Inquest Day Three
Cop can't recall 'urgency', by Luke Costin, AAP
Witness: Graham Child - former senior constable, Byron Bay Police 1997
Mr Childs said he has no independent recollection of taking the report from Sally, but assumes from his notes that she only wanted the matter noted.
"Without trying to sound dismissive, it would appear the information I was given didn't create a sense of urgency."
"To record a matter as occurrence only, it would be a person coming into a police station and saying I just want this recorded."
He doubts he knew Marion had secretly changed her name to Florabella Natalia Marion Remakel or that her passport was used to re enter Australia on 2 August 1997. Such information was "out of the ordinary" and he would have noted it.
He assumes he'd have filed it as a missing person case, had the words "I want to report my mother as a missing person" been used, and denies making an error. He said many people would walk in and report things they only wished police to note.
Mr Childs, who joined NSW Police in 1977 and retired in 2002, admitted he'd not been aware of the standing policy on missing person reports when speaking to Sally. He'd also never run a missing person case.
In a statement to the inquest,
the boss of the NSW Missing Persons Registry says Marion should have been considered a missing person in October 1997.
But Mr Childs was "a little astounded" someone could form an opinion in hindsight "when they weren't there at the time and didn't have the information I had at the time".
Summary:
- he was a police officer for TWENTY years and a Senior Constable at the time
- yet claims to not have known the procedures for missing persons nor ever run a missing person's case
- he just thought Sally wanted him to make a note her mum was missing and account was drained from the bank a few doors down, not actually follow up on any of it
- he denies making mistakes.