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Title: Beaumont Children January 26,1966
Description: Glenelg Beach Australia 9,7,4, years


monkalup - July 7, 2006 04:04 AM (GMT)
http://www.felicity.com.au/crimefiles.htm

The Disappearance of the Beaumont Children

One of Australia's greatest mysteries

Mark Owen, 2002. [Revised 2002. First published 1991].


PARENTAL ANGUISH
None of us can truly understand what Nancy and Jim Beaumont must have felt in those first days immediately after their three young children disappeared. Nor, for that matter, what they must have suffered through all the subsequent years.

The BEAUMONT children went missing more than a quarter of a century ago. For some of us who remember the drama as it unfolded it is hard to believe such a long period of time has passed. Harder still to accept that the mystery will probably now never be solved!

To lose one child, as many parents have done, through illness, injury and, even occasionally, abduction, is a traumatic event for any parent. We have had a number of such cases in recent times. But to lose three children - the only three children one has - must surely be an event beyond ordinary grief.

It was undoubtedly one of the most horrifying cases Australia has ever collectively experienced. True, children had disappeared before, had been abducted, abused, murdered, but child-abduction was until then a fairly rare event in our country. It was, however, to become more common in the years since the tragic Beaumont case.

SUMMER SUN
It was a scorchingly hot day in mid-summer, Australia Day, our national holiday, when the three youngsters - two girls, Jane, 9, and Arnna,7, and their young brother, Grant, 4, disappeared forever from the comfortable home life they had known.

Now many disappearing children are not necessarily abducted. They go wandering in the bush and are lost or are taken by a disaffected parent in a marriage break-up. They might even be raped and then murdered; their battered bodies being found in time. All these possibilities were considered carefully by police. They were, after all, the first obvious lines of investigation to follow.

But it soon became apparent that this was a different case, one of abduction, plain and simple, the motive only ever to be guessed at. And such a sensational case soon attracted notice around the world.

It was from a busy suburban swimming spot, Glenelg Beach in South Australia, that three little kiddies vanished forever on Wednesday, January 26, 1966.

They had been sent on the local bus by their mother, Mrs Nancy Beaumont, travelling alone from their home in Harding Street, Somerton Park, to Glenelg Beach, just a short 5 minute bus ride away, on a very hot (39C.) day. It was just after 10 am when their mother last saw them walking up to the corner of Diagonal Road to catch the bus. They turned and waved to her as they reached the corner. A terrible memory for a mother!

The fact that they were alone was not considered unusual at that time. Child abduction was then an almost unheard-of crime in Australia. The bus-driver knew them and they were good, reliable children who could be trusted to take care on the beach and return home when they should.

As it happened the children had been given bicycles for Christmas but Mrs Beaumont felt it would be safer if they went by bus to the beach. They were a family keen on cycling. While the kiddies were away at the beach Nancy Beaumont had actually used her own cycle to visit a friend.

The mother expected the trio to return on the midday bus but when it arrived near the home they were not on board. They must have been enjoying themselves, she thought, and had over-stayed their time and would certainly be on the next bus. No particular concern. Friends called on the mother and time passed.

NIGHTMARE BEGINS
By 2pm, when the next bus was due, Mrs Beaumont was merely a trifle agitated, nothing more. But when that bus came and went and the youngsters were not on board, she started to become really alarmed, as any mother would. The older girl, Jane, was very reliable and intelligent and always took care of her younger brother and sister. As an indication of the type of child Jane was Mrs Beaumont later produced a letter she had kept, intending to show Jane when she had grown into womanhood.

The letter had been left out for the parents one night, not long before the disappearance. They had been away from the home and returned at 9 pm to find this note:


Dear Mum and Dad, I am just about to go to bed and the time is 9. I have put Grant's nappy on so there is no need to worry about him wetting on the sheet. Grant wanted to sleep in his own bed so one of you will have to sleep with Arnna. Although you will not find the rooms in very good condition I hope you will find them as comfortable as we do. Good night to you both.
Jane xxx
PS I hope you had a very nice time wherever you went.
PPS I hope you don't mind me taking your radio into my room Daddy.

The letter shows a lively intelligence and is quite a remarkably mature effort for a child aged 9. It was to become a sad memento for the parents. All the more reason for being concerned; Jane was a good girl and should certainly have returned home by now. At first Mrs Beaumont reasoned that they must have spent their bus money and were walking home. But there were three possible routes, which made her hesitate to try to meet them along the way.

However when further time passed Mrs Beaumont experienced the growing realization that something had gone terribly wrong. The arrival of the 3pm bus, also minus the children, sealed the matter. It was to be the beginning of a nightmare for the two parents, and one that has haunted every parent in the country ever since. It was as if in the year 1966, in the month of January, Australian children were suddenly no longer safe in the streets.

FATHER JOINS SEARCH
Immediate inquiries among friends, neighbours and family produced no clues. Nobody who would have known the children, including the bus drivers, had seen them after they left the bus at the beach. Mr Munro, the driver of the morning bus, picked them up at 10.10 am, he said, and saw them off at the beach soon after.

By mid-afternoon Mrs Beaumont's husband, Grant, known usually as Jim, a wine or linen-goods salesman (different accounts give different occupations), returned from a country run and joined in the search. He cruised about the beachfront and the nearby streets to no avail. Meanwhile Glenelg police had been informed and were soon on the job.

An enormous search was mounted by police. Throughout the first night police and family wearily tried every possible avenue. Soon radio, TV and press had flashed the news to the public at large. It was a dramatic story and the result was that on the next day a large army of volunteers joined in the search. Included were forty cabbies from the Suburban Taxi Service.

The beaches and sandhills for miles around the area were combed thoroughly. Even where there was the slightest suspicion that a sandhill might have caved in, the area was dug out. Boats ran up and down the coast, prying into every inlet. Schools were at this time still closed for the holidays and local school-grounds and other areas were searched, as well as old huts and buildings, but not a clue emerged.

NO TRACE FOUND
Through the following days and weeks police and citizens failed to find any trace of the three children. Not one item of clothing, even a discarded sandal or handkerchief, ever appeared. No physical clues at all were ever found, although the search for clues was extensive and thorough. At the time the children disappeared they wore swimsuits and shorts. Jane wore white sandshoes, Arnna and Grant wore sandals. Jane had with her a green airways bag. This contained the children's towels.

But the children had not gone completely unnoticed. There were several sightings reported to police and every scrap of information was collated hungrily by the investigators.

One report above all others was the most important. During the morning of their disappearance they were seen with a tall thin man in blue swimming trunks. An elderly lady had been sitting on a park bench near the beach and had watched the children skylarking on the lawn area. She described the scene she had witnessed when she saw the children showering under the lawn sprinklers. The time, she said, was about 11 am.

Her description of what they wore was accurate so police believed she had indeed seen the three. And their mother told police that the children usually ran under the sprinklers after being on the beach. It all certainly added up.

