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Former
detective inspector Dave Edgar, hired by the McCann family to
lead the investigation into the hunt for Madeleine McCann |
A controversial DNA test used in the failed Omagh bomb case is the key
to finding Madeleine McCann’s kidnapper, Ulster investigator Dave Edgar
has claimed.
But the former RUC detective sergeant’s team will never be able to use
it as Portuguese authorities will not give him access to forensic
information.
Speaking exclusively to Sunday Life at the HQ of his Alpha
Investigations Group in Cheshire, the ex-cop leading the search for
Maddie believes that DNA tests, which can establish a profile from just
a few cells, could help solve the mystery.
Edgar said he tries to maintain “a decent relationship” with Algarve
cops but has blasted them for contaminating the scene of her
disappearance.
He claimed if Low Copy Number (LCN) DNA testing had been carried out at
the Ocean Club resort in Praia da Luz, where Maddie vanished from two
years and four months ago, it is “highly likely” her abductor would have
been nailed.
LCN DNA is a highly sensitive forensic procedure which magnifies
potential evidence that is unidentifiable by traditional DNA testing.
It can obtain a perpetrator’s profile from only a few cells as small as
a millionth the size of a grain of salt. Some argue its magnification
method leaves evidence open to distortion.
Doubts were raised when south Armagh electrician Sean Hoey was cleared
of charges connected to the Omagh bombing in a case which focused on LCN
DNA.
But Dave has seen it work before. His team used it in 2007 to snare
killer Stephen Mottram, who stabbed love-rival Andrew Batterton to death
in a jealous rage.
Dave said: “It’s an amazingly powerful tool, so it’s a real shame we
will never get to use it with Maddie.”
Prosecutors in the Omagh case claimed that LCN analysis had shown links
between the bomb timers used in the attack and Hoey.
But the judge rejected the use of the technique because it was not yet
seen to be at a sufficiently scientific level to be considered evidence
and Hoey was cleared of a total of 58 charges, including 29 murders.
A UK-wide suspension of the technique after the Omagh case collapsed was
lifted in January of last year and detectives are now free to use it
again.
The PSNI has championed Low Copy Number DNA analysis, pointing out that
it helped catch Trevor Hamilton, the serial offender who brutally
murdered Strabane pensioner Attracta Harron in December 2003.
LCN DNA was also crucial to the conviction fireman Gordon Graham for the
2000 murder of
Lisburn man Paul Gault, husband of Graham’s Fire Service lover Lesley, a
mum of triplets.
Graham battered his love rival to death with a hockey stick and tried to
the make the killing look like work of a burglar.
But Graham’s attempt to commit the ‘perfect crime’ was undone by traces
of his sweat found on the handle of sports bag at the Gault's Audley
Park home.
Graham, who has always denied the murder, was ordered to serve a minimum
18 years behind bars by the judge who branded him “brutal and merciless”
killer.
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