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00:09That afternoon we were going to swimming baths from school and as usual me and Shannon paired
00:16up together straight away. When that was over we'd gotten the coach back together. Once we got off
00:25the coach, something didn't seem right. Because her mum told her her brother was picking her
00:34up that day after school but he never showed up. Normally if like she sends one of the kids
00:44to pick Shannon up from school they'd be waiting outside the gates before we even got there
00:49but there was no one there. That was literally like the last time I saw her.
01:14The first thing that goes through your head if your daughter's missing is who's gone?
01:23Literally from the moment she'd walked out of those school gates there was not one positive sighting.
01:31How can Shannon go missing on a state like that when everybody knows each other?
01:38Hundreds of police are involved in a desperate search tonight.
01:47There were lots of people on the sex offenders register who not only had direct links to Shannon's family
01:54but also lived in close proximity.
02:02But is it true?
02:16What about the police do?
02:18What about the police do?
02:32The police do?
02:33Yeah.
02:34When did you last see her?
02:36She went to school this morning.
02:38Have you been in touch with the school?
02:39Can they confirm with her?
02:41She went to school a normal time at 10 past three.
02:44Right.
02:46What do they call her?
02:48Shannon Matthews.
02:49Has she been missing before?
02:51No, it's the first time.
03:00I was doing my ironing, and one of my neighbours said to me,
03:04can we open the community centre?
03:06She said, because one of Karen's kids gone missing.
03:10I left my kids at home, and we just stayed down at the community house,
03:15put hot lights on, just in case.
03:17She decided to come home in the middle of the night.
03:21The weather were horrendous.
03:22It was raining, it was freezing.
03:24The wind was just bitter.
03:27No nine-year-old wouldn't want to be out in it.
03:46The next morning, the police had checked out what houses and everywhere that they could think of that she would
03:50go to.
03:53Nobody had heard out from her.
03:56And by that time, everybody were worried.
04:14Well, I got the call, as I was driving to work, seven o'clock one morning from my DCI,
04:20asking me to gather my team together to go to Dewsbury Police Station.
04:24The homicide and the major inquiry team have responsibility for kidnaps and abductions.
04:31Shannon had never been missing before.
04:33It was unusual, it was out of character, and nobody had seen her hiding the hair of her, basically.
04:40So, West Yorkshire Police made the decision to put as many resources as possible into the search for Shannon Matthews.
04:51There are more than 250 police officers searching for Shannon Matthews in back gardens, in homes and in bins.
04:58The search for Shannon is now an urgent one.
05:05I got a call to say a young girl hadn't returned home from school.
05:10I got in my car, raced against time, put a completely new address into my sat-nav and found myself
05:17on Dewsbury Moor.
05:21By the time I arrived, the police search was in full swing.
05:29It was so cold.
05:46The search is going on tonight.
05:48I can already feel the temperatures are dropping to roundabout freezing,
05:51but we've heard that the very latest information that Shannon had in fact told some of her friends she was
05:56planning to run away.
05:57Let's hope that she is found safe and well very, very soon.
06:08It was the second night that we were missing that and everything came together.
06:13Everybody just started coming forward saying, right, is there hope we can do, hope we can do.
06:17And we just came up with just, all we can do is go out and look it.
06:20Right, can you just come in so they can tell you where to search?
06:24My mum was the one that led the search.
06:27The street were really busy because everybody were out, like, panicking.
06:31It was crazy, everybody were just out and kids were getting upset because nobody had seen her.
06:40The first thing that goes through your head if your daughter's missing, especially your daughter,
06:44I mean, the first thing you'd be thinking is, who's got her?
06:47What are they doing to her?
06:55One by one, the street filled with van after van after satellite dish after satellite.
07:03Suddenly you were becoming aware that this was a big story.
07:12Good evening, hundreds of police are involved in a desperate search tonight for a nine-year-old girl
07:17who is missing from home in West Yorkshire.
07:19Shannon Matthews hasn't been seen since leaving school yesterday.
07:23All day today, Shannon Matthews' mother has been waiting inside the family home here,
07:27waiting in vain for her nine-year-old daughter to come home.
