Madeleine McCann went missing in Portugal in 2007 aged three. Photo / Kate McCann
Madeleine McCann went missing in Portugal in 2007 aged three. Photo / Kate McCann
The London Metropolitan Police investigation into the disappearance of Madeleine McCann is to close after 11 years, amid fears the German prime suspect will never be charged.
Scotland Yard is understood to be preparing to shut its Operation Grange inquiry later this year. The investigation was set up four years after the three-year-old girl went missing in Portugal in 2007.
It is feared there is insufficient evidence to charge Christian Brueckner, the convicted paedophile and rapist whom German police believe was involved in the child's disappearance at the resort of Praia da Luz.
A source connected to the UK side of the investigation told The Sun: "The end of the road for Operation Grange is now in sight.
"The team's work is expected to be completed by autumn. There are currently no plans to take the inquiry any further."
Home Office funding for the inquiry is due to run out on March 31. But, the Met has applied for another grant to fund it through to September.
It is understood Madeleine's parents, Kate and Gerry McCann, both 54, are aware of the plans to wind down the UK investigation.
It will mean the total cost of the inquiry is around £13 million. Although Operation Grange is expected to be closed, the case could be reopened if new evidence emerges.
Madeleine went missing on the evening of May 3 2007, from her holiday apartment at the Ocean Club. Mobile phone analysis suggests Brueckner, 44, was in the area at the time of Madeleine's disappearance.
Christian Brueckner may never be charged. Photo / Supplied
A recent German TV documentary also claimed he had regularly worked at the Algarve resort where the McCann family was staying.
Prosecutors '100 per cent' sure Brueckner involved
German police named Brueckner as the prime suspect in the case in 2020. But, despite an intense investigation, including the suggestion he told a friend he was involved in the girl's disappearance, prosecutors have never brought charges against him.
Brueckner is currently in a high-security prison near the city of Bremen in northwest Germany where he is serving a seven-year sentence for raping a 73-year-old pensioner in Praia da Luz in 2005.
Last year, Christian Wolters, the German public prosecutor leading the investigation, said his team was "100 per cent" sure Brueckner was involved, but admitted evidence detectives had obtained was circumstantial.
They had appealed to the public for information, but have conceded that without a body, DNA or CCTV they lacked proof of his involvement.
Brueckner has denied any involvement in the girl's disappearance. The Met Police is still treating the case as a missing person inquiry.