A close friend of missing mother-of-two Nicola Bulley has hit out at social media detectives turning the river bank where vanished into a “tourist” hotspot.
The mortgage advisor disappeared on January 27 after dropping her two daughters – aged six and nine – at school, as she took her springer spaniel Willow for a walk along the River Wyre.
Ms Bulley’s phone was left on the bench near the river, still connected to a work call, with the dog lead and harness found close by.
Her friend Heather Gibbons said that a lot of people had turned up to “do social media things” as police urged the public to refrain from posting any wild speculation online.
She told the BBC: “The truth is if we look at it factually, no-one knows until we have some evidence.
“I think it’s incredibly hard, but up to a certain level, we understand it’s human nature. It’s natural for everyone to have speculation, because the truth is, nothing is making sense.”
She said the turnout for the search had been “amazing”.
But she added: “We have noticed it does feel like some people have come to maybe use it as more like a tourist spot, to do their own personal social media things which in some ways we see and understand but it is hard, there’s a lot of people around as it is.”
It came as an underwater search expert said he is “baffled” after Ms Bulley’s “distraught” partner visited the riverbank where she vanished.
Underwater search expert Peter Faulding, who was called in by the family to help find Ms Bulley, met with her partner Paul Ansell on Wednesday, as day 12 of the search continued in St Michael’s on Wyre, Lancashire, and told him she had still not been found.
Mr Ansell, who has spoken of the “perpetual hell” of not knowing what has happened to Ms Bulley, spent around 10 minutes close to a bench overlooking the River Wyre.
Mr Faulding and his team, from rescue operation Specialist Group International, have been searching the area around the bench, the “entry point” where it is believed by police Ms Bulley fell in the water.
But on the third day of his search, Mr Faulding said efforts had proved “negative”.
He said: “Well, Paul’s extremely obviously upset, he wanted to go and see where the original entry point was again, and the water’s a bit lower than it was originally when Nicola went missing.
“And he’s, he’s clear that, well all the family are clearly distraught like anyone will be.
“And it’s just, it’s not a nice place to be.
“And I’m just trying to explain what work we’re doing. And give him some confidence that Nicola is not in that river over there.
“Normally we find them, this is an unusual situation.
“And hopefully Nicola will appear somewhere or pop up somewhere, I don’t know.
“But with that, I’m, I’m totally baffled by this one, to be honest.
“Normally a drowning victim goes to the bottom. There was a bit of flow on the river that day. But normally we recover them within a few metres.”
He said his team had one small section of the river to check again later on Wednesday but after that his involvement in the search would be over.
Search teams from Lancashire Police and the Coastguard, including divers, are now focusing on the 10 miles or so of river downstream of the bench, where the River Wyre empties into the sea at Morecambe Bay.
Superintendent Sally Riley, of Lancashire Police, described the search as “unprecedented”, with 40 detectives following 500 lines of inquiry, with thousands of pieces of information coming in from the public.
And officers were trying to trace dashcam footage from 700 drivers who went through the village on the morning Ms Bulley disappeared.
But Supt Riley ruled out criminal or third-party involvement and on Tuesday reiterated the police’s belief that Ms Bulley had fallen into the river, with her body still unrecovered and police treating the incident as a missing person inquiry.