Police divers return to where Nicola Bulley's body was found dead

Police divers return to river where Nicola Bulley’s body was found after being asked by coroner to confirm her cause of death

Divers have returned to the river where Nicola Bulley drowned, it was revealed today.

Specialists were filmed in the River Wyre in Lancashire less than a mile from the bank where the mother-of-two was last seen on January 27, sparking a huge 23-day manhunt.

Ms Bulley’s partner Paul Ansell, 44, raised the alarm after a villager found their spaniel running loose close to a bench overlooking the river. Her mobile phone had been left on the bench. 

Dr James Adeley, Senior Coroner for Lancashire, has asked Lancashire Police to return to the water for investigative work to help confirm her cause of death and what happened before she was found in the reeds on February 20.

Footage from the scene shows divers working in the Wyre near its weir on Tuesday, April 4.

A spokesman for HM Coroner said: ‘The investigation will take time to complete to ensure that as complete a picture as possible of the facts concerning Ms Bulley’s death is presented at the inquest. This will assist the family in understanding what occurred.’

https://youtube.com/watch?v=gth-kgAkPyo%3Frel%3D0%26showinfo%3D1%26hl%3Den-US

Divers are back in the river wh3ere Nicola Bulley was found dead in February – 23 days after she vanished

The coroner has ordered Lancashire Police to return to help with Nicola’s upcoming inquest, which will determine her cause of death

Nicola Bulley, pictured with her partner Paul Ansell, disappeared while walking her dog on January 27. She was found dead 23 days later

Lancashire Police faces several probes over its handling of the case. 

The force was widely criticised for disclosing Ms Bulley’s struggles with alcohol and the perimenopause two weeks into the search after she vanished by the riverside near St Michael’s on Wyre.

Lancashire Constabulary also failed to address why it took 23 days for Ms Bulley’s body to be found, as well as its handling of social media sleuths who filmed themselves in back gardens searching for the 45-year-old mortgage adviser.

Her body was discovered on by psychic Jason Rothwell. An inquest into her death was opened and adjourned in later February. Coroner Dr James Adeley told the four-minute hearing at Preston Coroner’s Court that Ms Bulley was identified by dental records.

He added the remainder of the evidence ‘will require further evaluation’ and no cause of death was given. The inquest is due to resume this summer.

The Independent Office for Police Conduct has already begun investigating Ms Bulley’s prior contact with police. An officer carried out a welfare check at her home 17 days before she went missing.

And the Information Commissioner’s Office – which focuses on data privacy – has made initial inquiries with the force to understand the reasons for disclosing Ms Bulley’s personal information at a press conference.

Mother of two Nicola Bulley (pictured) was discovered on Sunday morning in the River Wyre in Lancashire, more than three weeks after she disappeared 

Police had twice searched the area where Nicola was found before a member of the public discovered her body in the reeds

Police had searched at least twice the stretch of river where Nicola was found.

Professional teams had been scouring the length of the River Wyre ever since the mother of two disappeared.

Yet it was a man and a woman going for a simple Sunday stroll that sparked a huge police operation that has left Ms Bulley’s family heartbroken.

The pair spotted something in an outcrop of trees and undergrowth along the bank and called emergency services at 11.36am.

With the whole area on high alert, two police officers sped to the scene. A witness saw the man pointing toward the reeds and telling an officer: ‘It was a body. It is down there. It was a body of a woman. There is definitely a body down there.’

The walker made his way down toward the spot by the bank as one of the policemen launched a drone to take a closer look. Within minutes a force helicopter was on the scene, the noise of its rotors echoing across the surrounding fields and alerting the media. Police patrol vehicles were quick to follow.

Officers aggressively cleared the area as a huge cordon was set up, a sign of the pressure cooker Lancashire Constabulary has found itself in.

After police vans and officers on foot had secured a radius of half a mile around the scene, divers arrived, entering the water shortly before 2pm just as Detective Superintendent Rebecca Smith, the senior investigating officer, arrived.

Word of the police activity quickly made its way around St Michael’s on Wyre.

And within half-an-hour a 104-word statement released from police headquarters near Preston detailed how the divers had ‘entered the water and sadly recovered a body’.

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