Cadaver dog's crucial role in hunt for body


Cadaver dog's crucial role in hunt for body
16 March 2012
The Herald

police drafted in a "cadaver dog" to help with the search for Suzanne Pilley's body.

The springer spaniel called Buster was said to have once located a body under 9ft of water and found signs that were of "interest" in the basement area of Gilroy's work at IML, in Thistle Street, Edinburgh.

Constable Simone Thompson, of South Yorkshire Police, said the dog reacted at a number of areas in the garage and an internal staircase. The body was thought to have been hidden in a recess under the stairs.

It also showed interest in the boot of Gilroy's car, despite it reeking of cleaning fluid or air freshener bought by Gilroy the day of the killing.

The High Court was told victim recovery dogs, are trained to detect the smell of blood or the gases given off by a body.
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David Gilroy: how police solved a murder mystery


David Gilroy: how police solved a murder mystery
The Herald
15 March 2012


Police today spelled out how they pieced together the case against David Gilroy, the former lover of Edinburgh book-keeper Suzanne Pilley, who has been found guilty of her murder.

Gilroy always denied killing the 38-year old in May 2010 and attempting to defeat the ends of justice by concealing her body.

The "groundbreaking" police investigation into Suzanne's murder saw officers spend months viewing hours of CCTV footage taken in Edinburgh city centre and from roads in rural Argyll.

Detectives did not have a body and were dealing with an "unusual" and complex" case.

It started as a routine missing persons inquiry, with Miss Pilley's parents alerting officers their daughter had not turned up for work and could not be contacted.

Investigations soon led to the belief that Ms Pilley was dead. She was captured on CCTV getting off a bus at Jenners and going to a nearby supermarket on the morning of May 4, 2010. She was making a "routine journey to work" but was never seen again.

When police visited her home they found her passport, some cash and medication. There was nothing missing and nothing disturbed. Her family said there was nothing out of the ordinary.

The 38-year-old had a close relationship with her parents, contacting them daily. That stopped abruptly on the day she disappeared. None of her bank accounts were touched and her credit cards have never been used.

Prosecutors said these facts, brought together, demonstrated Suzanne was dead.

David Gilroy, 49, was first interviewed by police as a witness when it emerged the two had a relationship.

Police phoned him on his mobile the day after she was reported missing and he told them he was in Lochgilphead, Argyll, on business. He returned to Edinburgh late that night and gave a statement to officers.

Police said he was extremely co-operative and his statement ran to 59 pages after an 11-hour interview.

Officers noticed cuts on his hands, and Gilroy was asked to attend a forensic medical examination the next day. They believed he was covering the cuts with a "flesh-coloured substance", possibly make-up.

This was the "turning point" in his status, police said, but it took many hundreds more hours of police work to piece together the circumstantial case.

Specialist cadaver dogs brought in from South Yorkshire Police were used to search the basement and garage of the Thistle Street building where they both worked at Infrastructure Managers Limited. They also turned their attention to the boot of Gilroy's silver Vauxhall Vectra car.


The court heard areas of "interest" were found by the dog but no DNA or forensics linking him or Suzanne to the office areas were uncovered. No forensic trace of her in his boot was found.

Detective superintendent Gary Flannigan, the senior investigating officer, said:
"The investigation into the murder of Suzanne Pilley has been groundbreaking and in many respects unique for Lothian and Borders Police.

"From the outset, we faced significant challenges and a routine missing persons inquiry quickly transformed into a murder investigation which relied heavily on information from the public."
He added:
"The thing that makes it unusual and unique for our force is the fact that we didn't have a body, I think that's what changes the complexity for ourselves and makes it such a difficult case for the crown as well. Our use of the cadaver dog is certainly groundbreaking, our application of CCTV and the media appeal."
During the trial, the court heard 20 officers analysed just one second of CCTV footage. Hundreds of cameras across Argyll were looked at as police investigated the route Gilroy took to Lochgilphead on May 5, 2010.