MAN IN BLUE TRUNKS
But the rest of the lady's story was the chilling part. She had watched the children run up to the man, who was lying on a towel. They had jumped over him playfully and flicked him with their towels.

The man on the lawn was described as being tall, about 5'10" to 6' in height. He had blonde hair, was of slim athletic build, and aged, the lady thought, between about 35 and 40. He had what she described as a longish face and wore blue swimming trunks.

It was a very useful description, one of the best any police force could wish for, although regrettably in the end it was to lead nowhere. Another lady had seen both the elderly woman herself and the man and children. When she saw the latter the children were trailing behind the man. Then he approached her and two people she was sitting with and asked had they seen anyone 'mucking about' with his clothing, as he had lost some money.

Ominously, the children seemed very friendly with the man who at one stage helped the oldest girl pull her green shorts over her swimming costume. They were last seen going off with him, disappearing behind the nearby Glenelg Hotel.

The next sighting reported was at about noon. This was a significant one, too, for the eldest child had offered a 1 note ($2) to a female shop-assistant when buying some cakes at a shop near the bus stop. Jane certainly did not have this sort of money with her when she left home but only 6/- (60). It seems almost certain that the man at the beach had given her the note to use and that he was the children's abductor. But if this is the case the very last and certain sighting added even further to the growing mystery.

It was obvious that they either knew this sun-baking man from previous encounters or had at least become friendly with him during that morning and he had no doubt supplied them with the 1 note. Certainly their actions with him indicate a degree of friendship.

It would be reasonable now to assume they had, some time after noon, gone off with the stranger. However, the man and the children still seemed to be around the area towards 2 pm as they were seen again by a male tourist visiting the area from Broken Hill and he reckoned this was close to 2 pm.

WALKING ALONE
But the last reported sighting only added to the puzzle. For the children were seen yet again - at nearly 3 pm, well beyond the time when they should have been back home, and they were not travelling on a bus but walking away from the beach and towards their home at Somerton Park. And they were alone! There was nobody with them then.

Now this report might be doubted except for one important fact. It came from a very reliable witness, the local postman, Mr Patterson, who knew the children well. He said he had definitely passed them walking at 3pm and they certainly had nobody with them then.

If we assume that this sighting was a positive one, and it seems more than reasonable that we should do so, then the unknown man, if he was indeed their abductor, must have waited until they had left the beach and followed them, presumably by car, offering them a lift when he caught up with them.

Why were they walking anyway? Had all the money gone? And if the stranger was on such friendly terms with the kiddies that they trusted him it is difficult to understand why he had not taken them from the beach itself. One possible explanation is that he thought the risk of being noticed was greater at the beach. There were hundreds of people out and about on that hot summer day. Glenelg was a very popular beach.

But it is also curious that the man did nothing to hide his friendship with the children from various people at the beach. Hardly the actions of someone intending to perpetrate an abduction! Was he an innocent party, who befriended the children, then parted company with them. Did someone else abduct them as they walked towards their home? But if the man was innocent of any wrong intentions why did he not come forward when the case exploded into the public arena? The Questions never end.

SEARCH CONTINUES
As the weary days passed there were many false leads. Two days after that fateful date Mrs Beaumont virtually collapsed from the strain and was kept under sedation in a darkened room while the search went on. (It hardly needs saying that both parents were considered by police to be completely innocent of any involvement in the disappearance of their children.)

Within a week of the abduction police had received over 1,000 reports, most leading nowhere. They door-knocked extensively, interviewing the people in every home in the area. Rewards were offered. The government offered $6,000, another $5,000 was added by Melbourne newspaper,The Truth.

After the initial sightings, about the only report that seemed to have any possibilities came far too late to be of use. Months after their disappearance a woman living in Malvern, a suburb only 8 km from the children's home, told police that on the night they disappeared she saw a man and three children enter a house she believed to be vacant.

Later she saw a small boy walking down the side lane. A man suddenly appeared and snatched him up, pulled him inside and closed the door. The next morning all four had disappeared again. Why the observer had taken so long to tell police is not known.

Police carefully checked out every possible way in which the children could have disappeared. After a careful examination of the beachfront they ruled out the possibility that the children had been buried under sandhills or had been caught in drainage outfalls. If they had been swept into the sea and drowned their bodies would have eventually been washed back on shore, or at least one or two of them would have. More importantly, some or all of their towels, the bag and footwear would have been left on the beach. Altogether there were about 15 or 16 possible items involved.

A 70-acre boat haven, Patawalonga, near Glenelg was even drained and police cadets waded through the slime but nothing was found. Theories abounded, some people even suggesting that a flying saucer (then the craze of the day) had whisked the kiddies away for experimentation! The police treated all such ideas with the scorn they deserved.

Among many suggestions aired in public a retired Adelaide doctor did come up with one useful theory. He suggested that while everyone was looking for three children together, their abductor might well have separated them and sold them to people in different places; if child trading was involved, which was quite possibly so. Thus only one small strange child would be noticed in any one place.

BRAINWASHED?
And in the case of the younger children especially, they were of an age that they might soon forget their real parents, given the right brain-washing (perhaps being told their parents were seriously ill or even dead, for example). That this is feasible was seen in recent times in the case of an American boy, Steven Stayner.

Steven was a 7-year-old boy living with his parents and three brothers and sisters when he was waylaid on his way home from school by a self-styled preacher, Kenneth Parnell. No physical force was used, the glib tongue of the man (with some help from an accomplice) managing eventually through a clever brainwashing process to persuade the boy that his family no longer wanted him.

In time Steven was forced to use a new name, now being known as Dennis Gregory Parnell, and actually sent to school. Outwardly the boy appeared to be the adopted son of the preacher, whose wife was said to have died. The doctor's theory was a useful one but would, like so many others, unfortunately lead nowhere. The children were still not found.

So desperate for news were the parents that Mr Beaumont stated publicly he would sell up his home and pay the proceeds as ransom if his children were returned. But this did not appear to be a kidnapping case; no demands were made, just dreadful silence was all that the distraught parents experienced. Certainly, as a result of all the publicity, the Beaumonts received many phone calls, some nice ones from well-wishers but others from cranks and crackpots and even from people abusing them.

As time passed about the only other significant clues came from a mystery green utility that was sighted from time to time by people in Victoria. It was variously reported from several Victorian country towns and was also seen in Dandenong, out of Melbourne, and later in Albury on the border. Each time a man was seen driving it, accompanied by three young children - two girls and a boy.

The vehicle was rather old, a 1953 or 1954 model, The last such sighting was at Violet Town, about 170 km from Melbourne, on July 16, 1967. But nobody was able to actually pin down the sightings further so that police could check.

CLAIRVOYANT FAILS
From time to time Adelaide police were bothered by clairvoyants and mystics who claimed they knew where to find the children. None, however, produced them! Then some people contacted famous Dutch clairvoyant Gerard Croiset.

