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Margaret clearly stood out for these teachers for them to remember after 20 years.
Mr Paterson told the court he went to see Mr Cairney at a flat in Port Glasgow.
Mr Cairney had moved there after police launched a missing persons investigation to trace Margaret on 28 October, 2016.
The court heard that the pair had bonded in the 1980's over an interest in weightlifting, swimming and scuba diving.
Referring to flat visit, Mr Paterson said: "Basically he told me that he had been out for a walk with Margaret. Probably that was the first time I'd heard that name. He said on the way back there was a police presence at the bungalow and Margaret ran away. "
Mr McSporran asked: "Did he say how long Margaret had been with him?
Mr Paterson replied: "No. To be perfectly honest I wasn't interested. When anyone disappears where I come from they usually end up in the river."
Mr Paterson said he asked Mr Cairney if Margaret disappearing was a regular occurrence and added: "He said it was every two or three weeks. I asked why did she come back and he replied 'money'."
The witness told the jury that Mr Cairney also claimed that he and Ms Jones had travelled to the Millennium Dome in London in 2000 looking for Margaret.
Mr Paterson said that Mr Cairney said Margaret had wanted to visit the attraction and had run off when told she could not go there.
He added: "He said they visited the Dome in shifts and she never turned up.
"After that they were sitting in a cafe in Greenock, I think it was Tesco's, and Margaret walked in."
I guess after 15 years or so without check ups from social services etc. meant AJ and EC thought nobody would check up on Margaret, even though AJ described her picking hole in her head and it being untreated.
I'm a bit uneasy that doctors refused to accompany the social worker.
I'm a bit uneasy that doctors refused to accompany the social worker.
This seems like a dreadful lack of care from the local GPs.
Thank goodness for Miss Bennett's intervention.
I don't live in Scotland, but here GP's are very reluctant to do home visits, period. That's what nurses and social workers are for. There are very few situations where a sick person can't be taken to a doctor, and those cases probably warrant an ambulance to hospital.This seems like a dreadful lack of care from the local GPs.
Thank goodness for Miss Bennett's intervention.
Thanks, there was a new witness mentioned there that I either missed or they updated the article after I read it.
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The court later heard Ms Jones apparently told a friend she knew where Margaret was and gave police a six-hour window to find her.
But Alison Nugent said Ms Jones told her detectives did not follow up the lead.
Ms Nugent, 54, of Inverkip, met with Ms Jones after the missing person inquiry was launched in October 2016.
Mr McSporran asked her what Jones had told her about this.
Ms Nugent said: "She said they knew where she was and had told the police where to contact her in a certain time frame, but police chose not to.
"There would be a six-hour window, but police didn't follow up on it."
Ms Nugent was asked who "they" were. She replied: "Her and Eddie."
Mr McSporran asked her if Ms Jones said where Margaret was.
The witness replied: "She said she was with travellers and they would keep her safe and protect her."
Ms Nugent said that she was told by Ms Jones that Margaret would return from time to time to collect her benefit money. She added: "She said Margaret had more than enough money to look after herself."
Missing woman was 'with friends'
All these witness 'friends' seem to have swallowed these crazy stories hook, line and sinker. I'm surprised no one twigged to this highly suspicious circumstances until finally a social worker was confronted with an application for yet more benefits for Margaret.