Why did it take police a week to find her?


Why did it take police a week to find her?
Met were forced to apologise to Tia's family after FOUR searches failed to spot her body in grandmother's loft
13 May 2013
Daily Mail
Chris Greenwood, Tom Kelly and Eleanor Harding


Eighty police failed to find Tia’s body even though it lay only a few feet from her bedroom in her grandmother’s house.

They spent a week scouring hundreds of hours of CCTV and at least a dozen officers, with dogs, searched the house no fewer than four times.

But astonishing blunders meant the 12-year-old’s body remained undiscovered at the small property in Croydon, South London.

By the time it was recovered, when the stench of decomposition was overwhelming, it was so badly damaged that she could only be identified by dental records.

The blunder means vital evidence was lost and her family will never know the full circumstances of her death.

Relatives said they are haunted by the thought that she was lying abandoned above them as the country was transfixed by the mystery of her disappearance.

Speaking last night, Tia’s grandfather Paul Sharp, said: ‘I’m disgusted that the police officers didn’t find the body.

Stuart Hazell, 37 changed his plea half-way through his Old Bailey trial and admitted killing the 12-year-old

‘They should have known she never left that house - people would have seen her.'

He added: ‘The body was unrecognisable when they found it.

'That’s how badly decomposed it was. They had to do a dental check on her.

‘I don’t understand how they couldn’t smell it.

'The whole house must have stunk.’

Police only found Tia’s body tightly wrapped in plastic bin liners in the tiny loft space during a fifth search.

Officers complained they were hampered because they feared falling through the unboarded ceiling and the space was hot and uncomfortable.

Earlier searches not only missed Tia, but a wealth of other evidence, including her damaged glasses, because officers thought bags holding them were ‘too light’ to be significant.

They blamed police procedure as the officers were on a missing person inquiry and looking for someone who was alive.

The first ‘brief examination’ of the house was undertaken by local officers on August 3, the day Tia was reported missing.

The second, a more thorough check, was carried out the next day by two sergeants and two PCs.

Among them was Sgt Keith Lyons who told the jury that Hazell helped him, providing a chair and telling him - chillingly - that he ‘always’ used it to access the loft.

Sgt Lyons spent five minutes searching with his torch in the unlit loft.

He said: ‘My legs were dangling down. ‘I know I’m clumsy and I was concerned I was going to go through the roof.

‘I was surprised how clear it was. I expected there to be much more junk.

‘I was searching for a missing girl and from what I could see the loft seemed very clear. I thought ‘she is not hiding in here.’

In the early hours of the following morning a specialist team, comprised of a sergeant and five PCs, carried out a third search.

PC Steven Jeffries, one of the officers involved, said: ‘I have never searched a loft before and I didn’t want to cause any damage.’

The officers spent 25 minutes searching, including moving black bags around that the team believed did not contain anything significant.

On a fourth search of the house on August 8 a specially trained dog also signalled towards the ceiling under the loft.

But officers decided it was not necessary to check again as it had been searched before and the animal was too big to put in the loft safely.

It took another two days, until officers noticed a stench in rooms at the top of the house, for Tia to be found.

A so-called ‘cadaver dog’, trained to detect the smell of decomposition, indicated that it was coming from the loft.

This time, after removing an overfilled bin bag, officers found Tia wrapped in a ‘body shaped package’ within three feet of the hatch.

Unlike the other items it was dust free and her big toe was sticking out through the plastic wrapping.

DC Daniel Chatfield said: ‘The loft was extremely confined. It was very hot and quite chaotic. After approximately 10 minutes the body was found .

‘My colleague alerted me to what he believed to be the body of Tia. On the side nearest to me I could see a foot. I could reach her ankles with my arms, it was three foot away at most.’

The missing girl was identified through DNA testing and dental records. A pathologist could not find a definitive cause of death.

Also in the loft was a cardboard box containing two other plastic bags, one with Tia’s yellow top and leggings and another with sweet wrappers and her broken glasses.

Met Commander Neil Basu, who was responsible for finding Tia, insisted the murder victim’s body was ‘well concealed’.

He said a review found ‘human error’ in how the searches were conducted and managed was to blame for the extraordinary mistake.

He added that the PC who first searched the loft was ‘inexperienced’ and he was given ‘words of advice’, the lowest form of disciplinary sanction.