Croiset at first worked from Holland and the Adelaide people relayed information about the disappearance to him through interpreters (as he neither spoke nor understood English) His Adelaide followers even hired a helicopter to take photographs of the Glenelg beachfront area and these, with other information, prints and press clippings about the case, were sent to the clairvoyant.

Croiset, then 58, received suitable visions and relayed these to his Australian followers, who then carried out his instructions to dig here, there and everywhere. His suggestions kept changing. The believers even attempted, at his suggestion, to flush out a one-and-a-half km concrete drainpipe that had become blocked. The blockage remained; then it was discovered that the same drainpipe had not been blocked and had been completely checked out by police in the earlier searches! Again, at his suggestion, they employed a bulldozer to shift tonnes of sand from the grounds of an institution for retarded children, Minda Home, Somerton. But Croiset's visions seemed continually to fail him.

Unfazed by these setbacks, Croiset eventually arrived in Adelaide in person, accompanied by a fanfare of publicity, where the discredited clairvoyant curiously received a tumultuous welcome from press and public. It was claimed that the welcome was as great as that given to the Beatles. But the crowds were to be disappointed again. Croiset was 'certain' he knew where children were buried They had, he claimed, been trapped in a fall of sand, according to his 'visions.' He had seen them in some sort of pit and a 'cube-shaped house' and then saw them buried under sand.

There followed what can only be described as an amazing charade. And a cruel one for the ever-hopeful parents. The morning after his arrival, starting out at 9 am armed with a sketch pad, camera and tape-recorder, Croiset led a party on his search.

Two days later, after going through all manner of ever-changing activities, including dramatic episodes where he 'felt ill' (a sign, he said, of being close to a place where there had been a tragedy!) Croiset failed to produce anything. Although he did give waiting reporters one titillating bit of information; back in Holland, he said, he had seen Jane removing her underclothes in a bunker; sure sign of a sex crime. And that would have been the end of the matter, except that Croiset managed to come up with one last dramatic attempt to prove himself.

CROISET FAILS AGAIN!
A woman had phoned him saying she heard children's voices outside her home on the night they disappeared. This was enough. Croiset sprang into action and, forgetting his previous vision of a sandpit burial, pointed to a new food warehouse that had just been built near where the lady lived in the suburb of Paringa Park. The children were buried under the concrete floor, about 2 to 3 metres down! It was definite, he said.

Croiset said he thought the children had been late leaving the beach and were too afraid to go home so had sheltered in a hole on the site of what was then an old brick factory. They had, according to his vision, pulled a plank over them and then the sides of the hole had caved in. Jane's earlier experience in the bunker seemed to be forgotten in this latest version of Croiset's imaginings.

But the man was not waiting to find out if he was right. He was off again, flying out to America on another case, leaving his Adelaide supporters to decide what to do next.

Now an agitation arose to dig up the floor. The building's owners said it would cost $7,000 to replace. The government wisely refused to employ public moneys in such a crazy venture, even although under great pressure to do so. However, in spite of his failings there were still Croiset believers around and a committee of citizens was formed who eventually raised the money.

Not before being informed that Croiset had told someone he had been looking for a way out when he nominated the warehouse. But nothing could stop the believers. A wall of the factory was knocked down and the floor was dug up - and, needless to say, no bodies were found.

The police, meanwhile, had a more practical approach to their work. They prepared effigies of the three kiddies, dressing them in garments such as they had been wearing when last seen. They also prepared a sketch of the man wanted for questioning. These exhibits were displayed in agricultural and other shows held around Australia. Reportedly more than 200,000 people saw the exhibit in the Sydney and Melbourne Royal shows alone. But no further clues were forthcoming.

MORE MYSTERIES
The Beaumont case was surrounded with mysteries. Such a dramatic disappearance obviously played on the minds of many very susceptible people and rumours were rife. For example, at one point in Tasmania a man was overheard in a conversation that seemed to imply some connection with the Beaumont case and Adelaide. Police were, however, unable to locate him for questioning.

Also from Tasmania came rumours that the religious sect known as the Exclusive Brethren were keeping the children captive in a remote and rugged part of the country. But this group, with origins back a couple of hundred years ago in England, being very secretive and 'exclusive' by nature, is ever subject to wild accusations, usually unfounded.

In Victoria, apart from the sightings of the green utility, there was another curious episode. In September of the same year the children disappeared, Police Senior-Constable Grose was on duty in Kaniva, about 400 km west of Melbourne, when he picked up his phone one day and found himself with a crossed line. Two women were talking and he thought one said to the other that she had 'just brought the Beaumonts from Tasmania.'

Detectives and PMG (now Telecom) technicians flew into action but eventually the Victoria Police decided it was a false trail, although their South Australian counterparts thought otherwise. One of the women heard the report and came forward; it seemed the two had been discussing the Beaumont children's disappearance and then went on to mention some other children who were being brought home from Hobart. It was certainly a case of crossed wires.

JANE'S LETTERS?
Some two years after the children disappeared mysterious letters, apparently written by Jane, arrived at her home. Were they genuine? Because of the sensitive nature of the situation little was disclosed in public when the first letter arrived. It resulted in an abortive trip by Mr Jim Beaumont with Detective Stanley Swain, who had been working on the case, apparently to meet the abductor. The trip received unwanted press publicity and nothing came of it. Apparently the abductor, if he was indeed involved, got cold feet.

A second letter arrived soon afterwards. It read:


Dear Mum and Dad,
We had a really beautiful lunch today. We had some turk(e)y and a lot of vegetables. They tasted really nice. The man is feeding us really well. The man took us to see the Sound of Music yesterday. Little Grant fell asleep in it though. He could not understand it. The man was very disappointed that you brought all those policemen with you. He knew all the time that they were there, he says that is why he sent the message to go across the street so that it would disturb the positions of the policemen. The man said that I had better stop now, so I will. Grant and Arnna send you their love.
Love Jane, Arnna and Grant. xxxxxxxxx.

At the time a great deal of controversy resulted from these letters. The family identified the writing as that of Jane and there certainly seems to be a sort of genuineness in the way it is phrased. Police were, however, skeptical. Perhaps nobody will ever know for sure as the second letter was the last. Silence has reigned ever since.

In 1985 a couple told a WA newspaper that they had lived next door to the Beaumont children in Reid, WA, but it turned out after checking that the children next to them were not the Beaumonts.

In 1986 a suitcase full of press clippings about the children was found on rubbish tip. This turned out to be another dead end, having been collected by an elderly eccentric lady. In 1989 it was suggested that Bevan Spencer von Einem, already in jail for killing a teenage boy, had taken the children and conducted medical experiments on them, as well as taking Joanne Ratcliffe,11, and Kirste Gordon, 4, who disappeared from a football match in 1973. A jail inmate reported on conversations he had with von Einem. But later any charges were dropped by the Crown.

