The Sunday Telegraph

Madeleine suspect and the mystery of the other tragic children

German sexual fantasist could have used drive between Bavaria and the Algarve to scout for victims, say experts

- By Steve Bird and Daniel Wighton

POLICE across Europe are reviewing unsolved child murders and disappeara­nces to see whether there is any link to the prime suspect in the abduction of Madeleine McCann.

Detectives in France, Spain, Germany, Portugal and Belgium are sifting through cold case files involving youngsters after the possibilit­y was raised that Christian Brückner, 43, was linked to another missing child and a teenager’s murder in Belgium.

The father of René Hasee, a six-yearold boy who went missing in 1996 while on holiday in the Algarve, has been told by the Federal Criminal Police Office in Germany that it is reopening the investigat­ion. At the time,

Brückner, then 20, lived in the region. Andreas Hasee told The Sunday Tele Tele

graph police said “absolutely nothing” about Brückner being linked to the decision, but he believed the “two cases aren’t that different at all – and that he [Brückner] could have something to do with it.”

In Belgium, the public prosecutor’s office in

Bruge confirmed it was investigat­ing whether Brückner was connected to the murder of Carola Titze, 16, whose body was found in dunes in De

Haan, in 1996. The teenager, who was on holiday, was said to have met a German man and was seen with him at a disco just days before her murder. Meanwhile, German police are investigat­ing whether the suspect was involved in the disappeara­nce of Inga Gehricke, five, in woods in Germany in 2015, after it emerged Brückner was some 70 miles away. UK police investigat­ing the disappeara­nce of three-year-old Madeleine in Praia da Luz, also in the Algarve, received 400 calls and emails from the public since launching a fresh appeal, which included naming Brückner as a suspect in the town where she vanished in May 2007. It is understood Brückner travelled extensivel­y by car between his native Bavaria and the Algarve.

In Germany federal police chiefs issued a general alert to regional forces to check all cold cases involving children to see whether they tallied with the time Brückner was not in prison.

Prof David Wilson, a leading British criminolog­ist, told The Telegraph an offender like Brückner, who was jailed for sex attacks on children and a pensioner, would have struggled to suppress “fluid sexual fantasies”.

Brucker has not been charged with any new crimes.

THE prime suspect in the Madeleine McCann case is feared to have committed numerous sex offences on regular trips across Europe as he drove between Germany and Portugal for more than two decades.

Christian Brückner, 43, is known to have frequently driven the 1,600 miles between his native Bavaria and the Algarve, through France and Spain and possibly Switzerlan­d and Belgium.

It is feared the convicted rapist, burglar and drug dealer could have used the trip, which would have taken more than a day, to scout for victims.

He is believed to have shunned flying to avoid airport passport control where any outstandin­g arrest warrants as well as details about his previous crimes, including sex offences against children, would have been flagged up.

The full extent of his nomadic lifestyle, which began with a backpackin­g trip to Portugal in his late teens, has meant he either lived in, or had been jailed for crimes in, countries including Germany, Italy and Portugal.

David Wilson, an emeritus professor of criminolog­y at Birmingham City University, said Brückner, who has been convicted for both paedophile and gerontophi­le (those sexually attracted to the elderly) crimes, was likely to have found his extreme sexual urges emerging throughout his life.

“The key thing we are dealing with here is a man who has very fluid sexual interests; from the very young to the old and vulnerable,” said Prof Wilson. “That implies a lack of sexual confidence to establish a relationsh­ip with an age-appropriat­e person.

“So those behaviours and that sexual insecurity would have existed for a very long period of time and would have found ways to express themselves on a number of occasions and in different ways. And, because he himself recognises the opprobrium that is attached to his sexual interests, he very much lived a mobile lifestyle.

“He would never be able to put down roots because ultimately his sexual fantasies would have to come to the fore. When that happens, there would have been a lot of gossip which would have meant he would have to move on.

“It’s absolutely right to think he would have offended in those places he moved, whether in Germany, Portugal, or anywhere in between.”

In 1995, aged just 18, Brückner first travelled to the Algarve shortly after getting his driving licence. More importantl­y, he was escaping from part of a two-year youth court sentence for sexually assaulting two children, a boy and a girl.

He travelled with his German girlfriend on a backpackin­g trip that saw them camp wild wherever they chose.

It is likely he grew increasing­ly attracted to the anonymity an itinerant lifestyle can provide.

Unlike the small town where he grew up, being passed from pillar to post within the care system, including in secure accommodat­ion for problem teenagers where his every move was monitored, out on the road he enjoyed a degree of obscurity.

It is also probable he realised how holidaymak­ers in the French and Spanish resorts he visited, at best, were easy targets for petty thefts and, at worse, offered potential victims for sex crimes.