The officer has since volunteered to stop undertaking searches.

His sergeant, who was responsible for supervising the search, also received ‘words of advice’.

Cmdr Basu said: ‘Both officers are devastated by their failure to find Tia and this case has deeply affected all those involved.

‘The Met apologised to Tia’s family as soon as it became apparent that her body had been missed.

‘While the police failure did not contribute to Tia’s death, the Met deeply regrets that this error caused additional distress to Tia’s family by prolonging the situation when it could have been brought to an earlier conclusion.’

 
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Officers who missed Tia's body in grandmother's New Addington home will not face sack



Officers who missed Tia's body in grandmother's New Addington home will not face sack
November 20, 2012
Croydon Today


TWO bungling police officers who failed to find Tia Sharp's body while they searched her grandmother's New Addington home will not face the sack, a Met source has revealed.

The constable and "supervising" sergeant – part of a team of officers who scoured the loft because sniffer dogs were not trained to – have received a "minor" telling off, despite the blunders making it harder for experts to establish the 12-year-old's cause of death.

Tia's remains were missed during three searches, which has since led to one of the officer's being pulled from specialist search duties. The first bungled search, two days after she went missing, delayed finding the body for five days.

A police source told the Advertiser: "It is the most minor form of discipline. This is at the bottom of the scale.

"It's like when you go to court, you can get life imprisonment or you can get an absolute discharge. It is a telling off but it's a minor one. Nobody's job is at threat."

The source added: "It strikes me as odd, that when a policeman makes a mistake people want to sack him, but when a news reader gets their lines wrong nobody complains.

"Part of frontline operations is you're going to make mistakes. The constable has been taken off [search] duties but I don't know what's happened to the supervising sergeant."

The source explained dogs were not taken into the loft, where the schoolgirl's body was found, because they are not trained to walk along the narrow joists and soft flooring typical of roof spaces. "Their feet would go straight through the floor," they said.

In August we reported how forensic pathologist Dr Stuart Hamilton suspects the Met blunders will have "absolutely" contributed to a post-mortem's failure to find how and why Tia died, making it harder to prove she was murdered in court.

Despite anger within sections of the community over the bungles, New Addington councillor Tony Pearson said tougher disciplinary action against the officers is not necessary.

He said: "It will never change the investigation. It was difficult for everyone concerned and the key for the family is to make sure there is justice for Tia, not to have a witch hunt on individuals."

But changes have since been made to the force's official guidelines since her body was found in The Lindens roof space, wrapped in a sheet and plastic bag, on August 10.

A Met spokesman said: "Two officers, a PC and a PS [sergeant] have received words of advice.

"A number of organisational learning points were identified which will be taken forward with the aim of reducing any similar errors occurring in future."

Stuart Hazell, the boyfriend of Tia's grandmother Christine Sharp, has been charged with the schoolgirl's murder and will appear at the Old Bailey to enter a plea later this year. Christine Sharp remains on bail after being arrested on suspicion of murder.



 
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Tia 'smothered' and body found in binbag in loft


Tia 'smothered' and body found in binbag in loft
'Grandad' appears in court via video
13 August 2012
The Sun
Harry Hawkins


Tragic Tia Sharp was "smothered" and her body was found wrapped in a black sheet and bin liner in the loft of her step-grandfather's home.

The details emerged as Stuart Hazell appeared in court via video - charged with the schoolgirl's murder.

Police feared taking Stuart Hazell to Camberwell Green Magistrates Court in person could spark violence - with baying mobs trying to attack him.

Instead he was beamed live to the court from a cell 13 miles away.

Hazell was remanded in custody after appearing at Camberwell Green Magistrates’ Court, south east London

He will appear at the Old Bailey on Wednesday, when there might be a bail application.

Hazell — the lover of Tia’s gran Christine Sharp, 46 — was charged with the schoolgirl’s murder at 2am yesterday and members of Tia’s family have spoken openly of “avenging” her.

The 37-year-old spoke only to confirm his name and address.

He was charged after Tia’s body was found in the loft of the home he shares with his lover and Tia’s grandmother Christine Sharp on Friday August 10.

Christine, who was also arrested on suspicion of murder, has not been charged and was freed on police bail until October.

