A former associate of Christian Brueckner, the prime suspect in the disappearance of Madeleine McCann, has broken his silence in a shocking on-camera confession — and what he revealed could reignite one of the world’s most haunting missing child cases.
Helge Busching, a German man with a criminal past, told ITV News that he is “100% sure” Brueckner was behind Madeleine’s abduction in 2007 from a Portuguese holiday resort. According to Busching, Brueckner chillingly let slip a detail about Madeleine that has haunted him for years: “She was not screaming.”
The conversation allegedly took place in Spain in 2008, just a year after Madeleine vanished. Busching recalled confronting Brueckner at a festival, saying he couldn’t understand how anyone could abduct a child from a hotel. Brueckner’s cold response — that Madeleine was not screaming — sent shivers down his spine.
“I was thinking, yeah, how you know this… yeah, he have to do something with this,” Busching explained. “He took Maddie out from this hotel. He is involved, sure.”
Brueckner, a convicted paedophile and rapist, has always denied any involvement in Madeleine’s case. He is now just days away from walking free after serving time for an unrelated rape conviction, sparking fears that he could disappear and evade justice once again.
Busching says his testimony, which was initially lost among the 60,000 tips Scotland Yard received, eventually reached investigators in 2017 and became part of the case against Brueckner. German prosecutors later named him the prime suspect in Madeleine’s disappearance.
But Busching’s revelations go even further. He claims he once stumbled upon a cache of disturbing videos in Brueckner’s home in 2006, showing him brutally assaulting women. One video, he said, ended with the masked attacker removing his disguise — revealing Brueckner himself.
“I saw a woman, she was handcuffed,” Busching recalled. “At the end, he was so hot, sweating, and he takes a mask off. It was Christian Brueckner. 100%.”
German courts previously dismissed Busching’s testimony as unreliable in another trial, but prosecutors insist that the case against Brueckner has been mishandled and are appealing. Meanwhile, Busching maintains his determination to see justice done: “I want Christian to go behind bars for this, for the case of Madeleine McCann.”
As Brueckner edges closer to release, the haunting words — “She was not screaming” — now hang heavier than ever. For many, they are not just a chilling remark, but possibly the closest glimpse yet into what really happened to Madeleine McCann.