'Clairvoyants' and amateur sleuths risk hindering Nicola Bulley probe trends now

'Clairvoyants' and amateur sleuths risk hindering Nicola Bulley probe trends now
'Clairvoyants' and amateur sleuths risk hindering Nicola Bulley probe trends now

'Clairvoyants' and amateur sleuths risk hindering Nicola Bulley probe trends now

Amateur detectives are causing distress and confusion as they descend on the small village Nicola Bulley went missing from. 

As desperate search for the mother-of-two in the Lancashire village of St Michael's on Wyre enters its eleventh day, sleuths are hindering progress with 'crackpot' theories. 

The community is trying to 'rise above it', a friend claimed, but online speculation is making things harder for the 45-year-old's family. 

It comes as police will start work with independent search experts, who are contributing more high-spec equipment, on Monday morning. 

Forensics expert Peter Faulding, who is flying up to join the search, said he hoped to be able to confirm or deny whether Ms Bulley was in the river by the end of Monday. 

World-renowned forensics expert, Peter Faulding, does not agree with police claims that Nicola Bulley, 45, fell into the River Wyre

World-renowned forensics expert, Peter Faulding, does not agree with police claims that Nicola Bulley, 45, fell into the River Wyre 

Police will be joined by independent experts on Monday morning as the search enters its eleventh day

Police will be joined by independent experts on Monday morning as the search enters its eleventh day

Neighbours have been helping to look along river banks for the mother-of-two but say 'crackpot' theorists have been hindering progress

Neighbours have been helping to look along river banks for the mother-of-two but say 'crackpot' theorists have been hindering progress

Superintendent Sally Riley said 'clairvoyants' had phoned the police helpline claiming to know Ms Bulley's whereabouts. 

A neighbour of Ms Bulley's, who was out every day helping the police with their search, said she had come across a man questioning locals.  

The man is said to have been sprouting 'crackpot' theories and had apparently attended hundred of similar missing person cases nationwide. 

The neighbour, who asked not to be named, said: 'It's upsetting to hear this sort of stuff from someone who has just turned up for their own interest.'  

Last week, a pair of armchair detectives travelled to the village from Leeds with a handheld camera to take 'documentary evidence'. 

The community is trying to 'rise above it', Heather Gibbons, a friend of Ms Bulley, said.  

The police described the online speculation and abuse as 'totally unacceptable', as an internet forum which discusses 'true crime' cases reached nearly 1,000 posts on the disappearance. 

CCTV pictures emerged of Nicola Bulley leaving home for the school run were published yesterday.

She is seen on security footage wearing a long dark coat, leggings and ankle boots with her hair tied in a ponytail

She is seen on security footage wearing a long dark coat, leggings and ankle boots with her hair tied in a ponytail

Still pictures showing Ms Bulley just hours before she vanished have been released by a friend in a bid to find her

Still pictures showing Ms Bulley just hours before she vanished have been released by a friend in a bid to find her

Still pictures from cameras at her home, showing Ms Bulley on her driveway just hours before she vanished, have been released by a friend as part of the desperate search to find her.

The mother, 45, can be seen in a long jacket, leggings and walking boots with her hair tied in a pony tail prior to taking her two daughters on the 3.8-mile journey to drop them off at school in St Michael's on Wyre on January 27.

Friends of the couple have begged armchair detectives and keyboard warriors to stop speculating about the involvement of her partner Paul Ansell. 

They say the CCTV images show why Mr Ansell has not been considered a suspect, as it is understood that he was at home at the time of Ms Bulley's disappearance.  

The heart-wrending moment Nicola Bulley's young daughter spots search teams looking for the missing mother was captured on video at the weekend. 

The six-second video shared by friends showed daughter Sophia, six, pointing towards a search team and asking: 'Them helicopters, they're looking for mummy.'

Over the weekend, her two little girls performed at a gymnastics show - with an empty seat saved for Ms Bulley, who had booked a ticket days before she went missing - as friends and family fight to keep their lives as normal as possible.

Emma White, a friend, told The Telegraph that the girls tended to do a lot of activities over the weekend, usually with their mother. 

'Over the weekend they had a gymnastics show and there was an empty seat, which was obviously hard as Mummy should be watching them.' 

Friends added that Ms Bulley's two daughters also attended a school disco on Friday evening as part of efforts among parents to 'keep things as normal as possible' for the children.

