Madeleine McCann investigators resume digging at German allotment patch owned by chief suspect Christian Brueckner as his apartment just three miles away is revealed
- Up to 100 officers using small diggers and sniffer dogs continued to excavate the vegetable garden today
- Two small tents were set up in a field opposite the dig site while a fleet of German police cars stood nearby
- Brueckner is known to have lived in an apartment three miles away and may even have lived on the allotment
Madeleine McCann investigators have begun their second day of searching an allotment in Germany three miles from an apartment where suspect Christian Brueckner once lived.
Up to 100 officers using small diggers and sniffer dogs continued to excavate the vegetable garden outside Hannover, where Brueckner lived after the three-year-old vanished in 2007.
A tent has been erected on the plot concealing the exact nature of the search, and a wide cordon with wire netting has set been up around the allotment.
Two small tents have been set up in a field opposite the main dig site, while a fleet of German police vehicles lined the side of the small country road while commuter traffic drove past.
An apartment block in Hannover has been identified as Brueckner's last known address in the city, and German media says he may have lived on the allotment itself - possibly in his trailer.
Detectives have been bagging up pieces of evidence and yesterday discovered a cellar underneath a long-demolished gazebo as they scour for clues that could link Brueckner to Madeleine's disappearance.

Police today began a second day of searching an allotment garden near Hannover as part of their Madeleine McCann investigation, close to where suspect Christian Brueckner once lived

Brueckner's last known address in Hannover was at this apartment block, around three miles from the allotment which is being searched by German police today

A map showing the location of Brueckner's apartment block in Hannover and of the vegetable garden which is being searched in northern Germany 


Christian Brueckner (right) is prime suspect in the kidnap and murder of three-year-old Madeleine (left) in 2007 while she was on holiday in Praia da Luz
German authorities have released few details about the allotment search, beyond confirming that it was part of the Madeleine investigation.
The allotment is only a short drive away from an apartment block where Brueckner is known to have stayed while living in Hannover, and the 'Havana Club' bar which he is thought to have frequented is also nearby.
There are also suspicions that Brueckner may have lived on the allotment itself, possibly in the trailer van where he is known to have slept for a time.
Asked by Bild about Brueckner's connection to the allotment, the suspect's lawyer Friedrich Fuelscher said he could not comment on the police operation. Pressed on why the allotment was being searched, Fuelscher told the newspaper that 'I think we'll find out the reason soon'.
According to local newspaper HAZ, detectives discovered and searched the cellar of a gazebo which had once stood on the site but has long since been demolished.
Brueckner is currently in prison in Kiel for drug offences and had launched legal proceedings for an early release after serving two-thirds of his sentence.
The two-thirds benchmark passed on June 7, leading to fears he could be released and subsequently disappear before the Maddie case was resolved.
However, he has now dropped his bid, though he is still appealing against a conviction for the 2005 rape of a 72-year-old woman in Praia da Luz where Madeleine vanished in 2007.
The drugs conviction is due to keep him behind bars until shortly before the end of January next year and, after that, a seven year jail term for the rape will kick in unless he wins his appeal.

An excavator at the allotment today where police are searching for a second day but have not revealed what they are expecting to find

Investigators arrive with their equipment with a police van behind them this morning as the search continues at an allotment linked to Madeleine kidnapping suspect Christian Brueckner in Germany

Police put up a screen at the allotment near Hannover today which is the site of a major search by German authorities

A tent was set up at the search site, where police are said to have uncovered a cellar underneath a long-demolished gazebo

A man operates a digger behind fencing at the allotment in northern Germany today, close to where the suspect once lived

Detectives have been bagging up pieces of evidence and yesterday discovered a cellar underneath a long-demolished gazebo as they scour for clues that could link Brueckner to Madeleine's disappearance
Brueckner is thought to have worked in a car repair shop while living in Hannover, and his last known address in Germany was 40 miles away in Braunschweig.
German media says he received at least two criminal convictions from a Hannover court, one for forging documents in 2010 and another for theft in 2013.
He split his time between Germany and Portugal from 2013 to 2015, prosecutors in Hannover have said.
At the end of 2012, he reportedly opened a small shop in Braunschweig with his then girlfriend. After they split up, he continued to run the shop alone until he gave it up 18 months later, along with the adjacent apartment.
Police were yesterday seen digging up the garden with an excavator after fencing off the allotment and sending in a sniffer dog to assist their search,.
'I can confirm that the search is being carried out in connection with our investigations into the Maddie case,' said Julia Meyer from the prosecutor's office in Braunschweig.
Some of the detectives were wearing forensic suits and putting possible pieces of evidence into plastic bags, while others were using rakes and shovels to scour for clues.
Meyer, the prosecutors' office spokeswoman, said she could not give any further details on the operation but added only that police would 'still need some more time to finish.'
The search was being carried out by officials from the prosecutors' office in Braunschweig, where Brueckner was convicted of rape last year, and the German federal police.

