Cops on high alert after Christian Brueckner tried to buy untraceable phone sparking fears he’s plotting to flee Germany

COPS in Germany are on high alert after Madeleine McCann suspect Christian Brueckner tried to buy an untraceable mobile phone — while carrying an ID card that could allow him to flee his home country.

Brueckner, 49, begged shop staff to sell him an anonymous handset without recording his official government identity, which is a legal condition there.

CCTV footage shows a man in a black hoodie buying a phone at a counter in a shop.
Fiend Christian Brueckner with a mobile phone in a shop in Germany
Dan Charity
CCTV footage of Christian Bruckner in a phone shop in Neumunster, Germany.
The now free Madeleine McCann suspect enters the phone shop
Dan Charity
CCTV footage of men transacting in a money transfer shop.
Boastful Brueckner hands over the money for his new handset
Christian Bruckner, the suspect in the Madeleine McCann disappearance, in a phone shop in Neumünster, Germany, purchasing a new mobile phone.
The Madeleine suspect sets up his smartphone in the shop
Dan Charity
Christian Brueckner arriving at court in Braunshweig, Germany.
Dan Charity

The convicted rapist was released from prison last week[/caption]

The convicted rapist was released from prison last week and a store worker instantly became suspicious by his request and refused — firing back to the rapist “I know who you are”.

He was then stunned to see Brueckner’s ID had not been updated with release conditions banning him from travelling outside Germany.

Police there have now been notified about the move and were said to be continuing to monitor the situation.

Worryingly, it also emerged flight-risk Brueckner quit the city his lawyers wanted him to stay in on his release after just one night because there were “too many police around”.

Phone shop manager Farouk Salah-Brahmin, 32, told The Sun he spoke to Brueckner for more than an hour shortly after he stepped off the train into his town.

The dad said: “He came in and said he wanted to buy a pay-as-you-go Sim card and a smartphone.

“He said he wanted to learn how to use WhatsApp because he had never used it before.

“He told me he wanted to be able to stay in touch with his lawyers.

“He produced a promotional pen for his lawyer and told me that was the only way he had to contact his legal team.

“I couldn’t believe it — his only contact in the world was a phone number on an office pen.

“It was then he really weirdly asked me if he could buy a Sim card without an identity card.

“That would mean no one could trace his calls.

“But I said, ‘No way, I know who you are’ because it’s illegal to register a phone without an ID card in Germany because then you have no idea who was using it.

“It was actually really scary that he even asked — he probably thought it would have been amazing for him to have an unregistered phone.”

One of the key pieces of evidence on Brueckner is a mobile phone record showing he was in the centre of Praia da Luz at the time of Madeleine’s disappearance there on May 4, 2007.

In Germany, ID cards can be printed with specific stipulations such as limits on travel.

He really weirdly asked me if he could buy a Sim card without an identity card. That would mean no one could trace his calls


Farouk Salah-Brahmin

Brueckner’s identification, however, carries none of the limitations agreed to by a court — despite prosecutors insisting that it should.

Stunned Farouk added: “When he gave me his identity card, I was completely shocked because there were no travel limitations on it.

“I thought that was really strange because his release conditions were supposed to be limiting his travel abroad — but there was nothing there.

“It means right now he can get on a place or go wherever he wants because he can use his ID card like any other person.

“There were no police or officials or anyone following him.

“There was nothing to stop him at all. I couldn’t believe it.”

Madeleine McCann, a young child, wearing a pink hat, shirt, and shorts, holding tennis balls on a tennis court.
Collect

Madeleine McCann was three when she vanished while on holiday in Praia da Luz, Portugal, in May 2007[/caption]

Gerry and Kate McCann at a vigil marking the 15th anniversary of their daughter's disappearance.
Maddie’s parents, Kate and Gerry McCann, have been searching for answers over her disappearance since 2007
a white building with a car parked in front of it
The apartment complex that Maddie disappeared from in Praia Da Luz, Portugal
Christian Brueckner, a suspect in the Madeleine McCann case.
Rapist Brueckner was living in the Algarve at the time Madeleine went missing

Brueckner spent his first night as a free man in Kiel in the northern state of Schleswig-Holstein where his lawyers are based and had planned to stay there.