Despite a significant response to a public appeal looking for information from witnesses who might have spotted a silver car and a a considerable number of weeks spent searching the areas where his car was seen on CCTV, her body was never found.

Mr Flannigan said:
"We are confident that we have covered David Gilroy's movements from the moment he left IML on the Wednesday to the point he came to the police station. Clearly we've not looked in the right area or she's not been left there and there is always the possibility that she was placed somewhere else."

He added: "There's only one person who knows where Suzanne is, to our knowledge, and that's clearly David Gilroy."
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Ex-lover of missing woman feared buried in the Scottish Highlands found guilty of her murder


Ex-lover of missing woman feared buried in the Scottish Highlands found guilty of her murder
15 March 2012
Daily Mail
Matt Blake


  • David Gilroy, 49, convicted of killing Suzanne Pilley 'by unknown means'
  • Prosecutors believe body was taken to 'lonely grave' in Scottish highlands
  • Gilroy's family 'devastated' by verdict, claiming his innocence

The former lover of a missing woman was today convicted of her murder - even though her body has never been found.

Suzanne Pilley, 38, vanished without trace nearly two years ago after making a routine journey to work in Edinburgh city centre.

But today, David Gilroy, 49, was convicted of carrying out the killing by 'unknown means' after prosecutors convinced a jury he had buried the book-keeper's body in a 'lonely grave' in the Scottish wilds.

Gilroy was also found guilty of attempting to defeat the ends of justice by concealing the office worker’s body and driving it to various locations in Scotland in the boot of his car.

The jury of eight men and seven women took just under eight hours over three days to convict Gilroy by a majority of both charges on the 19th day of his trial at the High Court in Edinburgh.

For Ms Pilley, May 4 2010 should have been a routine day.

She boarded the buses she normally took from her Whitson Road flat to her work at Infrastructure Managers Limited (IML) in Edinburgh’s Thistle Street, where she had worked for about two years.

She was even spotted on CCTV buying food for the day at the nearby Sainsbury’s store.

But although her office was just a short walk away, she did not turn up for work that day - something her colleagues found unusual.

Piecing together why the divorcee would vanish in a city centre in the busiest part of the day, and where she could have gone, sparked a high-profile missing person inquiry and one of the most challenging investigations carried out by Lothian and Borders Police.

Her life appeared to have been interrupted suddenly. She had vanished and made no contact with relatives, there had been no activity on her credit cards and she had not made any arrangements to feed her pet cat.

Despite extensive searches, her remains have never been found and no forensic evidence linking Gilroy to the crime. But as time went by, the finger of suspicion pointed closer towards him.

Prosecutors said he killed Ms Pilley on the day she vanished in the basement of the Thistle Street building where they both worked and then abandoned in a 'lonely grave', thought to be in Argyll.

The case presented against Gilroy in court was an entirely circumstantial one but each strand led to a 'compelling and convincing' case against him, prosecutors said.

Advocate depute Alex Prentice QC told the jury:
 'The Crown case is that Suzanne Pilley met David Gilroy on that morning; that they went to the basement in the building together, quite possibly with the consent of both, that he killed her, he placed her body in the recess, he got his car from home, brought it to the garage, placed her dead body in the boot, took her home and next day transported her to a lonely grave somewhere in Argyll, where she is now.'
The conviction was sealed in the absence of a body and without any direct witness evidence.

Evidence presented to the jury painted a picture of Gilroy as a deceitful, controlling individual, motivated by jealousy and driven to kill when Ms Pilley told him their relationship was over.

Ms Pilley’s mother said her daughter and Gilroy became lovers after married Gilroy split from his wife. He even moved into Ms Pilley’s flat in mid-2009.

Ms Pilley believed she would find a permanent partnership with Gilroy but it was a 'turbulent' relationship and she soon tired of his 'lies' and strange behaviour.

By spring 2010, Ms Pilley was single, wanted to meet someone new and had started internet dating.

The day before she vanished, she spent the night with a man she had recently met online, 41-year-old planning officer Mark Brooks.