Yet again, on May 29, 1992, Adelaide Police announced that as a result of advances in forensic science in the intervening years, they were currently following up a lead in Melbourne. They were interviewing a man there who would have been aged 15 at the time of the disappearances. New technology has brought to light a certain clue that had remained buried through the years, but they emphasized that this was 'peripheral' to the main evidence.

And still the mystery remains in spite of every effort to trace the children, one of the saddest cases in Australian criminal history. It now seems almost certain the mystery will never be unravelled and the abductor of the three Beaumont children will remain undiscovered and unpunished. Perhaps he is by now already dead.


The following site is dedicated to this mystery. You may care to visit it (Note: not associated with my site): http://www.beaumontchildren.com

monkalup - July 7, 2006 04:05 AM (GMT)
http://www.doenetwork.us/cases/392dmsau.html

user posted image

Jane, Arnna and Grant BEAUMONT

Missing - January 26th (Australia Day) 1966

Glenelg Beach, Adelaide

Circumstances - at 10am on the morning of January 26th, 1966, brother and sisters Grant (4 years), Jane (9 years) and Arnna (7 years) Beaumont caught a bus from their home in Somerton Park Adelaide a short distance to Glenelg Beach. They were seen at 11am playing with a young, blonde man on the Beach, in the park opposite the Beach and then walking away with him behind the Glenelg Hotel. Jane bought ice creams for her brother and sister and paid for them with money her mother had not given her.

The local postman came forward and said that he had seen the trio, alone, walking up Jetty Road away from the beach and toward their home at about 3pm. They were laughing and holding hands.

The children were expected to return home on the midday bus but failed to catch this bus. They have not been seen since this date.

monkalup - July 7, 2006 04:06 AM (GMT)
February 3, 2005 Article

Police re-open inquiries into Beaumont children's disappearance

The World Today - Thursday, 3 February , 2005
Reporter: Nick McKenzie

KAREN PERCY: Now to one of the country's most notorious unsolved cases the disappearance of the Beaumont children from an Adelaide beach almost four decades ago.

And last night cold-case detectives from across Australia interviewed Victoria's longest serving prisoner about that case and five other unsolved murders. Derek Percy has been in prison since 1969 after he was arrested for killing a 12-year-old girl in Victoria.

Police there say interviewing him is only a preliminary step and may not yield results. Nonetheless, the story is dominating newspapers and reigniting speculation about a mystery that continues to haunt the nation.

Nick McKenzie reports.

NICK MCKENZIE: In Melbourne last night, Detectives from South Australia, Victoria and New South Wales interviewed prisoner Derek Percy about his possible connection to eight unsolved murders.

They include the murders of Christine Sharrock and Marianne Schmidt on Sydney's Wanda beach in 1965, the murder of 6-year-old Alan Redston in Canberra in 1966, the death of Simon Brook in Sydney in 1968 and the disappearance of schoolgirl Linda Stillwell from St Kilda in the same year.

But police also interviewed 55-year-old Percy about the disappearance of the Beaumont children 9-year-old Jane, seven-year-old Arnna and 4-year-old Grant from Glenelg beach on Australia day in 1966.

It's his possible connection to the Beaumont mystery that's sparked so much attention this morning, although Victorian Police Chief Commissioner Christine Nixon say the development is, at this stage, far from a breakthrough.

CHRISTINE NIXON: I think that what we are doing is simply at the very preliminary stages. When we've got some more information, when in fact the investigators have had a chance to talk with this individual, then we'll certainly make more information available as we can.

These are very difficult issues and areas. They're old cases, the family's involved. You don't really want to raise their expectations until we're a lot clearer. We clearly have information, and that information will be put and when we've got further to say about the matter, we will.

NICK MCKENZIE: Prisoner Derek Percy was arrested in 1969 for killing a 12-year-old girl at Western Port Beach, but was found unfit to plead on the grounds of insanity.

Today, the Age newspaper reported that in interviews with authorities over the last few years, Percy has always remained evasive, but that notes and diaries seized from his cell detail plans to abduct and kill children.

It's also believed police can place Percy near the scene of the Beaumont children's disappearance and that there may be some similarities with the crime he was arrested for and other unsolved murders.

Police are stressing the interview of Percy last night is, at this stage, a very minor development. But it's not difficult to understand today's media interest. The moment the Beaumont children disappeared, the nation was fascinated.

This radio extract is from 1966:

RADIO EXTRACT: (Music in background) The biggest search of all was for the Beaumont Children Jane aged 9, Arnna 7, and Grant 4. They disappeared in January after visiting a beach in Adelaide. In November, a Dutch clairvoyant, Mr Gerard Croiset, said he believed the children's bodies would be found under an Adelaide warehouse floor.

NICK MCKENZIE: Possible linking of Derek Percy to the Beaumont case comes after a number of instances where other prisoners have been mistakenly linked to the children's disappearance.

Associate Professor Colleen Lewis is a criminologist from Monash University. She says new technology is breathing life into cold cases, but that there are limits to what it can achieve.

COLLEEN LEWIS: With the advent of new technology with DNA and other technology, there is the possibility these days that cases that have been cold for some 20 or 30 years can be solved and we're seeing that more and more.

NICK MCKENZIE: Is there a danger, though, in this case, that, because the Beaumont case is really inscribed upon the nation's memory, that whenever there's a snippet about any progress or any step or any development in the case, that we get a bit ahead of ourselves and talk about a possible breakthrough?

COLLEEN LEWIS: I think it has a lot to do with hope. I think that people hope that we can solve this mystery, this Beaumont killing which has, as you say, occurs, is brought back into our memory, time and time again when we think that maybe this time there is a breakthrough.

KAREN PERCY: Criminologist Colleen Lewis from Monash University speaking to Nick McKenzie.

monkalup - July 25, 2006 10:26 PM (GMT)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beaumont_children_disappearance

Beaumont children disappearance
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Jane, Grant and Arnna Beaumont, photographed during a family trip to the Twelve Apostles in Victoria, Australia in late 1965.Jane Nartare (aged 9), Arnna Kathleen (aged 7), and Grant Ellis Beaumont (aged 4) were three siblings who disappeared without a trace from a beach near Adelaide Australia in 1966. Known collectively as The Beaumont Children, their case resulted in the largest police investigation in Australian criminal history. It remains unsolved.

The huge attention given to this case, its significance in Australian criminal history, and the fact that the mystery of their disappearance has never been explained, has led to the story being revisited by the press on a regular basis, with the result that it has started to pass into Australian folklore. It is also viewed by many social commentators as a significant event in the evolution of Australian society, with a large number of people changing the way they supervised their children on a daily basis.


Background to the children's disappearance
The children lived with their parents Jim and Nancy Beaumont in Harding Street, Somerton Park, a suburb of Adelaide. Not far from their home was Glenelg, a popular beach-side resort, which the children often visited. On Australia Day, January 26, 1966, a hot summer day, the children took a five minute bus journey from their home to the beach. Jane, the eldest child, was considered responsible enough to care for the two younger children, and their parents were not concerned. They left home at 10:30am and were expected to return home by noon. Their mother became worried when they had still not returned by 3:00pm.