07:31She's been inside the house all day.
07:42Shannon, if you're out there, please, darling, come home.
07:44We love you so much.
07:45Me and your dad, your brothers, your sisters, everybody loves you.
07:49Your dad's missing you so much, Shannon.
07:51He's even out looking for you.
07:53Please come home, Shannon, if you're out there, come home.
07:56If anybody's got my daughter, my beautiful prince's daughter, please bring her home safe.
08:01On that media repeal, Karen looked rough.
08:03It looked like she cried buckets.
08:05The bags under her eyes, everything.
08:09Everybody felt for her.
08:12I was sat at home, just watching it on telly.
08:15I started crying because nobody knew what had happened.
08:25It got to the point where I thought, they're not going to find her, she's not going to come home.
08:32She's dead.
08:42With me working at the Knowles Hill School, which was the main infant school on Marside Estate,
08:46we used to read with the children in the class.
08:51And Shannon Matthews is one of the children that I used to read with.
08:56Shannon was a very quiet young girl.
09:00She always had a smile for me.
09:02She always seemed happy.
09:07My name's Megan Aldridge and I was Shannon's best friend.
09:11From day one at school, like, we just got along.
09:14We clicked, like, we were, like, pretty much the same person.
09:18If you get what I mean.
09:20We just used to mess about at school all the time.
09:22Like, as soon as we see each other, that's it.
09:24We'd run up to each other and pretty much jump on each other.
09:38We just got along with each other more than we did with anybody else in school.
09:44Because me and her used to get bullied all the time.
09:48It was horrible.
09:50We were getting bullied for the same reasons.
09:54The way we used to dress and how we'd have his hair for school and stuff like that.
10:03Shannon was not the kind of child that went roaming, she'd go to school and straight home.
10:10She didn't roam around the estate like some of the children.
10:16So, it was a mystery how somebody managed to kidnap Shannon, really.
10:46More than 200 police officers as well as her family, friends and neighbours are involved in the search to find
10:52Shannon.
10:56I'm Paul Cattlewell. I was a detective constable on the homicide and major enquiry team.
11:03I have a daughter myself.
11:05I couldn't imagine losing a child in such circumstances.
11:11Can't even begin to comprehend what that must feel like.
11:18I attended the first briefing.
11:21It was as big a briefing, personnel-wise, as I've attended in my police career.
11:34Every time we looked out that window, there were police.
11:39They had dogs. They had the sticks to search in the long bushes.
11:43The helicopter were out.
11:46They were even stopping cars to see if they'd seen Shannon.
11:56We had no idea what had happened to Shannon, and so we had to cover every avenue and every possibility.
12:08When a child goes missing, or indeed with any police investigation, the first golden rule is you've got to clear
12:15the ground from underneath your feet.
12:19You've got to know what's going on. You need to understand your victimology.
12:25And in that respect, you're going to get all those answers from the family and the nearest and dearest.
12:34So, I met Karen Matthews at Jewsby Police Station.
12:38I explained to Karen what we needed and what we wanted.
12:44We had spent nearly six hours with Karen, getting all the background information in relation to Shannon and what she
12:51usually did with the time and who her friends were.
12:56And certainly, Karen Matthews did paint a rosy picture of the family life.
13:08I went with other officers, including the family liaison officers, to search Shannon's bedroom and obtain any items that may
13:17be of relevance.
13:24And as we entered the property, Karen never even looked up or engaged or acknowledged our entry.
13:33We just went about our business almost as though she weren't there.
13:52We got our school books and we got a composite set of Shannon's fingerprints so that we had a reference
13:59point so that when we were searching anywhere, we could send in fingerprint experts to examine premises to see if
14:06she'd been in there.
14:14We introduced forensic scientists to those houses as well to search for traces of blood or body fluids.
14:34There were 22 specially trained cadaver dogs within the UK and we deployed 18 of those.
14:48They searched everybody's house.
14:50There were five officers and a dog that turned up to mine.
14:54They searched my kitchen, every room in my house.
14:58They put the dog up in the loft.
