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

  • #4,741
It has not been confirmed that the aerial drone photo of the person riding a motorbike is the tracker.

In an earlier post I observed that the motorbike is green, as is the motorbike the tracker was photographed using in news photos.

This may be a coincidence (green motorbikes are not unusual) or the tracker may have been using a bike belonging to the Murray’s or the drone photo may indeed have captured the tracker.

I think the photo was released as an example to demonstrate that the AI technology can accurately identify a human and differentiate humans from animals, living animals from carcasses etc.

Hope that clarifies things a bit.

*edited for grammar.

thank you
I wish the police had explained this when they released it
 
  • #4,742
Hi jepop,
I enjoy reading your posts.
In-laws in QLD have a very large property. They have a grassed section for children and grandchildren and no sandpit because snakes are attracted to sandpits. On removing a sandpit in my last property we found a nest of baby brown snakes.
In this vicinity of GL snakes are everywhere and as I have earlier stated the active months. September. Tiger snakes and copperheads are attracted to sand particularly wet sand. Did GL have a bucket and spade and perhaps a hose to cool him down?
My points are very relevant to this case given that we have only been given few areas of point of contact and where individuals are placed.
Im not sure about the snake angle. Surly being a rural property they would have a snake bite kit on hand in case of bites. Surly if the child was bitten paramedics would be notified and the child transported to hospital. Im unsure of the snake types for that area but being inland i would presume brown snakes which are aggressive and deadly. Tiger snakes are more coastal as are copperheads. Copperhead snakes are shy and generally not aggressive unless startled.
 
  • #4,743
hi jepop,
Thank you for your post.
Further in the investigation in the disappearance of Gus Lamont:
This is a link of 43 brown snake eggs found in a sandpit in 7 nests
Dozens of reptile eggs found in Australian school sandpit

' "I believed they were brown snake eggs due to the fact that they were seen in the area and that when I shone a light through the egg, I saw a small striped baby snake," Mr Miller explained'
Per your link it seems this was seen as an unusual occurrence (in the state of NSW at least), additionally at the end of the day (scroll down in the report) they could not be sure they were not the eggs of a harmless reptile.

I feel like this convo is branching off into OT territory at this point, so I'm moving on. Thank you for posting that interesting link though.
 
  • #4,744
Quite a detailed summary by a local Daily Mail reporter on Gus Lamont's case as it stands.

 
  • #4,745
Im not sure about the snake angle. Surly being a rural property they would have a snake bite kit on hand in case of bites. Surly if the child was bitten paramedics would be notified and the child transported to hospital. Im unsure of the snake types for that area but being inland i would presume brown snakes which are aggressive and deadly. Tiger snakes are more coastal as are copperheads. Copperhead snakes are shy and generally not aggressive unless startled.
The most common snakes in the region are various brown snakes - Eastern brown, western brown, king brown, the common death adder, bandy bandy, desert whip snake, yellow faced whip snake, red bellied black and tiger snakes are also possible.
 
  • #4,746
  • #4,747
hi jepop,
Thank you for your post.
Further in the investigation in the disappearance of Gus Lamont:
This is a link of 43 brown snake eggs found in a sandpit in 7 nests
Dozens of reptile eggs found in Australian school sandpit

' "I believed they were brown snake eggs due to the fact that they were seen in the area and that when I shone a light through the egg, I saw a small striped baby snake," Mr Miller explained'
Thanks for this info wulfmoon, but would you please indulge me in expressing my frustration at continually hearing about snakes !
I grew up in the bush, I’m aware of snakes, of the danger of their bites and of the need to respect their territory, not to threaten them etc etc. (We were always taught - if you see a snake, stand still and let it pass. …. although I recall a time when playing chasey around the house my young cousin had no time to stop so he just jumped over the top & kept going ! leaving me wide eyed and stuck to my spot behind )

However re Gus, the question (imo) has always been ‘ where is he ?’ and in reality, if he’d been bitten by a snake and died as a result, in the most basic of normal situations he should still have been found in the area of the homestead.

Classifications of ‘criminal activity’ / major crime etc comes in when there’s human intervention in the disappearance of a person. … and in the way I heard things the other day, SAPOL have determined that someone known to Gus is responsible for him no longer being present ( with great emphasis put on absolving Gus’s parents of any involvement)

It’s quite obvious to me from the police statement that focus is on either Josie or Shannon. And so I think it’s relevant that I focus my attention there. .. as to who, why did it happen / how did it happen , and where is his little body. This to me is quite confronting, given the remoteness, extreme heat & animals of prey in almost desert like conditions.

The Who etc is still a work in progress for my addled brain !
 

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