Nicola Bulley’s daughters will ‘get the support they need from the people that love us the most’

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Nicola Bulley’s heartbroken family has vowed that the mother-of-two’s daughters will ‘get the support they need from the people that love us the most’.

The 45-year-old was discovered on Sunday morning in the River Wyre in Lancashire, after three-week search by police.

In an emotional tribute to Nicola, the mortgage adviser’s family said they would always love her.

They said: ‘We will never forget Nikki, how could we, she was the centre of our world, she was the one who made our lives so special and nothing will cast a shadow over that.

‘Our girls will get the support they need from the people who love them the most.

Nicola Bulley’s daughters will ‘get the support they need from the people that love us the most’

Nicola Bulley’s devastated family made a vow to the mother-of-two that her two daughters will ‘get the support they need from the people that love us the most’

In a press conference this evening police did not disclose why it had taken 23 days to find Nicola Bulley's body in the river

In a press conference this evening police did not disclose why it had taken 23 days to find Nicola Bulley’s body in the river

Police diver teams were pictured at the River Wyre after two walkers found the mother-of-two's body

Police diver teams were pictured at the River Wyre after two walkers found the mother-of-two’s body

There was an outpouring of loving support from across the country after the mother-of-two went missing in January

There was an outpouring of loving support from across the country after the mother-of-two went missing in January

‘Our family liaison officers have had to confirm our worst fears today.

‘We will never be able to comprehend what Nikki had gone through in her last moments and that will never leave us.’

The family added: ‘To those who genuinely helped and supported us, privately, we thank you.

‘The community support in St Michael’s, friends, neighbours and strangers has been nothing short of comforting and heart-warming. Friends you know who you are. Thank you.

‘Our hearts truly break for others who have missing loved ones. Keep that hope alive.

‘Finally, Nikki, you are no longer a missing person, you have been found, we can let you rest now.

‘We love you, always have and always will, we’ll take it from here.’

Nicola’s body was discovered by a self-confessed ‘psychic’ on Sunday morning in the River Wyre in Lancashire, more than three weeks after she disappeared.

There has been considerable public anger following police disclosures of Ms Bulley’s ‘vulnerabilities’ and Home Secretary Suella Braverman said on Monday that she was ‘not satisfied’ with Lancashire Constabulary.  

Her family paid tribute to the 45-year-old mortgage adviser and said: 'We love you, always have and always will'

Her family paid tribute to the 45-year-old mortgage adviser and said: ‘We love you, always have and always will’

At a press conference on Monday, Lancashire police confirmed that the body found in the river on Sunday was that of Nicola Bulley. 

The force’s head of crime Detective Chief Superintendent Pauline Stables read a heartbreaking statement from Ms Bulley’s family, where they said: ‘We love you, always have and always will.’

The statement read: ‘Our family liaison officers have had to confirm our worst fears today.

‘We will never be able to comprehend what Nikki had gone through in her last moments and that will never leave us.

‘We will never forget Nikki, how could we, she was the centre of our world, she was the one who made our lives so special and nothing will cast a shadow over that.

‘Our girls will get the support they need from the people who love them the most.’

Paying further tribute to Ms Bulley at the end of their statement, the family added: ‘To those who genuinely helped and supported us, privately, we thank you.

‘The community support in St Michael’s, friends, neighbours and strangers has been nothing short of comforting and heart-warming. Friends you know who you are. Thank you.

‘Our hearts truly break for others who have missing loved ones. Keep that hope alive.

‘Finally, Nikki, you are no longer a missing person, you have been found, we can let you rest now.

‘We love you, always have and always will, we’ll take it from here.’

Throughout the search friends and family tried to keep life as normal as possible for the missing 45-year-old’s two young daughters. 

The two girls performed at a gymnastics show in early February – with an empty seat saved for Ms Bulley, who had booked a ticket days before she went missing.

Emma White, a friend, told The Telegraph that the girls tended to do a lot of activities over the weekend, usually with their mother. 

‘They had a gymnastics show and there was an empty seat, which was obviously hard as mummy should be watching them.’ 

