When the police searched the house in Kendall, New South Wales, William Tyrrell's adoptive parents were listed as interested

2021-11-18 08:46:26 By : Mr. Sunmart Solar

The police conducted a new search of the house of the foster grandmother who saw William Tyrrell for the last time in 2014 and are investigating the possibility that the boy fell 5m from the high balcony of the house.

On Tuesday, a team of eight policemen and two detectives gathered in the house. A policeman in blue overalls took a dead dog through the lower floors of the house and dug out a part of the house. A garden bed.

A source from the New South Wales Police confirmed that the current search of the house was to find evidence to support or reject the theory that the boy may have fallen. 

On September 12, 2014, officers of the Operation Support Group conducted a search under the balcony where William was last seen playing. They also looked around the rock ledge below.  

The police officers screened the evidence on the front lawn, while another police officer used a lawn mower to trim the overgrown plants under the house. 

The military search of the property and three bushland locations along the road was carried out after a sensational development in the Sydney case during seven years.  

A policeman took a dead dog through the lower floors of the house and the property’s garden bed as it was excavated

The police use Kason screens, a heavy-duty vibrating separator used to screen "challenging materials" such as dirt and gravel

The New South Wales Police used a sieve to screen the dirt and gravel on the front lawn when re-searching the house where William Tyrrell disappeared in 2014

The police conducted a new search of the foster grandmother’s house. William Tyrrell was photographed here a few minutes before his disappearance in 2014, and is investigating the possibility of the boy falling 5m from the high balcony of the house. . Pictured: Police search for overgrown plants from under the house

New South Wales Police Commissioner Mick Fuller said on 2GB on Tuesday morning: "There must be someone we are watching closely." Pictured: Police collect from the garden of the house where William Tyrell was last seen Dirt and rubble

New South Wales Police Commissioner Mick Fuller confirmed this morning that the police are investigating "a person" in connection with the disappearance of the missing child William Tyrell.

Commissioner Fuller said on 2GB on Tuesday morning: "There must be someone we are watching closely." He did not say who he was referring to. 

"Of course I don't want to announce too much, because in these situations, you don't want to compromise the potential results.

"These officials have been working tirelessly to reach the point where we are searching for land, again using the best technology." 

William's adoptive father has been fighting for his discovery for a long time, and he was identified overnight as one of the hundreds of people involved in the case. 

In the investigation of William’s disappearance, the lawyer who assisted Gerald Craddock said that the fact that someone is an interested person does not necessarily make them a suspect.

The Australian Daily Mail did not imply that the adoptive father was related to the disappearance of William Tyrrell, only that he was an interested person in the investigation. 

Earlier Tuesday, a military-style excavation of a secret cemetery took over William's foster grandmother's property. 

At the same time, on this road, excavators, police cars, rural fire trucks, and dozens of police officers began to gather at the corner of Cobb & Co Road in the eucalyptus jungle. 

With the explosive development of the case in Sydney, the search for the skeletons of young children began.   

The military operation of excavating a secret cemetery to find the body of William Tyrrell has begun rolling into the bushes only 700m away from where the three-year-old child disappeared in 2014

A policeman took a dead dog and searched the garden bed of Kendall Manor, where the three-year-old William disappeared.

Excavators, police cars, rural fire trucks and dozens of police officers began to gather in the eucalyptus bush near William's missing property

In September 2014, the morning when William mysteriously disappeared while playing in the courtyard of his adoptive grandmother’s house, William wore his Spider-Man costume

A rare photo, taken a few minutes before William Tyrrell’s adoptive parents saw him for the last time, playing with his sister on the balcony of his adoptive grandmother

Police sources confirmed that the current search of the house is to support or reject the theory that the boy may have fallen from the 5-meter-high balcony of the house.

In addition, it was revealed last night that William’s adoptive father had submitted an application for an arrest and violence warrant on charges related to assaults on children. 

The case will be heard by Hornsby District Court on November 23. Although the claim-is understood to be included in the police AVO file, no charges have been brought against any adoptive parents.  

The “Australian Daily Mail” can reveal that William’s biological parents had known some of these developments before these developments.

Today, an archeologist and a groundwater technologist who identified the remains hidden under the surface will arrive at the site, which has dead pools, large concrete road culverts, dense bushes and 30-meter-high virgin forests.

Three excavation areas a few meters apart are marked with tape and numbered poles, and the excavation equipment includes piles of shovels stacked on a white forensic service truck parked on site.

A staff and vehicle marshalling area with a forensic treatment area was set up in the open space near the three locations identified by the detectives of Strike Force Rosann. These locations may be burial sites for the remains of young children.

Police inspect the garden bed where the three-year-old William Tyrrell disappeared

Detectives are holding photos of the red and blue Spider-Man suit worn by William Tyrrell when he disappeared.