Neighbour Paul Meehan, 39 — held for assisting an offender after allegedly giving a false statement — was also freed on bail without charges.

Tia went missing after visiting the home Hazell, 37, shares with Christine, 46, in New Addington.

Her body was found in the loft after seven days by cops using sniffer dogs. Bungling officers had missed it during three previous searches.

Police apologised to Tia's devastated mum Natalie for failing to find the youngster.


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Sharp accused to appear in court


Sharp accused to appear in court
Channel 4 News
13 August 2012

The man accused of killing schoolgirl Tia Sharp is due to appear in court on Monday charged with her murder.

Stuart Hazell is charged with the murder of Tia Sharp, two days after a body was discovered in the house he shares with Christine Sharp, Tia's grandmother, in Croydon.

His arrest followed a massive search for Tia which involved around 100 police officers and countless members of the local community.

Despite visiting her grandmother's property in New Addington, south London, on several occasions, investigators only discovered Tia's body on Friday evening.

Police have not revealed where it was stowed but officers were seen taking a ladder into the house, sparking suggestions it may have been concealed in the loft.

Hazell, who was previously interviewed as a potential witness, became the subject of a manhunt following the grim find.

He was arrested hours later in the south London borough of Merton after he was apparently spotted by a schoolgirl who saw him buying alcohol in an off-licence.

Neighbour detained

Christine Sharp was similarly arrested on suspicion of murder and freed on bail.

Her next-door neighbour Paul Meehan, 39, was detained by detectives on suspicion of assisting an offender. He was also bailed pending further inquiries.

Officers have apologised to Tia's mother, Natalie Sharp, for the delay in locating her body.

Yesterday the grieving mother wept as she left a tribute to her daughter alongside hundreds of flowers and cards which carpet the pavement near the 46-year-old grandmother's home.

A note believed to have been left by Ms Sharp, 30, read: "Our baby girl, we love you very much and always will.

"Sorry baby that this has happened, I wish I was there to protect you.

"We know you are safe now and you are at home with us everywhere we go. Love you, mum, dad, Jack and Harry. XXX".

Ms Sharp held her face in her hands as she arrived at the shrine, supported by her partner David Niles.

The pair left a white orchid and soft toy at the site, along with the note.

It remains unclear how Tia died. A post-mortem examination on the body was paused on Saturday night and is expected to resume this week.

Scotland Yard said: "Although officers await formal identification of a body found at The Lindens on Friday 10 August, the victim is named in the murder charge as 12-year-old Tia Sharp."
News

The dead girl was only found after police took a body recovery dog to the scene.

Metropolitan Police South East London Area Commander Neil Basu has said human error was to blame for the protracted search and conceded mistakes were made during a second examination of Sharp's property.

Speaking on Saturday, Mr Basu apologised to Ms Sharp, who lives in an apartment block in Mitcham, south London.

Neighbours have spoken of their anger after spending days searching for the girl.

Dale Robertson, 44, said: "There's a mixture of anger and heartbreak. People feel aggrieved. They were duped. Even people who couldn't get out on the searches have posted up on Facebook that they are angry and they were duped."

Flowers, teddy bears and candles remained near the house where the body was found after neighbours and friends left tributes to Tia. Hazell will appear via video link at Camberwell Green magistrates court, south London.
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Specialist Dog leaving Tia Sharp's Grandmother's House


Specialist dog leaving Tia Sharp's grandmother's house

Tia's body was discovered shortly after.


Dogs are rewarded when they find what they are trained to find. (Notice the orange ring toy in the sniffer dogs's mouth.)

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Tia Sharp: police face questions after body discovered in grandmother's house


Tia Sharp: police face questions after body discovered in grandmother's house
Telegraph
David Barrett, Home Affairs Correspondent, and Ben Leach
11 Aug 2012

Scotland Yard faces mounting questions over its handling of the Tia Sharp murder case after a body was discovered in her grandmother's house a week after the girl's disappearance and despite repeated searches of the property.

• Police find body at the home of grandmother Christine Sharp

• Step-grandfather Stuart Hazell arrested after manhunt

• Questions why first three police searches failed to find evidence

Detectives hunting for the missing 12 year-old discovered a body after using ladders to reach the loft space at the home of Tia's grandmother Christine Sharp.

