It's specifically
a letter discussed at great length on podcast and inquest. The letter sent to Marion's dad from Salvos says that they spoke to 'Police missing persons' who claimed
they spoke to 'Security at Colonial', who told
them it was definitely Marion who withdrew $80,000 on 5 Oct 1990, and she spoke of 'starting a new life'. But during the inquest, Colonial said that they never had a securities officer.
Also, it was the inconsistency of the date provided in letter,
5 Oct 1990, that made Sally and her dad concerned that it wasn't properly investigated, and again, wonder if anyone had actually seen Marion.
This prompted Sally to request that Salvos investigate again, starting from scratch. They did, and eventually apologised and admitted that they never physically sighted Marion nor can they confirm if Marion truly made the statements in their original letter.
As we now know, the date of the Ashmore withdrawal was
15 Oct 1997. So Salvos and Police did pass on incorrect information.
I'd like to clarify another question I saw floating around no one was able to answer.
There is speculation that the Salvation Army said that police/bank/Marion said
“you can stop looking for me in Byron Bay as I’m far, far away and you can tell Sally that I’m annoyed with her for not putting any money in my account after selling the car”.
Sally believes what happened was this: she and her grandad had several conversations about what to do with the sale of the car money as they didn’t want to put it in Marion’s account if it was only going to be drained by a thief. They also discussed what the Salvos letter said about Marion 'wanting to start a new life', and if so, would she be angry if the car sale money wasn't deposited? In the end they together decided to hold onto the money until they saw Marion again in person, because they believed they would
Sally thinks this conversation was a confused by her sick grandfather who was devastated about the situation and dying of cancer at the time. She believes he mixed it up thinking it had been Salvos who said it too, like the other things. When it was, in fact, his own painful worry.
The Salvation Army has since confirmed that
they never give a family that much personal detail about a missing person. It's their policy to give basics only such as 'not found' or 'found safe and well'.
So basically, it never happened. Hope that makes sense.
Does any document or letter explicitly state that the security officer spoken to was from the colonial at Ashmore?
The reason I ask is because a situation I’m thinking is likely is that because Byron Bay police had carriage of the case and because Sally had only told them about the CBA account, it’s likely that Byron Bay police made their enquiries with the local CBA branch.
I’m also going to guess that a security officer might be someone that covers a few different branches in an area and not just one branch. A security officer or someone had to have existed because the salvos wouldn’t just pull that info out of thin air.
Mjjj14, you're
kind of on the right track...
It
is weird that Sally reported the 20 or so withdrawals at CBA to Byron Bay Police. Yet they instead passed on information about the one Colonial withdrawal to Salvos that Sally hadn't even known about, without seeming to have made any enquiries. Byron Bay Police also never again mentioned CBA, despite it being what triggered the search for Marion and her welfare.
It's NOT Salvos who pulled that info out of thin air - it was Byron Bay Police. In the inquest, it is clear no one can understand how Byron Bay Police got the Colonial Ashmore info or came to the conclusion Marion had been seen.