Gilroy, from the Silverknowes area of Edinburgh, denied every charge against him.

But the evidence revealed a chain of bizarre behaviour by him, before and after Ms Pilley’s death, which exposed his guilt and revealed the calculated steps he took to cover up his crime and maintain a front of normality.

The court heard:

  • In the weeks leading up to her disappearance, Gilroy pestered Ms Pilley with more than 400 text messages. But as soon as she went missing, those messages stopped.
  • Work colleagues spotted him looking 'agitated', 'shaking' and 'in shock' on the morning she disappeared.
  • A police dog searching his home showed interest in the boot of Gilroy’s silver car, which was said to have had a smell of cleaning fluid or air freshener. 
  • Gilroy had scratches on his body around the time Ms Pilley vanished, which could have been caused by fingernails during a struggle.
  • A flesh-coloured substance might have been used to cover an injury.
  • Gilroy’s Vauxhall Vectra was spotted on CCTV travelling between Edinburgh and Lochgilphead, Argyll, the day after Ms Pilley disappeared.
The court heard how there were 'numerous opportunities' on the route between Tyndrum and Inverary - an area of remote hillsides and forestation - to hide something.

Gilroy stared straight ahead as the guilty verdicts were delivered.

As he was led away to the cells, he nodded to certain members of the public gallery.

Ms Pilley’s parents, Sylvia and Robert, were present in court to see the jury’s verdict delivered.

Mrs Pilley wept as the verdict on the first charge - the charge of murder - was announced.

Gilroy will be sentenced on April 18 at the High Court in Edinburgh.

In a statement issued through Lothian and Borders Police, Ms Pilley’s parents said:
'This day has been a long time coming but finally Suzanne has received the justice she deserved.

'As a family we continue to struggle to come to terms with losing her: we have lost our daughter but her memory lives on in everyone who knew her.

'Suzanne was a devoted daughter, a supportive friend and an exemplary colleague at work.

'She was a proud Scot who led a full and active life, and enjoyed the great outdoors, always walking, cycling and keeping fit.

'We have been met with nothing but kindness from her many friends during this time of great sorrow.

'We would like to express our gratitude to every police officer involved in the investigation and to Alex Prentice and his team for their efforts in bringing this case to a conclusion today.

'Although the trial has ended, our ordeal goes on, and we hope that one day we can lay our daughter to rest.'
Prosecutor Alex Prentice QC told the court that Ms Pilley, who was born and raised in Edinburgh and lived alone in her flat, was popular among her colleagues and friends.

She had a keen interest in the outdoors and enjoyed camping and cycling.

He said:
'It appears from Suzanne's family and friends that Suzanne was keen to get married and start a family. Family life was something she had always craved.'
Mr Prentice said of her family and friends:
'The heartache suffered is increased by her remains never being located.'
He said married Gilroy has no previous convictions.

He was employed as a regional operations manager at IML before his employment was terminated in July 2010.

The court heard that earlier in his life, Gilroy worked as a Royal Navy engineer.

Judge Lord Bracadale deferred sentence to obtain background reports. He told the jurors they had 'clearly taken great care' over their deliberations.

Simon Peck, director of IML, said:
'Suzanne was a much-loved friend and colleague.

'To have her snatched from her friends and her family in such a callous and cold-blooded way is something we're all still dealing with.

'The revulsion and disgust felt towards David Gilroy cannot be expressed.

'To think that he went about his business in the days after he murdered Suzanne, pretending that nothing was amiss, is truly chilling.

'We owe a sincere debt of gratitude to the officers of Lothian and Borders Police for their tremendously diligent efforts in securing this conviction.

'I can only hope that this verdict gives some small degree of comfort to Suzanne's parents and her many friends.

'But until David Gilroy reveals where Suzanne's body lies, her family and friends will never be able to fully come to terms with her loss.'

In a statement, Gilroy's family said:
'We are devastated about the verdict.

'The family has always believed in David's innocence and continue to do so.

'We would ask that the family's privacy is respected now that the case has been concluded.