Senior officers now face tough questions over their failures in the case, which diverted police officers away from the Olympic security effort in the hunt for Tia near her home in New Addington, south London.

Stuart Hazell, Tia's step-grandfather, was arrested on suspicion of murder on Friday night after going missing, prompting a huge manhunt.

Neighbours in the estate where Tia lived said they felt let down by the police.

There was speculation that the human remains discovered by police had been in Mrs Sharp's house all along.

Police combed the property three times before discovering any trace of the schoolgirl, including a search by sniffer dogs trained to detect cadavers.

Commander Neil Basu, who has headed the case since Tia was reported missing more than a week ago, said: "Clearly there will be many questions about the investigation into Tia's disappearance and I want to take this opportunity to clarify some of the speculation."

He said the inquiry had been "difficult and challenging".

"A number of searches took place at the address," said Mr Basu.

"When Tia was first reported missing, officers searched her bedroom as is normal practice in a missing persons inquiry.

"A further search of the house took place in the early hours of Sunday morning by a specialist team. This was then followed by another search of the house by specialist dogs on Wednesday lunchtime.

"What we now need to establish is how long the body had been in the place where it was found. This will be subject of the ongoing investigation and it would be wrong to jump to any conclusions until all the facts have been established."

Scotland Yard's failure to keep Stuart Hazell under surveillance during the house search led to a city-wide hunt when the suspect went on the run yesterday.

More police resources, including a helicopter deployed for several hours, were taken up until the 37 year-old was eventually arrested on Cannon Hill Common at Morden, south-west London.

He is believed to have been the last person to see the schoolgirl before she was reported missing.

Scene of Stuart Hazell's arrest in Cannon Hill Common, Morden

Mr Hazell had claimed Tia told him she was going shopping to buy a pair of flip-flops in nearby Croydon, before leaving the house alone.

About 80 police officers and scores of locals have spent the past week scouring CCTV footage and searching nearby woodland and waste ground for any clues to her disappearance.

Yesterday afternoon the focus of the hunt switched to Mrs Sharp’s house, with sniffer dogs and forensic officers entering the property.

Scotland Yard said the search was part of a pre-planned operation that was expected to take two days, but by 1.15pm a planned press briefing had been hurriedly cancelled, indicating there had been a major development.

Just before 5pm it was announced that a body had been found.

Officers were seen entering the house with a large collapsible ladder and it is thought the body may have been discovered in the loft space.

Tia’s family, including her mother Natalie, have been at the property for the past seven days, desperate for a positive breakthrough in the investigation.

Neighbours expressed their shock and disgust at the discovery, but also questioned why it had taken so long to find the body.

Mr Hazell, who was previously in a relationship with Tia’s mother, was questioned by police earlier in the week after claims that there were inconsistencies in his version of events.

On Thursday he gave a television interview in which he insisted he had nothing to do with Tia’s disappearance.

He told ITV News: “Did I do anything to Tia? No I didn’t. I’d never think of that. I loved her to bits, she’s like my own daughter. She’s got a lovely home. I can’t work out what’s going on. She’s a happy-go-lucky golden angel. She’s perfect.”

But he disappeared yesterday morning, telling members of Tia’s family he was going out to help in the search.

Mark Williams Thomas, the criminologist who interviewed Mr Hazell, said: “The first rule of any major investigation is that you secure the premises and ensure the child isn’t there. There are many cases where the child has hidden in the home.”

Mr Hazell was arrested last night after being identified by a member of the public. Witnesses said he had been seen in a nearby shop buying vodka and asking: "Have you seen Tia?"

Graham Sutton, a former Scotland Yard detective, told BBC Radio Four's Today programme: "I think it's possible that the position the police find themselves in these days is that the balance errs on the side of caution in terms of disrupting the family and disrupting their sensitivities.

"That may mean the investigation is not as robust and thorough as it ought to be."

Three police vans arrived at the scene this morning, while more than a dozen officers entered the cordoned off area around the house.

Flowers, teddy bears and candles remained near the house after neighbours and friends left tributes to Tia last night.

One message read: "Rest in peace Tia. Justice will be served."

