Calgary Herald

MCCANN SUSPECT MAY WALK FREE.

Administra­tive error could mean Bruckner walks free

- IZZY LYONS, JAMIE JOHNSON AND ROBERT MENDICK

The Madeleine Mccann suspect has denied involvemen­t in her disappeara­nce in his first public comment on the case.

The statement came as it emerged he could walk free from prison in a month if the European Court of Justice overturns his conviction for raping an American pensioner.

Christian Bruckner emerged as a prime suspect two weeks ago after German prosecutor­s said they had launched a murder investigat­ion and could place him in Praia de Luz, Portugal, on the day Madeleine disappeare­d.

Lawyers defending Bruckner yesterday said their client “denies any involvemen­t” in the case.

Bruckner’s first comment came as Madeleine’s parents denied they had received a letter from German prosecutor­s stating their daughter was dead.

Bruckner, who is in prison for a separate drug offence and is eligible for parole, was convicted last year of raping a 72-year-old woman in Praia de Luz in 2005 and jailed for seven years.

But his conviction is the subject of an appeal due to an administra­tive error by German police after they extradited him on the wrong charge. The court’s decision is expected on July 16.

It could result in the court ordering a retrial or quashing the conviction, meaning Bruckner would be eligible for immediate release. The authoritie­s fear it would enable him to flee abroad to a country that does not have an extraditio­n agreement with Germany.

Yesterday, further details emerged in the German media about his past. According to an investigat­ion by Der Spiegel, police recovered “countless children’s items, most of them small swimsuits” when they searched Bruckner’s camper van in May 2016.

The search was in connection with the disappeara­nce of fiveyear-old Inga Gehricke, known in the German media as “the German Maddie.”

The police last week confirmed the 43-year-old had been ruled out as a suspect.

Officers viewed more than 8,000 photos and videos on six USB sticks and two memory cards showing the abuse of young children and around 100 of the files were pictures of Bruckner partly naked or in black stockings performing a sex act, the newspaper reported.

The details came as police in Frankfurt confirmed they had reopened the murder case of another German child.

Tristan Brubach was killed in 1998 and witnesses produced a composite image of the suspect, which bears a striking similarity to Bruckner. However, Noah Kruger, the chief prosecutor, said there was so far no evidence linking him to the case.

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