Cadavar dogs used in search for missing Navan woman

A search for missing Navan mother, Lizzie Clarke, was carried out in Navan by cadaver dogs last week by Trace Missing Persons Ireland.
The group said the search was carried out at the request of the young woman’s family.
A search was carried out using cadaver and forensic detection dogs of an area in Navan on Thursday.
According to a spokesperson for Trace Missing Persons Ireland, further follow up searches will commence in the coming days of a number of locations around the town.
25 year Lizzie Clarke went missing from Claremont Estate, Navan in November 2013. She is described as being 5ft 3ins in height, approximately seven stone in weight, with brown hair and brown eyes. She was last seen wearing a yellow hooded top and blue jeans.
Anyone with any further information is asked to phone Trace Missing Persons Ireland on 085-8744032.  Last year, Elizabeth’s family said they feared the young mother may be dead.
Navan Gardai launched an appeal for information on her whereabouts in February last year, but the search for her whereabouts has proved fruitless to date. In April last year, her family waited on tenterhooks when they heard that bones had been found at a derelict site in the Athlumney area of Navan, but they turned out to be animal bones.
However, the incident brought home the fact to her worried relatives that she may be dead.  
Elizabeth grew up in Portrane, Co Dublin, and the family then moved to Bettystown. She had been living with her partner and his family in Claremont Estate for a number of years and was the mother of two children. Her family in Dublin had little contact with her over the past few years and her family in Navan are believed to have last seen her in November 2013. The family have been putting up posters and handing out leaflets all over Meath and Kildare in a bid to help trace her movements around the time she disappeared.