Community pays tribute to tragic schoolgirl on her ‘final journey'
Mourners have lined the streets to bid farewell to a tragic six-year-old schoolgirl as she completed her 'final journey' in the company of her favourite cartoon characters.
Hope Gordon was found dead alongside her 36-year-old father Mark at a house in West Calder on January 20.
Police said they are treating her death as murder, while her father's death is not being treated as suspicious.
On Monday – what Hope's bereaved family have called 'Hope's Day' – a private family service in Coop Funeralcare in Livingston was followed by a procession to the town's Adambrae Cemetery.
Despite the chilly temperatures mourners turned out in force to line the roadside, some carrying flowers which they threw onto the horse-drawn hearse as it went past.
Hope's coffin was decorated with characters from Paw Patrol, her favourite cartoon, and the hearse followed a car carrying a Paw Patrol floral tribute provided by her Auntie Tess.
The ornate white hearse was pulled by two white horses, each draped in a white cloth and with blue and yellow feathers affixed to their heads in an evocation of the Paw Patrol colours.
The hearse was followed by a close family friend dressed as Chase, a character from the animated series, with cars bearing members of Hope's family close behind.
The procession was headed by a piper in full Highland dress, who piped the schoolgirl on what a social media post on behalf of her family described as 'Hope's final journey'.
A poem that Hope's Auntie Tess wrote about her was included as part of the family service.
A fundraising page launched by family friend Melanie Wheeldon to help cover the cost of Hope's Day raised more than £10,000 – more than five times its original £2,000 target.
In a statement posted on the page, named 'in memory of Hope', Ms Wheeldon said: 'On January 20 2025, our hearts shattered as we learned of the tragic and senseless murder of six-year-old Hope.
'Hope was a vibrant and loving little girl, known for her infectious smile, kind spirit and deep love for animals.
'Hope's life was tragically cut short, leaving a void in the hearts of her family and friends that can never be filled.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
The Latest Development in the Madeleine McCann Case Explained
Originally appeared on E! Online Kate McCann and Gerry McCann have gone without answers for 18 years, but they've refused to give up hope that they will find their daughter Madeleine McCann. Or at least that they'll learn the truth about what happened to her. "The years appear to be passing even more quickly and whilst we have no significant news to share, our determination to 'leave no stone unturned' is unwavering," Kate and Gerry wrote on their Find Madeleine website May 3, the 18th anniversary of her disappearance, days shy of her fourth birthday. "We will do our utmost to achieve this." Noting that Madeleine would have turned 22 this year, the couple added, "No matter how near or far she is, she continues to be right here with us, every day, but especially on her special day. We continue to 'celebrate' her as the very beautiful and unique person she is. We miss her." The physician couple, who also share now-20-year-old twins Sean and Amelie, did their best to go on with their lives in England, as much as they could when a part of them would always be in Praia da Luz, Portugal, where their eldest child went missing during the family's spring holiday. It was German prosecutors who formally named a suspect in the McCann case in 2020: Christian Brueckner, a convicted sex offender who's due to be released from prison in a few months after serving seven years for raping a 72-year-old woman. He has denied having anything to with Madeleine's disappearance and has never been charged in the case. "There is currently no prospect of an indictment in the Maddie case," prosecutor Hans Christian Wolter told Sky News in January. "As things stand, the accused Christian B's imprisonment will end in early September." And yet the quest to keep Brueckner behind bars—including charging him with insulting a prison staff member in May—has continued since he was found not guilty last October of three counts of rape and two counts of child sex abuse dating back to between 2000 and 2017 in Portugal. Prosecutors have appealed that verdict, according to BBC News, and if he's convicted of the prison infraction he could face either a fine or up to an additional year in jail. More from E! Online Kailyn Lowry's Son Isaac Introduces New Name Another Summer House Star Announces Exit Amid Paige DeSorbo's Departure Brittany Furlan Reveals Tommy Lee Relationship Status After Catfish Scandal The case was initially closed in Portugal in 2008, but Scotland Yard opened their own investigation in 2011, and then Portuguese police reopened the case in 2013. With global interest in the case never waning, it has remained