Jill Peck, who attended a vigil to light candles at St Michael's Church on Sunday, told Sky News: 'If something was in the diary, it's been kept in the diary. They are aware that something is happening but we're trying to keep it away from the school.

'They just desperately want her home and that is all they are asking all the time is "where is she and is she coming home?"'.

Other family members also attended the Candlemas service, where more than 50 worshippers lit a candle for the missing mother. 

She and her partner are active members of St Michael's Church, often attending services and helping decorate for Christmas. 

The Rev Andrew Wilkinson asked for prayers for the missing woman during the service and said afterwards that: 'As a family, they are so very positive, energetic and full of life. 

'They are lovely to be with. Nicola was always joining in and had lots of friends.' 

The plea comes as police begin work with specialist divers to search the vast stretch of river they believe the mother-of-two fell into. 

The specialist search teams are expected to start setting up extra high-tech equipment from 8am on Monday. 

Police have called in extra divers to assist in the desperate search for the mother - after initially turning down specialist assistance despite the family's pleas.

Peter Faulding, a world-renowned forensics expert and founder of private search and rescue organisation Specialist Group International, will join the search from Monday morning. 

He initially said Lancashire Police had refused his offer of specialist divers and equipment to aid in the search.

But in a subsequent statement, he confirmed his expert team has left Surrey on Sunday evening to join police in the search for the missing mother from Monday morning.

He said: 'I have just had a long call with the Lancashire Police search adviser to discuss the search for Nicola. We will work closely with the police search teams who are working long hours to find Nicola.

'The team are leaving shortly from our base in Dorking on route to Lancashire to start tomorrow [Monday] morning.'

Speaking to Sky News on Sunday, Mr Faulding said he will be bringing 'high-spec' sonar equipment that has a 'very high hit rate' in search operations.

Peter Faulding, a world-renowned forensics expert who is a diver for the police and has worked on hundreds of cases across the southeast, today confirmed his specialist rescue and underwater team has been called in to help with the search

Peter Faulding, a world-renowned forensics expert who is a diver for the police and has worked on hundreds of cases across the southeast, today confirmed his specialist rescue and underwater team has been called in to help with the search

Mr Faulding believes that there are a number of anomalies in the search and hopes to be able to determine whether Ms Bulley is in the water on Monday

Mr Faulding believes that there are a number of anomalies in the search and hopes to be able to determine whether Ms Bulley is in the water on Monday 

He said: 'We’re assisting with our dive team. We carry out all the underwater operations in the south east for the police anyway, but we’re bringing a particularly high-spec piece of equipment, 1,800-kilohertz specialist side-scan sonar.

'Each year we deal with a lot of drownings and we locate them extremely quickly. The difference with this sonar is that it’s very, very high frequency. 

'It’s about £55,000 and it scans the river and I can see every stick and stone lying on the river bed. We’ve got a very high hit rate with this.

He added: 'Our sonar is probably a bit more superior but I’ve got a lot of specialist search expertise and I’ve worked on hundreds of these cases and we always generally find people within the hour in lakes etc.' 

Meanwhile, Mr Faulding also said he believes it is unlikely that the river bank is the correct answer regarding the disappearance. 

Police officers search near the River Wyre in St Michael's on Wyre, Lancashire,on Saturday

Police officers search near the River Wyre in St Michael's on Wyre, Lancashire,on Saturday

The forensics expert told GBNews: 'The amount of searching that's gone on in this river, I would have thought she would have been found by now. Normally when a person drowns, if they are left a number of days they don't move very far.

'This is not a fast tidal river. So I would have expected her to be found by the police divers by now... It's as clear as that. And you know, none of this rings right to me. My belief is she's not in not in the river at all.'

Mr Faulding said that not enough factors added up in his opinion, suggesting that Ms Bulley's phone could have been left on the bench as a 'decoy'. 

He continued: 'I personally think this phone could be a decoy.

'We dealt with a drowning a couple of years ago where a gentleman went into a river and Ripley, his dog, was screaming by the riverbank when we got there.

'When we arrived it was howling, and literally pointing exactly where he was. He stayed with his owner.

'The phone on the bench, I mean, you have to ask, normally someone would have a phone in their hand especially if they were walking around.'

The forensics worker said it 'feels odd' that no one spoke of the fact that Ms Bulley was not wearing clothes that would have absorbed water quickly, there were no marks at the scene and that not one person heard screams.