Police investigation
Police investigating the case found several witnesses who had seen the children near the beach, in the company of a lone male adult, described as being tall, with blond hair, and in his mid-thirties. The children were playing with him, and appeared relaxed and to be enjoying themselves. The man and the children were seen walking away from the beach at 11.00am. A shopkeeper reported Jane Beaumont had bought cakes with a 1 note shortly after this. Police viewed this as further evidence that they had been with another person, for two reasons. Firstly the shopkeeper knew the children well from previous visits, and on this occasion they made their customary purchase, plus an additional item, a meat pie. Secondly Mrs Beaumont had given the children only enough coins for their bus fare and food, but had not given them a one pound note, therefore leading police to believe it had been given to them by another person, who did not enter the shop with them. At approximately 3pm the children were seen walking alone, away from the beach, along Jetty Road, in the general direction of their home. The witness, a local postman, knew the children well, and his statement was regarded as factual. He said the children had stopped to say hello to him, and seemed cheerful. Police could not determine why the reliable children, already three hours late, were strolling alone and seemingly unconcerned. This was the last confirmed sighting of the children.

Mr and Mrs Beaumont did not know who the man might have been. They described their children, particularly Jane, as shy. For them to be playing so confidently with a stranger seemed out of character. Investigators theorised that the children had perhaps met the man during a previous visit or visits and had grown to trust him.

Several months later a woman reported that on the night of the disappearance a man, accompanied by two girls and a boy, entered a neighbouring house which she had believed empty. Later she had seen the boy walking alone along a lane where he was pursued and roughly caught by the man. The following morning the house appeared to be deserted again, and she never saw either the man or the children again. Police could not establish why she had failed to provide this information earlier. Sightings of the children were reported for about one year but many of them were regarded as false by police.

The case attracted widespread attention in Australia and caused a change in the lifestyle of many people. Parents were confronted with the reality that their children could not be assumed to be safe, while earlier generations had routinely allowed their children the same freedoms the Beaumont children had enjoyed. The case also attracted international attention, and a parapsychologist from the Netherlands named Gerard Croiset was brought to Australia. This resulted in a media frenzy; however, his story changed from day to day, and did not offer any clues. He identified a site near the children's home (and also near the Paringa Park Primary School attended by Jane and Arnna) in which he believed the children's bodies had been buried. At the time of their disappearance it had been a building site, and he stated that he believed their bodies to be buried under new concrete, inside the remains of an old brick kiln. The owners of the property were reluctant to excavate the site on the basis of a psychic's claim, however his claims were well publicised and the owners soon bowed to public pressure and allowed a thorough search of the area indicated by Croiset. No remains, or any evidence linking to any of the Beaumont family were found. Police established that between the three children they were carrying seventeen individual items, including articles of clothing, towels, and bags, however none of these items were ever found.

In 1996, the building identified by Croiset was undergoing partial demolition and the owners allowed for a full search of the site. Once again no trace was found of the children, but it was a strong demonstration of the level of commitment to explore every possibility which existed even thirty years after the disappearance.


False Letters
About two years after the disappearance, the Beaumont parents received two letters supposedly written by Jane, and another by a man who said he was keeping the children. The envelopes showed a postmark of Dandenong, Victoria. The brief notes describe a relatively pleasant existence and refer to "The Man" who was keeping them. Police believed at the time that the letters could quite likely have been authentic after comparing to other letters written by Jane. The letter from "The Man" said that he had appointed himself "guardian" of the children and was willing to hand them back to their parents. In the letter a meeting place was nominated. Mr and Mrs Beaumont, followed by a detective drove to the designated place but nobody appeared. It was some time later that the second letter purported to be from Jane, arrived. It said that the man had been willing to return them, but when he realised a disguised detective was also there, he decided that the Beaumonts had betrayed his trust and that he would keep the children. There were no further letters. Some twenty-five years later, new forensic examinations of these letters proved that they were a hoax. Fingerprint technology had improved and the author of the letters was identified as a 41-year-old man who had been a teenager at the time. He had written the letters as a joke. Due to the time that had elapsed, he was not charged.

[
The parents
The Beaumonts received a huge amount of sympathy from the Australian public for the fact that they lost their entire family in such a manner. It was never suggested that the children should not have been allowed to travel unsupervised, or that Mrs Beaumont was in any way negligent as a parent, simply because at that time in Australian society it was taken for granted that it was safe and acceptable.

They remained at their Somerton Park home for many years. Mrs Beaumont in particular held hope that the children would return and stated in interviews that it would be "dreadful", if the children returned home and did not find their parents waiting for them. Over many years, as new leads and new theories emerged, the Beaumonts fully cooperated in exploring every possibility, whether it was claims that the children had been abducted by a religious cult and were living variously in New Zealand, Melbourne or Tasmania, or some clue that suggested a possible burial site for the children. Every search for their bodies failed to provide any further information. In recent years, the couple has sold the home and moved away, and while the case remains open, the South Australian Police Force remains informed of the couple's address. The Beaumonts eventually divorced and are currently living separately. They are reported to have accepted that the truth may never be discovered, and have resolved to live their final years away from the public attention that followed them for decades. They were devastated in 1990 when newspapers published computer-generated photographs of how Jane, Arnna and Grant would have looked as adults. The pictures, published against their wishes (Nancy Beaumont refused to look at them), caused a huge backlash of public sympathy from a community which is still sensitive to their pain.


Other cases and a possible solution
In 1973 two children, Joanne Ratcliffe (aged 11) and Kirsty Gordon (aged 4) disappeared from the Adelaide Football Oval during a football match. Their parents had allowed the two girls to leave their group to go to the toilet. They were seen several times in the 90 minutes after leaving the oval, seemingly distressed and in the company of an unknown man, but then they vanished. They have not been seen since.

In 1979, the body of a young man was found in Adelaide. Identified as Neil Muir (aged 25), his body was badly mutilated. In 1982, the mutilated body of Mark Langley (aged 18) was found. Before his death, he had been subjected to "surgery" his abdomen was sliced open, and had been shaved prior to this. Part of his bowel had been removed and Langley had died from loss of blood. Over the next few months more bodies were found. The dismembered skeletal remains of Peter Stogneff (aged 14) were found almost a year after his disappearance and Alan Barnes (aged 18) was found mutilated in a similar manner to Langley. In 1983 a fifth victim Richard Kelvin (aged 15) was found, once again with the same mutilations.

Suspects

Bevan Spencer von Einem
Main article: Bevan Spencer von Einem
Investigations led police to a 37 year old accountant, Bevan Spencer von Einem. Witnesses began to come forward, many claiming to be in fear for their lives and telling of a secret society of highly placed Adelaide professional men who preyed on boys and young men, by drugging, raping and sometimes killing them. Von Einem was charged with the murder of Richard Kelvin only.

