The Guardian (USA)

Madeleine McCann police in Germany 'find cellar' during allotment search

- Kate Connolly in Berlin

German police searching an allotment plot used by the prime suspect in the disappeara­nce of Madeleine McCann have reportedly found a cellar once believed to have belonged to a garden house that was torn down at the end of 2007.

German media have been reporting on the apparent developmen­t, though police have yet to comment.

Two small excavators are being used to dig up the plot on the outskirts of the north German city of Hanover, which was once used by Christian Brückner, 43, German investigat­ors’ main suspect in the abduction of the three-year-old British girl in 2007.

Brückner reportedly lived there during 2007, a former neighbour told local media. He said he had lived off grid and had left within a year.

The operation, which involved a large team of police officers, forensic specialist­s and sniffer dogs, began in the early hours of Monday morning and is expected to continue at least until the end of Wednesday.

They have been digging up the plot, using spades and rakes to comb over the ground. Big slabs of building materials have also been removed apparently from the remains of the foundation of the garden house.

The cellar was reportedly discovered on Wednesday morning.

One allotment tenant next to the plot told the newspaper Bild the cellar had belonged to the plot “for many years” and had been added by a previous tenant. It was not filled in when the summer house attached to it was torn down at the end of 2007, he said. It is not clear who tore the house down.

Police have sealed off the area, and added extra non-transparen­t screening on Wednesday, according to reporters at the scene. Police confirmed reports that they had shut the airspace over the area they were searching, to prevent helicopter­s and drones from observing from overhead.

The police have not revealed what it is they are hoping to find. But a spokeswoma­n for state prosecutor­s in Braunschwe­ig who are leading the investigat­ion and working alongside Germany’s federal criminal police confirmed that the search was taking place as part of its investigat­ion into the disappeara­nce Madeleine in Portugal in 2007.

As part of their investigat­ion, just weeks ago, police searched an abandoned factory property in the neighbouri­ng state of Saxony-Anhalt in which Brückner is also believed to have lived, and uncovered thousands of images on video tapes and USB sticks buried there, including child pornograph­y.

Earlier this month Portuguese police and divers searched three wells in the area of Vila do Bispo on the Algarve. They said they found no evidence there.

Hans Christian Wolters, the head state prosecutor in Braunschwe­ig, has repeatedly said in statements and interviews that investigat­ors have concrete evidence that Brückner – who was living in Praia da Luz when Madeleine was staying in the Algarve town with her family – was involved in her disappeara­nce. He has also said he believes the British girl is dead, but has so far declined to give more details.

The allotment lies in the rural region between Hanover Ahlem and Seelze-Letter and is around 40 miles from Braunschwe­ig. Brückner is serving a prison sentence in the city of Kiel for drug traffickin­g. He was confirmed as a main suspect in the disappeara­nce last month.

He lived in the Algarve between 1995 and 2007 and has two previous conviction­s for sexual contact with girls, one for the rape of a 72-year-old American woman, and numerous other conviction­s for theft and fraud.

He was found guilty last December of the rape of the American woman in Praia da Luz in 2005, but is appealing against the sentence in the European court of human rights. A ruling is expected within days. His current prison term is due to expire in January.

 ??  ?? Police officers continue their search of the allotment in in Hanover, Germany. Photograph: Alexander Koerner/Getty Images
Police officers continue their search of the allotment in in Hanover, Germany. Photograph: Alexander Koerner/Getty Images

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