Paraphrased
Police have turned their focus to an area in Gray's Point Monday afternoon, where BLC grew up
Police unable to account for a crucial "gap in time" when BLC dumped the bodies
Police have revealed 000 call made from Mr Davie's phone before suddenly being disconnected, 4 min after shots heard. Police initially said was from Mr Baird's phone.
NSW Police sent a patrol car to Mr Davies’ Waterloo residence, and then to Mr Baird’s home suburb of Paddington to conduct a welfare check based on the call. Police earlier claimed they had not attempted such a follow-up.
Despite digital access to the location of Mr Davies’ phone at the time of the triple-zero call, officers involved in the welfare check failed to check the right Paddington address, leaving the crime scene undiscovered for another three days.
The daily telegraph reported that officers tried to call the number back but there was no answer.
It is alleged that Lamarre-Condon had access to his “Mobipol”, a device that provides access to the state police database, despite being off-duty at the time.
The next day BLC made "partial admission" to a female acquaintance that he had been involved in the death of two people.
On Monday afternoon police searched houses and a creek in the Grays Point street in which Lamarre-Condon grew up. Detectives were door knocking residents requesting CCTV.
A helicopter was seen searching along Dent's Creek, which leads to Port Hacking.
Lamarre-Condon family home was on the waterfront of Dent's Creek. They flew around waterway from the house to swallow rock & also went over primary school & a bit by entrance to the national park.
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At 4.30am on Thursday, he left Bungonia and spent time around Sydney before driving to Newcastle, where he went to a friend’s home and asked for a hose to clean the van, police say.
He stayed in Newcastle until 5am Friday, when he drove to Sydney and met an uncle where he grew up in the Sutherland Shire. At 10.39am, he walked into Bondi police station.