Madeleine McCann suspect ‘confessed to cellmate about abducting child in Portugal’

The prime suspect in the Madeleine McCann case, Christian Brueckner, reportedly confessed to abducting a young girl in Portugal to one of his former prison cellmates. Convicted paedophile Brueckner is said to have admitted to kidnapping and burying the child in his garden in Praia da Luz in May 2007. Today in court, Brueckner’s ex-cellmate Laurentiu Codin testified that the German national disclosed details of the abduction. Codin revealed that Brueckner spoke about stealing a child from a region in Portugal where affluent individuals resided. Brueckner allegedly confessed to taking a child from a location with an open window while searching for money but was interrupted by police presence, prompting him to leave the area.

During the court proceedings, Codin shared another disturbing detail from Brueckner’s revelations – the suspect inquired about extracting DNA from bones buried underground. Additionally, Codin claimed that Brueckner had confessed to abducting and sexually assaulting young girls. The 47-year-old Brueckner, currently serving a jail term for raping an elderly woman in Portugal, is also facing trial in Germany for other reported sexual offenses in the Algarve spanning from 2000 to 2017. These offences include the 2004 rape of Irish holiday representative Hazel Behan, as well as allegations of assaulting a teenage girl, an elderly woman, and exposure to a German girl on a beach in Salema.

Despite the mounting accusations, Brueckner adamantly denies involvement in Madeleine McCann’s disappearance. Prosecutors, though claiming to have evidence indicating Madeleine is deceased, have yet to establish Brueckner’s direct link to the case. The ongoing trial holds high stakes, potentially resulting in the suspect’s release if found not guilty, scheduled for the end of the year. A not guilty verdict could intensify pressure on prosecutors to bring charges against Brueckner regarding Madeleine’s disappearance. As the legal proceedings near their conclusion, the uncertainty surrounding the case persists, with significant implications hanging in the balance.