15:00Obviously they didn't find anything, but they didn't leave any greys, like they looked everywhere.
15:16I remember the police coming to me and asking if I'd go out in the van to help look for
15:20her.
15:28We were on, like, the greenway and stuff where all foxholes and stuff like that are.
15:35They thought she might be down there and that made me think.
15:40They're not going to find her, she's not going to come home.
16:02Literally, from the moment she'd walked out of those school gates, there was not one positive sighting.
16:13No sign. No sightings. No discovery of any belongings.
16:23It was almost as though she'd walked out of those school gates and disappeared off the face of the earth.
16:33I was just so confused about how she'd gone missing.
16:37She wasn't seen going into a car, there were no strangers or anything like that, so it's confusing.
16:44I was just thinking, how could she have gone missing?
17:07The search goes on for Shannon Matthews, still missing after four days.
17:16Family, friends and neighbours of the nine-year-old have scoured the Dewsbury area, while day and night a team
17:21of 250 police officers are doing the same.
17:31West Yorkshire police have released new CCTV footage showing nine-year-old Shannon Matthews just before she disappeared.
17:41This was the day that she went missing.
17:44She'd been to the weekly school swimming lesson at the local baths.
17:50I remember at the time thinking, this will really help.
18:15The last afternoon I saw her, something didn't seem right.
18:20The last afternoon I saw her, something didn't seem right.
18:23Because her mum told her her brother was picking her up that day after school.
18:28But he never showed up.
18:32Normally if, like, she sends one of the kids to pick Shannon up from school,
18:36they'd be waiting outside the gates before we even got there.
18:40But there was no-one there.
18:48The last time I seen her, she was walking down the road from school.
18:52Even though she should have been walking up the road.
18:59I thought it were a bit weird.
19:02Especially when she wouldn't walk home on her own.
19:12She was walking downwards, not up.
19:16A different way home, you mean?
19:18Yeah.
19:19What's it been like without Shannon being here?
19:22I'm really, really sad.
19:25And if you know where she is, just call.
19:30And tell us where she is.
19:39Okay.
19:55Good evening.
19:57On Look North.
19:58West Yorkshire police now fear that nine-year-old Shannon Matthews
20:01was snatched from the streets of Dewsbury.
20:12I was 18 years old when I became a journalist.
20:15My very first story was The Yorkshire Ripper.
20:30The Yorkshire Ripper was the biggest manhunt West Yorkshire has ever had.
20:37And although the time was so different,
20:40although it was a build of five years during the Ripper investigation
20:44that grew and grew,
20:46the same level of anxiety,
20:49the same level of anger,
20:54who could have done this was very palpable.
21:02What police say quite categorically
21:04that due to the number of resources they've had
21:06on the streets day and night,
21:09that if the little girl was hiding,
21:11they would have found her.
21:18We were alive to the possibility
21:21that she could well have been abducted
21:24and was not going to turn up alive again.
21:48It was a surprise to everybody in the investigation team.
21:53The actual number of people who were on the sex offenders register
21:59within that locality.
22:03It's like dropping a pebble into a pond, isn't it?
22:07And the ripples tend to go out forever.
22:12There were so many, the task ahead of us was not insurmountable,
22:18but it was going to be a serious undertaking.
22:24Nick and myself would trace, interview and eliminate,
22:30or, in fact, raise the profile of people of interest,
22:35people who were on the sex offenders register.
22:39Each had to be seen and alibied.
22:45The names just kept coming at us
22:47and the work just kept piling up.
22:53We knew on the estate that the coppers were checking out pedo's houses.
22:58Because they searched their houses first,
23:00they made it so obvious where pedos live.
23:04I was more amazed at how many were actually living near the schools.
23:09We've got two schools.
23:10We had infant school and junior school
23:13and the amount of pedos on that footpath
23:16to both schools was unbelievable.
23:31It wasn't just that we registered sex offenders within the district.
23:36There was the fact that sex offenders were visiting the district.
23:42We know on the day that Shannon was reported missing,
23:45two bail hostels in the area
23:47had been holding counseling sessions
23:50and there were actual sex offenders coming from outside the district
23:55into Dewsbury.