Nicola Bulley, pictured on the day she went missing in late January, leaving her house to go on a dog walk with pet Willow. She was on her was to drop her daughters off at school

Nicola Bulley, pictured on the day she went missing in late January, leaving her house to go on a dog walk with pet Willow. She was on her was to drop her daughters off at school 

Friends added that Ms Bulley’s daughters also attended a school disco on Friday February 3 as part of efforts among parents to ‘keep things as normal as possible’ for the children.

Jill Peck told Sky News: ‘If something was in the diary, it’s been kept in the diary. They are aware that something is happening but we’re trying to keep it away from the school.

‘They just desperately want her home – and that’s all they are asking, all the time, is: “Where is she and is she coming home?”‘.

The heart-wrenching moment Nicola Bulley’s young daughter spotted search teams looking for the missing mother was also captured on video.

The six-second video shared by friends showed daughter Sophia, six, pointing towards a search team and asking: ‘Them helicopters, they’re looking for mummy.’

In a statement on February 6, ten days after Ms Bulley went missing, her partner Paul Ansell said the girls missed her ‘desperately’. 

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‘It’s been ten days now since Nicola went missing and I have two little girls who miss their mummy desperately and who need her back. 

‘This has been such a tough time for the girls especially but also for me and all of Nicola’s family and friends, as well as the wider community and I want to thank them for their love and support.’

The force did not address at the press conference the widespread criticism it had received for releasing some aspects of Ms Bulley's private life into the public domain

The force did not address at the press conference the widespread criticism it had received for releasing some aspects of Ms Bulley’s private life into the public domain

Nicola Bulley was 'the centre of our world', the family said in a statement read out by Lancashire Police at a press conference on Monday

Nicola Bulley was ‘the centre of our world’, the family said in a statement read out by Lancashire Police at a press conference on Monday 

The statement from the family said it saddened them that they would one day have to explain to Ms Bulley's children that their father Paul Ansell (left) had been accused of vicious crimes

The statement from the family said it saddened them that they would one day have to explain to Ms Bulley’s children that their father Paul Ansell (left) had been accused of vicious crimes 

There has been widespread criticism of the police force – including from Nicola’s family – over their handling of the case.  

Lancashire police force did not address at Monday’s press conference the criticism it had received for releasing some aspects of Ms Bulley’s private life into the public domain.

Police also did not disclose why it had taken 23 days to find her body in the river.

Speaking at the force’s HQ, Assistant Chief Constable Peter Lawson did confirm the body had been identified as Ms Bulley – and described the investigation as ‘hugely complex and highly emotional’.

He did not take questions from the media present.

Ms Bulley’s body was found on a stretch of the river just past a slight bend, a mile or so outside the village, close to where a tree had fallen on its side half in and half outside the water, with branches and undergrowth partially submerged.

It is understood that a man and a woman discovered the body and called police – who said they were called to the River Wyre close to Rawcliffe Road at around 11.35am on Sunday.

Police had erected a tent and cordoned off the lane while police divers were called in, but the road was reopened around three hours later once the body was recovered.

Assistant Chief Constable Peter Lawson said, confirming the formal identity of the body found on Sunday: ‘Sadly, we are now able to confirm that yesterday we recovered Nicola Bulley from the River Wyre.

‘Nicola’s family have been informed and are of course devastated. Our thoughts are with them at this time as well as with all her loved ones and the wider community.

‘We recognise the huge impact that Nicola’s disappearance has had on her family and friends, but also on the people of St Michael’s.

‘We would like to thank all of those who have helped during what has been a hugely complex and highly emotional investigation.

‘Today’s development is not the outcome any of us would have wanted, but we hope that it can at least start to provide some answers for Nicola’s loved ones, who remain foremost in our thoughts.’

The force came under fire from the public and the government after making Ms Bulley’s struggles with alcohol and perimenopause public three weeks after she vanished.