One of the witnesses, regarded as highly credible by police due to the accurate information he had provided about von Einem and the killings, related a conversation between himself and von Einem. Von Einem boasted of having taken three children from a beach several years earlier, and said he had taken them home to conduct experiments. He said he had performed surgery on each of them, and had "connected them together". One of the children had died during the procedure and so he had killed the other two and dumped all the bodies in bushland south of Adelaide. Police had not considered von Einem in connection with the Beaumont Children, but he very closely matched the descriptions and police sketches from 1966. Furthermore he was known to have frequented Glenelg Beach and to have been fond of children. The reference to surgical experimentation also corresponded to the coroner's reports on several of the murdered men. Von Einem also told the witness that he had taken two girls from the Adelaide Oval during a football match. He said he had killed them but did not elaborate.


Bevan Spencer von EinemVon Einem received a life sentence for the murder of Richard Kelvin, and is assumed to have been involved in the deaths of the other young men. No accomplices were ever charged. He has refused to co-operate with investigators since his arrest, and although attempts have been made to interview von Einem about his possible connection to other murders, he remained silent.

The cases of the Beaumont Children and of Joanne Ratcliffe and Kirsty Gordon remain open, though many investigators believe that von Einem was responsible for their deaths also.

[edit]
Arthur Stanley Brown
Another suspect was named in 1998 as Arthur Stanley Brown. Then 86, he was charged with the murders of sisters Judith (aged 7) and Susan (aged 5) Mackay in Townsville, Queensland. They disappeared while on their way to school on 26 August 1970, and their bodies were found several days later in a dry creek bed. Both girls had been strangled.

When Brown was charged it was noted that he bore a similarity to the suspect in the Beaumont children and Adelaide Oval cases. Nothing could be proven, however, and Brown's trial did not reach a verdict. He was never retried as he was considered to have deteriorated too much mentally. Along with von Einem, he is considered to be the best suspect for the Beaumont children abduction, however he died in 2002, presumed innocent.


monkalup - December 26, 2006 04:58 PM (GMT)
SADISTIC child killer Derek Percy will be quizzed at an inquest that could unlock the secrets of Australia's most baffling child murders - including the fate of the Beaumont children.
In a dramatic move, the sex killer will be subpoenaed to give evidence at the inquest into the 1968 murder of Sydney toddler Simon Brook.
It is hoped that details to emerge during the hearing may shed light on other unsolved cases.
Breaking his silence after more than 30 years, the boy's father, Donald Brook, said he hoped justice would be done.
"It is in the public interest that the facts should be established ... even after such a long time," Professor Brook said in a statement.
"This is partly because it encourages trust in the police and in the judicial process.
"It is also partly because, assuming that the facts can be reliably established, it may become possible to make sure that no other child will ever suffer the same fate, at the same hands."
Professor Brook will testify at the Sydney hearing in mid-December.
It follows a push from the Victoria Police cold case unit to re-examine the suspected crimes of Derek Percy.
Simon Brook's is one of several unsolved child murders or disappearances over which Percy was recently questioned.
The three year old's body was found in bushes near the family's Sydney home on May 19, 1968.
In 1969 a coroner ruled the boy died from suffocation caused by an unknown person. Now, another coroner will decide whether, on the balance of probability, Percy was that person.
Percy is one of Victoria's longest-serving prisoners after his conviction for the murder of 12-year-old Yvonne Tuohy at Western Port Beach in 1969.
He was found not guilty on the grounds of insanity, but jailed indefinitely.
Victoria Police has been working with detectives in three jurisdictions to investigate Percy over the other unsolved cases.
They are: Linda Stillwell, who vanished from the St Kilda foreshore in 1968; Alan Redston, six, found strangled in Canberra in 1966; the three Beaumont children, who vanished from an Adelaide beach in 1966; and Marianne Schmidt and Christine Sharrock, both 15, murdered at a Sydney beach in 1965.
Police believe Percy was in each of the cities when the children were killed.

Sunday Herald Sun (20-11-2005)

monkalup - December 26, 2006 05:00 PM (GMT)

DETECTIVES will question notorious child killer Derek Ernest Percy (See MAKO/ File)
over the disappearance of the Beaumont children in Adelaide almost 40 years ago.
The disappearance of Jane- 9yrs, Arnna- 7yrs, and Grant- 4yrs, near Glenelg Beach, Adelaide, on Australia Day 1966, remains one of the nation's most baffling mysteries. In an unlisted hearing in Melbourne Magistrates Court today, homicide detectives from Victoria's cold case unit and police from three other states were granted permission to quiz Percy over the crime.
Percy, in his late 50s, is Victoria's longest-serving prisoner.
He has spent 35 years in Ararat prison for the rape, torture and murder of 12-year-old Yvonne Elizabeth Tuohy.
He abducted her from a spot near the beach in the Warneet area of South Gippsland on July 20, 1969.
"This application has been sought following investigations by a multi-jurisdictional taskforce set up in early 2004," Inspector Craig Walsh said.
"The task force includes detectives from Victoria, New South Wales, ACT and South Australia who are reviewing a number of unsolved murders and suspicious disappearances of children between 1965 and 1968."
Media reports last week suggested Tasmanian Police Commissioner Richard McCreadie believed convicted child killer James O'Neill could have been responsible for the Beaumont abduction.
But Mr McCreadie and South Australia police rejected the reports, saying O'Neill had been investigated and there was no evidence to link the prisoner to the case.

AAP (2-2-2005)

monkalup - December 26, 2006 05:00 PM (GMT)
SA Police are working to establish possible links between the murders of two Townsville schoolgirls and the abduction of five Adelaide children.
They are co-operating with Queensland colleagues and the Canberra Bureau of Crime intelligence, and have established a special file with their Crime Stoppers office to assess calls from the public.
Major Crime Task Force chief, Supt Paul Schramm, confirmed yesterday a joint inquiry was under way into any possible connections between the 1966 abductions of Jane, Anna and Grant Beaumont, the 1973 disappearance of Joanne Ratcliffe and Kirste Gordon and the arrest of Arthur Brown, 86.
Brown was arrested in Townsville two weeks ago for the alleged murder of MacKay sisters Judith, 7, and Susan, 5, in 1970. The arrest followed statements to police by his grand-daughters. He has denied the murders.
It was a picture of Brown alongside police sketches of the man seen in the Beaumont and Gordon-Ratcliffe cases that prompted media attention and revived SA police interest in the cases.
Supt Schramm told interstate media: "We are taking it seriously and we are seeing if there is any connection. We have analysts working very closely together to try and piece together the past 30 years.
Since the Queensland arrest, police have opened a new file in its Crime Stoppers office and reports a "significant" number of contacts from the public volunteering information.
Mr Schramm said the number of calls to Crime Stoppers indicated an on-going interest in the two SA abduction cases.
"We are quite happy for the public to volunteer useful information and will look closely at what comes in."



