The first call (1267), on October 8, "nominated Khandalyce as possibly being the little girl in the suitcase".
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-10-...ed-breakthrough-in-suitcase-girl-case/6873196
Only days before 2 October this article published which included pictures of the clothing of both
presumably unknown victims.
http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/little-gi...tim-of-wynarkas-homicide-20150923-gjt1ah.html
South Australian-based detectives believe the girl found in Wynarka was killed between 2007 and 2009 before she was put in the suitcase and dumped on the side of Karoonda Highway....
The case has similarities to the discovery of a girl's skeleton in NSW's Belanglo State Forest in 2010.....
Detectives have gone back to the Commonwealth agencies and asked them to widen the search criteria.
These names
will be cross-referenced against state records and some will be eliminated from the investigation quickly. Door knocking will be the last resort, police don't want to cause unnecessary panic.
Inspector Hutchins said
immunity from prosecution could be on the table for those not directly involved in murder of the Wynarka child.
"If you're on the periphery of this crime, come to us before we come to you," he said. "There is things we can offer, like immunity."
Until someone's conscience prompts them to come forward, both the girl in the suitcase and the girl in Belanglo State Forest will remain nameless.
Police have been down many avenues to identify this girl, including those never explored by NSW homicide investigators before........
The females teeth show signs of dental work typical of Western dentistry and commonly carried out in Australia, but so far weve been unable to match them with dental records, he said.
If we receive information to point us in the direction of who she might be,
we would be in a position to confirm her identity through dental records.
http://www.news.com.au/national/pol...glo-state-forest/story-e6frfkvr-1226212134175
He said it was a "miracle" that police were able to find "ante-mortem" samples, or blood samples collected from both mother and daughter at birth and stored in medical record systems.
"That allows you to positively identify one set of remains to a person whose DNA was collected before they were killed," professor Austin said.
"We now move onto a different phase [in] the investigation
where we will look at the clothing in the suitcase and the suitcase itself to see if there is some DNA profiles there that might prove useful for the police in their investigation," he said......
"We may get a result, it is certainly not guaranteed."
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-10-22/forensic-team-searches-wynarka-suitcase-for-dna/6874714
Reading the 2 October article in hindsight I do think LE had made the link.