Madeleine McCann inquiry could end in months, says Met chief

http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2016/apr/26/madeleine-mccann-inquiry-could-end-months-met-chief-bernard-hogan-howe

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The investigation into Madeleine McCann’s disappearance could finish in the next few months.

The Scotland Yard boss, Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe, said investigators were following one remaining line of inquiry and unless any new evidence emerged, that would spell the end of the British investigation.

Madeleine vanished at the age of three while on holiday with her parents in Portugal in 2007, and despite a high-profile search, no trace of her has ever been found.

Speaking on LBC radio, Hogan-Howe said: “There’s been a lot of investigation time spent on this terrible case. It’s a child who went missing. Everybody wants to know if she is alive and, if she is, where is she, and sadly if she’s dead then we need to give some comfort to the family.

“It’s needed us to carry out an investigation together with the Portuguese and other countries have been involved. There is a line of inquiry that remains to be concluded and it’s expected that in the coming months that will happen.”

The Home Office has given £95,000 funding to keep the investigation – on which only a handful of officers are working – going for another few months.

Hogan-Howe said: “The size of the team has come down radically. We are now down to two or three people; at one stage there were about 30 officers in it.

He added: “There is a line of inquiry that everybody agrees is worthwhile pursuing.”

When asked when the investigation, called Operation Grange, will end, the Metropolitan police chief constable said: “At the moment it would be at the conclusion of this line of inquiry unless something else comes up. If somebody comes forward and gives us good evidence we will follow it. We always say that a missing child inquiry is never closed.

“First of all, the line of inquiry that is being pursued, that obviously is important and it is important that is resolved, and I think it will be. If something new comes forward we will investigate it, but that line of inquiry probably at the moment is the conclusion of this inquiry.”

Hopes were high when the UK investigation into the girl’s disappearance was launched in 2011, with Scotland Yard detectives later highlighting a sex offender who had targeted British families with young children staying in villas in the same area where Madeleine was last seen.

Despite no obvious progress since then, last week DCS Mick Duthie, who is head of the force’s murder squad, remained optimistic. He said: “There is ongoing work. There is always a possibility that we will find Madeleine and we hope that we will find her alive.”