i still dont think its really evedence
What am I missing here? It seems Jim and Nancy Beamont would know whether their children would recognize Harry Phipps in 1966, regardless of any connection by marriage that hadn't even happened yet. If he was a wealthy and 'famous' figure, the man about town, isn't possible Jane would have trusted him based on his status alone?
With so much circumstantial evidence, I'm sensing where there's smoke there's fire. I'm just not sure what's actually burning. Could Haydn be the "boyfriend Jane got down the beach" and be more involved than just a treehouse witness? If he were a knowing/unknowing accomplice that would explain why Harry dying in 2004 wasn't the end of the saga.
as a local businessman and prominent member of the community isn't it likely that Phips would of been recognised if he went around playing with random children at the beach
Maybe the buffer of it being Jane's 'decision' to return the change made her drop her guard. He gave them money and trusted them enough to leave, so he must be a good Samaritan. Especially before stranger danger, Jane being shy didn't necessarily mean she had an active guard to drop. It seems she'd have said "Mr. So-n-so" rather than "the man" if he'd given her a name. He could have ingratiated himself over time, but that makes it more likely he'd be recognized if/when people thought back on it, and that the children would've mentioned him at home. So maybe this really was a one-day thing; he chose, or was compelled, to act on a crowded day with children everywhere. Either way, he must have known they weren't with an adult who was sitting down the beach. Was he sitting and watching the 3 of them arrive alone and put his plan into action.I think what is important is .... "A shop assistant at the bakery recalled the children mentioning “the man” and witnesses said they saw the children playing at Colley Reserve with a tall, blond, thin-faced man who appeared to be in his 30s'. Link
It sounds as if Phipps fits this description. It also sounds as if this man was bonding himself with the young children.
And there is speculation in one of the articles I posted that this man could be the one that gave the children the one pound note for their lunch, and they were to bring the change to him at his house. The Phipps house was on their way home.
He may well have been recognised on the day as being there but so were thousands of other people on that very hot Australia Day at the beach. He was never named as a suspect until decades later so nobody was thinking "Oh yeah, I saw Harry Phipps that day." He just wasn't on the radar.as a local businessman and prominent member of the community isn't it likely that Phips would of been recognised if he went around playing with random children at the beach
A newer paywalled article states that the slab was not concrete as first thoughtBREAKING: A private search for the remains of the Beaumont children at North Plympton has unearthed a new area of interest.
A large slab of concrete has been found that investigators believe has no reason to be there.
The latest dig has today broken ground on a site that has never been searched before.
Download the 7NEWS app: https://7news.link/7NEWSapp
A newer paywalled article states that the slab was not concrete as first thought
“the discovery was “sensationalised” and was in fact cement stabilised sand which “looks like it has been added after 1966”.
Harry Phipps drove a RHD Pontiac( Laurentian I think) a top of the range expensive make of car. Can't have been too many around as Australians drive on the right side of the road & LHD vehicles were prohibited by law at the time.