THE senior policeman who led the investigation into the disappearance of Margaret Fleming has slammed her murderers and says her last days would have been a 'living hell'.

Detective Superintendent Paul Livingstone, Senior Investigating Officer, spoke as he welcomed the guilty verdicts against Eddie Cairney and Avril Jones.

Det Supt Livingstone said: "Margaret was a very vulnerable young woman who was manipulated, abused, neglected and ultimately murdered by the two people who should have been looking after her.

"It is clear that one of Cairney and Jones' motivation was money. As part of their scheming ways they also managed to manipulate Margaret's mother, Margaret Cruikshanks before Cairney assaulted her. "For many years, Cairney and Jones kept up the pretence that Margaret was still alive, going as far as to write letters claiming to be from her.

"Margaret was described as being a funny, caring young woman who, despite having some mild learning difficulties, just wanted to be liked and to have friends.

"She was close to her father who died suddenly before she came to live under the care of Cairney and Jones. Margaret had been to James Watt College briefly before Cairney and Jones began to control her life and keep her prisoner within their home in Inverkip.

"She was subjected to daily punishment which included being tied up, having her hair cut short and deprived of food. The treatment which she was subjected to can only be described as horrific and the conditions in which she lived in were utterly disgusting and uninhabitable.

"For Cairney and Jones to continue the charade that she was still alive for all these years is abhorrent, with one of their reasons for doing so being for financial gain.

"We will never know just how Margaret was killed.

"What we do know is that she lived her last days in what can only be described as a living hell. She must have felt that she was alone in the world with no one coming to help her which is just heartbreaking to think of.

"All of the detectives who worked on this complex enquiry were resolute in their aim to secure justice for Margaret. They wanted to be the advocate she never had.

"Margaret was just a young woman when she was murdered. Who knows what she could have gone on to achieve in her life if it hadn’t been ended so prematurely at the evil and greedy hands of Cairney and Jones."