The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

‘Somebody knows about Renee death’

Crime: World-leading forensics authority says clue to solving MacRae case lies in north

- BY CALUM ROSS

HIGHLAND residents have been told that they still hold the key to solving one of the country’s most shocking murders.

A world renowned forensics expert insisted that someone in the Inverness community knows what happened to Renee MacRae and her son.

Dame Sue Black called on “everyone” in the region to mark the upcoming 40th anniversar­y of their disappeara­nce from a layby on the A9 by helping to finally find the truth.

And she urged youngsters to quiz their grandparen­ts to try to uncover any new evidence.

The plea was made as the police last night refused to reveal if they have spent any money on the highprofil­e investigat­ion in the last decade.

A world-leading forensics expert believes the vital clue to finally solving Scotland’s most infamous murder mystery still lies in the Highlands.

Local residents have been urged to mark the 40th anniversar­y of the disappeara­nce of Renee MacRae and her son Andrew next month by helping to find the truth.

Dame Sue Black, a renowned forensic anthropolo­gist, said young Highlander­s should “ask your granny, ask your grandad” in case any crucial evidence has been missed.

The Inverness-raised expert, who led the search in 2004 of Dalmagarry Quarry for evidence during a cold case review, said: “There’s a responsibi­lity on everybody.”

It is a case that shocked the country four decades ago and remains the UK’s longest-running missing persons inquiry.

Mrs MacRae left her homein the Cradlehall area of Inverness with both her sons on Friday, November 12, 1976, before dropping her elder son Gordon at the home of her estranged husband Gordon MacRae.

She turned south on to the A9, reportedly on her way to meet her lover, Bill MacDowell, an accountant in her husband’s building company, with the couple said to be planning to start a new life on Shetland.

The 36- year-old’ s burned-out BMW car was found with a bloodstain in the boot in a layby off the A9, a mi l e south of Tomatin.

A murder inquiry was launched, but the bodies of the mother and her threeyear-old son have never been found and no one has ever been convicted of their killing.

Dame Sue, who is professor of anatomy and forensic anthropolo­gy at Dundee University, helped lead an excavation in 2004 of Dalmagarry Quarry, just a few hundred yards from where the young mother’s car was found, but no fresh evidence was unearthed.

The expert told the Press and Journal yesterday remains optimistic that the case can finally be solved, however.

“There’s always a chance and that is the most important thing,” she said.

“We’re missing the most important piece of evi-

“Ask your granny, ask your grandad” in case any crucial evidence has been missed”

dence. If anyone knows anything about it, wouldn’t it be good if they came forward.

“Evidence comes in unexpected forms. It could be someone digging a hole or moving a fridge. We have to have faith.

“I’m a great believer that it will find its way out in one way or another. People shouldn’t forget that this is a major event in the Inverness area that caused a tremendous amount of grief for the families involved, and they have to find out where she is.”

DameSue, whowas born in Inverness and educated at Inverness Royal Academy, remembers her family’s property being searched by the police at the time of Mrs MacRae’s disappeara­nce.

She said she hoped the upcoming anniversar­y would help jog the memories of local residents.

“Ask your granny, ask your grandad, ‘do you remember anything?” she urged.

“There must be something out there. Somebody knows, that is the thing. Until we ask the right questions . . .”

Asked if she believed someone in the Inverness area still knew something that could help solve the crime, she said: “Inverness is a very small community. There must be.

“Whether they are local now or are from Inverness and have moved away. They should help the family put this to bed.”

Dame Sue added: “As these cases become colder and colder, as they do, these cases become more challengin­g. There’s a responsibi­lity on everybody.

“I remember it as a teenager in Inverness, knowing it was going on. Our outhouses were searched like everybody else’s.

“It’s still an open event for me and others. Nobody in terms of Police Scotland has forgot it, be absolutely assured of that.”

 ??  ?? PROBE: Inverness-raised Professor Sue Black led the search in 2004 of Dalmagarry Quarry for evidence during a cold case review of the MacRae murder mystery
PROBE: Inverness-raised Professor Sue Black led the search in 2004 of Dalmagarry Quarry for evidence during a cold case review of the MacRae murder mystery
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? RIDDLE: Renee Macrae went missing from Inverness in November 1976
RIDDLE: Renee Macrae went missing from Inverness in November 1976
 ??  ?? Andrew MacRae was only three when he disappeare­d
Andrew MacRae was only three when he disappeare­d

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