Another read: "Tia Sharp, beautiful angel, taken too soon, our thoughts are with all of you."
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We DID search the loft but missed Tia's body


We DID search the loft but missed Tia's body: Police make startling admission as step-grandad is charged with murder as grandmother and neighbour are bailed
Daily Mail
Russell Myers, Jonathan Petre and Ben Ellery
11 August 2012 | Updated: 12 August 2012


Police admitted yesterday that they had searched the loft of Tia Sharp’s grandmother’s house soon after the schoolgirl was reported missing, but failed to find her body because of ‘human error’.

The admission, which follows the disclosure that the 12-year-old’s step granddad Stuart Hazell, 37, has been charged on suspicion of murder, will dramatically intensify criticism of the police’s handling of the case. He will appear before magistrates on Monday.

Tia's grandmother and Hazell's live-in lover, Christine Sharp, 46, was yesterday arrested along with Mrs Sharp’s next-door neighbour Paul Meehan, 39, on suspicion of assisting an offender.

They have both been bailed to return to a south London police station in October.

The body, which is still yet to be formally identified, was found on Friday by detectives using ladders to reach the loft at Mrs Sharp’s terraced house in New Addington, South London, despite repeated previous searches of the property.

The house was visited four times by police, including a full search with a specialist team two days after Tia was reported missing on August 3 and the last occasion, when sniffer dogs trained to detect cadavers were brought into the property on Friday.

Tia lived with her mother Natalie Sharp, 31, and her partner David Niles, 29, in Mitcham, Surrey, about ten miles away, but is thought to have stayed at her grandmother’s house regularly.

Yesterday, the Met’s South East London Area Commander Neil Basu apologised to Tia’s family, saying the search should have been more thorough. In a statement, he said:

‘The second visit was a full search of the property with the consent of the occupiers.

‘This was conducted on August 5 over a period of two hours. All parts of the premises were searched, including the location where a body was discovered, five days later, on Friday, August 10.

‘An early review has been conducted and it is now clear that human error delayed the discovery of the body within the house. We have apologised to Tia’s mother that our procedures did not lead to the discovery of the body on this search.’

Neighbours yesterday said they were furious that the house had not been properly searched earlier.

Dale Robertson, 44, said:
‘I don’t think it happened soon enough. After 24 hours, they should have been ripping that house apart.

‘There’s a mixture of anger and heartbreak. People feel aggrieved.

‘They were duped. Even people who couldn’t get out on the searches have posted up on Facebook that they are angry and they were duped.’

The admission of errors by the Met Police seemed to discount an earlier theory that the body of the murdered 12-year-old had been moved from the loft prior to it being discovered.

Sources also indicated that police chiefs will launch an internal inquiry to examine why Mr Hazell was allowed to go missing and remain at large for several hours on Friday evening as police searched the property prior to finding Tia’s body.

The jobless 37-year-old was caught on Cannon Hill Common in Morden, South-West London, after he was spotted by a member of the public.

Witnesses claimed Hazell appeared to be drunk and was calling out, ‘Have you seen Tia?’.

A hairdresser revealed Hazell had staggered into her salon, asking if anyone had seen Tia minutes before he was arrested. Bryoni Goodwin, 18, from Merton, said:
‘He was swaying and crying, asking, “Have you seen Tia Sharp, I’m her grandfather.”

‘He seemed drunk and said, “I don’t want to find her dead in a forest, I want to find her eating a happy meal in McDonald’s”.’
His arrest came just 24 hours after he made a tearful appeal on television for the return of Tia, during which he spoke about her in the past tense.

He denied harming the young girl and said: ‘I loved her to bits. She was like my own daughter.’

The body, which has not been formally identified, was removed from the house on Friday evening and police were yesterday still scouring the property for clues.

A post-mortem examination is expected to be held within the next few days.

It is not clear why Mrs Sharp’s neighbour Paul Meehan, who with his wife Bobbie has a daughter aged 11 and a son aged eight, was taken into custody on Friday morning.

It is believed, however, that the bus driver told police he saw Tia leave her grandmother’s house and walk down the path towards the end of the street the day she was reported missing.

His information may have thrown officers off the scent after their initial line of inquiry had been that Mr Hazell had been the last person to see Tia alive.

Sources said the investigation team, led by Commander Basu, was braced for heavy criticism for failings in the way the investigation has been conducted.

Scotland Yard’s apparent failure to keep Mr Hazell under surveillance during the operation could lead to the matter being passed on to the Independent Police Complaints Commission.

