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- Jul 11, 2015
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I don't know anything about Australian law. (And for that matter I'm not a lawyer in my own country, the U.S.)The case was transferred to the Missing Persons Investigation Section of SAPOL within the week of when Gus Went missing. A person may have been considered a suspect from day one. We aren't privy to that information. Neither do we know what evidence they gathered at that time.
I doubt that it took four months to start looking at a certain person as a suspect and then start looking for evidence.
But in the U.S. if a person is labeled a suspect publicly there can begin to be a legal risk to the prosecutors if they don't eventually give a person an ability to defend themselves without taking away a persons right to remain silent. It could become an abuse of power without even using the courts, turning the suspect into a victim.
If LE publicly accuses, and doesn't ever indict, or takes too long to indict, they are participating in destroying a reputation while never giving a person a day in court. In addition, the longer such an accusation is in the ether without a charge, the more biased potential jurors become. The suspect begins to have a very valid defense that LE tainted the jury pool.
So LE in the U.S. avoids saying out loud who figures in their criminal theories too soon.
MOO