Australia AUSTRALIA - 4YO AUGUST (GUS) Missing from rural family home in Outback, Yunta, South Australia, 27th Sept 2025

  • #601
1759806431939.webp
Follow-up on POL53 activity

After posting earlier about the helicopter’s departure and signal drop, I’ve now noticed it comes back online over Jamestown at 18:34:30 UTC (around 4:04 am local time).

So, in total:
  • Departed Adelaide ~11:31 pm local
  • Signal lost near Jamestown ~12:19 am
  • Back online over the same area ~4:04 am

Looks like it was operating through the night, possibly below ADS-B range for several hours.
 
  • #602
  • #603
I think its very strange that they have not found anything relating to Gus.

The lack of information being released is strange too IMO.

I would normally expect a relative or family friend to be speaking out but something seems off here.

If Gus simply wandered off I think he would have been found by now. How can you leave a boy this young without any Supervision for such a long time? Something is not adding up here.

 
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  • #604
It probably has no relevance whatsoever, but that Saturday was the first day of school holidays in South Australia.
Replying to myself: I suppose it could mean that the parents had travelled to Adelaide to collect older children from boarding school, and hadn't yet returned. Leaving Gus with grandma.
 
  • #605
I’m interested in understanding:
  • How long it typically takes to get a police helicopter launched once a missing-child report is received in regional SA.
This is case by case and depends on several factors (terrain/conditions/circumstances/timeframes/age/resource and team availability/travel time/subjects background info etc.)

Even if the decision to deploy an aircraft is made early, getting it airborne will take some time. Crews are called in, equipment is checked, fuel loaded, flight plan filed etc. I don’t have data on average ground to air timeframes but looking over the extensive SAR procedures does provide some clues.

  • Whether this timing is consistent with normal procedure or if there are usually faster deployments.

The timing could be explained by operational and logistical factors common in Australian search and rescue cases. The sequence of events below demonstrate SAR procedures in cases similar to Gus’s and may provide some insight:


1. Gus is reported missing around 20:30, emergency response must first assess risk and determine the urgency level, verify details and identify suitable resources for deployment. The immediate line of enquiry also determines the initial strategy (in this case, a ground search team was mobilised, followed by the aircraft.)

2. POL53 was based at Adelaide, crew had to be alerted, briefed and the aircraft prepared for flight. Night time operations may require additional checks (fuel/weather/air traffic clearance.)

3. Adelaide to Jamestown flight times would also depend on several factors. Based on knowing absolutely nothing about helicopters, best I can offer is a questionable estimate of roughly 1-2+ hours in optimal conditions. This tiki tour may have been a staging point for crew to meet coordinators or access communication infrastructure and resources.

4. Aircraft operations likely require liaison with ground teams before entering a search area to ensure coverage is coordinated and any updates are reported.


  • And whether this affects anyone’s view of the official timeline

Not really no, although public information is still fairly minimal for this case.

Is it possible aircrew had been instructed to search the wider area before arriving at the scene? SAR had been on foot at the property for some time covering the initial radius, potentially identifying the need to widen the search area. Given the time between the last sighting, the missing persons report, the arrival of SAR and the limited visibility, a wider search radius is plausible.
 
  • #606
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  • #607
I think its very strange that they have not found anything relating to Gus.

The lack of information being released is strange too IMO.
I suspect this is intentional.
 
  • #608

Police presser from today


7NEWS Adelaide



BREAKING: Police have provided an update on the case of missing four-year-old Gus Lamont, vowing to never give up on finding the little boy.
Yesterday, a search occurred near a dam located 3.5km west of the homestead after a small bootprint was located - but that potential clue was quickly ruled out.
In recent days, police have been using a special drone with infrared capabilities to further search the property located 40km south of Yunta – the same technology used in the search for the remains of Port Lincoln murder victim Julian Story
 
  • #609
Not an easy feat...

Unless it was someone who has access to the property and knows the layout <modsnip>
Could be an Amazon delivery person for all we know. Imo
 
  • #610
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He said what he said. 🤷🏼‍♀️ MOO
 

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