This morning, RFS officials had moved into an excavation site with a chain saw, and the corpse dogs were raiding on Monday afternoon in search of possible human remains.

The detective in the William Tyrrell case is calling in a forensic expert who has handled the Daniel Morcomb case. 

Hydrologist John Oxley inspected the remains of missing Queensland male students who were kidnapped and murdered in 2003. He will analyze the sediments in three search areas to find possible traces of William Tyrrell. 

Archaeologist Tony Lowe and forensic anthropologist Penny McArdle will also attend the Tyrell site. They have handled the case of two missing girls on Lake Macquarie. 

On Tuesday morning, after collecting evidence of hand screening from under the high balcony of Tyrrell's adoptive grandmother's house, the police brought a Kason sieve. Heavy-duty vibrating separators are used to screen "challenging materials" such as dirt and gravel collected by police at homes. 

The detective in the William Tyrrell case is bringing in a forensic expert who has handled the Daniel Morcomb case

The excavation site was located on both sides of Batal Creek Road in Kendal. Early theories about William's possible kidnapping featured this road because it was a connecting road to the Pacific Highway and was considered an escape route.

Today, more corpse dog teams have gathered for further excavation site cleaning.

Strike Force Rosann has set up a command post and a marshalling point on the open space bordering the construction site at the bottom of the street for a new nursing home complex.

Neighbor Vic Gunter said it "seems a little strange" that the police will target the house many years later.

"I don't think this new evidence will be brought back to the house," he said.

But for the neighbors, the kidnapping of William "is still fresh in the minds of many people."  

Despite extensive searches in September 2014, when it was believed that William had lost his way or might be kidnapped, the boy has not been found so far.

The second extensive search conducted by former detective Gary Jubelin in 2018 found no clues. 

The detectives admitted that they believed William was dead, and now they only hope to find the remains of the toddler.

Hundreds of people are interested in the seven-year investigation into William's disappearance, but no one has been charged for the boy's disappearance.  

Related persons excluded from any role in William’s disappearance include a businessman who was supposed to serve the washing machine of William’s adopted son Nana and an elderly neighbor.

In the past year, William's adoptive parents raised objections to the police investigation. 

In September, they issued a frustrating statement, lashing out at media reports that suggested that the police were looking for new people of interest. 

 As the new "intensive" search for the missing William began in the jungle, the coroner's van was waiting nearby, and new people of interest claimed to have appeared. 

On Monday, hundreds of police officers armed with chain saws and whip snipers began cutting bushes and trees in the eucalyptus bushes near Cobb & Co Road in Kendall, only two bends from where the toddler disappeared. 

Last night, Australia's "Daily Mail" witnessed seven RFS police officers standing guard at police detectives, with uniformed police guarding the road area.

Near the white van labeled "Forensic Services" and five RFS vans and trucks, there is a pile of shovels on the ground. 

Hundreds of police officers are preparing to conduct searches in three new locations in Kendal, where William Tyrrell (pictured) disappeared in September 2014-his adoptive parents are regarded by detectives as "people of interest"

Detectives investigating the mysterious fate of the three-year-old have identified the adoptive parents of the missing toddler William Tyrrell as "interested persons" (pictured, William's adoptive father helped the police in an earlier search)

The seven-year pursuit took a dramatic turn as the police sought to issue an arrest warrant against his adoptive parents, accusing his adoptive parents of assaulting children. cry)

When the police put down their tools after 6 pm, a detective put a picture of William back in his car, wearing the red and blue Spiderman suit he was wearing when he disappeared. 

The new search in Kendall, a small town on the north-central coast of New South Wales, is expected to take two to three weeks and involves forensic and skeletal experts. 

New South Wales detective supervisor Darren Bennett said the search was to find the body of three-year-old William. 

In 2018, a further search was conducted in the surrounding area to cooperate with the investigation of the cause of death of the boy's disappearance.

But on Monday, hundreds of police and emergency services came to Kendall to search three new areas that had never been investigated before.

Australia's "Daily Mail" witnessed a police search team searching the area around William's foster grandmother's home on Monday night. 

The case progressed rapidly. A coroner in New South Wales summoned all the notes, recordings and materials of the Channel 10 reporter who produced a podcast about the disappearance of William Tyrrell. 

On Monday, in the eucalyptus bushes near William's foster grandmother's home, police officers armed with chainsaws and whip scissors (pictured) began to cut the bushes and trees

Police and rural firefighters lead a new hunt, while the coroner’s van is waiting nearby (pictured)

 No trace of William (pictured) was found and no one was charged

Ten journalists, Leah Harris, produced the "Where is William Tyrell?" podcast three years ago, in which they found new information about the child's inexplicable disappearance.

It's unclear what the detectives hope to find in this popular podcast series, but Harris said the legal notice to hand over all her information while researching the podcast was "a bit unexpected."

