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Tia Sharp police find body in grandmother's home Tia Sharp: police find body in grandmother's house
(about 1 hour later)
Police searching the home of the grandmother of the missing schoolgirl Tia Sharp have found a body, they said this afternoon. The week-long hunt for missing 12-year-old schoolgirl Tia Sharp has become a murder investigation after police discovered a body during a search of her grandmother's house.
Officers said they are now seeking Stuart Hazell, the partner of Tia's grandmother. They warned the public not to approach him and people should call 999 immediately said if anyone saw him. Less than four hours after a Metropolitan police forensic team went into the property on the New Addington estate in south-east London, Scotland Yard revealed they had found a body. It is understood that it was discovered inside the house, not in the garden or an outbuilding.
Forensic officers began a full search of the home of Christine Sharp, 46, around lunchtime. Tia's grandmother agreed to leave her terraced house saying she would not obstruct the inquiry. The body has yet to be formally identified, but there is little doubt that it is that of the schoolgirl, a pupil at Raynes Park high school in the nearby borough of Merton. A postmortem is due to be carried out.
It took less than four hours for forensic teams to find the body in the small house. There are likely to be questions asked about why a full forensic search was not carried out sooner, although police are required to have some evidence in order to mount such a search. Tia's mother Natalie has been informed of the discovery.
Officers said they had discovered a body but no identification had yet taken place. A postmortem will be carried out in due course. A manhunt is now under way for Stuart Hazell, 37, who lived at the property with Tia's grandmother, Christine Sharp, 46. The public were warned not to approach Hazell, who has several convictions, including drugs offences and possession of an offensive weapon, but to phone 999 if he was seen.
The full forensic search will continue for days as police try to find evidence in the house to build a case against whoever was responsible for Tia's death. A spokesman for Scotland Yard said: "A murder inquiry has been launched after a body was found at 20 The Lindens, New Addington. We are seeking to find Stuart Hazell to be interviewed in connection with this case."
Hazell spoke to ITV News on Thursday to deny any involvement in Tia's disappearance. It is believed that he was the last person to see her alive around noon a week ago on Friday 3 August. The police are likely to face questions about why they did not mount a full search of the property earlier and how they allowed Hazell to vanish.
Detectives have always been concerned that, despite claims that Tia left the house on 3 August, none of the CCTV seized and examined by officers showed any sign of the missing girl. Sniffer dogs were used twice to examine the house, most recently on Friday morning but a full forensic search was only carried out on Friday afternoon. Christine Sharp was asked to leave the property and, by lunchtime, forensic teams were inside the house and made their discovery later in the afternoon.
Hazell has not been seen at the address on Friday and Ms Sharp said she did not know where he was. Commander Neil Basu acknowledged that there would be many questions about the investigation. Speaking outside the house, he said: "When police investigate cases as difficult and challenging as this it is important that we do not just focus on one line of enquiry.
The Metropolitan police said in a statement: "A murder inquiry has been launched after a body was found at 20 The Lindens, New Addington following a search of the property this afternoon. Enquiries are under way to establish the identity of the body. A postmortem will be held in due course." "A number of searches took place at the address. When Tia was first reported missing, officers searched her bedroom as is normal practice. A further search of the house took place in the early hours of Sunday morning...this was then followed by specialist dogs on Wednesday lunchtime.
They said Stuart Hazell "should not be approached and, if seen, people should call 999. There have been no arrests in connection with this investigation at this time". "What we now need to establish is how long the body has been in the place where it was found. It would be wrong to jump to any conclusions until all the facts have been established."
The police said Tia's family had been informed of the discovery. Hazell was thought to have been the last person to see Tia alive and there was always a suspicion that the schoolgirl had not gone far from the property.
The search for the 12-year-old has centred on Ms Sharp's home for the last week. Hazell was interviewed as a witness on Wednesday but not arrested. But police were also following up two sightings of Tia which suggested she might have left the house, as Hazell had suggested, at noon last Friday.
The house being searched is a small terraced property, with a fenced back garden, Hazell lived there with Tia's grandmother. As the inquiry went on, however, Hazell's claim that Tia had gone into Croydon to buy some flip-flops was not backed up by CCTV footage.
He was the last person to report seeing her alive, and said Tia had left the house around noon last Friday to go into Croydon to buy a pair of flip flops. But there were no sightings of her in the town despite a massive publicity campaign for information. Examining hundreds of hours of tape, police failed to find any trace of Tia in the town and their focus returned more intently to the house in New Addington.
Hazell is known to have several convictions, including one for possession of an offensive weapon, a machete, in February 2010 and drug offences. By Friday, a decision was made to search again, in a detailed and extensive way.
Police interviewed Hazell as a witness on Wednesday but released him without further action. He was never arrested.
In an interview with ITV News on Thursday, he denied any involvement in the disappearance of Tia.
"Did I do anything to Tia? No, I didn't. I love her to bits. She is like my own daughter," he said.
"I know deep down she walked out of here. I know deep down she walked down that path. What happened after that I don't know."
It was Hazell who led a candlelit vigil this week for the schoolgirl, wearing a white T-shirt with a picture of the missing girl and the words: "Find Tia" beneath it.
When asked earlier on Friday by reporters outside the house where Hazell was, Christine Sharp replied: "I don't know where Stuart is; he is out doing his own thing. He has had it hard – he knows the finger is being pointed at him."
Friends on the estate have been walking the streets all week, carrying posters of Tia and asking the public for help in finding her. Within minutes of the discovery of a body at the house, members of the local community arrived to express their sadness and shock, but there was also anger directed against the police.
Ginny Oteng, 46, a mother of three, said: "I have kids of my own the same age as Tia, and I was worried because I thought there was a child snatcher out there."
Alston Millington, 32, expressed the views of many when she said she had hoped Tia had been in trouble at home and had run off in an act of rebellion. "I was hoping she would be found somewhere with somebody," she said. "It's such sad news."
Eileen Minogue, 40, said: "I feel disgusted. It is heartbreaking. I feel for the genuine family, her mum Natalie, the cousins and aunts who have been in that house who have had sleepless nights waiting for Tia to come home. All the while her body was there."
The search for Tia has been the focus for much of the community on the New Addington estate for thepast week.
Gavin Barwell, MP for Croydon Central, wrote on his blog: "The police and forensic teams now have a serious job to do and I ask that we all please allow them to get on with trying to close a case which has, in such a short period of time, affected so many of us in Croydon and around the country.
"Despite the sad end to an emotional week, I want to praise the community in New Addington for their relentless dedication to trying to help their neighbour's family. So often in times of tragedy come inspirational displays of community."