Browns trial for the murders of the Mackay sisters did not reach a verdict and a 2nd trial abandoned as Brown had become unfit to stand trial. Brown died in 2002.

monkalup - December 26, 2006 05:02 PM (GMT)
THEIR case has captivated Australia for almost 40 years.
The disappearance of the three Beaumont children on Australia Day 1966 is one of the country's greatest mysteries, fuelled by endless speculation and bizarre rumours.
Only the Azaria Chamberlain case comes close to its place in Australian history.
The disappearance of Jane, 9, Arnna, 7, and Grant Beaumont, 4, from an Adelaide beach on that hot summer's day changed the way children were raised. No longer was it considered safe for children to play outside alone.
Despite thousands of calls to police and reported sightings from around Australia, the fate of the children remains unsolved.
A tall, thin, fair-haired man was spotted talking to the children but a massive search failed to reveal their whereabouts.
In the past four decades there has been an abundance of new leads, rumours and theories.
While most believe the children were probably murdered, there have been suggestions they were abducted by a cult.
Others believe the children were buried under an Adelaide warehouse. In 1996 the floor of the warehouse, which had been identified by a Dutch clairvoyant, was excavated but no evidence was found.
In 1997 police opened a new line of inquiry after a former detective who worked on the case claimed he had found Jane Beaumont, the eldest of the three children.
The detective said a mystery Canberra woman had admitted she was the missing girl but the claims were dismissed after police found her birth date did not match.
In May last year New Zealand police located a man who thought he had lived next door to the Beaumont children in Dunedin.
He had recognised the children from a photograph he saw in a newspaper but nothing was ever substantiated.
Last week two documentary makers claimed pedophile prisoner James O'Neill had confessed to killing the Beaumont children.




The Age (3-2-2005)
Liz Gooch

phil - April 27, 2007 07:33 AM (GMT)
'Dad took Beaumont children'
Tracy Ong
April 27, 2007

MEMBERS of a South Australian family have claimed their father, who was a member of a 1960s pedophile ring, was involved in the abduction of the Beaumont children.
The family, who have made statements to the police but declined to be identified, say they saw the three children in the boot of a car the day they disappeared in the Adelaide beach suburb of Glenelg in 1966.
They defended their silence on Australia's most enduring unsolved mystery, telling Foxtel's Crime and Investigation network in a documentary aired last night that they grew up in an environment of trauma and abuse.

The Australian

monkalup - May 4, 2007 11:41 PM (GMT)

monkalup - May 4, 2007 11:42 PM (GMT)
Can you imagine how hard it must have been to live with this knowledge about your own dad? OMG This poor family must have been so fractured over this and other crimes. It is almost incomprehensible!

oldies4mari2004 - October 3, 2007 07:11 PM (GMT)
jpg.me

oldies4mari2004 - October 3, 2007 07:12 PM (GMT)
Jane, Arnna and Grant BEAUMONT

Missing - January 26th (Australia Day) 1966

Glenelg Beach, Adelaide

Circumstances - at 10am on the morning of January 26th, 1966, brother and sisters Grant (4 years), Jane (9 years) and Arnna (7 years) Beaumont caught a bus from their home in Somerton Park Adelaide a short distance to Glenelg Beach. They were seen at 11am playing with a young, blonde man on the Beach, in the park opposite the Beach and then walking away with him behind the Glenelg Hotel. Jane bought ice creams for her brother and sister and paid for them with money her mother had not given her.

The local postman came forward and said that he had seen the trio, alone, walking up Jetty Road away from the beach and toward their home at about 3pm. They were laughing and holding hands.

The children were expected to return home on the midday bus but failed to catch this bus. They have not been seen since this date.
IP: 61.68.235.173

monkalup - April 14, 2008 02:23 PM (GMT)
DETECTIVES will today seek a court order to question Victoria's longest-serving prisoner, Derek Ernest Percy, after discovering new evidence connecting him to a series of unsolved child murders.

Thousands of documents hidden by Percy, including some that appear to link him to child abductions from the 1960s, have been uncovered.

The Age

Dianne - May 15, 2008 05:14 AM (GMT)
http://www.theage.com.au/news/national/new...8067191850.html

The killer, the vault and the murder link
John Silvester
August 30, 2007
user posted image
Derek Percy shown leaving court. Photo: Simon O'Dwyer

Court accepts girl murdered

DETECTIVES will today seek a court order to question Victoria's longest-serving prisoner, Derek Ernest Percy, after discovering new evidence connecting him to a series of unsolved child murders.

Thousands of documents hidden by Percy, including some that appear to link him to child abductions from the 1960s, have been uncovered.

Police obtained a court-approved warrant to seize 35 boxes of files, clippings and handwritten diaries concealed by Percy in a South Melbourne self-storage warehouse that he has rented for 20 years. They also found razor blades similar to one used to mutilate a victim.

The material includes newspaper articles on sex crimes, pictures of children, a video with a rape theme and handwritten stories on fresh sex offences involving abduction and torture.

Percy (pictured below in 1969) managed to collect and transfer the material from jail to his private collection, despite being one of Australia's most violent sex criminals and judged too dangerous for release.

Police now know that Percy, a former naval rating, has maintained storage facilities in Melbourne since the early 1970s.

He was ordered to remain in custody indefinitely when found unfit to plead on the grounds of insanity for the murder of Yvonne Tuohy, 12, whom he grabbed from Warneet beach, on Western Port near Tooradin, on July 20, 1969.

He is also a suspect in the murders of Christine Sharrock and Marianne Schmidt, both 15, on Sydney's Wanda Beach in January 1965; the disappearance of the Beaumont children, Jane, 9, Arnna, 7, and Grant, 4, in Adelaide in January 1966; the murder of Allen Redston, a six-year-old grabbed in Canberra in September 1966; Simon Brook, 3, killed in Sydney in May 1968; and Linda Stilwell, 7, abducted from the St Kilda foreshore in August 1968.

An investigation, codenamed Heats, found credible evidence leading investigators to say that Percy, 58, remains a "person of interest" in the unsolved cases.

Police are expected to apply today under section 464 (B) of the Crimes Act to remove Percy from Port Phillip Prison to question him over unsolved murders. He is expected to be interviewed by Victorian and NSW detectives.

Since he was a teenager, Percy has written diaries detailing his violent sexual impulses.

The first few were destroyed by his parents, but after his arrest at the Cerberus navy base, near Hastings, for the murder of Yvonne Tuohy, police found more writings connected with plans to abduct and torture young victims.

When he was jailed Percy became a model prisoner, but a search of his cell on September 28, 1971, found elaborate blueprints of planned sex crimes, pictures of children, obscene notes and complex charts showing abduction plots.

Percy has claimed that a prison psychiatrist, now dead, urged him to write down his fantasies for "therapeutic purposes". He has repeatedly said he has not had any violent fantasies since that time.

When Percy began legal moves to push for his freedom in 1998, the Supreme Court was told: "Since 1971 Mr Percy has never written anything which could be indicative of any sexual fantasy."

