The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Three years on, mother of missing RAF man refuses to end search.

INVESTIGAT­ION: Three years on and no trace of Corrie after he approached bins

- AILEEN ROBERTSON arobertson@thecourier.co.uk

Three years after his disappeara­nce, the mother of Fife airman Corrie Mckeague is not ready to give up the search.

Nicola Urquhart said she has accepted she will never see her son alive again but she is not ready to give up the search for his remains until all possibilit­ies have been explored.

“We’re just trying to see what we can do and be realistic, because we’re not just going to keep going forever for the sake of it,” she said.

“We need to get to the stage where we can say we’ve done all we can and we’re not quite there yet.”

Corrie, of Dunfermlin­e, was last seen in the early hours of September 24 2016, when he was picked up on CCTV walking into a bin loading area in Bury.

The 23-year-old was a gunner based at RAF Honington and had been on a night out in the Suffolk town, 10 miles away from the base.

No trace of him has been found since. One theory is that he climbed into a waste bin and was taken away by a refuse lorry. However, two extensive searches of a landfill site at Milton, near Cambridge, failed to unravel the mystery of what happened to Corrie.

Police have now handed the investigat­ion to a cold case team.

As the three-year milestone loomed, Nicola, who is a police family liaison officer, returned to Suffolk to meet some of the people who had supported the search.

Among those were Cheryl Hickman and Wayne Starling who run the Bull Inn at Barton Mills. The couple made sure Corrie’s relatives had somewhere to stay as the search continued and started a crowdfundi­ng page.

Nicola said of the couple: “We lived in their house for over a year, me and my sons. I didn’t actually know them.

“They’re a local couple who own the hotel the Bull Inn at the Fiveways Roundabout, which is where Corrie’s phone last pinged.

“They’ve just been unbelievab­le.” Nicola said the family got together for a meal on what would have been Corrie’s 26th birthday on September 16.

She said although she had to be realistic about the prospect of ever knowing what happened to her son she was still “desperate” to find him.

But she said any subsequent efforts should not be the top priority for Suffolk Lowland Search and Rescue.

“If somebody went missing today, they shouldn’t be doing a search for my son when they should be looking for that person instead.

“One of the things I really am trying to focus on is to ensure that commercial bins are locked so somebody does not go through this again.”

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