Police have confirmed that the body found in the River Wyre is that of Nicola Bulley, found over three weeks after she disappeared while on a dog walk.
Lancashire Police told the public in a press conference held on Monday (February 20) that the body found in the river was indeed that of Bulley following formal identification.
The mother of two, 45, had vanished on January 27 after dropping her young daughters – aged six and nine – to school before taking the family dog, Willow, for a walk near the River Wyre in St. Michael’s on Wyre, Lancashire.
A short while later, Willow was seen looking agitated on her own while Bulley’s phone was found on a nearby bench still connected to a work conference call.
The police had initially hypothesized that Bulley had fallen into the river and drowned, however, extensive searches failed to find any trace of her in the water.
Her body was located over three weeks later on February 19 less than a mile away from where she was last seen, after police were called by a man and woman who were walking their dog, per reports from PA.
Lancashire Police had issued a statement after the body was found, saying at the time: “This morning, Sunday, 19 February, you may be aware of police activity around the river near to St Michaels. We want to provide you with an update on that activity.
“We were called today at 11:36 AM to reports of a body in the River Wyre, close to Rawcliffe Road. An underwater search team and specialist officers have subsequently attended the scene, entered the water, and have sadly recovered a body.
“No formal identification has yet been carried out, so we are unable to say whether this is Nicola Bulley at this time.”
This morning, Sunday, 19 February, you may be aware of police activity around the river near to St Michaels. We want to provide you with an update on that activity.
— Lancashire Police (@LancsPolice) February 19, 2023
We were called today at 11:36am to reports of a body in the River Wyre, close to Rawcliffe Road. pic.twitter.com/zTtloX69hJ
“Procedures to identify the body are on-going. We are currently treating the death as unexplained,” they added. “Nicola’s family have been informed of developments and our thoughts are with them at this most difficult of times. We ask that their privacy is respected.”
Following the recovery of the body, Bulley’s partner Paul Ansell, 44, told Sky News that he had “no words right now, just agony,” adding: “We’re all together, we have to be strong.”
Authorities had failed to locate the missing mother despite combing the waters using an ‘arc-search’, which is when the riverbed is monitored using a side-to-side motion from one bank to the other.
Bulley’s body is believed to have been found in reeds just around a slight bend in the river, near to where a tree had fallen on its side and was partially submerged.
Peter Faulding, an expert forensic diver, had led an independent search of the water in conjunction with the police, and had previously claimed it was unlikely Bulley would be found in the river.
Following the discovery of a body, he told MailOnline: “All I can say is when we searched she was not on the bottom of that river. We weren’t searching the reeds, our job was to search the water.”
He’d previously stated that most drowning victims “go down where they are” and are found within five or 10 meters of where they entered the water.
Our thoughts remain with Nicola Bulley’s family and friends at this difficult time.