A body has been found in the River Wensum amid the search for missing mother-of-three Gaynor Lord.
The search for Mrs Lord, 55, who was last seen walking out of her workplace at Jarrolds department store over an hour before her shift was due to end and hurrying through the streets of Norwich on December 8, had today entered its second week.
Specialist police divers were seen searching an area of the River Wensum on Friday morning and pulled a large object out of the water in a black bag.
Norfolk Police confirmed a body had been retrieved and that while it has not been formally identified, Gaynor’s family have been informed. They continue to be supported by specially trained officers.
Police yesterday revealed that they have ‘some indications’ as to why Mrs Lord left work early on the day she vanished, but also admitted they have not been able to establish her state of mind when she went missing with ‘any degree of confidence’.
Possessions including her rings, mobile phone and clothing were found in a park in the city hours later, while her coat was in the nearby river.
The mother-of-three (pictured) walked out of her workplace over an hour before her shift was due to end and hurried through the streets of Norwich
A police dive team assisting the search for the mother-of-three today carried out checks at a specific part of the River Wensum in Norwich
This timeline shows what we know so far about how Gaynor Lord’s disappearance unfolded
A police dive team assisting the search for the mother-of-three today carried out checks at a specific part of the River Wensum in Norwich, placing an orange buoy on the spot.
An Environment Agency search boat was stationed next to the buoy on Friday morning as a dive team truck arrived at the area just after 11am.
Two members of the dive team could be seen surveying the area, appearing to check if the water was safe to enter.
The buoy was positioned around 100 metres down stream from where the main focus of Thursday’s search for Ms Lord had taken place.
Police divers with flippers could be seen ready to enter the water in a park area further along the river but after a phone call was received, their kit was packed up and personnel got back in their truck and rediverted.
Later two specialist divers assisting with the search for Gaynor Lord pulled a large object in a black bag, believed to be a body bag, from the River Wensum.
The divers removed the object from the water next to the orange buoy which had been positioned in the river on Friday.
Earlier on Friday, the friend of missing mother Gaynor Lord revealed her regret after she was phoned by her just half an hour before she left work but had to hang up after receiving another call from a work client.
Friend Julie Butcher had shared ‘gins and hugs’ with the mother-of-three just days before and the pair agreed to play tennis together after Christmas.
Ms Butcher told Sky News: ‘I wish I hadn’t have answered that call. [I] Really wish I hadn’t have answered that call. And then she may have talked to me a bit more or I might have found out the reason why she was calling me.’
She said her friend asked her: ‘Where are you, where are you?’, on the call before Ms Butcher promised to call her back – but when she did so five minutes later there was no answer.
Then, she got another call but thinks it was a pocket dial.
Police were seen preparing to dive a new site in the river on Friday morning
The team could be seen scouring the river, which was marked with an orange buoy
The entrance to Norwich Cathedral, where Gaynor Lord was seen walking, as police continue the search for the mother of three who was last seen on Friday afternoon last week
Police released new CCTV footage yesterday showing the last time Mrs Lord was caught on camera, about ten minutes before her second call to Ms Butcher
Ms Butcher told GMB: ‘It was 4.15pm and she rang me again. It sounded like a pocket call. It just sounded like she was walking. So I thought, “oh she obviously hasn’t meant to call me”. I just wish I’d have kept her on the phone and not taken that phone call because you never know, she might have said something.’
Speaking about the last time she saw Mrs Lord, she said: ‘She was happy on Tuesday and we had a few gins with her and the last time I saw her she gave me a hug.’
She said she was ‘upbeat’ and talking about Christmas just days before she disappeared.
‘We were talking. She was a bit busy but we were talking about Christmas and she seemed fine, no different to the usual Gaynor. She was quite upbeat and happy,’ Ms Butcher told the BBC.
Ms Butcher said: ‘I keep going over the conversation. If I hadn’t answered that call [from her client] would she have talked to me? I feel terrible. I feel so sorry for the family… It’s not like Gaynor to do this.’
Speaking to GMB, she said of Mr Lord: ‘He sounded like he hadn’t slept. He sounded dreadful, as you would if your wife hadn’t come home.’
Speaking near the spot in Wensum Park where Mrs Lord is believed to have gone into the water, Chief Superintendent Dave Buckley of Norfolk Police said it will take ‘a couple of days’ or longer to complete the search of the stretch of river, which has included using sonar equipment.
‘It’s very, very challenging – the river is very, very full of water with all the rain, full of lots of debris,’ he said. The divers can see about one foot in front of them, so it’s an extraordinarily challenging environment for them to work in.’
Mr Buckley added that the force is keeping an open mind about what happened to to Mrs Lord but that ‘everything we know is pointing to a high probability that Gaynor went into the water’.
‘We’ve got some indications as to why she behaved the way in which she did but what we’re doing is we’re just working backwards now to actually truly understand what may have taken place.
‘We’re just cautious of everything we know at the moment because clearly we’ve ended up in the situation we have, which is not usual.’
Mrs Lord’s colleagues have insisted her behaviour was normal prior to her disappearance. A co-worker at the store’s Bullards Gin concession said she seemed her ‘normal, happy self’ days before.
Police searching for missing mother Gaynor Lord scour Wensum Park in Norwichon Thursday
Members of the dive team searching the River Wensum at Wensum Park in Norwich on Thursday
Gaynor Lord was last seen on Friday afternoon as she left work early from Norwich city centre
Police teams continue to hunt for clues in the disappearance of Gaynor Lord in Norwich on Thursday
A floor manager in the city centre store added: ‘There was nothing to suggest at all that something like this would happen… She didn’t show any signs of distress or concern.’
But a friend of hers, who was a salesman at a nearby store, revealed yesterday that Mrs Lord had told him she was ‘feeling a bit funny’ shortly before her disappearance.
‘It was very nonchalant. She said she was feeling a bit funny, a bit off,’ the man told the Daily Telegraph.
He added: ‘We had a brief conversation about anxiety. She didn’t say she did or didn’t suffer with it… She had no mental health problems that I was aware of.’
Police released new CCTV footage yesterday showing the last time Mrs Lord was caught on camera, about ten minutes before her second call to Ms Butcher.
Taken just over an hour after she left the department store where she works and several hours before her belongings were found, she could be seen walking calmly along St Augustines Street in the city centre.
She was later spotted by a woman, who said Mrs Lord appeared ‘quite calm’ as she performed a yoga pose with her coat on the ground beside her.
Norfolk Police, who have received around 30 calls from members of the public in response to appeals for information, don’t believe anyone else was involved in her disappearance but have not ruled it out.
Chief Superintendent Buckley added: ‘We’re really concerned about her safety. We are pursuing the inquiry that she’s missing and alive.’
The force has been liaising with Lancashire Police, which handled the investigation into Nicola Bulley, who went missing in similar circumstances earlier this year.
Her body was found in the River Wyre and an inquest concluded she fell in and died of accidental drowning.
Mrs Lord’s husband Clive, 63, has not commented on the case.
Police search the New Mills Yard area of the River Wensum in Norwich this morning
Detectives are using sonar equipment at the River Wensum in Norwich this morning
The New Mills Yard area of the River Wensum is the search focus for police this morning
Police continue to scour the River Wensum by Wensum Park in Norwich, pictured yesterday
Police teams continue to hunt for clues in the disappearance of Gaynor Lord in Norwich today