More than 800 hours of CCTV footage were scoured for clues of Tia’s whereabouts, with 60 reported sightings and more than 300 calls to the incident room looked into, but former senior detectives have criticised the investigation team for taking eight days to make the discovery.

Retired Met detective John O’Connor said:
‘I find it simply staggering that it took more than a week to find a body which was right under their noses, and even more unbelievable that the man who ought to have been their prime suspect was not placed under surveillance and allowed to go missing for several hours before the police were forced to issue a panicked appeal for him to come forward.’
Tia’s mother Natalie and her partner David are said to be ‘utterly devastated’ at the sudden developments.

Mr Niles was too distressed to talk when he was approached last night at his mother’s home in Mitcham, Surrey, but was still wearing the ‘missing’ T-shirt used to publicise his stepdaughter’s disappearance.

A family friend, who asked not to be named, said the family had been ripped apart by what has happened. The friend said:
‘Both Natalie and David are in a state of utter shock and disbelief right now. It hasn’t sunk in for either of them. They are both praying that the police have got it wrong somehow.

‘They haven’t slept in days and now this is almost too much to bear. This is a close community and we stood by one another when this happened and joined in the search for Tia to be strong for the family but to think she was in that house all along is stomach-churning.’

Tia’s biological father Steven Carter, 30, travelled from his home in Northampton last week to help in the search for his daughter.

Yesterday he left a note along side flowers and tributes from neighbours, in which he wrote: 'My darling baby girl Tia. Daddy loves you dearly. I want you to stay safe in the arms of the angels. Love always. Daddy.'

Grandmother Christine Sharp was seen being led from her home by detectives on Friday at about 11am, but news of her arrest was not made public until yesterday morning when police confirmed that they had made two further arrests in connection with the inquiry.

It is not clear whether Mr Meehan was arrested at his home but last night his mother-in-law, Julie Pullen, said that there was ‘no way on earth’ he was involved in a cover-up. She said:
‘There’s no way he would have been involved. He’s got kids of his own and he hasn’t done anything.

‘I haven’t spoken to him and neither has my daughter but of course we’re worried and completely shocked by what has happened but he definitely had nothing to do with any of this.’ And speaking from his home in Swansea, Mr Meehan’s father told The Mail on Sunday: ‘I just can’t believe it. I hadn’t heard anything until just now.

‘I haven’t seen or spoken to Paul for quite a while, but I saw the news earlier in the week about the missing girl in New Addington and I know that he lives there so I did wonder if he knew anything about it or had been out looking for her.

‘He’s got two young children of his own so I can imagine that he would have been quite concerned for the young girl.

‘He’s a good boy so I can’t see how he would have got himself wrapped up in something like this. It’s all a bit of a blur at the moment and I haven’t spoken to him so I don’t really know what to think.’

Last night, police continued to question all three suspects at separate police stations in South London.

A friend of Hazell’s yesterday said she was ‘stunned’ by his arrest. The woman, who didn’t want to be named, said:
‘I knew Stuart for eight years and during that time he didn’t have a nasty bone in his body.

‘We used to drink in the pub and when a woman arrived at the table he would be the first to stand up. He was a charmer and very popular with the ladies.’
Police were yesterday stationed outside Tia’s mother’s home in Mitcham where tearful wellwishers left flowers, teddies, candles and a statue of an angel. One note said: ‘To dear Tia, may you sleep tight and now rest in perfect peace.’

Dozens of tributes to Tia were also left at the bottom of the New Addington street where police discovered the body on Friday.

Last night, Tia’s biological grandfather, Stephen Carter, laid a card in which he wrote: ‘To my darling granddaughter. Sleep peacefully my angel. Until we meet in heaven. Lots of love Granddad Steve.’

Another card, left beside a giant grey and pink teddy bear, simply said: ‘Be at peace little Tia, justice will be done angel.’

A Scotland Yard spokesman said:
'Although officers await formal identification of a body found at 20 The Lindens on Friday 10 August, the victim is named in the murder charge as 12-year-old Tia Sharp.

'Two other people have been bailed to return to a south London police station.

'They are a 46-year-old woman who was arrested on suspicion of murder and a 39-year-old man who was arrested on suspicion of assisting an offender.'
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