But he was panicked by the large police presence so boarded a train to another city nearby.

Farouk said: “Brueckner said one of his conditions was that he had to register a place to live so he could come to our town to register as homeless.

“He said he knew that meant he would get given an apartment here.

“He knew how the system works.

“But he said his lawyers had tried to take him to their home city of Kiel.

He said he wanted to go somewhere where the police wouldn’t follow him all the time, even though he asked for police protection. It was totally clear he wanted to lose the officers following him so he could do what he wanted


Farouk Salah-Brahmin

“He spent his first night as a free man there in a hotel.

“But he said he decided he couldn’t stay there because there were ‘too many police’.

“He felt like there police everywhere and he wanted to go somewhere with less police.

“He said he wanted to go somewhere where the police wouldn’t follow him all the time, even though he asked for police protection.

“It was totally clear he wanted to lose the officers following him so he could do what he wanted.”

Since being released last Wednesday it has been clear Brueckner has already repeatedly defied his lawyers’ wishes by refusing to keep a low profile.

Man in blue blazer holding documents being escorted by two blurry officers.
AFP

Brueckner was released from prison last week[/caption]

German police vehicles on a road.
Dan Charity

A police convoy took Bruckner to a safe house after his release[/caption]

A person's hand with a striped cuff holding a blue and white object inside a car, viewed through a tinted window.
Dan Charity

He covered his face with a blanket as the car sped past reporters[/caption]

Aerial view of a prison at night, with illuminated buildings inside a walled perimeter.
AFP

An aerial shot of the jail where Brueckner was caged[/caption]

As well as being snapped at the shop, he had been spotted partying at a nightclub — only 48 hours after being released — and begging for free pizzas from Domino’s in disguise.

He bragged to phone shop boss Farouk about his plans to build a new life for himself in his current city and get a permanent apartment.

Farouk said: “He said he wants to stay here and make a life because he knows the north of Germany very well.

“But everyone hates him here. No one wants him here.

He said he wants to stay here and make a life because he knows the north of Germany very well. But everyone hates him here. No one wants him here


Farouk Salah-Brahmin

“I told friends. They are scared because everyone who has children knows he’s a paedophile and a violent sex offender.”

Brueckner has been a suspect over Madeleine’s abduction and murder for German police since 2020 but never faced charges.

His lawyers have continued to insist on their client’s innocence in the McCann case.

TIMELINE OF THE MADDIE CASE

HERE’S a timeline of the case which has gripped the world.

May 3, 2007

Madeleine McCann disappears from her family’s holiday apartment in Praia da Luz, Portugal, sparking a massive police search and becoming one of the most famous missing persons cases in history.

January 15, 2016

Neighbour reports a possible ‘grave’ at Brueckner’s abandoned factory in East Germany.

Cops find disturbing images on USB sticks and launch a full-scale search.

February 16, 2016

Christian Brueckner is convicted for abusing a girl of five in a park after images found on his laptop.

He was sentenced to 15-months behind bars but was already on the run by then.

May 3, 2017

Around this time, Helge B calls an information hotline after watching a ten-year anniversary special on the disappearance of Madeleine McCann.

He reports an alleged confession by Christian Brueckner.

September 27, 2018

On-the-run Christian Brueckner is arrested over outstanding drugs claims in Italy.

He is extradited to Germany the following year.

December 16, 2019

Christian Brueckner was convicted, in Germany, for the 2005 rape of an American woman in Praia da Luz, Portugal, after his DNA was matched to a hair found on her bed.

He was sentenced to seven years behind bars.

June 4, 2020

German prosecutors reveal to the world they have a suspect in custody under investigation for the abduction of Madeleine McCann.