'There will be no further statement or comments from the family at this time.'
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Suzanne Pilley murder: David Gilroy found guilty of killing former girlfriend


Suzanne Pilley murder: David Gilroy found guilty of killing former girlfriend
Jury finds 49-year-old Gilroy guilty of killing Edinburgh bookkeeper, who went missing in May 2010
15 March 2012
Guardian
Severin Carrell


Suzanne Pilley vanished without trace nearly two years ago after making a routine journey to work in Edinburgh city centre.

A man has been found guilty of killing his ex-girlfriend in a rare case in which detectives were unable to find a body or any forensic evidence proving he committed the murder.

David Gilroy, 49, was found guilty on Thursday of murdering Suzanne Pilley, a bookkeeper, after a high court jury in Edinburgh deliberated for eight hours, weighing up a mass of circumstantial evidence which finally convinced them of his guilt.

As the jury read out its verdict, Gilroy, described in court as "controlling and possessive", stared stonily ahead while Pilley's mother began crying in court.

In a statement after his conviction, Pilley's parents, Sylvia and Rob Pilley, said:
"This day has been a long time coming but finally Suzanne has received the justice she deserved. As a family we continue to struggle to come to terms with losing her: we have lost our daughter but her memory lives on in everyone who knew her.

"Suzanne was a devoted daughter, a supportive friend and an exemplary colleague at work. [Although] the trial has ended, our ordeal goes on, and we hope that one day we can lay our daughter to rest."
Pilley, 38, disappeared on 4 May 2010, only yards from the Infrastructure Managers Ltd offices in central Edinburgh where she and Gilroy worked, sparking a huge search and then, after no trace of her could be found, a full-fledged murder inquiry.

Detectives carried out a series of inconclusive searches across hundreds of square miles of remote mountains around the Rest and Be Thankful and Hell's Glen areas in the south-western Highlands of Argyll, west of Loch Lomond, after Gilroy's car was traced to the area.

Her body has not yet been found. Six times since then, the police have investigated discoveries of other human remains in the region, none of which were Pilley's.

Gilroy, from Silverknowes, Edinburgh, was convicted after police were able to establish that he behaved extremely oddly in the hours after her disappearance, inventing stories to account for his activities while being unable to account properly for long periods of time and 124 miles driven in his car.

The police and prosecution believe that Gilroy, then extremely jealous about a new boyfriend, met Pilley as she arrived at work and then enticed or coerced her into their office's underground car park.

After a row, he killed her, depositing her body in an alcove before heading home to pick up his car. The police established that he bought air fresheners. They allege he then put her body in the car and drove to Argyll on the pretext of making a business trip to Lochgilphead on Loch Fyne.

Gilroy has repeatedly denied killing her. After eliminating theories that Pilley had not gone into work or had met someone else, the police were able to reconstruct Gilroy's movements using CCTV cameras, his car's mileage and fuel usage, and his own admissions.

A team of 20 officers scoured CCTV footage from 250 cameras and uncovered a missing two-hour period in his journey that Gilroy failed to explain. His car also had damage suggesting he had driven it on rough tracks or off-road. During questioning, the police found he had disguised cuts and bruises on his hands using makeup.

The court heard that Gilroy, who was originally charged with offences of violence towards his wife and children, only for those charges to be dropped during the trial, had had an intense relationship with Pilley marked by bouts of violent, bullying and possessive behaviour on his part.

In the month after she ended their affair and met another man, Gilroy bombarded her with 400 text and voicemail messages. They stopped immediately when she disappeared. Her phone, on which she had texted her father just before arriving at work, has not been recovered.

Work colleagues described Gilroy, known for being extremely self-controlled, as looking "agitated", "shaking" and "in shock" on the morning she disappeared.

The police ruled out the possibility she had eloped or run away after establishing that no belongings were missing from her home: she had left money, medication and her passport at home; had made no arrangements to care for her cat and pet fish; and had used none of her credit cards or her bank account. She had failed to tell her colleagues she would be late, her usual practice, and has made no contact since with any family members or friends.