24:12That data points to the fact that in 76% of cases
24:16where a child has been abducted for sexual purposes
24:20they'd be found dead within six hours.
24:24Within 12 hours you can guarantee that 96% will be dead.
24:29And within three days, 100%.
24:35There were lots of people on the sex offenders register
24:38who not only had direct links to Shannon's family
24:44but also lived in close proximity to Shannon.
24:48A large amount.
25:07One of the tasks is to obtain a full and detailed family tree.
25:12Unfortunately, in Shannon's case, it wasn't a family tree,
25:15so it's a family forest.
25:19The branches of that family tree continued almost forever.
25:28Karen Matthews is from a very big extended family.
25:32She was one of seven children.
25:35She herself had seven children to five different fathers.
25:41And so it was quite a complicated picture.
25:47Identifying all the people within that family circle
25:52to identify and go and speak to her was a task in itself.
26:00We looked at close family friends and members and relatives
26:04of Shannon Matthews that needed to be interviewed and eliminated.
26:19Some of those were family members, not all of them.
26:25And some of those were sex offenders, but not all of them.
26:39Shannon's real dad was a fellow called Leon Rose.
26:46He was in his late 20s, early 30s,
26:51from a working class background in Yorkshire.
26:54He lived in a community a few miles down the road,
26:57a semi-rural town.
27:09He never wanted to chat too much.
27:14Never gave that many interviews.
27:17For the sake of tape machines, just your name, please.
27:21Yeah, it's Leon Rose.
27:22I've been looking out every day, basically.
27:26Out driving about, handing out leaflets,
27:29just asking about if anyone's seen out.
27:33You know what I mean?
27:33Any littlest detail could mean a great thing,
27:37a great big deal.
27:40Shannon's father, Leon Rose, was interviewed.
27:43He did have access to Shannon, and he'd seen her quite a lot.
27:48But I know that those visits had died off,
27:51as I think there was issues still between him and Karen.
27:54Do you have a theory, an idea of what's happened?
27:59At the moment, I've no idea.
28:01All I know is she went to go home from school,
28:05but she didn't go home.
28:08That's basically all that I know of.
28:10In that sense, I don't know where she's gone,
28:12what she was thinking.
28:14You know what I mean?
28:15I don't know, no.
28:17She had written on her wall, apparently,
28:19that she was talking about wanting to live with you,
28:22or to come back and...
28:23Yeah, that's what I'd heard, yeah.
28:25If that's what she's done, but she's run away,
28:27she's scared, or...
28:29Is there a message there?
28:30Well, basically, it's like she's watching this, like, you know.
28:35Go home, we'll sort something out, you know what I mean?
28:37I would like to see her again.
28:41And the longer this goes on,
28:42the more worried everybody must be,
28:44but...
28:44It's been to a week now, and tomorrow.
28:49You know what I mean?
28:50She's nine-year-old, and she's...
28:52Well, she's still out there, nine-year-old,
28:55you know what I mean?
28:55It's going to be hard for any nine-year-old.
29:19So, we'll hide it down, and that's how I see,
29:19I'll hide it, I'll hide it down, and...
29:19I will run like that only one-year-old.
29:19And that's how I feel like it is.
29:20I don't know
29:20if you can't do anything. That's because I'm
29:20dealing with you, because it's not bad.
29:20You know what I mean?
29:27You can't do anything that's
29:29wrong, but I can't do anything else.
29:41There was a note scribbled on Shannon's bedroom wall saying that she wanted to live with her
29:46dad. That gave us some concern. It almost pointed to the fact that there were issues
29:55within the family, which was at odds with what Cannon was telling us about things being perfect.
30:16Craig Meehan was high on the suspects list early on because of his involvement with the family.
30:26Craig Meehan was 22 years old. He was interested in computers. He was interested in football.
30:36Altogether, he came across as quite an awkward figure.
30:44Are you still hopeful?
30:46Yeah.
30:47He worked as a fishmonger in a local supermarket and didn't seem the brightest.
30:57When we first saw them together, they cut a pretty unlikely-looking couple.