open ever since. It was German prosecutors who formally named a suspect in the McCann case in 2020: Christian Brueckner, a convicted sex offender who's due to be released from prison in a few months after serving seven years for raping a 72-year-old woman. He has denied having anything to with Madeleine's disappearance and has never been charged in the case. "There is currently no prospect of an indictment in the Maddie case," prosecutor Hans Christian Wolter told Sky News in January. "As things stand, the accused Christian B's imprisonment will end in early September." Metro Police said in 2020 that Brueckner (identified only as Christian B. at the time) lived in the Algarve—Portugal's southernmost region, a popular vacation destination full of beachfront resorts—off and on between 1995 and 2007. Police shared pictures and descriptions of two cars linked to the suspect, a camper van and a Jaguar that was re-registered under another name the day after Madeleine went missing, and asked the public for any sightings of the vehicles from the spring and summer of 2007. But it's unclear as yet if the latest action in the McCann case has borne any fruit. On June 3, German and Portuguese investigators launched a new search of the area between the resort where the McCanns were staying in Portugal when Madeleine disappeared in 2007 and where Brueckner was lodging at the time. The search ended three days later and, while police have not publicly shared any details, the BBC reported June 6 that a conversation the outlet had with an officer suggested nothing significant was found. The McCanns were on holiday with three other families in Praia da Luz when Madeleine went missing. According to numerous accounts of the events of May 3, 2007, Kate and Gerry went to dinner with the other adults at around 8:30 p.m. after tucking in Madeleine and her siblings in the bedroom they were sharing in the McCanns' quarters at the Ocean Club resort. The various parents took turns going back to the rooms to check on all of the kids every half hour. Gerry recalled checking on the children at 9:05 p.m. Dr. Matthew Oldfield, another member of their party, said he went in at 9:30 p.m. but later couldn't definitively say whether he had seen Madeleine in her bed or not. In the meantime, Madeleine's family has learned to take these periodic announcements that could potentially lead to a break in the case in stride. "It's more than 13 years since Madeleine went missing and none of us can imagine what it must be like for her family, not knowing what happened or where she is," Metro Police Detective Chief Inspector Mark Cranwell, who heads up the McCann investigation—dubbed "Operation Grange" in 2011—said in a statement on June 3, 2020, when the suspect news broke. "Following the ten-year anniversary, the Met received information about a German man who was known to have been in and around Praia da Luz," Cranwell continued. "We have been working with colleagues in Germany and Portugal and this man is a suspect in Madeleine's disappearance. The Met conducted a number of inquiries and in November 2017 engaged with the BKA who agreed to work with the Met. "Since then a huge amount of work has taken place by both the Met, the BKA and the Polícia Judiciária. While this male is a suspect we retain an open mind as to his involvement and this remains a missing person inquiry. Our job as detectives is to follow the evidence, maintain an open mind and establish what happened on that day in May 2007." The McCanns were on holiday with three other families in Praia da Luz when Madeleine went missing. According to numerous accounts of the events of May 3, 2007, Kate and Gerry went to dinner with the other adults at around 8:30 p.m. after tucking in Madeleine and her siblings in the bedroom they were sharing in the McCanns' quarters at the Ocean Club resort. The various parents took turns going back to the rooms to check on all of the kids every half hour. Gerry recalled checking on the children at 9:05 p.m. Dr. Matthew Oldfield, another member of their party, said he went in at 9:30 p.m. but later couldn't definitively say whether he had seen Madeleine in her bed or not. Kate returned to the apartment at 10 p.m. The door to the front bedroom, where the children had been asleep, was open. She remembered in her 2011 book Madeleine: Our Daughter's Disappearance and the Continuing Search for Her that, while she was standing there somewhat puzzled, the door slammed shut. And then she noticed the breeze coming from an open window. She realized that, while Amelie and Sean were fast asleep, Madeleine was gone. After a quick, frantic search of the resort grounds, they reported their daughter missing at 10:14 p.m. She had been wearing Eeyore pajamas from Marks & Spencer and had gone to sleep with her pink blanket and her Cuddle Cat. Her family had planned to celebrate Madeleine's fourth birthday on May 12, but instead she