For the first time they claim Madeleine is dead.

German media later name him as Christian B (Christian Brueckner).

June 23, 2023

In his first interview, witness Helge B alleges to German newspaper Bild that Christian Brueckner all-but-confessed the Madeleine abduction to him, by allegedly saying “she didn’t scream” as they talked about the case, at a music festival, in Spain.

February 16, 2024

Brueckner goes on trial accused of none-McCann allegations of rape and sex assault, in Braunschweig, Germany.

Prosecutors hope for a conviction to keep him behind bars permanently and lead to McCann charges.

October 8, 2024

Brueckner was acquitted of all claims.

Prosecutors launch an appeal, however. Decision pending.

June 1, 2025

Police order a renewed search for clues in Praia Da Luz on the Algarve in Portugal.

It lasts for just three days.

September 17, 2025

Christian Brueckner released from jail after serving sentence for rape and allowed to walk free.

September 22, 2025
Read More >>

My model sister vanished without trace… then I discovered her secret life – will two new witnesses finally reveal truth?

FLICKING through photos of her younger sister, tears well up in Suellen Simpson’s eyes as she wonders what her life would be like now.

Rather than pursuing her dream of modelling and dancing, Revelle Balmain‘s life is feared to have been cut tragically short – but the truth of what happened to her could be closer than ever to being revealed.

a woman in a blue dress sits on the floor in front of a red curtain
The Australian

Revelle Balmain was about to go on a dance tour in Japan when she vanished[/caption]

a black and white photo of a woman in a crop top
The model disappeared more than 30 years ago
Summer issue of Oyster magazine featuring Gia Carides.
Alamy

Revelle had made her debut on the cover of fashion magazine Oyster[/caption]

The cover star, 22, vanished more than three decades ago in Sydney, Australia – and her sister Suellen believes she was murdered.

Heartbroken Suellen is still battling for answers to find out what really happened to her beloved sister.

Revelle was just a day away from embarking on a dance tour in Japan when she vanished without a trace on November 5, 1994.

She had picked up shifts as an escort with Selection Companions to make quick cash and Suellen fears her disappearance may have links to her secret work.

Suellen also believes police at the time failed to investigate properly as they judged her work as an escort.

Although the model’s body has never been found and no charges laid, cops are certain she was murdered.

After 31 years of torment, Suellen now hopes two witnesses due to take the stand at a final inquest next year could reveal crucial clues.

She told The Sun: “There are two more witnesses to take the stand: Jane King and her ex-husband Zoran Stanojevic, the former owners of the escort agency Select Companions.

“These two witnesses are crucial in detailing their whereabouts on November 5, 1994.

“All I ever wanted was the truth.”

Suellen blasted how long it has taken for the final inquest dates to be scheduled for next February after hearings last year.

The grieving sister added: “Nearly two years between inquests is an insult to her family and a disgrace to our legal system.

“If any consideration was given, it should have been for a family that has waited decades, and in this case, it’s been over three.”

Shoe found in a bin

Revelle appeared to have the world at her feet as a bright, bubbly blonde who had just made her debut on the cover of fashion magazine Oyster.

Her final shift as an escort was on the evening of her disappearance with keen surfer, Gavin Samer.

All I ever wanted was the truth


Suellen Simpson

After her appointment, Revelle – who studied at the former Bush Davies School of Theatre Arts in London as a teenager – was due to meet friends – but never showed up.

Samer, who claimed he dropped Revelle at a nearby pub, quickly became prime suspect after some of her belongings were found near the 26-year-old’s home.

One of the dancer’s cork-heeled platforms was found in a bin, her diary in a gutter, and her keys and make-up bag on a roadside.

Tragically, her passport and airline ticket to Japan sat packed in a bag at her home, never to be used.

