Corrie Mckeague: Fresh police appeal for potential witnesses

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CCTV imageImage source, Suffolk Police
Image caption,

Police have released a fresh appeal for help identifying the men in CCTV pictures

New images have been released of three potential witnesses to the disappearance of missing RAF serviceman Corrie Mckeague.

The 23-year-old vanished while on a night out with friends on 24 September in Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk.

Suffolk Police officers combing through CCTV footage have released stills of three people who have yet to be traced.

Mr Mckeague, from Dunfermline in Fife, was last seen walking alone in Bury St Edmunds at about 03:25 BST.

Image source, Suffolk Police
Image caption,

More than £300,000 has so far been spent on the search for Corrie Mckeague, according to Suffolk Police

He walked into a dead-end area known as the "horseshoe" and was not seen again.

Following a previous appeal, police still need to trace two people shown on CCTV - a cyclist and an older man.

A name had been given for the older man, but this person has since been traced and he was not the man in the image.

Image source, Suffolk Police
Image caption,

All of the footage released by police was filmed in Bury St Edmunds town centre in the early hours of the morning

Image source, Suffolk Constabulary
Image caption,

Corrie Mckeague was last seen walking alone in Bury St Edmunds on 24 September

A third picture has also been released. It is a better image of a potential witness, believed to have featured in pictures previously released on 8 December.

All of the footage was filmed in Bury St Edmunds town centre between 03.15 and 05:20 BST.

Police said the vast majority of people in the area who were captured on CCTV had been identified, traced and spoken to.

Image source, Suffolk Police
Image caption,

RAF serviceman Corrie Mckeague was last seen in an area known as the 'horseshoe'

The three people in the images were the last seen on foot in the area who have yet to be traced.

Det Supt Katie Elliott said police had worked through information in a "logical way".

She added police have not received any information as yet from an intelligence services company employed by Mr Mckeague's family, but anything passed on by them would be considered as part of the ongoing inquiry.

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