The police force came under fire after making Ms Bulley's struggles with alcohol and perimenopause public (pictured on February 6)

The police force came under fire after making Ms Bulley’s struggles with alcohol and perimenopause public (pictured on February 6)

In a press conference on Wednesday, they revealed she was classed as a ‘high-risk’ missing person immediately after Mr Ansell reported her disappearance, ‘based on a number of specific vulnerabilities’.

They later added in a statement that Ms Bulley, from Inskip in Lancashire, had stopped taking her HRT medication.

The family said in their statement that Ms Bulley ‘would not have wanted this’ – and there was anger that the information was released weeks after she vanished in the village of St Michael’s on Wyre, Lancashire on January 27. 

Home Secretary Suella Braverman said she was ‘not satisfied’ with the reasoning behind the decision to release the private details about Ms Bulley. 

The Home Secretary said: ‘I want to put on record my deepest thoughts and sympathies for the family of Nicola Bulley, it must be a horrendous experience that they are going through right now.

Home Secretary Suella Braverman (right  with Cheshire Chief Constable Mark Robert) during a visit to Warrington Police Station today where she criticised Lancashire Police

Home Secretary Suella Braverman (right  with Cheshire Chief Constable Mark Robert) during a visit to Warrington Police Station today where she criticised Lancashire Police

‘I did have concerns earlier in the week about some of the elements relating to the release of personal information of Nicola into the public domain. 

‘I raised those concerns with the chief constable – I wasn’t wholly satisfied, I have to say, with some of the responses I got but it is a matter for the police themselves.

The minister added that investigations had been launched into how the information had been made public and that action would be taken on the basis of the inquiries.  

‘There are some investigations ongoing, looking into how the investigation has been handled and we must let that carry out its own process.

‘We must just let the investigation conclude, and then we will see what the investigations and inquiries come back with.’

Lancashire Constabulary has confirmed a date had been set for an internal review into the investigation following the public backlash.

Timeline: Disappearance of Nicola Bulley 

January 27 

At 8.26am Ms Bulley left her home with her two daughters, aged six and nine, dropping them off at school. 

She then took her spaniel, Willow, for a walk along the path by the River Wyre at 8.43am, heading towards a gate and bench in the lower field. 

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She was seen by a dog walker who knew her at around 8.50am, and their pets interacted briefly before they parted ways, according to the force. 

At 8.53am, Ms Bulley sent an email to her boss, followed by a message to her friends six minutes later, before logging on to a Microsoft Teams call at 9.01am. 

She was seen by a second witness at 9.10am, the last known sighting. 

Her phone was back in the area of the bench at 9.20am before the Teams call ended ten minutes later, with her mobile remaining logged on after the call. 

At 10.50am, Ms Bulley’s family and the school attended by her children were told about her disappearance. 

Lancashire Constabulary launched an investigation into Ms Bulley’s whereabouts on the same day and appealed for witnesses to contact them. 

January 28 

Lancashire Constabulary deployed drones, helicopters and police search dogs as part of the major missing person operation. 

They were assisted by the Lancashire Fire and Rescue Service, as well as the Bowland Pennine Mountain Rescue Team and the North West underwater search team. 

January 29 

Local residents held a meeting at the village hall to organise a search for Ms Bulley at 10.30am on Sunday, according to reports from The Mirror, and around 100 people joined in. 

Police urged volunteers to exercise caution, describing the river and its banks as ‘extremely dangerous’ and saying that activity in these areas presented ‘a genuine risk to the public’.

January 30 

Superintendent Sally Riley from Lancashire Constabulary said police were ‘keeping a really open mind about what could have happened’, and that they were not treating Ms Bulley’s disappearance as suspicious. 

January 31 

Lancashire Constabulary spoke with a potential witness, a man who had been walking a small white fluffy dog near the River Wyre at the time of Ms Bulley’s disappearance. 

Her family released a statement saying they had been ‘overwhelmed by the support’ in their community, and that her daughters were ‘desperate to have their mummy back home safe’.

February 2 

Lancashire Constabulary spoke with a second witness who they had identified with the help of the public using CCTV but they told police they did not have any further information to aid their inquiry. 

