Australia Australia - William Tyrrell Disappeared While Playing in Yard - Kendall (NSW) #78

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Thank you Drsleuth…. I found plenty of pics of him in that link you kindly supplied. I still can’t find his name….


View attachment 525739

In the top pic he seems to be staring at the camera, defying us to identify him…. Hehe…. ;)

Perhaps he is Scott Jamieson then. I would think that, considering his involvement, he would be among that crew.

I can't find any named images of Jamieson. Not under SFR, not under NSW Missing Persons Squad, not under NSW Police.

imo
 

The man in charge of the investigation, Detective Chief Inspector David Laidlaw, along with Detective Senior Sergeant Mark Dukes, Detective Sergeants Scott Jamieson and Andrew Lonergan, and Detective Senior Constable Sean Ogilvy, are all in civilian clothes working harder than anyone on site every day.
 

In court on Tuesday, Ms Grahame was handed a letter from the DPP, outlining the status of that request for advice.

In the letter, the Director of Public Prosecutions, Sally Dowling SC, said that NSW Police had in April asked her office to 'suspend' its request for advice until the conclusion of the final block of inquest hearings.
 
Ah yes the speaker of these words shortly before the 2021 search

“We know why, we know how, we know where he is,”
“We aren’t guessing, we aren’t bluffing.
“We are saying we know what happened and why it happened and where [his body] is.”
Narrator voice: they were bluffing.

I find it quite hard to accept and reconcile NSWPol’s approach to all of this.
 
Yep, and as I've said here before, I expect the Coroner will have some words to say in her report about the way police went about this case, and I don't think they will be flattering.
Do you think so ?
As much I think the police investigation has been appalling, I’m not sure it’ll be too seriously challenged.

I don’t know much about coronial enquires but I thought the Coroner was pretty much a law unto itself - meaning that I thought the Coroner could / would call anyone & ask anything that was thought necessary to get to the bottom of things. Maybe I’m wrong but I l don’t feel that’s happened so far. ..
 
Do you think so ?
As much I think the police investigation has been appalling, I’m not sure it’ll be too seriously challenged.

I don’t know much about coronial enquires but I thought the Coroner was pretty much a law unto itself - meaning that I thought the Coroner could / would call anyone & ask anything that was thought necessary to get to the bottom of things. Maybe I’m wrong but I l don’t feel that’s happened so far. ..

Coroners will call out police practices when they feel it necessary. Indeed Ms Grahame has done so earlier this year:

Handing down her findings in the inquest into the death of Todd McKenzie today, Deputy State Coroner Harriet Grahame was highly critical of the practices of NSW Police on the day.


At the very least, I'm expecting her to have something to say about the shambolic situation in place in the first day or so in Kendall when all sorts of people were allowed to trample all over the incident site, to the detriment of forensic evidence gathering and dog squad operations.
 
Thanks, I put these up weeks ago, they are on the previous page
Thanks drsleuth, I thought someone wonderful like you would have! Thank you !! I wasn’t sure as I have sadly, not been following little Williams case very close of late.
 
That guy is always there, but never named! I just cannot remember his name. So annoying!
doing a google image search i came across this article which i hadnt seen before.....

EXCLUSIVE: Human remains expert who cracked one of Australia's biggest murder mysteries reveals HOW he'll try to solve the William Tyrrell case​

 

Beneroon Drive in Kendall, where William Tyrrell went missing in 2014.(ABC News: Wiriya Sati)

Sloppy work credited to the ABC's Wiriya Sati, referring to the street as 'Beneroon' Drive. I note the incorrect spelling on the street sign, evidently grabbed from Google.
 
Beneroon Drive in Kendall, where William Tyrrell went missing in 2014.(ABC News: Wiriya Sati)

Sloppy work credited to the ABC's Wiriya Sati, referring to the street as 'Beneroon' Drive. I note the incorrect spelling on the street sign, evidently grabbed from Google.
The photograph would have done better a little further down in the article, under the heading "Early mistakes".
 
The photograph would have done better a little further down in the article, under the heading "Early mistakes".

I have often wondered why the local council allowed a misspelled street sign to remain. They surely must have had years in which to correct the error.
 

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