Australia Australia - Gerard Ross, 11, Rockingham, WA, 14 Oct 1997

  • #301
"But investigators did not consider them relevant as they matched the blue overshoe covers used by police at crime scenes and the green mortuary sheets used by mortuary staff."


A bit of a different MO, between CSK and the abduction and death of GR.
 
  • #302
  • #303
$1 million reward for WA cold case murder

The family of 11-year-old Gerard Ross, who was murdered in Western Australia 23 years ago, have urged the public to come forward with information after the state government announced a reward for bringing his killer to justice.

Gerard disappeared while walking along Kent Street in Rockingham on his way to a comic store with his brother, who had skated ahead on his rollerblades, on October 14, 1997.

His body was found dumped in a pine plantation, about 20km southeast of Rockingham, two weeks later.

Police Minister Michelle Roberts on Wednesday announced a reward of up to $1 million for information leading to his killer's apprehension and conviction.

"Today Gerard should be a young man, perhaps with a family of his own," she said on the 23rd anniversary of his disappearance.

"He was robbed of that future and his parents were robbed of that future.

"I hope that with this added incentive, we can come closer to resolving the murder. I know that our police will never give up on pursuing justice for Gerard."

In a statement, the Ross family said it was grateful to the government for the substantially increased reward.

"As we head into another year without him, we are sadly reminded that someone somewhere knows what happened to our beautiful funny and loving boy," the family said.

"From Gerard's family and friends on both sides of the world, and the community of Western Australia, please come forward and take this opportunity to provide justice for Gerard."

Ms Roberts said anyone who came forward with information leading to the killer's conviction may be considered for a pardon or protection from prosecution.

WA Police last year said all evidence linked to the abduction and murder was being re-investigated as part of a fresh cold case review.
 
  • #304
This may help
The spot were gerard was found indicates to me a local knowledge of the area . Somebody passing through (circus) couldnt possibly find this spot
 
  • #305
Hi I am brand new to this page, I stumbled across Gerard's case just recently and its just something I cant let go of. from what I have been reading it seems to me that the police know who the killer is, they just don't have enough evidence
I cant get past the suspect they had that was 26 at the time. the police knocked on his door but he didn't answer, then ten days later he went to the police and said he had seen the 2 boys.. Gerard's body was found 14 days after he was taken, to me is seems like he kept Gerard, decarded his body cleaned up and then went to the police... this suspects house had blood on the wall, at his parents house and in a car he has access too, i think he took him to his house, which i believe to be 98 Kent street, (i read that this suspect had no alibi, that day he was fixing breaks on a car and running errands, if you look on google earth at 98 Kent street it looks like some type of car junk yard) then for some reason, over the next ten days he was killed, then taken the the parents house and placed in the parents cream car and taken out to the pine plantation.
 
  • #306
so i think the murderer is today a 49 year old male that in 1997 lived at 98 kent street, possibly ran a scrap metal, or car junk yard, possibly a mechanic ( i think i will start looking at mechanics that where open in 1997 in the area between Rockingham and kwinana, if you look at google earth you will see how close the kwinana tavern is to 98 kent street, the nurse said a man had told her he knew who the killer was because a man told him he had done it, at the kwinana pub... its possible they frequently stopped in there after work if they worked in the area) I have been thinking about the model aeroplanes in the room, possibly he was part of a club back in the day? I feel like this suspect has been hidden from the internet, trying to get any info on this suspect has been really hard, this case is heart breaking
 
  • #307
Hi all - just been reading entire thread. I don't have any investigation or theories to add, but I also lived in Rockingham for many years. I had a house on Kent st not far from GRs abduction point. So if I can help with any memories of the area etc, I'll try. Life changed a lot for me with GR loss. I was working full time at the time and had two young children in school, so I actually quit work due to it all. I've also lived in the caravan park at the end of Kent, and I'm pretty sure circus people never stayed there. They've always stayed on site at their circus (animals to care for etc).

I'm so sorry you had be so close to such a disgraceful crime.
do you by any chance have any memories of who used to live at 98 Kent street? and was that house a scrap car yard or something similar?
do you remember if there was a mobile mechanic in the area ?
 
  • #308
  • #309
seems they are onto someone
 

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will post up when some snips when I get a chance
 
  • #312
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My theory is that it was the same 3 boys involved with killing Phillip Vidot in November 1995 but they werent sentenced until 2 years later in November 1997, The police probably knew that if the truth came out it would come back on them for not locking up these boys sooner hence why the taskforce were divided, if you look at the brutality of the first murder and then when Jeremy Mclaughlin again murdered in 2011 in christchurch the girl was found with a ligature around her neck and a sock stuffed in her mouth I am pretty sure from what I remember this is similar to how Gerard was found.
 