Officers from the North West Police Underwater and Marine Support Unit searched the area close to where Ms Bulley’s mobile phone was found, while police divers scoured the River Wyre. Meanwhile, Ms Bulley’s family appealed to the public for help tracing her. 

February 3 

Lancashire Police said it was working on the hypothesis that Ms Bulley may have fallen into the River Wyre. 

Ms Riley urged against speculation, but said it was ‘possible’ that an ‘issue’ with Ms Bulley’s dog may have led her to the water’s edge. 

February 4 

Lancashire Police announced it wanted to trace a ‘key witness’ who was seen pushing a pram in the area near where Ms Bulley went missing on the morning of her disappearance. 

February 5 

The woman described as a ‘key witness’ by police came forward. The force insisted she was ‘very much being treated as a witness’ as it warned against ‘totally unacceptable’ speculation and abuse on social media. 

Peter Faulding, leader of underwater search experts Specialist Group International (SGI), say his team will begin searching the river after being called in by Ms Bulley’s family. 

February 6 

Ms Bulley’s friends said they hoped the help of a specialist underwater rescue team would give the family answers. 

Meanwhile, Ms Bulley’s partner Mr Ansell, in a statement released through Lancashire Police, said: ‘It’s been ten days now since Nicola went missing and I have two little girls who miss their mummy desperately and who need her back. 

‘This has been such a tough time for the girls especially but also for me and all of Nicola’s family and friends, as well as the wider community and I want to thank them for their love and support.’ 

February 10 

Police urged people to refrain from indulging in commentary and conspiracy theories about Ms Bulley’s disappearance as speculation increases online. 

February 15 

Police held a press conference over the case and say the mother-of-two was classed as a ‘high-risk’ missing person immediately after she was reported missing due to ‘vulnerabilities.’ 

They later disclosed Ms Bulley’s struggles with alcohol and perimenopause. 

February 16 

In a statement released through Lancashire Police, Ms Bulley’s family said the focus had become ‘distracted from finding Nikki, and more about speculation and rumours into her private life’ and called for it to end. 

Lancashire Police referred itself to the police watchdog over contact the force had with Ms Bulley prior to her disappearance. 

Home Secretary Suella Braverman demanded an ‘explanation’ for the disclosure of Ms Bulley’s private information by the force. 

February 17 

Lancashire Police announced it was conducting an internal review into the handling of Ms Bulley’s disappearance and the Information Commissioner said he would ask the force questions about the disclosure. 

February 18 

Ms Braverman met with police leaders to discuss the handling of the investigation after Prime Minister Rishi Sunak also expressed ‘concerns’ about the revelation. 

February 19 

Appearing on the morning broadcast round, Commons Leader Penny Mordaunt described the police disclosure as ‘shocking’ while shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper, who also wrote to the force over its handling of the case, repeated her concerns about the ‘unusual’ level of private information made public about Ms Bulley. 

A new search effort was launched less than a mile from where Ms Bulley vanished. 

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Later on Sunday, Lancashire Police announced they had found a body in the River Wyre. 

February 20

Police confirm that the body found in the River Wyre is that of Nicola Bulley at a press conference.  

There has been widespread criticism of the way Lancashire Police have handled the missing persons case over the weeks of the investigation.  

Detective Superintendent Rebecca Smith had criticised social media for ‘distracting the investigation’ as the force came under fire after it took them 24 days to find remains in the reeds of the Wyre. 

The body was found less a mile away from where Ms Bulley went missing in late January.  

She did not appear at tonight’s press conference, during which officers confirmed the body was Ms Bulley.

It comes after Lancashire Police sparked fury today after it replied to a tweet showing the senior officer depicted as a Lego figure with a heart emoji during the search for Ms Bulley.

Force staff admired the toy lookalike of Det Supt Smith, saying ‘we will make sure she sees this’ alongside a yellow heart emoji.

