Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Glasgow Live
Glasgow Live
National
Edel Kenealy

Paisley family of missing man Barry McCullagh appeal for help with mass searches

The distraught family of a man who disappeared over a week ago is holding a mass search for him starting at the last place he was seen.

Barry McCullagh went missing from Paisley's Royal Alexandra Hospital on Wednesday, October 5. He had been taken to the hospital after suffering a seizure and hallucinations.

The 40-year-old was allowed out of the building at 5.20pm to have a cigarette but was captured on CCTV moments later walking on Corsebar Road away from the hospital, reports the Paisley Daily Express.

Read more: Murderer out celebrating 18th birthday killed stranger in unprovoked Rutherglen attack

His desperate family - who have a second brother in intensive care at Glasgow’s Queen Elizabeth University Hospital – have been frantically looking for Barry and appealing for information in the days since his disappearance.

They are now asking Buddies to help them look for him and plan to hold mass searches on Thursday and Saturday.

His sister Stacey McCullagh said: “Barry wasn’t in a good state of mind the night before he went missing, that’s why we called an ambulance. He wasn’t the normal Barry, he was hallucinating.

“He has been taking seizures for the past year-and-a-half and he took a seizure on Saturday and he hadn’t been right since so we phoned the ambulance on Tuesday. He went with them to hospital and that was the last time we saw him.”

She added: “We just can’t get over the fact that he is out there somewhere on his own. We just don’t know what has happened. He has nothing on him, no money and no phone or anything.

“He could have wandered somewhere and fallen, we just don’t know.”

Stacey, her sister April and extended family – who all live in Castlemilk – have been travelling to Paisley day and night to search for dad-of-two Barry.

The family is focusing their search on the woodlands and locations in the immediate area.

They have now organised a detailed search plan and are asking people living in Paisley, especially those who know the area well, to join them in looking for Barry.

Stacey added: “We are asking please that if anyone can help to meet us there. Every little helps, every extra pair of fresh eyes, we would be so grateful.

"A close friend has printed maps out for us so we are going to meet tomorrow to hopefully cover all of the woodland areas and cross them off as we go.”

A particularly harrowing time for the McCullagh family, Stacey’s brother Brian was admitted to the Queen Elizabeth five months ago for tests and has been in intensive care ever since.

Her third sibling, April, is also seven months pregnant and worried sick about both her brothers.

Stacey said: “Our heads are just everywhere. They are my two brothers.

“My sister April is pregnant. She has just eight weeks left and they are trying everything to keep her calm.

“Mum and dad, their heads are all over the place. I’m trying to stay strong for mum and dad and just get Barry home.”

Renfrewshire police have completed several searches for Barry, with sniffer dogs used on Tuesday evening.

Barry is described as 5'9 in height with short black hair. On the day of his disappearance, he was wearing a black softshell jacket, black and navy jogging bottoms and white and grey trainers.

Anyone with any information on Barry’s whereabouts is asked to contact 101 quoting reference 3910 of 5 October, 2022.

People who want to take part in either of the searches should meet the McCullagh family at the cricket pitches opposite the entrance to the RAH at 10am on Thursday and Saturday.

READ NEXT -

Glasgow landlord refused licence after police called out 12 times

Glasgow mum devastated as autistic daughter 'lured to park and beaten unconscious'

Murderer out celebrating 18th birthday killed stranger in unprovoked Rutherglen attack

Glasgow petrol station incident sees man threaten to 'set woman and car on fire'

Greyhound charity in desperate plea for foster carers to help free up rehoming space

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.