
Police divers tragically find dead body in River Thames during search for 23yo after he had ‘got into difficulty'
Specialist diving teams have been searching for a young man who went missing on Sunday July 13.
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He was last seen entering the River Thames at Buscot Lock, near Faringdon, Oxfordshire.
Police received a report just after 9.10pm on Saturday that 23-year-old William had got into difficulty after entering the river.
Emergency services rushed to the scene.
A number of search and rescue teams responded immediately.
It included Thames Valley Police, National Police Air Service, specialist search teams (POLSA), search dogs and Lowland Rescue Oxfordshire, Wiltshire Search & Rescue, Severn Area Rescue Association and Hampshire Search & Rescue Dogs.
The Avon & Somerset police dive team also attended the investigation.
Thames Valley Police announced that they had found a body during the search this afternoon.
Formal identification is yet to take place.
Local police believe the body to be William and have informed his next of kin.
Temporary Chief Superintendent Lis Knight said: 'Extensive searches were untaken to locate William, and I am saddened to confirm that we have located a young man's body.
'William's family have been kept updated throughout the day.
'An investigation will be conducted on behalf of the Oxfordshire Coroner, but we do not believe the death to be suspicious.
'I would like to offer my sincere thanks to all agencies who have assisted us with our search throughout the day.
'It is a very tragic outcome, and my thoughts and the thoughts of all of us at Thames Valley Police remain with William's family at this extremely distressing time.'
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That led to Richard being interviewed by four registrars and a lawyer from the local council, all of whom were satisfied that he did have capacity to marry. The wedding therefore went ahead. "Richard was a short-tempered, authoritarian father who expected his children to work hard on the farm and would brook no dissent. He is variously described by his children as 'controlling, manipulative and unpredictable'.....He was capable of falling out with his children." In relation to the proprietory estoppel claim, the barrister told the judge that Adam had already been handed land and property worth over £10m by his father before he died. "It is clear that Richard wanted his children to benefit from the fruits of his labours, and in that regard he treated Jennifer's children on an equal footing with the children of his first marriage," he said. "Adam worked on the farm for his father, and in the later years he did so to a greater extent than his siblings, but he was aware of Richard's mercurial character. "He knew that Richard had five other children by his first marriage, and seven children by Jennifer, all of whom had an expectation of inheritance. "Adam was rewarded for his work, including by Richard making lifetime gifts to him of substantial parcels of land, which have proved to be extremely valuable. "Adam relies on a number of alleged statements made by Richard as assurances. Any statements made by Richard in Adam's early years were not sufficiently clear statements intended to be taken seriously. Adam himself states that 'when I was young it was just a hope…' "Richard was an inherently unreliable character, whose track record was of breaking promises," the barrister concluded.