Deirdre Jacob
The father of murdered Newbridge teenager Deirdre Jacob has said that the 25th anniversary of her disappearance is the right time for somebody holding a key piece of information to come forward.
A Garda press conference will be held in Newbridge to coincide with the anniversary on Friday and a prayer service has been organised in St Conleth's Church in the town for 7pm.
Michael Jacob said: "We are hoping that people will think deeply about Deirdre around the 25th anniversary and that somebody holding that small but vital piece of information will bring it to gardaí.
"We believe there is at least one person holding onto information, and now is the time to get it off their chest and come forward.
"There may be changes that have happened in 25 years and somebody might feel that now is the time to take action.
"We know this has happened in other investigations and we are hoping that it will happen in this one.
"A very small piece of information, however insignificant, even something that was overheard in conversation, could unlock the mystery and solve the disappearance.
"This person may not realise the importance of this information, and might think it won't make any difference, but we are asking them to bring it to gardaí and to let them decide.
"I know that the gardaí will treat this person with all the sensitivity and sympathy that is required."
The young Co Kildare woman vanished from the roadside close to her family home just outside Newbridge on July 28th, 1998.
The 19-year-old was studying in London to become a primary school teacher.
The missing persons case was upgraded to a murder investigation in 2018.
Michael also insisted that his family remains totally committed to finding Deirdre.
He continued: "We have one mission and that is to find Deirdre. We know she is lying somewhere. We would love to have her back. It would bring a mighty satisfaction.
"But of course it would never bring closure as that word doesn't make sense in this case. It would never answer all the 'whys' that we have."
Michael encouraged people to keep Deirdre in their thoughts in the days around the anniversary and to initiate conversations about the student in the hope that it may unearth new information.
He added: "25 years is a long, long time. We have gone through a lot of heartache. And at every family occasion, Deirdre is missing, and that is deeply felt by all of us."
The Jacob family also encouraged people to attend the prayer service to mark Deirdre's disappearance in St Conleth's Church at 7pm on Friday.
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