Police release images of home of April Jones accused

Jury visited key locations in case including house where traces of blood found

Undated handout photo issued by Dyfed Powys Police of the lounge in the home of Mark Bridger as the jury in the April Jones murder trial visited his house and a number of other sites which feature in Bridger’s trial.

Photographs showing the inside of a house where traces of schoolgirl April Jones’ blood were found were released today as a jury visited the key locations in the case.

The pictures were taken by police and are of the inside of the cottage where defendant Mark Bridger lived at the time of April's disappearance.

Bridger, 47, is accused of murdering the five-year-old after he abducted her as she played outside her home in Machynlleth, mid-Wales, on October 1st last year. April's body has never been found.

Today the trial jury were taken on a site visit of the main areas of Machynlleth including Bridger’s former home, Mount Pleasant, in Ceinws.

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Following their visit the court released photographs of the inside of the house which are part of the prosecution’s evidence in the case.

The prosecution’s case is that traces of the child’s blood were found at various locations in the cottage and bone fragments from a “juvenile skull” were found in the ash of a woodburner.

Bridger denies the charges and instead says that he ran April over in a car accident and then “blanked” out and cannot remember what he did with her body.

The first photograph shows Bridger’s living room and the wood burner in which bone fragments consistent with being from a juvenile skull were found in the ash, the court has heard.

Elwen Evans QC, prosecuting, told the jury earlier this week that when police searched Bridger’s house he had carried out an “extensive clean up” — but that he failed to get rid of all the evidence.

Traces of blood were found in the living room, hallway and bathroom — and it matched April’s DNA, the court heard.

There was a concentration of blood found around the wood burner in the living room, the jury heard.

Around the wood burner were a number of knives, including a boning knife, which was badly burnt.

Miss Evans said there was a “one in a billion” match to April’s DNA and the defence accepts it was the young girl’s blood.

She said there had been attempts to clean away the blood stains and that when police entered the house for the first time there was a “strong smell of detergent, and a smell of cleaning products, air freshener and washed clothes”.

She added: “There was nothing which would strike the eye as April’s blood, it was only after careful forensic analysis that this evidence emerged.”