS

The search for missing Scottish airman Corrie Mckeague will be handed over to a cold case squad, police have confirmed.

No trace of the 23-year-old from Fife has been found since he was last seen in Bury St Edmunds on 24 September 2016, and the current theory is that he climbed into a waste bin and was taken away by a bin lorry.

Detective Superinten­dent Katie Elliott said: “It is extremely disappoint­ing that we have not been able to find Corrie. I can only imagine the strain Corrie’s family have been under over the past 18 months and I thank them for their patience and understand­ing.

“Whilst the investigat­ion has drawn to a natural conclusion, we will continue to work with the family to provide answers to their questions and help them understand what may have happened.

“Since Corrie disappeare­d, police have been exploring all proportion­ate and relevant lines of inquiry.

“We have now reached a point where we are unable to make any further progress, and have gone as far as we realistica­lly can with the informatio­n we have. If any new, credible and proportion­ate enquiries relating to Corrie’s disappeara­nce emerge we will pursue them.”

Suffolk Constabula­ry said in a statement that investigat­ors had been through all realistic possibilit­ies in detail and that there was no evidence of foul play.

Police

carried

out two

0 Police mounted two searches of a landfill site where it was thought the body of Corrie Mckeague, inset, may have been dumped searches of a landfill site at Milton near Cambridge last year, with the first search lasting 20 weeks and the second, lasting seven weeks, concluding in December.

They sifted through thousands of tonnes of waste in the two areas where it was most likely for Mr Mckeague to have ended up, but the records used were not detailed enough to rule out him being elsewhere.

Investigat­ors were also initially given the wrong weight of the bin that Mr Mckeague may have climbed in, making it too light to support the theory that he was in there. However this was later corrected, showing that it was actually much heavier than normal.

Mr Mckeague’s father Martin told a newspaper he fears the airman may have killed himself. Mr Mckeague, 49, said he thought his son knew he was going to become a father which may have affected his mental state.

He said: “I just can’t help thinking this would have weighed on him heavily and he may have actually chosen to get in that bin that night knowing what would happen.

“It’s as probable as anything else and it makes it no less heartbreak­ing.”

Assistant Chief Constable Simon Megicks said the inquiry had been reviewed by senior officers as well as external experts, and he had “absolute confidence in the way the investigat­ion was conducted”.

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