A year after Brückner arrived in the Algarve, René Hasee, from Elsdorf, Germany, disappeare­d on June 21 1996, while on holiday in Aljezur, 25 miles from Praia da Luz.

His parents lost sight of him after he ran ahead on the beach. On the sands where the six-year-old boy had been lay some of his clothes.

Last Thursday, German detectives arrived at the home of Adreas Hasee, René’s father, and said they were looking again into his son’s disappeara­nce.

The announceme­nt came as a shock because the last time police had visited was 20 years ago. He told a local newspaper how over the years he had come to accept his son had drowned.

While the Federal Criminal Police Office refused to comment on whether the decision to name Brückner as a suspect in the Madeleine McCann case had any bearing on the boy’s case being reopened, Mr Hasee told reporters: “There could be a connection.”

The northerly route between Brückner’s native Germany and Portugal could take him within miles of the Belgian seaside resort of De Haan (well known for its vast sandy beaches and

‘He would never be able to put down roots because ultimately his sexual fantasies would have to come to the fore’

one-time resident Albert Einstein). In the summer of 1996, 16-year-old Carola Titze went for a morning walk along the beach while on holiday there. She never returned, and her body was found six days later.

The schoolgirl was reported to have been in contact with a German man whom she was seen with at a disco in the days before her murder.

Yesterday, the public prosecutor’s office in Bruges confirmed they were investigat­ing whether Brückner could have played any part in her death.

If Brückner had tried to forge a new identity he failed. In 1999, he was extradited from Portugal to Germany to face the courts for previous juvenile crimes. He had earlier been jailed for a series of burglaries in holiday towns up and down the Algarve.

Nonetheles­s, a few years later he was back in Portugal and moved into a rundown property where neighbours reported seeing a variety of dishevelle­d cars parked up. He may have been attracted to the Algarve because it was a major route organised criminal gangs used to smuggle cannabis, a drug Brückner was known to use and sell.

By the summer of 2007, his life was truly mobile after he resorted to living in a VW camper van, probably with his unnamed English girlfriend (he was fluent in English). When Gerry and Kate McCann, along with Madeleine and their twins, arrived in Praia da Luz, he was known to have been trundling around the area.

An hour before the three-year-old vanished from the room she shared with her siblings, Brückner received a 30-minute call in the town. The next day, he arranged for the ownership of his German-registered Jaguar to be transferre­d to another person’s name back in Germany. He and his girlfriend split up and he returned to his homeland. There, Brückner continued his habit of moving around, having settled for periods in Dresden, Augsburg, Sylt, Munich, Hannover and Braunschwe­ig.

In May 2015, Inga Gehricke, five, disappeare­d in a case so similar to what happened in Praia da Luz that she became known as “the German Maddie”. She vanished from a family barbecue after going to collect firewood in the northern town of Stendal. She has never been since.

As was the case in the McCann inquiry, Brückner became a suspect in the Gehricke case, but faded from the inquiry, despite it being claimed he had been at a service station only 90 minutes away from the scene of the girl’s disappeara­nce.

Police described it as inexplicab­le how a girl could simply vanish without trace.

A raid in 2016 on his property – he was not there – uncovered a Skype chat on a computer in which he stated he wanted to “catch something small and use it for days”.

According to Bild magazine, a USB stick found at the site where he lived had images of the abuse of babies. The property was searched again in 2018.

It is clear that Brückner was reluctant to sever links with Portugal. Although he regarded the Algarve as his main home for 12 years from 1995 to 2007, one of his former landlords in Bavaria said he was regularly returning to Portugal in the years before his arrest in 2018.

Alexander Bischof, 64, rented an attic room in his property in Augsburg, northern Bavaria, to Brückner before police raided it two years ago.

The landlord recalled Brückner owning a Jaguar, very probably the same one with German number plates that he was known to have had in the Algarve. That sighting adds credence to the belief that he drove through open borders between Portugal and Germany.

Prof Wilson is eager to point out that there is no evidence that has been gathered that merits Brückner being charged for the abduction or murder of Madeleine, let alone any of the three other children whose cases have resurfaced since his name hit the headlines.

In fact, Brückner was ruled out of the Madeleine inquiry in 2008 by Portuguese police, before coming to the attention of British detectives in 2013 and again in 2017.

Prof Wilson added: “He would very likely have been reoffendin­g in those places he travelled.

“But, that doesn’t mean to say he had anything to do with either the abduction or, as the Germans say, murder, of Madeleine McCann.”

‘It’s absolutely right to think he would have offended in those places he moved between’

 ??  ?? The disappeara­nce of René Hasee, left, and murder of Carola Titze, right, are being re-examined after Christian Brückner was named as a suspect in case of Madeleine McCann, below
The disappeara­nce of René Hasee, left, and murder of Carola Titze, right, are being re-examined after Christian Brückner was named as a suspect in case of Madeleine McCann, below
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