The exchange on Twitter prompted criticism from force followers during the missing probe

The exchange on Twitter prompted criticism from force followers during the missing probe

Assistant Chief Constable Peter Lawson (left) and Detective Superintendent Rebecca Smith of Lancashire Police update the media on February 15 as police continued their search for Nicola Bulley, 45

Assistant Chief Constable Peter Lawson (left) and Detective Superintendent Rebecca Smith of Lancashire Police update the media on February 15 as police continued their search for Nicola Bulley, 45

Sharing a picture of the figurine on Twitter on February 16, as the hunt for the missing mother continued, its creator wrote: ‘I don’t know Detective Superintendent Rebecca Smith of Lancashire Police but I do know she’s doing everything in her power to find Nicola Bulley. 

‘DSU Smith makes a pretty formidable Lego Minifigure too, if I do say so myself! Please give it a retweet so she sees it.’

However the brief exchange sparked outrage from people following the force.

In a reply sure to raise further questions over police judgement, staff responded with a blue heart emoji and said: ‘We’ll make sure she sees this.’

There was no response to MailOnline this afternoon on if and when Det Supt Smith was shown the Lego figure.

One asked: ‘Why don’t you focus on conducting yourselves with dignity and integrity instead of engaging with tweets and liking pro Lancashire police tweets? 

‘You’re turning this case into a farce, now you’re engaging with irrelevant tit for tat online, publicly, it’s disgusting.’

Another said: ‘Utterly inappropriate response. Just mind numbingly irrelevant.’

The figure was was made by popular Twitter account Brick Cop, who is an anonymous real-life officer who makes the toys in their spare time.

The criticism comes after a self-confessed ‘medium’ said he was the walker who found the body of Nicola Bulley in the River Wyre on Sunday. 

Jason Rothwell, 33, was seen in pictures pointing to the waters where Lancashire Police massed yesterday afternoon.

He and his friend, who MailOnline have cross-referenced to their social media presence, spoke to police who later retrieved the body.

Mr Rothwell, from Oldham, said before the press conference on Monday afternoon: ‘It is with great regret that I have to address this issue at this time. 

Jason Rothwell, 33, was seen in pictures pointing to the waters where Lancashire Police massed yesterday afternoon

Jason Rothwell, 33, was seen in pictures pointing to the waters where Lancashire Police massed yesterday afternoon.

He and his friend, which MailOnline have cross-referenced to his social media presence, spoke to police who later retrieved the body

He and his friend, which MailOnline have cross-referenced to his social media presence, spoke to police who later retrieved the body

‘But due to wide number of private enquires and threads now circulating on YouTube and TikTok, I feel I should but put a brief statement.

‘As has obviously become apparent, yes it is myself in the images in the media currently circulating relating to the case of Nicola Bulley and yes yesterday morning it was myself and a friend who reported and assisted the police in the recovery of a body from the river Wyre.

‘Such as it is it would be inappropriate of me to discuss in any further detail anything we may know about that body at this time, considering a formal identification of that body has yet to be confirmed.

Mr Rothwell and his friend are seen in a still taken from the scene yesterday in Lancashire

Mr Rothwell and his friend are seen in a still taken from the scene yesterday in Lancashire

‘I would also like to just say a huge thank you to Lancashire police for their help, support and the open mindedness with which they dealt with us, following our call, spiritualists or mediums are obviously not something the police come across every day and I appreciate the respect given to us both.

‘It is also important to mention, I was not asked by the police or Nicola’s family to become involved in this case, but having seen the wild speculation and hurtful commentary that has been ongoing, and having previously assisted in the recovery of Michael Brooks, I decided to use what ever “gift” it is we mediums possess to try and locate Nicola Bulley. 

‘I would however stress again, I can not confirm that body we traced yesterday is that off the lady in question.

‘My thoughts and prayers are with her family, friend and loved ones at this time and I do hope, that if it is indeed Nicola, they can find some peace with this. 

‘If it is not, I would send my prayers to the family off whomsoever it may be.

‘I would add as a final note, I will not be giving any further information or commentary at this time regarding the work involved in finding this person nor is it my place to engage in any discussion on how that body came to originally be in the water.’

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