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snip 2
 

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  • #316

Retired Detective Superintendent Deborah Wallace is making it her mission to finally give a grieving husband the truth about his wife’s brutal murder.

Investigative TV Series, Million Dollar Murders, Channel 9 and Nine Now

Three cases including Lynette White, Gerard Ross, Melissa Hunt.

Cross post from Lynette White Thread. It looks like this will be on Gerard Ross next week.
 
  • #317
Cold case detectives say they are confident they will solve the murder of Newman schoolboy Gerard Ross while assuring the investigation continues to be “active and well-resourced” 26 years after his abduction.
1699261582130.jpeg

In what has become one of WA’s most heartbreaking and enduring mysteries, the 11-year-old vanished on October 14, 1997, while walking to a comic shop with his brother in Rockingham, where they were holidaying with their family
 
  • #318
Cold case detectives say they are confident they will solve the murder of Newman schoolboy Gerard Ross while assuring the investigation continues to be “active and well-resourced” 26 years after his abduction.
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In what has become one of WA’s most heartbreaking and enduring mysteries, the 11-year-old vanished on October 14, 1997, while walking to a comic shop with his brother in Rockingham, where they were holidaying with their family
Does anyone have access to this article that they could do a summary of?
 
  • #319
Main page for season

Episode featuring Gerard Ross

You need to be signed up/logged in the see the program.
 
  • #320

New article in my local Western Australian newspaper, The West Australian, about an attempted abduction prior to Gerard’s murder.​

The Boy in the Blue Cap Gerard Ross: Could boy’s attempted kidnapping offer fresh clues to cold case?​

by Kristin Shorten

An attempted kidnapping in Western Australia three decades ago could shed new light on the unsolved 1997 murder of schoolboy Gerard Ross.

The Nightly can reveal that just a few years before 11-year-old Gerard was snatched off the street in Rockingham, another boy was almost abducted in eerily similar circumstances.

In 1994, two men had tried to grab young Ben Robbins as he walked to a friend’s house, just 35m from his home, on Hillcrest Street at Coogee.

“I was eight years old,” he told The Nightly.

“I remember a white vehicle with a bonnet pulling up and somebody jumping out and grabbing hold of me.

“I kicked and screamed and ran home.

“In all honesty, I’d sort of forgotten about it until you brought it back up.”

Mr Robbins, now a fuel truck driver, said the incident occurred out the front of his friend’s house, across the road and a couple of doors down.

“I was going up the street and they came up from behind,” he said.

“It was up at the corner house.

“I’m pretty sure I was walking up to the Johnsons’ house because I was up there all the time. It was on the grass, right out the front of their property.”

The 37-year-old said that while he cannot recall many details of the incident due to his age at the time, he vividly remembers “being hysterical about it”.

“It wasn’t the driver that jumped out. There were definitely two men,” he said.

“It was on the opposite side of the road, so I ran back down the hill and across the road to our yard.

“I remember running down to our front yard screaming.”

Ben’s mum Ruth, who was inside their house, heard her son yelling.

“Ben was screaming and I raced out the front door and the vehicle was still there but I didn’t see inside it,” she said.

The incident occurred in broad daylight on a Monday afternoon.

WA Police confirmed that on December 5, 1994, Cockburn Police responded to the attempted abduction after receiving a call from Ben’s father Lee Robbins.

“The report indicates that a statement was taken from the 8-year-old male victim and a male neighbour,” a spokesperson said.

“It was reported that two males in a white Holden utility drove alongside the victim.

“The male passenger exited the utility and grabbed the victim by the arm and tried to pull him into the vehicle.

“The victim struggled with the male, before running to his home and advising his father.”

The witnesses were only able to provide police with a “limited description” of the offender’s appearance and vehicle at the time.

“It was described as a white Holden utility – HK, HG or HQ model – with a black tarpaulin covering the rear tray area,” police said.

“In this time period, it was very common for utilities to have black canvases covering the rear tray area.

“The matter was investigated by Fremantle Detectives but unfortunately no persons were charged.”

The Nightly has spoken to residents who had lived on Hillcrest Street when the attempted abduction occurred.

Amanda Covich recalls witnessing the traumatic incident as a small child.

“Yeah (I saw it happen) but I was a kid,” she said.

“I just remember him getting away. He fought them off and he escaped. That’s what I remember.

“I’m pretty sure I was playing out in the street and we ran inside to tell our parents.”

Amanda’s mother, Dunja Covich, told The Nightly she remembers “bits and pieces”.

“I just remember Ben coming down the hill on his bike to our house saying, ‘I nearly got abducted by a couple of men in a car’ who tried to pull him in,” she said.

“That’s all I remember. I had three little children at the time and I was probably concentrating on them and keeping them inside.