disappeared without a trace. "Apart from those first 48 hours, nothing actually has changed since then," Kate told Sky News in 2017, referring to the fact that, though their daughter remained missing, there was no definitive evidence that she had been harmed, either. "I think the difficult thing has always been, how will we find her?" But Kate said that they could "take heart" in the progress that had been made, "and we just have to go with the process and follow it through, whatever it takes, for as long as it takes. But there's still hope that we can find Madeleine." Metro Police said in 2020 that Brueckner (identified only as Christian B. at the time) lived in the Algarve—Portugal's southernmost region, a popular vacation destination full of beachfront resorts—off and on between 1995 and 2007. Police shared pictures and descriptions of two cars linked to the suspect, a camper van and a Jaguar that was re-registered under another name the day after Madeleine went missing, and asked the public for any sightings of the vehicles from the spring and summer of 2007. Brueckner had numerous convictions for child sexual abuse, German police said in a statement, per NBC News (again, not yet identifying him by name), and seemed to have earned a living "by committing criminal offenses, such as burglaries of hotel complexes and holiday apartments as well as trafficking in narcotic drugs." On June 4, 2020, Braunschweig state prosecutor Wolters said, via Reuters, "We assume that the girl is dead. The public prosecutor's office in Braunschweig is investigating a 43-year-old German national on suspicion of murder." Wolters told the BBC days later, "We have evidence against the accused which leads us to believe that he really killed Madeleine but this evidence is not strong enough at the moment to take him to court." Moreover, the police announcement continued, Brueckner had a cell phone conversation that ended approximately an hour before Madeleine disappeared—so whomever was on the other end of that call was considered a "highly significant witness." They released the two mobile numbers involved, both starting with the Portuguese country code 351, and asked for anyone with information about either number to contact authorities. The next day, Cranwell said they had received more than 270 calls and emails. In their own 2020 statement, the McCanns thanked the police for their continuing work and the public for their support, saying, "All we have ever wanted is to find her, uncover the truth and bring those responsible to justice. We will never give up hope of finding Madeleine alive but whatever the outcome may be, we need to know, as we need to find peace." German officials, meanwhile, gave their own grim update on the case as had numerous convictions for child sexual abuse, German police said in a statement, per NBC News (again, not yet identifying him by name), and seemed to have earned a living "by committing criminal offenses, such as burglaries of hotel complexes and holiday apartments as well as trafficking in narcotic drugs." On June 4, 2020, Braunschweig state prosecutor Wolters said, via Reuters, "We assume that the girl is dead. The public prosecutor's office in Braunschweig is investigating a 43-year-old German national on suspicion of murder." Wolters told the BBC days later, "We have evidence against the accused which leads us to believe that he really killed Madeleine but this evidence is not strong enough at the moment to take him to court." The prosecutor said the evidence was "strong enough to say that the girl is dead and strong enough to accuse a specific individual of murder—that strong." But, Wolter added, "One has to be honest and remain open to the possibility that our investigation could end without a charge, that it ends like the others have. We are optimistic it will be different for us but for that we need more information." To this day, the Metropolitan Police still classify the investigation into Madeleine's disappearance as a missing persons case. Over the years a handful of suspects have been named, including Gerry and Kate, who weren't formally cleared by Portuguese authorities until July 2008, about 10 months after police acknowledged there wasn't enough evidence to keep questioning the couple. "This is the only time in 13 years that police have been so specific about a suspect, down to the phone numbers, vehicles and particularly with a known individual," said Clarence Mitchell, a former BBC reporter who for awhile was the McCanns' full-time representative and still serves as a spokesman for the family. Gerry and Kate "were coping as best as they can but want the focus to remain on the police investigation," Mitchell said, adding, "They still remain hopeful." Kate told Sky News in 2017, "You don't realize how strong you are until you have no option, and I think that's very true. Obviously massive events like this cause a lot of reaction, a lot