Suellen Simpson, half-sister of Revelle, looking up and to the right while speaking.
NSW Police

Revelle’s sister Suellen Simpson hopes two new witnesses could reveal the truth[/caption]

a wicker basket sits next to a sandal with shells on it
Her bag and one of her shoes were found after she disappeared
a woman with blonde hair and blue eyes looks at the camera
60 Minutes Australia

An inquest into Revelle’s disappearance is due to continue next year[/caption]

Samer was let off the hook after police failed to find any evidence linking him to Revelle’s potential murder, adding there was no plausible motive.

An inquest in 1999 concluded the dancer had died “at the hands of a person or persons unknown” – and the case was left with the unsolved homicide unit.

Revelle’s devastated parents Jan and Ivor died without ever finding out their daughter’s fate.

But since 2020, her case has been reexamined- and Suellen hopes King and Stanojevic can help shed light on Revelle’s final hours.

According to police, King and Stanojevic were two of only four people who knew her location at the time she went missing.

Senior counsel assisting Matthew Johnston told a previous hearing at Lidcombe Coroner’s Court there was evidence that Revelle was in debt to the escort agency she worked for when she disappeared.

Detective Chief Inspector Stuart Bell, leading the formal review, said he believed Revelle’s belongings were scattered near her final client’s home in a bid to implicate him.

Who was the prime suspect?

GAVIN Samer was named as a suspect by police after Revelle Balmain vanished in 1994.

When he was 26, he hired Revelle to go to his home at Kingsford, in Sydney’s south-east.

Revelle failed to meet friends after, and Samer said he had dropped her at a nearby pub at around 7pm.

He was named as a person of interest – but his involvement in her disappearance and likely death was dismissed by Deputy State Coroner John Abernethy in May 199.

Abernethy said: “Not only is she dead, but I am firmly of the opinion that her disappearance involves her homicide.

“While Mr Samer certainly had the opportunity to kill Ms Balmain, and rightly in my view is the main person of interest to police, there is no plausible motive proved.”

During a coronial inquest, it was revealed police did not search Samer’s house with a specialist forensics team.

His car was not searched for nine days and police did not ask him to hand over the clothes he was wearing that night.

Samer has never been charged over Revelle’s disappearance and has always maintained his innocence.

Bell told a previous hearing: “One of the theories of the investigation is that the person responsible…had to know that she was at Gavin Samer’s premises.”

Witnesses claimed they heard the sound of a woman’s scream and the loud skid of a car speeding away in the Kingsford area where Revelle vanished.

“I miss her and what could have been.”


Revelle’s sister

Suellen said: “As with most cases, I believe Revelle’s investigation was evaluated based on the solvability factor, which means various facts were considered before her case was even re-investigated.

“Those facts include the likelihood of solving the crime, forensic evidence such as DNA found at the scene, and data analysis.           

“As far as I know, with limited resources, there are only so many police available to handle these cold cases, especially after many years.

“People have moved on and started new lives, and finding those who may have moved interstate or changed their names is nearly impossible.

a poster for a missing person asking for help
The Australian Newspaper

A missing poster from when Revelle disappeared[/caption]

two people standing next to a sign that says piccadilly lane platforms
A young Revelle with dad Ivor in London when she was studying at Bush Davies School of Theatre Arts
Supplied
Revelle Balmain with her great aunt in her pink childhood bedroom.
Revelle in her pink themed childhood bedroom with her great aunt
Supplied

“Time is the most critical factor in cold cases; some witnesses may no longer be alive to testify.”

Along with just a shred of hope for the truth, all Suellen now has are memories and photos of her sister – and a dream of what her life could have been.

She added: “Revelle was never given enough time to pursue any of her dreams, and for that reason, she should be remembered as a young girl whose life meant nothing to some of those around her. 

“She had a talent for entertaining through dance and a personality that could melt your heart if she trusted you, but unfortunately, she was unable to recognise good from bad in this world.

“She was very loving to her family and close friends, still very young and just finding her way through life. Caring and compassionate, but more than anything, a beautiful soul whose life was taken too soon.

“I miss her and what could have been.”

September 20, 2025
Read More >>