The Crown Office, which put three prosecutors on the case full-time, admitted it was a very rare case, which relied entirely on reconstructing events using circumstantial evidence.

Stephen McGowan, the district procurator fiscal for Edinburgh, said:
"The sheer combination of these physical pieces of evidence have a particular significance, and in this case we were able to demonstrate to the jury that David Gilroy was in a jealous and possessive state of mind. All his actions before she disappeared and his actions after her disappearance shows she was murdered by him."
He added:
"David Gilroy was a deceitful and controlling individual who pestered Suzanne with hundreds of messages, and then killed her when she told him their affair was over. The calculated steps he took in the minutes, hours and days after her death to cover up his crime and maintain a front of normality reveals a cold and calculating personality."
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Suzanne Pilley trial: ‘Cadaver’ sniffer dog reacted to accused’s car


Suzanne Pilley trial: ‘Cadaver’ sniffer dog reacted to accused’s car
24 February 2012
Scotsman
John Robertson


A dog trained to find dead bodies reacted when sniffing in the boot of the car belonging to the man accused of murdering book-keeper Suzanne Pilley, a jury has heard.

Two specialist cadaver dogs from an English police force had been brought in to help in the search for the missing woman, and areas of “specific interest” were also identified in the garage of the office where she and David Gilroy worked, a court heard.

Gilroy’s car had not been particularly clean and tidy when it was examined by experts, but a fresh fragrance wafted from the boot after the lid was opened, a witness claimed.

Ms Pilley, 38, of Whitson Road, Edinburgh, went missing on 4 May 2010, apparently on her way to work at Infrastructure Management Ltd (IML) in Thistle Street, Edinburgh.

Gilroy, 49, of Silverknowes Brae, Edinburgh, denies murdering her by unknown means, and concealing the body within IML’s premises before taking it in the boot of his silver Vauxhall Vectra to various locations in Scotland. Her remains have never been found.

Mark Heron, 47, a senior scene examiner with the Scottish Police Services Authority, said he had gone with forensic scientists on 9 May 2010 to the garage in Thistle Street used by IML and other offices in the block.

Also, there were two dog handlers from South Yorkshire Police with specialist cadaver dogs. Each dog was used independently of the other.
“The dog handler released the dog just inside the garage door and the dog made its way around the garage sniffing the floor, the corners, piping ducts. The dog sat down or paused at three specific areas in the garage and the handler indicated these were of interest. We chalked these areas for specific examination,” said Mr Heron.
One area was at a door which led to the building’s internal stair, and two were in parking bays.

Later that day, said Mr Heron, he went to a garage in the Sighthill area of the city where the police impounded vehicles for forensic examination, and searched Gilroy’s car.

It was not a “pristinely clean” car and the interior was not particularly tidy, he agreed.

The advocate-depute, Alex Prentice QC, asked:
“When you opened the boot, could you tell us what you experienced?”
Mr Heron said:
“I could smell either a cleaning fluid or an air freshener-type smell… a fresh, clean fragrance.”
Mr Prentice asked:
“Did you experience that anywhere else in the car?”
Mr Heron replied:
“No.”
He added that a cadaver dog went into the boot and “showed interest” in two areas, at corners diagonally opposite each other.

Mr Heron confirmed to the defence counsel, Jack Davidson QC, that he and others had examined the stair, the garage and the basement in Thistle Street on numerous occasions. He estimated the number at between ten and 15.

Mr Davidson suggested there had been an extensive amount of activity, and it was detailed and meticulous.

The witness agreed, and said there had been special chemical tests for the presence of saliva and blood, as well as high-intensity lighting which could show up marks invisible to the human eye.

“There was no forensic link from examination of items from the staircase, basement and garage to Mr Gilroy in relation to this inquiry,” said Mr Davidson.
“Not as far as I am aware,” said Mr Heron.
“I am 100 per cent certain when I opened the boot I could smell a clean or fresh smell. It did dissipate when the boot was opened for a period of time,” said Mr Heron.
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