of trauma and upset, but ultimately you have to keep going. And especially when you've got other children involved." "I think before Madeleine was taken, we felt we had managed to achieve a little perfect nuclear family of five," added Gerry, with a small smile. He cleared his throat. "And we had that for a short adapt and you have a new normality and, unfortunately for us, our new normality at the minute is a family of four." (Originally published June 17, 2020, at 7 a.m. PT) Robert Murat—a British national who lived not far from the Ocean Club and had volunteered to aid in the search for Madeleine when she first went missing—ended up winning upward of $750,000 in defamation damages from four U.K. media groups for coverage in their newspapers that strongly insinuated he was guilty of something. "It is hard to describe how utterly despairing it was to be named arguidos and subsequently portrayed in the media as suspects in our own daughter's abduction," Kate said at a news conference when she and her husband were officially cleared. "It has been equally devastating to witness the detrimental effect this status has had on the search for Madeleine."Local authorities conducted a sweeping raid in Portugal on dozens of properties linked to around 80 suspected pedophiles in 2007, but "Operation Predator," as it was called, did not result in any substantive leads in the McCann case. In 2012, Scotland Yard said it had identified 38 persons of interest in the case, including 12 Britons. By October 2013 it was 41, including 15 British nationals. Tips came in from all over the world, as did alleged sightings of Madeleine from as far away as India and New Zealand. In 2014, Metropolitan Police announced "a potential linked series of 12 crimes which occurred between 2004 and a male access to mainly holiday villas occupied by U.K. families on holiday in the western Algarve." NBC News reported in March 2014 that police were asking for the public's help identifying the perpetrator, whom they described as "having an interest in young white girls." Detectives said that in four of the cases being investigated, the man was believed to have sexually assaulted five girls between the ages of 7 and 10 years old while they were in their beds. The suspect was further described as "tan, with messy short dark hair," and he spoke English with a foreign accent. Prosecutors in the German city of Stade said in June 2020 that the newly announced suspect was also being investigated in connection with the 2015 disappearance of 5-year-old girl—identified as Inga G.—from the woods outside a family party being held in the town of Stendal, about 60 miles west of Berlin. "It is being assessed whether there is a connection between the two cases," a spokesperson for the prosecutors' office said. Though the update was disturbing, a spokesperson for the McCann family told NBC News at the time it also felt like the most "significant" development in the case to date. "This is the only time in 13 years that police have been so specific about a suspect, down to the phone numbers, vehicles and particularly with a known individual," said Clarence Mitchell, a former BBC reporter who for awhile was the McCanns' full-time representative and still serves as a spokesman for the family. Gerry and Kate "were coping as best as they can but want the focus to remain on the police investigation," Mitchell said, adding, "They still remain hopeful." Kate told Sky News in 2017, "You don't realize how strong you are until you have no option, and I think that's very true. Obviously massive events like this cause a lot of reaction, a lot of trauma and upset, but ultimately you have to keep going. And especially when you've got other children involved." "I think before Madeleine was taken, we felt we had managed to achieve a little perfect nuclear family of five," added Gerry, with a small smile. He cleared his throat. "And we had that for a short adapt and you have a new normality and, unfortunately for us, our new normality at the minute is a family of four." (Originally published June 17, 2020, at 7 a.m. PT) For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News App
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
A ‘free spirit': Mother remembers teen at center of metro-east investigation