31:02And what about what the community is doing here?
31:07They're really brilliant. They're non-stopping every day out searching leaflets and everything like that.
31:21Craig Meehan just seemed weird.
31:25There was just something about him.
31:29He positioned himself in front without saying anything.
31:34You would ask him to do an interview and he'd go no, but yet he was there wearing the t
31:40-shirt.
31:45I just thought, have you got something to do with it?
32:02Karen's mother and father gave an interview with one of the The Weekend Tabloids accusing Craig of sometimes being violent
32:11towards their daughter.
32:26Let me ask you directly, have you ever hurt a child?
32:30Would you ever consider her to show?
32:33Were you ever cruel to her?
32:35No.
32:36There's even a lot of people that could back that up.
32:40There's a lot of my friends and family around here.
32:43They even trust me with their kids.
32:45I look after my babysitter with play, don't we?
32:49Same with my ****.
32:53I would never hurt anyone, basically.
33:20The night that we did the walk, Karen wasn't going to come down.
33:26She just said she just didn't want to.
33:28She didn't give a reason.
33:31I just told her to come down and the community were there for her and her daughter.
33:36And I think it would be nice if you showed your face.
33:39So you can see what support is actually out there for you.
33:46Once you were talked into coming down, everything went on out.
33:50I mean, obviously, the press were all on her as soon as the clocked her.
33:56But we hid her in the middle of everybody so the press couldn't get to her.
34:01She was certainly being protected well by friends who really cared about her.
34:06Who were saying, you know, she'll come out but she's going to lead the march.
34:10We didn't want to do any interviews.
34:32The time, 27 minutes to eight.
34:33The search for nine-year-old Shannon Matthews is now one of the biggest of its kind ever undertaken by
34:40West Yorkshire police.
34:41Well, yesterday I talked to both Shannon's mum and Craig Meehan.
34:44There's been a lot of coverage of, not least your family, your parents and your brother, talking about how Shannon
34:56had a difficult,
34:57and your other children had a difficult relationship with Craig.
35:00No.
35:02That's untrue.
35:03By quoting your parents, we've never seen him, Craig, beat Shannon with our own eyes.
35:08But the kids have said it's happened.
35:10They've suggested that Craig was hitting Shannon.
35:13No, look, he hasn't never, ever touched her. Never.
35:18It was a tough interview from Radio 4, and at that point, Karen and Craig, they've been involved in a
35:24few national media interviews.
35:28Craig, Karen's parents say that they've been trying to persuade Karen to leave you
35:34because they say that ever since you've been around the last four years that the children have been unhappy.
35:38They say there have been a whole series of family bust-ups.
35:41And people are going to wonder if there's a very deliberate reason why they are coming out and saying this
35:47so deliberately three weeks after Shannon disappeared.
35:51Well, basically, that's all lies.
35:53So, when people said that you had a difficult relationship with Shannon, did you, how was it?
35:58Did you ever lay a finger on her?
36:00No.
36:02No.
36:02I haven't done, never will.
36:09When I heard that interview, I thought this is all getting a bit suspicious.
36:15Something's not right, is it?
36:17You just think something's going on in those four walls.
36:21It's not right.
36:41When I went to work on the Marr side of the state, I introduced myself to Karen.
36:46But she didn't speak to me because she classed me as a grasser.
36:51And a lot of people don't like grassers.
36:58I knew I'd have to keep a close eye on her because she did have a few problems, did Karen.
37:05She was very impressionable and very susceptible to people who started being nice to her because she thought they wanted
37:13to be her friends.
37:18My biggest concern about Karen's house was it, it was like the estate party house.
37:28There were loads of people in and out of her house all the time.
37:31And then there were kids in it.
37:37So, yeah, it was one of the party houses on the estate.
37:43The biggest one.
37:47But that still went on.
37:50Nothing changed.
37:51If my child had gone missing, I wouldn't have people.
37:54The only people around the house would be the people who was helping me.
37:56I wouldn't have a lot of people in the house.
37:58I wouldn't be drinking and carrying on.
38:01And that's what made you, made me realise it.
