Monday 9 May 2022 09:02 PM Corrie McKeague's mother vows to 'make Biffa pay' after inquest rules ... trends now The mother of Corrie McKeague has vowed to 'make Biffa pay' after an inquest ruled her RAF serviceman son was crushed to death when he climbed into one of their commercials bins on a boozy night out. McKeague, 23, disappeared in the early hours of September 24, 2016, after being ejected from a night club in Bury St Edmunds. The gunner was last seen on CCTV entering a service area behind a Greggs shop but his body was never found, with detectives believing his remains are located at a landfill site in Cambridgeshire. Last month a £2 million inquest ruled the the airman had been crushed after climbing into the commercial bin. It concluded there were ‘ineffective bin locks’, an ‘ineffective search of the bin’ before it was tipped, and ‘poor visibility through a Perspex viewing window on the lorry’. McKeague's mother Nicola Urquhart, 52, went live on social media on Saturday to address her feelings towards the disposal company. Nicola, a former police officer, has accepted the ruling but vowed to 'make Biffa pay' for its role in her son's death. She said the amount of people that die in bins is ‘disgusting’ and believes there are simple measures that can be put into place to stop this. The family of Corrie McKeague (left to right) Leah McElrea, brother Daroch McKeague, mother Nicola Urquhart, and brother Makayen McKeague, speaking to the media outside Suffolk Coroner's Court following the inquest Corrie McKeague pictured with his girlfriend April Oliver. Tragically, the RAF gunner vanished before finding out she was pregnant The bins in a service area behind a Greggs shop in Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, which Corrie McKeague was last seen entering on CCTV A CCTV still released by Suffolk Constabulary in the hours before he went missing following a night out The mother detailed how she was left shocked after visiting the same area last month, where her son was last seen, and discovering that the bins in that area still did not have locks on them. Ms Urquhart, from Dunfermline, also revealed that she found out information at last month's inquest that she had not been told by police. Speaking to 105,000 members of the Find Corrie Facebook group, Nicola said: 'My biggest problem, and the reason I feel I won’t get an answer to this, is Biffa. 'The way they have personally treated us as a family. This is Biffa, I am not talking about the bin driver. 'Right when my son first went missing, myself and my sons all came down to Suffolk. 'The very first conversation I had heard the police press officer saying, it wasn’t something I was supposed to listen to, I heard her saying to the senior investigating officer at the time Biffa had requested that we not mention them in this press conference. 'I made sure that the first thing I mentioned in that press conference was Biffa. What were they so bothered about? I do now know. 'The amount of people that die needlessly in bins is disgusting and there is something that they can do about that and it is quite simple.' She said she was glad the chief coroner has written a Prevention of Future Deaths report in which he 'stated very clearly Biffa's failings'. Ms Urquhart continued: 'I will be doing everything to make Biffa pay for this. 'I found this out at the inquest, it was eight weeks after Corrie went missing that they carried out a forensic investigation inside the bin that they believe he went in. Even at that it cannot be guaranteed that it was exactly the same bin. 'We do believe that the most likely hypothesis is that Corrie went in that bin and he has ended up somewhere in the landfill. McKeague, who had served in the RAF for three years, drank a ‘significant amount of alcohol during the evening’ of September 23 Corrie McKeague's father Martin outside Suffolk Coroner's Court on March 22 earlier this year 'It is also physically possible that he did go in that Biffa bin, that the bin driver was mistaken, that he didn’t check that bin properly, and that Corrie was missed. 'That bin was never locked, I’ve been down there, I’ve lost count. When I was down at the inquest, Greggs still had not locked that bin. 'How they can sleep at night, knowing that that bin in particular they are still not locking, is utterly beyond me.' The mother also reflected on how she and Corrie’s brothers Makeyan, 31, and Darroch, 26, heard information at the inquest that was not communicated to them by police. She said: 'At least when I got the inquest, I then found out that, no, there was no terrorism. The same applied to lots of other things that in my mind had never been answered properly. We then got far fuller answers. 'What was a bit of a shock, communication has always been a bit of an issue with me with the police. 'But I am still glad that we did get all of this information. “After the jury had delivered their verdict, we went next door with the police and we sat there for some time. 'They both sat and listened to everything we had to say. 'What we were talking about was everything that we felt about how we had been treated by the police. 'Some of the mistakes that we felt had been made, the problems that we had with communication and how that affected us. 'I have never had such a genuine heartfelt apology from both of them for what they did and you could collectively see from all of us the peace that it gave me that they understood and apologised for what they have done, that is enough for me.' Ms Urquhart is now planning to travel back to Suffolk to collect her son's personal possessions and is in discussions with the RAF about her son's memorial. She added: 'That is going to be difficult, it is going to be emotional. We are going to meet with the RAF to organise a memorial. 'The RAF have said that they will be putting a memorial stone at the National Arboretum for Corrie.' Suffolk and Norfolk police spent 137 days looking for Mr McKeague at the Milton tip and trawled through more than 7,000 tonnes of rubbish as part of a £2million investigation into his disappearance. However, no remains were ever found. A devastated Ms Urquhart pictured with her family following the verdict of an inquest into Corrie's death Tragically, the RAF gunner vanished before finding out that his girlfriend April Oliver was pregnant with their daughter Ellie-Louise, who was born in 2019. During the inquest into his death, Mr McKeague’s father Martin McKeague said in a statement that he had a ‘falling out’ with his son shortly before his disappearance after ‘having words’ with him about his ‘binge-drinking problem’. An inquest jury has now recorded in a narrative conclusion that Mr McKeague died at approximately 4.20am in Bury St Edmunds as a result of ‘compression asphyxia in association with multiple injuries’. In their conclusion, they said his ‘death was contributed to by impaired judgment due to alcohol consumption’, that there were ‘ineffective bin locks’, an ‘ineffective search of the bin’ before it was tipped, and ‘poor visibility through a Perspex viewing window on the lorry’. Members of Mr McKeague’s family, including his mother, father, two brothers and his daughter’s mother, were in court as the jury returned its findings. A Biffa spokesperson said: 'Our deepest sympathies are with Corrie’s family and friends. 'This tragic case highlights the important, waste industry-wide issue, of people sleeping in waste containers. We have been actively campaigning on this subject for the last 10 years and we will continue to work to raise awareness of it.' All rights reserved for this news site (dailymail) and under his responsibility