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Is 30-year mystery behind girl who never came home from buying cereal about to be solved?

The 13-year-old’s last known movements were captured on Spar’s CCTV (Picture: PA)

A teenage girl left home to quickly buy cornflakes but was found at the bottom of a canal. Now, more than 30 years later, there are hopes her killer may have been found.

Lindsay Rimer, 13, vanished in 1994 after nipping to her local Spar in Hebden Bridge, West Yorkshire.

After several months of searching, Lindsay’s body was found, weighed down by a large rock, in the Rochdale Canal, about two miles from her home.

Today, West Yorkshire Police announced that a prisoner had been arrested on suspicion of the teenager’s murder.

The man, who denies killing Lindsay, is being grilled at an undisclosed UK prison, where he is serving a sentence for other offences.

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Lindsay had popped out for some cereal when she vanished (Picture: PA)

Police have revealed he is expected to be bailed and returned to prison while enquiries continue.

Juliet Rimer was just one when her sister was killed and has been left to read her diaries to piece together her life.

‘It’s just, it’s a bit of a horror film that we have to do this,’ she told Sky News last year.

‘The fact that I had a sister that I never knew who was murdered, I just can’t wrap my head around that. It’s had a massive impact on me.

‘This person should be in prison, not us because that’s where we feel we’ve been for the last 30 years.’

Detectives have approached many potential witnesses – mainly in the Hebden Bridge and wider Halifax area – who have been identified by the investigation.

DCI James Entwistle said: ‘We remain very firmly committed to doing everything we can to get justice for Lindsay, and to give her family the answers they still so desperately need after all these years.

‘The arrest we have made today comes as a result of our continued focus on progressing the investigation.

‘We are keeping Lindsay’s family updated and, while we appreciate the understandable public interest that today’s arrest will bring, we do not anticipate any immediate developments at this stage.

‘Although it is now more than 30 years since Lindsay was murdered, we remain convinced there is someone out there who has vital information that could finally help to ease her family’s pain, and we urge them to do the right thing and tell us what they know.’

Anyone with any information that could assist the investigation is asked to contact detectives.

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