Corrie McKeague’s mum claims police mistook CCTV of son for woman in mini-skirt

THE mum of missing airman Corrie McKeague claims cops mistook CCTV footage of her son for a woman wearing a mini-skirt.
Nicola Urquhart, 51, believes the images prove her 23-year-old son walked out alive from the area in Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, where he was last spotted.
Cold-case officers showed her unpublished footage of a woman wearing a mini-skirt shortly after her son was last seen.
But Mr Urquahart is adamant the "woman" was in fact her son.
She believes it proves he walked away from a Greggs bin, which officers believe he climbed into before it was emptied into the back of a lorry.
Ms Urquhart told the : “On one of my last meetings with the police, they were showing us the CCTV.
“Then we saw someone walking out with these other people.
CCTV FOOTAGE
"Immediately I said, ‘That’s Corrie’. Corrie’s brothers, Darroch and Makeyan, were the same.
“The police said, ‘Yes, we thought it was Corrie too, we got experts in and it’s actually the girl, because she’s got a mini-skirt on and she’s got bare legs, it looks like light-coloured trousers’.
“But I said the description [of a girl] was put out, I’ve seen CCTV [of her], she was in dark jeans.
“That’s not a girl, that absolutely is Corrie.”
Corrie, a gunner, was based at RAF Honington and was last seen on a night out in the town in September 2016.
Immediately I said, ‘That’s Corrie’. Corrie’s brothers, Darroch and Makeyan, were the same."
Mum Nicola Urquhart
His body has never been found, despite a police inquiry costing more than £2.15million which included two huge searches of a landfill site.
The family of the airman, from Dunfermline, have been battling for four years to find out what happened to him.
Cops believe he died after climbing into a Greggs bin before it was emptied into a refuse lorry.
However, a search of the dump the lorry travelled to in Milton, Cambs, did not locate his body.
Nicola, a police officer, accepts her son is dead but disputes their theory.
That’s not a girl, that absolutely is Corrie."
Nicola Urquhart
His mum added: “This footage was after the lorry had gone and I’m like, ‘That was Corrie leaving’. I do believe it was Corrie. Nobody came in wearing a mini-skirt.”
Suffolk Constabulary said an East Midlands Special Operations Unit review found the investigation was “thorough and detailed, and explored all reasonable lines of enquiry”.
Their statement added: “The integrity of the investigation has not been in question.”
Cops said that they believed the missing airman was dead as the inquest into his apparent death was briefly opened in a
Chief Supt Marina Ericson, the county policing commander for Suffolk, gave a statement at the hearing.
'TRAGIC'
She said: "At 03.25 hrs Corrie entered a ‘horseshoe’ shaped area in Brentgovel Street behind Superdrug and Greggs the bakers.
"Located in the area are several industrial waste bins. 03.25 hrs was the last time Corrie was seen and known to be alive.
“A Biffa waste lorry, making its waste collections, drove into this area at 04.19hrs and emptied the Greggs waste bin.
"The bin weighed 116kg, approximately 70-80kg more than its average."
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Suffolk senior coroner Nigel Parsley described the death of Corrie as “tragic”.
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He added: “I would like to pass my sincere condolences to Corrie’s parents Nicola and Martin and the rest of his family and friends who lost him in such tragic circumstances.
“On the basis of the evidence I have heard, I will open the inquest into Corrie’s tragic death.”