Police continue their digging operations at the vegetable garden near Hannover today in the hope of finding clues to link Brueckner to Madeleine's disappearance

A German police officer stands chest-deep in a hole while a sniffer dog watches on at an allotment near Hannover yesterda where authorities are digging up a garden in their search for Madeleine McCann

German police use an excavator at an allotment garden near Hannover yesterday in an operation linked to the disappearance of Madeleine McCann in 2007 


Police were digging up the the garden with 'heavy equipment' including an excavator after fencing off the allotment this morningBrueckner, a career criminal, was identified as the new lead suspect in June after German police released a trove of new evidence including details of his cars and phone numbers, urging people to come forward with new tip-offs.
Investigators in Germany said at the time that Madeleine was assumed to be dead, going further than British police who are still treating the toddler's disappearance as a missing-person case.
Madeleine's parents, Kate and Gerry McCann, last month denied receiving a letter from German investigators stating that 'there is evidence or proof' Madeleine is dead.
German prosecutor Hans Christian Wolters, who is leading the German investigation into Madeleine's disappearance, said that a letter had been written to the couple, but would not reveal what it said.
Mr Wolters said prosecutors have 'concrete evidence', but not 'forensic evidence' that Madeleine was killed by the suspect and may 'know more' than Scotland Yard, who are still treating the case as a missing person investigation.
The Metropolitan Police maintain their active investigation into Madeleine's disappearance, Operation Grange, is a missing person inquiry as there is no 'definitive evidence whether Madeleine is alive or dead'.
In the days after the renewed appeal, Scotland Yard said they received hundreds of tips to their Operation Grange team.
Portuguese authorities are also continuing their investigation and earlier this month searched a series of wells in the Algarve region.
Police and divers in the Algarve region examined a series disused wells in Vila do Bispo, around 10 miles from Praia da Luz.
Multiple investigators were at the scene with specialist diving equipment to examine the wells, with the largest thought to be more than 40ft deep.
Brueckner is known to have lived on the Algarve coast and his Portuguese mobile phone received a half-hour phone call in Praia da Luz around an hour before Madeleine went missing 13 years ago - a key piece of evidence in the German investigation.
Police hope to track down the person who placed the call, regarding them as a crucial witness to Brueckner's movements on the night of Madeleine's disappearance.
Brueckner made a living doing odd jobs in the area where Madeleine disappeared, and was also known to have burgled hotel rooms and holiday flats.
He has not yet spoken to investigators, who say they are convinced that he has committed other sex attacks.
Madeleine went missing from her family's holiday apartment in the Portuguese holiday resort of Praia da Luz on May 3, 2007, a few days before her fourth birthday, as her parents dined with friends at a nearby tapas bar.
Despite a huge international manhunt, no trace of her has been found, nor has anyone been charged over her disappearance.
In September 2007, Gerry and Kate McCann were questioned by police as formal suspects. The following July, the Portuguese police dropped their investigation because of a lack of evidence and cleared the McCanns of any involvement.
The UK government has continued to fund Scotland Yard's investigation despite increasing doubts over whether the case would ever be solved.
The McCanns' lawyer Rogerio Alves said police have only 22 more months to nail down the case because of a 15-year statute of limitations in Portugal.
Speaking on McCann: The Hunt for the Prime Suspect on ITV, Alves said: 'We have a 15 years time barrier, even to manslaughter, to homicide, to certain sexual offences — and even to the most serious kind of kidnapping.
'So we are still on time. But time is getting short now.'

German investigators wearing protective gear are seen through the trees during their search of an allotment garden near Hannover on Tuesday morning

The area was fenced off by police today after the search got underway with 'heavy equipment' four miles outside Hannover Brueckner's name has also been mentioned in connection with other missing children, some of whom vanished in similar circumstances to Madeleine.
In one case, five-year-old Inga Gehricke vanished from a forest in Saxony-Anhalt in 2015 and prosecutors confirmed they were probing possible connections to the McCann case, while saying that Brueckner was not currently a suspect.
He reportedly had a property in the town of Neuwegersleben, around 60 miles south-west of Stendal when Inga went missing.
Separately, the family of German six-year-old René Hasse, who went missing in the Algarve in 1996, revealed that police are re-investigating the case for the first time in 20 years.
Dutch police have also prepared a dossier for German police to look for a possible link to the disappearance of seven-year-old Jair Soares in 2005.
Jair went missing when he went to buy chips near the town of Monster in the South Holland province of the country on August 4, 1995.
A spokesman for police in The Hague confirmed that after announcing their intention to exchange information they have now presented the case and 'were in talks'.
He said: 'Presenting the case means that we look if there are any similarities between the cases. So we look for clues that connect them.'
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