Western Mail

Missing mum leads ‘being exhausted’

- PRESS ASSOCIATIO­N REPORTER newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

POLICE investigat­ing the disappeara­nce of Nicola Bulley have said all possible lines of inquiry to find the mother-of-two are being “exhausted”.

A team of 40 detectives are working on about 500 different lines of inquiry, Superinten­dent Sally Riley said.

More than 700 drivers who travelled through the village of St Michael’s on Wyre around the time the 45-year-old went missing are also being traced.

However, it is still the force’s belief that Ms Bulley fell in the River Wyre, Ms Riley added.

Giving an update at a press conference yesterday, Ms Riley, of Lancashire Police, said: “At the moment there are around 500 active pieces of informatio­n and lines of inquiry that we’re working on to try and find answers for Nicola’s family. This is normal in a missing person inquiry and does not indicate that there is any suspicious element to this story. The inquiry team remains fully open-minded to any informatio­n that may indicate where Nicola is or what happened to her.”

She added: “All possible lines of inquiry, search or investigat­ion are being exhausted.”

Ms Riley said: “It does remain our belief that Nicola sadly fell into the river and that this is a missing persons inquiry.

“Any informatio­n that comes in that indicates otherwise is being checked out all the time and negated as each inquiry comes up. We’re not closed in any way to any particular line of inquiry and we remain genuinely open to that. All these inquiries, however, have so far not found anything of note.”

Family and friends of Ms Bulley have questioned the police theory that she probably fell into the water while walking her dog, after dropping her children off at school on January 27.

Specialist underwater divers are searching a stretch of river where police believe she may have fallen in.

Peter Faulding, a private search expert sometimes used by police, has said if his team cannot locate Ms Bulley in the river then she is not there and he would not rule out “third-party involvemen­t” in her disappeara­nce.

They have been concentrat­ing on an area around and downstream from a bench where Ms Bulley’s mobile phone was left, still connected to a work call.

 ?? DANNY LAWSON ?? > Peter Faulding, right, CEO and workers from private underwater search and recovery company, Specialist Group Internatio­nal on the river in St Michael’s on Wyre
DANNY LAWSON > Peter Faulding, right, CEO and workers from private underwater search and recovery company, Specialist Group Internatio­nal on the river in St Michael’s on Wyre

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