It’s not entirely clear whether Gilly sold these lurid tales to the media, or whether the information was attributed to her dishonestly by persons unknown or the media itself. But it was here, from the newspapers, the idea that Suzy might be buried at Norton Barracks began.
Of course, in 1991, the allegations in the newspaper caused quite a stir, re-emerging as they did on the fifth anniversary of Suzy’s disappearance. As a direct result of these wild stories, the police were forced to establish what the facts actually were.
This fell to Det. Supt Brian Edwards of the Met, the man who, by 1991, was the officer in charge of Suzy’s case. Gilly Paige was tracked down and the pair spoke at length on the phone about what was being claimed in the press. During the call, Gilly retracted everything in the articles, saying that none of it had ever happened. She specifically quashed all suggestions and innuendo that Cannan had ever confessed to raping and murdering Suzy Lamplugh.
Scotland Yard moved immediately to stop the rumours from spreading further, releasing a statement to the press denying that there was any evidence linking Cannan to Suzy’s disappearance, a stance they had maintained ever since the media had first tried to link Cannan to Suzy’s case.
On Gilly Paige’s dealings with them in 1991, the police announced in a statement: ‘She has not repeated some of the statements attributed to her by the media and she stands by the statement she made to Avon and Somerset Police some considerable time ago.’
Publicly, and following the police intervention, Gilly firmly denied that Cannan had ever confessed to her that he was responsible for Suzy’s disappearance, saying that she was not prepared to discuss the circumstances surrounding it and that she had told the police all she knew at the time.