“But I was shocked because it was a really safe neighbourhood.”

Charis Covich was visiting Hillcrest Street that day.

“My husband and father-in-law ran out to the road but, by then, the car had taken off and gone down Beach Street,” she said.

“Andrew Johnson was having a cigarette on his steps and saw it happen.”

Mr Johnson provided a statement to police at the time but sadly has since passed away.

One neighbour reportedly saw the two offenders watching the children with binoculars from a nearby lookout the day before the abduction attempt but The Nightly has been unable to contact her to confirm this account.

Ms Covich said that after hearing about this sighting, she had gone to the lookout and found “lots of cigarette butts and beer bottles lying around”.

“Coogee, at that time, was still really rural and not built up like it is today,” she said.

“It was just a small pocket of residential and beach houses surrounded by market gardens and abattoirs.

“It was just so weird that those men were even at the lookout because only the locals knew about the lookout.”

Ms Covich believes that after hitting Cockburn Road, the men would have headed south.

“They would not have driven north because Fremantle was too built up, so they definitely would have driven south, and there was nothing but bush that way,” she said.

“The next stop, or built-up area, was Rockingham where Gerard was abducted from. Cockburn Road ran along the coast then, and it was only a 15-minute straight run to Rockingham foreshore.

“When I first heard Gerard had gone missing, I thought those two men might have been involved. What are the odds of two pairs of predators operating around that time in basically the same area?”

A few years later, Gerard disappeared during a family holiday in Rockingham, south of Perth.

On the morning of October 14, 1997, Gerard and his brother Malcolm left their holiday unit at 105 Kent Street headed for a nearby comic shop.

Gerard, 11, was on foot while 13-year-old Malcolm went ahead on his rollerblades.

They had agreed to meet at the comic shop, which was located on the beach end of the now-demolished Woolworths arcade about 1km away, but Gerard never arrived.

CCTV footage from the Gull Rockingham indicates that he was abducted from Kent St before reaching the service station 800m away.

Horse trainer Mick Miller found the boy’s body in the Karnup pine plantation, 20km away, two weeks later.

In 2019, The West Australian released an eight-part investigative documentary The Boy in the Blue Cap: The Gerard Ross Story, which is now available on The Nightly.

In an exclusive interview for the documentary, a former Kent Street resident said she saw a boy being pushed into a car outside 68 Kent Street on the morning Gerard vanished.

Rose Jurek, who police called a “credible” witness, said she saw two men struggling with a black-haired boy wearing a hat around the time that Gerard was abducted, on the street where he was last seen.

Police took Ms Jurek’s account seriously and thoroughly investigated it, but were unable to identify the people or vehicle she described.

It remains unknown if Gerard was abducted and murdered by a lone offender or an offender with an accomplice.

Some detectives have long suspected two men were involved in Gerard’s abduction because it could explain how Gerard was restrained in a moving vehicle while the other offender drove.

While police say there is nothing, at this point in time, to link Mr Robbins’ attempted abduction with Gerard’s murder, there are obvious similarities.

Both incidents were opportunistic, brazen, blitz-style attacks, committed by predators prowling Perth’s beachside suburbs on weekdays – when most adults were at work – in the mid-1990s.

Both victims were young boys, of similar age, who were approached while walking alone in “safe” neighbourhoods during the day.

Police this week said that as part of the investigation into Gerard’s murder, extensive inquiries were conducted into suspicious approaches and reported abductions as well as other incidents to identify any similar or linked offences.

“The search parameters included many years prior to 1997 and areas outside the suburb of Rockingham,” a spokesperson said.

“A large number of reports were identified, reviewed and cross-referenced, however at this time no offences have been linked to the Ross homicide.”

Police said Mr Robbins’ attempted abduction report would have been captured and reviewed during the intelligence phases of Gerard’s investigation and reviews.

“All reported abductions were reviewed to identify any similarities to the Ross homicide,” a spokesperson said.

“Where similarities were identified, further investigation was conducted.”

The investigation into Gerard’s case – now codenamed Operation Footlight – remains the second largest in WA history after the Operation Macro investigation into the Claremont serial killings.

Solving it has also become one of the special crime squad’s highest priorities with a $1 million reward for information that leads to a prosecution on offer.

“The Special Crime Squad – Homicide remains committed to resolving the 1997 homicide of Gerard Ross,” a spokesperson said.

“Any person who provides information resulting in the conviction of the person or persons responsible may be eligible for a reward of up to $1 million.”

Anyone with information about the murder of Gerard Ross, the attempted abduction of Mr Robbins or any other historic offence is urged to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.





The Boy in the Blue Cap Gerard Ross: Could boy’s attempted kidnapping offer fresh clues to cold case?
 
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