The witness who first connected Christian Brueckner to Madeleine McCann’s disappearance has expressed his conviction that the German sex offender knows what happened to the missing British toddler.
Helge Busching, who initially linked Brueckner to the abduction in 2008, said he is “convinced” the German is involved.
A fresh search is underway in the Algarve
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Busching’s testimony has already proved crucial in securing Brueckner’s 2019 conviction for raping an elderly American woman in Praia da Luz, resulting in a seven-year prison sentence.
The former friend of Brueckner first reported his suspicions just one year after three-year-old Madeleine vanished from the resort in May 2007.
Busching revealed disturbing details about his 2008 encounter with Brueckner at a Spanish music festival, where the suspect made comments that convinced him of his involvement.
According to Busching, Brueckner told him it was “strange Madeleine didn’t scream” when she was taken.
“When he said ‘she didn’t scream’ we were talking our language, German and I could tell from his voice and gestures what he meant, there is no misunderstanding,” Busching told the Mail.
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The witness described Brueckner as “evil” and “bad”, stating: “I know he is capable of taking Madeleine and I told Scotland Yard and the German BKA (police) the same thing.”
A dramatic intervention has emerged from Ken Ralphs, who claims police are searching the wrong location and that he met Brueckner’s alleged accomplice one week before Madeleine vanished.
Speaking to GB News, Ralphs said the accomplice “cried that he needed the money to get out the country with his family and children and that’s why he got involved” in plans to abduct a child from Praia da Luz.
Ralphs identified what he described as the last property where Brueckner stayed before Madeleine disappeared, urging investigators to focus their efforts there instead.
“For over 18 years, I’ve pressed the police and all they can do is blame each other for not passing this information on,” he said.
The current searches at Atalaia, approximately three miles from where Madeleine vanished, have entered their third day with German and Portuguese authorities using excavators, geo-scanners and other equipment to examine scrubland around abandoned buildings.
Brueckner faces potential release in September if he pays outstanding fines of €1,500, though sources suggest he may remain imprisoned until January 2027 due to lack of funds.
Busching expressed frustration about the timing, telling the Mail: “I just pray to God that they find something to keep him in jail. The BKA wouldn’t spend all this money to send a team to Portugal if they didn’t think it was worth it.”
He warned that if Brueckner goes free, “he will disappear, and justice won’t be done.”