Additionally, he criticised the fact that the location has not remained cordoned off.

He said: 'People have been walking past the bench. There's no police tape up. This would normally be sealed off as a crime scene so potentially crime scene investigators can go in and see if there are any microfibres, evidence, slip marks down the bank etc and I don't believe that has actually happened here.' 

The mother is seen wearing a long jacket with leggings and walking boots as she uses the boot of her car

The mother is seen wearing a long jacket with leggings and walking boots as she uses the boot of her car

Police investigating the mysterious disappearance of mother Nicola Bulley have not found any evidence that she slipped or fell into the river but will continue their search

Police investigating the mysterious disappearance of mother Nicola Bulley have not found any evidence that she slipped or fell into the river but will continue their search

Nicola Bulley, 45, was last seen a over a week ago walking next to the River Wyre in St Michael's on Wyre in Lancashire

Nicola Bulley, 45, was last seen a over a week ago walking next to the River Wyre in St Michael's on Wyre in Lancashire

Police search teams were pictured in boats on the River looking for the missing 45-year-old

Police search teams were pictured in boats on the River looking for the missing 45-year-old

The family friend thanked those who had shared their support along with the list of details surrounding Nicola's disappearance

The family friend thanked those who had shared their support along with the list of details surrounding Nicola's disappearance 

Tilly Ann, a friend of missing mother Nicola Bulley, shared 11 key details about her disappearance.

Essential information from her Facebook post read that the only CCTV camera at a residential caravan park 'that would have seen Nikki' is not working.

She added that her friend and her partner Paul take the walk along the river regularly and would be well-recognised by the local community.

Tilly Ann noted that Ms Bulley is 'an incredibly strong swimmer' and that her dog Willow who she was walking was completely dry when found. 

She wrote that the dog would never have a harness on during the familiar walk and is removed at a gate at the top of the field. When the dog was found, it was very close to the bench along with the harness on the floor. 

She added that her friend would often put her phone on loud-speaker when talking - her phone was discovered close to the river bank and she had previously been on a conference call before she vanished.

The family friend thanked those who had shared their support and contributed to the search for Nicola - saying it had 'created such a comfort to Nikki's family'.

Tilly Anne noted that Ms Bulley is 'an incredibly strong swimmer', and that her dog Willow who she was walking was completely dry when found

Tilly Anne noted that Ms Bulley is 'an incredibly strong swimmer', and that her dog Willow who she was walking was completely dry when found

Following an urgent appeal for a mother wearing a yellow rain jacket in their ongoing search for missing mother Nicola Bulley, the force wrote that it was

Following an urgent appeal for a mother wearing a yellow rain jacket in their ongoing search for missing mother Nicola Bulley, the force wrote that it was 'pleased to say that the woman came forward very quickly'

Detailing the impact on Paul, she wrote that he is struggling to hold back his pain, but is focusing on his children and does not want to worry them 'more than they already are'.

How dog behaviour can disclose hidden clues to mysteries

Dogs are believed to be able to find the last location of their owners through their sense of smell.

Experts advise those searching should go back to where the dog was last spotted because it will backtrack to its owner and their scent. 

A dog's sense of smell is 10,000 times more powerful than a human and can pick up locational scent. 

If it's home is far away and the dog can't find its owner, it will get worried and try to return home to somewhere familiar. 

In certain cases, some dogs will return home along or attempt to follow their missing owner, according to Colin Tennant, director of the Cambridge Institute of Dog Behaviour and Training, who wrote in The Sunday Times today.

Dogs cannot, however, process what is happening if a human falls into water. In this case, the dog might run along the bank looking for eye-contact or stop on the bank as the last place of detection. 

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On Saturday, police released an image of a potential witness who was spotted in the area at the time of Ms Bulley's disappearance.

Later that evening, they released a statement that said the force 'pleased to say that the woman came forward very quickly' and were treating her as a 'key witness' in the investigation.

Lancashire Police said: 'We must stress that she was very much being treated as a witness and was one of many people in St Michael's on Friday, January 27th.

'Our enquiries to find Nicola are extensive and will include speaking to as many members of the public as possible.'

Police are particularly interested in speaking with people who may have been travelling near Blackpool Lane and Garstang Lane between 9am and 10am on the day Ms Bulley vanished.   

Photographs of police scouring the River Wyre in St Michael's on Wyre in Lancashire where the mother was last seen have been released as they continue to search.

The police

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