"They asked for a wide range of content related to podcasts-files, audio, all of which are included in the subpoena," she said.

'It seems that they just want to know what we know about the case. They want to know anything we found while researching podcasts and want us to give them all.

Someone saw the police conducting a search on the North Central Coast where William was last seen (pictured)

The new search in Kendall, a small town on the north-central coast of New South Wales, is expected to take two to three weeks, involving forensics and skeletal experts (pictured, the search team is preparing for Monday's hunt)

"They obviously have some new directions, some new strategies, which led to them issuing this subpoena after such a long time."  

Detective Chief Superintendent Darren Bennett (Darren Bennett) said that based on the specific evidence received by the police, a new search was conducted.

He said: "This activity is a response to the evidence we obtained during the investigation and is by no means speculative." 

"We are acting on behalf of the coroner, and in conjunction with the death order, she will be kept abreast of our progress.

"We very much hope that we can draw conclusions in some form."

Superintendent Bennett added that if something was found while searching the three new sites, it was "very likely" that it was a dead body.  

"We are looking for the remains of William Tyrrell, there is no doubt about that," he said. 

William Tyrrell (pictured) disappeared from his adoptive grandmother's home when he was three years old on September 12, 2014

Detective Chief Superintendent Darren Bennett (Darren Bennett) said that a new search (pictured, Monday’s house) will take two to three weeks.

As the investigation took a dramatic new turn, expert search dogs (pictured) were sent to assist the police

Superintendent Bennett confirmed that some trees will be felled to allow police and other agencies to clear the ground and "go underground."   

Since the mysterious disappearance of the little boy in September 2014, he has not been found and no one has been charged. 

The police hope that after Lieutenant State Coroner Harriet Graham concludes an 18-month investigation in October 2020, a new search will stop the investigation. 

Superintendent Bennett said that Ms. Graham is aware of plans to search these three locations and will update any future discoveries.   

The lieutenant state coroner postponed the release of her findings, which she was scheduled to announce in June.    

Detective Chief Superintendent Darren Bennett (pictured) said that "high-intensity" searches will take two to three weeks and require the work of hundreds of police officers

In September, on the seventh anniversary of the disappearance of William's grandmother, detectives returned to his home after new information was "exposed". 

Officials from Strike Force Rosann announced that they will work on the premise that the three-year-old child disappeared due to "human intervention."  

Since then, officials have remained silent about what new information prompted them to return to Kendall after nearly a decade. 

William Tyrrell Jr. (pictured) was supposed to celebrate his 10th birthday in June this year

Chief Detective Inspector David Lederlaw, the head of the strike force, said that after reviewing the materials collected by investigators during William's disappearance for seven years, further information has been exposed.  

"As our team continues to investigate and explore all avenues of investigation, our focus has always been to determine if something is missing, or if there are any details-no matter how small-that needs clarification," the inspector said in September. 

"The police are still working to find out what happened to William, but our most important job here is to bring him home for the two families."

Detectives continue to conduct interviews, searches, and other investigative activities, including investigations based on the cause of death order, and review all available materials with the assistance of experts. 

On the morning of September 12, 2014, William and his 5-year-old sister were playing in the yard wearing a Spider-Man suit. He disappeared from his adoptive grandmother's home in Kendall. 

After a five-hour drive from Sydney, the children travelled with their adoptive parents on the north-central coast of New South Wales. 

His adoptive mother was always outside, coming into the house to make tea, and she was worried if she didn't hear his voice for five minutes. 

The little boy will celebrate his 10th birthday in June.

The $1 million reward announced in 2016 still exists to obtain information on the circumstances leading to William's recovery and disappearance.  

The latest development comes after high-level sources claim that the police are honing a new person of interest and announce that a breakthrough in a nearly ten-year-old case is about to be achieved. 

However, William’s adoptive parents had previously stated that police sources said they were approaching a new suspect who had disappeared from a toddler, which was “fake news”.

"When you took away William, you plunged our world into eternal darkness. How long will you make us suffer?" said the boy’s adoptive parents, September

The couple said in a statement issued on September 7: "We are once again forced to see others objectifying William for personal gain."

"Publishing unsubstantiated statements without considering the harm caused by articles of this nature is disrespectful and devastating for everyone who knows and loves William."  

Due to state law, William's adoptive parents and biological parents were unable to determine their identity, and they all publicly called for help in finding him. 

When William disappeared, he had been playing with his little sister in the front yard of his grandmother's house, and his adoptive mother later said that she had removed her eyes from him for "five minutes"

Still missing: William Tyrrell disappeared from his adoptive grandmother's home five years ago

September 12th-Three-year-old William Tyrrell, dressed in a Spider-Man costume, disappeared from the garden while visiting a member of a foster family on the North Coast of New South Wales. 

