FORENSIC teams have searched two shipping containers as part of a decade old murder probe.
Mum-of-three Lisa Pour vanished in 2013 after staying at a flat in North West London.
PAMum-of-three Lisa Pour vanished in 2013[/caption]
PAThe mum has been described as 5ft 2ins tall with a slim build and had dark hair when she vanished[/caption]
2 containers now and police presence including forensics team. Not a good sign. https://t.co/MC3O5Gu5De pic.twitter.com/LAzCdYVP3K
— Life In Kilburn (@LifeInKilburn) December 5, 2023
Her case remained a missing person one until July this year when the Metropolitan Police opened a murder investigation.
They said a lack of contact from Lisa, who was “devoted” to her family, led them to believe she may have come to harm.
Images shared online on Tuesday showed crime scene investigators examining two green containers on Kilburn High Road, near Brondesbury Medical Centre.
A Met spokesperson confirmed the searches are linked to Lisa’s murder investigation.
They told The Sun: “We won’t be commenting further while the ongoing operational activity takes place.”
The flat the mum had been staying at before she vanished is on the same road.
The mum had been living apart from her family in the flat which was known to be popular with drug users.
Police have previously spoken to people connected to the flat but have received no concrete evidence, just “rumours”.
The mum was last seen by her probation officer on January 16, 2013, and reported missing seven days later.
The mum was described as 5ft 2ins tall with a slim build and had dark hair when she vanished.
Lisa – who would now be 51 – was known to frequently visit the Camden and Brent areas of London.
Lisa’s dad Reza Pour told of his agony after cops opened the murder probe in July.
He urged anyone with information to come forward.
Reza added: “Lisa’s absence in our lives has been a daily struggle, but we always held onto the hope that she might still come back to us.
“To think that her last moments may have been filled with fear and pain is something that we cannot get over.”
Detective Chief Inspector Neil Rawlinson, who is leading the investigation for the Met Police, told MyLondon: “Lisa has been missing for more than ten years and we know the heartache and distress this has caused to her devoted parents and three children.
“We are carrying out active enquiries and we hope that this new reward from Crimestoppers could encourage anyone who has any information to now come forward.”
Anyone with information should call the Met on 020 8358 0200 or Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.
Crimestoppers is offering a £20,000 reward for information that would help to bring Lisa’s alleged killer to justice.
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