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06th Feb 2023

Head of dive squad searching for Nicola Bulley believes she ‘is in the river’

Charlie Herbert

‘Everything is pointing to the river’

The head of the specialist dive squad searching for Nicola Bulley has said he does now think that she fell into the river she was walking along when she went missing.

Nicola was last seen at 9.10am on 27 January while walking in St Michael’s on Wyre, Lancashire, having earlier dropped her daughters, aged six and nine, at school.

The 45-year-old’s phone, still connected to a work call, and the dogs lead and harness were found a short time later. Police are now trying to account for a missing 10-minute period.

On Friday, police revealed their “main working hypothesis” was that the mum fell into the river.

Peter Faulding, founder of Specialist Group International (SGI), has offered his services to Lancashire Police for free, according to a report on Monday by the Mirror, and the company is due to launch its “top of the market” 18,000khz side scan sonar later this morning.

But, at the time, the expert wasn’t convinced that Nicola is in the water, and said that he believed something was “not quite right here.”

Faulding noted no screams were heard, and “normally people would scream out”, and dogs normally stay with the owner. Nicola cocker spaniel, Willow, was found wandering alone.

He said: “There’s something, in my opinion, not quite right here.”

Speaking to the Mirror again today (February 6) though, Faulding said he did believe Nicola had fallen into the water.

He said: “I do believe she’s in here from the evidence we’ve got at the moment.

“Everything is pointing to the river.

“There doesn’t seem to be a third party involved.”

Although police said last week that she was a good swimmer, they explained she may have been weighed down by heavy clothing she was wearing that morning.

Faulding also said that if Nicola fell into the river and was conscious, cold water shock could have “taken her breath away” and her energy would have been sapped meaning she would eventually drown.

If Nicola had indeed drowned, he said she would have likely got “snagged” within around 500 metres of the point of entry.

Faulding said, if Nicola “accidentally” fell into the river, as suspected, “she wouldn’t have gone far” because it has “shallows and she would get lodged”.

He continued: “There’s no way she would have gone out to the estuary. The river’s not in flood, it’s benign.”

“If Nicola is in there, we will find her. If she’s there, our sonar will pick her up straight away.“I will see a body on the bottom. We are dealing with about 10 drownings every summer. We always locate within the hour. It’s that quick, it’s that good.”

Over the weekend he branded the police investigation a “mess” and suggested police could not rule out third-party involvement in Nicola’s disappearance “when they haven’t actually checked”.

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