A fresh search has been launched in England for the body of a young boy abducted by Moors murderers Ian Brady and Myra Hindley in 1964.
A team of volunteers began the renewed hunt for Keith Bennett's body at the weekend after hundreds of people donated money to fund the project.
So far, the volunteers from a Welsh search and rescue team have focused on Saddleworth Moor on the Lancashire-Yorkshire border and a new area near the village of Greenfield.
Keith was just 12 when he was abducted and killed by Brady and Hindley while walking to his grandmother's house in the town of Longsight, near Manchester.
He was one of five children the pair abducted and murdered in the 1960s.
Keith's mother, 76-year-old Winnie Johnson said she hoped her son would be found so she could finally bury him.
"That is all I want out of life now because I want him found before I die, and before Brady dies, and that will kill Brady," she told the Liverpool Echo.
"He (Brady) knows where he is. He admitted it and that is how I knew I would never find him alive again.
"I want the closure and I want him buried before anything happens to me.
"But I also want him buried knowing Brady's alive when they do it, because it is getting on his goat now.
"He knows where he is, but he does not want him found."
Police abandoned their own search for Keith in 2009 after failing to find any trace of his remains.
Brady and Hindley were jailed for life in 1966 for murdering three children.
In 1987, they confessed to Keith's murder and that of 16-year-old Pauline Reade, who disappeared in 1963.
Hindley died in jail in November 2002, aged 60.
Brady has remained behind bars for 25 years at the high-security Ashworth Hospital in Merseyside.