Tiffany Zancha describes her 19-year-old son, Damien Zancha, as a 'free spirit' who was known for living up to the ideals of his namesake, St. Damien, the Catholic saint who ministered to outcasts and people with leprosy in Hawaii in the 1800s. 'He was a free spirit through and through,' Tiffany Zancha said about her son in a text Friday to the Belleville News-Democrat. 'If he wanted to do something — by God, he was going to do it, no matter what anyone said.' A funeral service is set for Saturday for Damien Zancha, who is the focus of an ongoing death investigation in connection with what Highland police report as 'an incident that occurred at Silver Lake' last month. Tiffany Zancha, who said her son died on May 22, said she wanted to 'hold off' on commenting on the police investigation at this time. Highland Police Chief Carole Widman has declined to release details regarding Damien Zancha's death or comment on whether anyone has been arrested. Rumors have been swirling on social media about the circumstances surrounding the teenager's death. 'Please be advised that we are aware of numerous social media posts regarding this incident,' the Highland Police Department said in a news release Thursday. 'This is an open and active investigation. Forensic analysis results in this case are still pending. No further details are being released at this time to preserve the integrity of the investigation.' Anyone with information about the case is asked to contact Detective Jeremiah Kingery at 618-654-2131, ext 3. Silver Lake is part of Silver Lake Park, which is operated by the city of Highland. It's 2 1/2 miles northeast of downtown, off Illinois 143. Funeral arrangements for Damien Zancha are being handled by Kutis Funeral Home. Visitation will be at noon Saturday at the Kutis Affton Chapel at 10151 Gravois Road in Affton, Missouri. The funeral service will be at 1 p.m. Saturday. He graduated from Highland High School in 2024 and loved to fish, according to his obituary. Tiffany Zancha said her son was named for St. Damien. 'From the start, Damien was always a funny, witty child that could light up any room,' she wrote. 'That child loved sports so much that his first word was 'ball.' He wanted to play any and every sport and so he did. From soccer, basketball and football to wrestling and track (and) field.' She said her son wanted to be 'included and accepted for who he was and not the picture that the world had painted of him. 'He loved his friends and family with a ferocity that all of us hope we can find in this lifetime,' she wrote. To sum up her memories of her son, Tiffany Zancha used an anglicized Gaelic phrase about someone's strong admiration for another: 'He was one of (a) kind. My macushla.' Belleville News-Democrat reporter Bruce Darnell contributed information for this article.


CBS News
4 days ago
- CBS News
Israeli community shows support for Boulder, Colorado in aftermath of attack
Hundreds of people from the Boulder community joined Jewish leaders from outside the state to come together in a night of music, unity and hope days after an attack on Pearl Street. A total of 15 people were injured at a rally on Sunday, calling for the release of Israeli hostages in Gaza, and the suspect is facing 16 counts of attempted murder, as well as federal hate crime charges. Wednesday night's community vigil at the Boulder JCC. CBS "It's shocking to know in this quiet city in Boulder, Colorado, we're experiencing a terrorist attack," said Israel Bachar, Consul General of Israel to the Pacific Southwest. Among the crowd of people who attended a community vigil at the Boulder JCC following Sunday's attack on Pearl Street were religious leaders and Jewish allies. Bachar also made the flight from California to Colorado to show his support on behalf of the Israeli community. He says he learned about the Pearl Street attack less than an hour after it happened. The prime minister of Israel called right away and wanted an update from the ambassador in Washington," he said. "The whole Israeli system started to gear up and gather information. We put our security on alert, and we were in touch with a high official in Washington to get information on what is going on in the community." Israel Bachar, Consul General of Israel to the Pacific Southwest. CBS He also spent the day on Wednesday meeting with Boulder city leaders at the memorial, as well as one of the victims who was hospitalized with burns. "She has burns in her leg, second degree, and in her hand. She has a good spirit, but she's still shocked over what happened," said Bachar. "It was just her second time she was marching with the group for the hostages. You have to remember, these people were standing for what? For calling to release civilians who are being held right now by Hamas in Gaza." People who spoke up during the community vigil say these rally-goers who were attacked on the mall were only trying to send a message against violence, which should never have been met with violence in return. "The Jewish community here is not alone. There are forces in the world here that will support them, and an event like this will not go unanswered," said one council member. Jewish and Israeli leaders hope that this week's gatherings will encourage people in the community to feel like they can attend Jewish events this weekend. The scene of the attack on Pearl Street. CBS "By coming on Sunday, you tell everybody, including the terrorist, you're not going to win," said Bachar. "That's what we're doing in Israel. That's what we need to do here."