September 21-The police stopped searching for the missing boy after searching the surrounding jungle and neighboring houses. 

January 20th-The police searched the home and company of Bill Spedding, a washing machine repairman who was supposed to be repairing the house when his three-year-old child disappeared.

Detectives took objects for testing, including mattresses, computers and vehicles. They emptied his septic tank. 

January 23-The washing machine repairman publicly denied any connection with William's disappearance and stated that due to public concern, he and his wife are on the verge of collapse.

February 19th-The homicide detective took over the case and stated that William was probably kidnapped. 

March 2-The police searched a jungle near Bonnie Mountain three days after receiving the report to no avail. 

April 17th-William's adoptive parents spoke publicly for the first time in an emotional video released by the police, but did not reveal their identities. 

April 17th-The police said the boy may be a victim of a pedophile gang. 

September 6-The 60-minute show on Channel 9 showed that two suspicious cars were parked on the street on the morning of William's disappearance. 

September 12th-"Where is William" week started a year after his disappearance. 

September 12th-A reward of $1 million was provided to obtain information that led to William's return. 

August 24-After a landmark court ruling, William's adopted son's identity was revealed.

June 12th-New South Wales Police announced the start of a four-week forensic search of the jungle by Strike Force Rosann.

June 14-William's grandmother scolded the police who had not found the boy after four years and claimed that their most recent search was "just for performance."

June 26-Forensic searches continue on William's seventh birthday.

June 27th-Strike Force Rosann announced that it will move the search to an 800 square meter jungle area, only 4 kilometers away from where William was last seen.

June 5th-In the latest search, Detective Chief Inspector Gary Jubelin (Gary Jubelin) stated that the case will soon be brought to trial by the coroner. 

August-The head of the investigation, Detective Chief Inspector Gary Jubelin, and a sergeant have a disagreement at a briefing.

September 13-The police revealed that they found a burnt car wreck belonging to a predecessor.

December 19th-The coroner said William may still be alive and the investigation will determine whether he is dead.

February-DCI Jubelin is exempted from the misconduct investigation.

March 25th-The investigation into the disappearance of William Tyrell begins, and William's biological parents and adoptive parents appear within a week. 

The first hearings of the investigation focused on William's family status and the events leading to his disappearance. 

Both his adoptive parents and biological parents were investigated, and the neighbors who helped to find were also investigated.   

According to reports, in 2012, according to the Children's Court order, William's biological parents absconded with him for six weeks.

William's biological father slammed the authorities for letting them down. 

"The authorities screwed it up... The minister is responsible for ensuring William's safety before he is 18 years old. This is not the case."

May: DCI Jubelin withdrew from the police force.

June: DCI Jubelin is charged with four charges of violating the Surveillance Equipment Act. He denied any wrongdoing

August: The second batch of inquiries and hearings begins on Wednesday, August 7

Inquest heard that Bill Spedding, a repairman on the north-central coast of New South Wales, was the predecessor of the disappearance of William Tyrrell. He was in Kendall at 9.30am. Laurieton, a 15-minute drive away, had coffee with his wife, which was lost the day William went.

Then they attended a school rally across the road and saw that the children they took care of were rewarded.

The investigation heard that a man claimed that he saw William Tyrrell in the back seat of a speeding car on the day the child disappeared, waiting unrestrained for the police to interview him and tell them what he saw.

He told the investigation that he contacted the police but did not receive a reply to the interview.

It took him nearly 1,000 days to be able to disclose what he saw to the police. 

The coroner ordered an urgent investigation into the final image taken on the day of William's disappearance because the metadata indicated that the photo may be 118 minutes earlier than originally thought.

The "creation time" of the image is 7.39 am and the "correction time" is 9.37 am. This is a new document from a 2000-page evidence summary. 

As the next round of hearings will be held in March 2020, the cause of death investigation has been postponed for another eight months. 

November 11: The Lieutenant State Coroner posted footage of William Tyrrell and his family in Heatherbrae McDonalds on September 11, 2014

February 2020 to March 2020: Gary Jubelin defends four charges against Paul Savage, who is interested in illegal records, in court hearings

February 21: The Australian Daily Mail revealed that Frank Abbott was arrested for being interviewed by the police for William's disappearance. 

March 2020: Investigation into the cause of death of William’s disappearance resumed, but stopped two days later due to the coronavirus outbreak

April 6, 2020: Magistrate Ross Hudson delivers judgment in Gary Jubelin case

April 8, 2020: Zhu Bolin was convicted of all four counts and fined $10,000. The former police said he would appeal 

June 22, 2020: Police and SES launch a new search for William Tyrrell near Heron Creek where Abbott once lived

June 26, 2021: Police admit William Tyrrell's 10th birthday

November 15, 2021: Detectives return to Kendall after receiving new information and admitting that they are looking for the body. According to reports, his adoptive parents are the persons involved in the case