38:04Well, it, there's something, something not right.
38:14A really different Karen appeared.
38:17Sorry.
38:19She'd had time to collect and compose herself.
38:24There were some black rings around her eyes, signs of tiredness, although the red rings from the crying had gone.
38:33She spoke very carefully, very deliberately.
38:40Well, it's probably can't sum up how difficult this has been.
38:44But it has been so long now.
38:46I mean, what is your daily routine at the moment when, you know, you wake up first thing in the
38:52morning, if you do manage to sleep?
38:54Well, it's hard to sleep, really.
38:56It's just, I always don't feel the same without them not being there, really.
39:03It just, it just feels empty.
39:13Well, I think that somebody out there will know Shannon.
39:18Supposed to probably know me as well.
39:22And it's just, I just want to know I'm safe, really.
39:26Does it make, I mean, if it was somebody that knew her and someone that might know you,
39:31does that in a terrible way make you suspicious of people that are close to you?
39:37It makes me think now I can't trust people who's really close to me anymore.
39:41I just can't trust them.
39:45Those words were weird.
39:48Those words seemed to point to somebody near her.
39:51Who was she referring to?
39:57Was it a slip?
39:58Was she saying what she thought the police might want her to say?
40:04Or was she just saying the first thing that came into her head?
40:08No, I can't trust people who's really close to me anymore.
40:12I just can't trust them.
40:15It just seemed odd that she was making that statement.
40:19Suddenly, it felt as though something was beginning to unfold.
40:24It suggested that she may have been holding things back
40:27and that she did know more than she was letting on.
40:35I says to my husband, I says,
40:38there's something not right about that.
40:44There's something funny about it.
40:49I can't trust people who's really close to me anymore.
40:52I just can't trust them.
40:55I just can't trust them.
40:56I just can't trust them before they wanted to find their way.
41:10I love the other one
41:11It's a secret to me.
41:11I love the other one.
41:12It's a secret to me anymore.
41:12It's a secret to me anymore.
41:12And I feel that I love a scant it.
41:14It's a secret to you anymore.
41:14I don't know.
41:14I'm sure it's a secret to you anymore.
41:15I'm sure it's a secret to you.
41:23Craig led the way up the stairs.
41:25I remember different pairs of shoes lined up on the steps
41:29as we walked up the slightly threadbare carpet.
41:34Karen was with us, but only very briefly,
41:36and she said, I can't be in here, and very quickly left.
41:41We got to the door of the room that Shannon shared
41:45with one of her siblings, and I'll never forget,
41:48on the door of the room, scrawled on there,
41:51in clearly a child's hand, it said,
41:53Shannon, on the name of sibling room, keep out.
41:59We go inside.
42:01The interview went on with Craig in the bedroom.
42:03But then, for whatever reason, Karen returned.
42:09And she came in so quietly,
42:11I didn't notice that she was there at first.
42:14And it wasn't until I asked her about the relationship
42:19between herself and Craig at that time
42:22that there was the first show of emotion from either of them.
42:29Karen said to Craig, he's my rock.
42:33And it was Craig that filled up with tears.
42:37And Karen said, don't you start now, Craig.
42:42Craig just about held it together,
42:44and two of them hugged.
42:48What struck me afterwards
42:50was that it was Craig
42:52who had been the one
42:54that was going to show the tears,
42:56and not Karen.
43:07We had a meeting, and we just said,
43:09right, what else can we do?
43:10So that's when we brought out the posters.
43:13We were a company that donated a photocopier.
43:16We went to Leeds United,
43:18handed out leaflets there.
43:20It did us feel town, Leeds Town Centre.
43:22We just covered every area we could think of.
43:26We did it back to T-shirts.
43:28Everybody were putting the right and sole into it.
43:31It was inspirational.
43:33It was incredible.
43:38They never slept.
43:40This extraordinary community response
43:44to try and find this little girl.
44:05It was incredible.
44:06We're back his bottle.
44:07We're back his bottle.
44:08We're back his bottle.
44:11We're back his bottle.
44:12We're back his bottle.
44:12I'm back his bottle.
44:25You
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