But after the material was discovered in his cell, Percy began to hide his writings and clippings by sending them out of the prison. Police say the evidence he placed in storage indicates Percy has not changed: instead he chose to hide incriminating material that would destroy his hopes for release.

"If he has stored them he must believe he will get out so he can recover them," a senior policeman said.

Police say Percy has moved material from prison since the early 1970s, first to a rented lock-up at Pascoe Vale and, for the past 20 years, to a self-store unit in South Melbourne.

The documents, kept in tea-chests and cardboard boxes, include material that police say may implicate Percy in the murders of Linda Stilwell and the Wanda Beach girls, Christine Sharrock and Marianne Schmidt.

They have found a 1978 street directory with a line drawn through the St Kilda Pier where Linda Stilwell was abducted 10 years earlier, and a pornographic lesbian cartoon on which Percy has written the word "Wanda" across the top.

When he was arrested in 1969, police found Percy had maps of the areas where Linda Stilwell, Christine Sharrock, Marianne Schmidt and Simon Brook lived or were murdered.

In 2005 NSW Coroner John Abernethy held an inquest into the murder of Simon Brook. Percy refused to give evidence on the grounds of possible self-incrimination.

Some of Percy's writings, including those seized in South Melbourne, detail abducting a young boy and inflicting similar injuries to those found on Simon Brook's body. Police also found in Percy's collection a kit filled with old-style razor blades, the same type used to mutilate the young victim.

Victoria's Coroner, Graeme Johnstone, is set to open an inquest on the death of Linda Stilwell; Percy is the only known suspect. Mr Johnstone will also examine material linking Percy to the interstate cases. Police believe the storage boxes contain Percy's possessions at the time of his arrest, material smuggled from jail in the 1970s and official documents, including court records, that have been legitimately transferred in the past two decades.

This month The Age revealed that, for the first time, a court had found that Linda Stilwell had been murdered. Magistrate Susan Wakeling granted her family an application for crimes compensation, accepting that the victim had been abducted and murdered.

Percy has received a navy pension since his arrest. He has nearly $200,000 in the bank and has successfully invested in gold. He has used part of his income to rent the South Melbourne storage unit.

Among the items seized by police was an extensive stamp collection valued at several thousand dollars, compiled while Percy was in prison.

Dianne - May 15, 2008 05:38 AM (GMT)
http://www.news.com.au/adelaidenow/story/0...5006301,00.html

Von Einem suspect in Beaumonts disappearance

BY NIGEL HUNT
September 23, 2007 12:15am

EXCLUSIVE: A POLICE report prepared almost 20 years ago identified convicted sex killer Bevan Spencer von Einem as a suspect in the Beaumont case.

The confidential report, prepared in 1989 by detectives in the then Major Crime Squad, was the first time possible links between von Einem and the two baffling cases was documented and presented to senior police with a request to launch a major probe.
The request was granted with the detailed report being the catalyst for extensive investigations that explored his possible involvement in the mysteries.

The report and subsequent inquiries examined similarities between the two cases, von Einem's known involvement in the drugging and sexual abuse of hitchhikers prior to the start of the notorious Family murders and his residential addresses at the times of the child abductions.

Von Einem, 61, serving a 24-year non-parole period for the murder of Richard Kelvin in 1982, was on Friday officially questioned over the disappearance of the Beaumont children following renewed investigations into the 41-year-old mystery.

Major Crime Investigation Section detectives spoke to him in the cells of the Adelaide Magistrates Court prior to his appearance on child pornography charges.

The fresh investigations centred on the possibility von Einem may have been present at a search for Grant, Arnna and Jane Beaumont the day after they vanished from Glenelg on January 26, 1966.

They followed the discovery of video footage by Channel 7 that showed a man with a striking resemblance to von Einem, who would have been aged 20 at the time, avidly watching police divers search a drain at Glenelg.

Major Crime acting Superintendent Tony Crameri said yesterday von Einem had made a short statement to detectives, but he would not elaborate on its content.

"There has been no evidence produced which furthers this line of inquiry and it is now complete," he said, referring to the Channel 7 pictures.

When asked about the 1989 von Einem report, acting Supt Crameri confirmed its existence, but would not discuss its content.

"It is one of many files that have been produced in respect to persons of interest," he said.

Retired detective chief superintendent Gerry Edwards, who in 1989 was officer-in-charge of the division that included Major Crime, yesterday said he "recalled a document of that nature".

"As a result of that document there would have been a review of past events and actions issued," he said.

A police source familiar with the report said it was "significant" because it was compiled before a witness in the Family murders case, known only as Mr B, implicated von Einem in the child abductions. His statement, in which he claimed von Einem had confessed to him, provided detectives with uncorroborated intelligence that supported their suspicions of his involvement.

Mr B told police von Einem had told him he had abducted and killed the Beaumont children and Kirste Gordon, 4, and Joanne Ratcliffe, 11, and disposed of their bodies in Myponga Dam.

Police divers unsuccessfully searched the dam.

Despite lengthy inquiries, no other evidence has ever been uncovered linking von Einem to the Beaumont case or the abduction of the two girls from Adelaide Oval in August, 1973.

The source said the 1989 report examined in detail various areas including von Einem's likeness to the identikit images of suspects, the fact that none of the children were struggling when last seen with the suspect and von Einem's expertise in drugging people.

"The report examined how the children could be taken without putting up a fight or alerting someone to their plight," the source said. "It pointed out there was a significant amount of evidence already available at that point that showed von Einem was skilled at delivering a therapeutic dose of a sedative in order to gain control of a person."

The report stated that "if" von Einem was involved in the abductions, it would have been a simple matter for him to slip sedative drugs into drinks purchased for the children and highlighted that the last sighting of the Beaumont children was at a deli buying soft drinks with money from an unknown source.

"Von Einem's method of operation when seducing his victim was to offer them a drink laced with an undetectable sedative," the source said.

"Once that was achieved he had control over them. They would put up little resistance.

"It was hypothesised in the report that this was a strong explanation for why there were no reports of children struggling at Glenelg or Adelaide Oval. It was quite the contrary, they were seen to be co-operating with the unknown male they were last seen with."

The source said the report also revealed detectives had established von Einem lived at Thebarton at the time of the Adelaide Oval abductions. This was considered significant because the two girls were last seen walking along the railway line west of Adelaide Oval near the brewery with an unknown man.

As a direct result of the report, detectives spent considerable time examining archived Lands Titles documents, finally establishing that von Einem did live at Thebarton and nearby Mile End at the time of the Adelaide Oval abductions.

The Thebarton house was demolished in the 1970s when the SA Brewing Company purchased the entire street the von Einem house was situated on.

The source said the report recommended police conduct a number of investigations including questioning both von Einem and his mother about the abductions, enlist the help of a forensic odontologist to examine photographs of von Einem and the abduction identikits and have an intelligence analyst start incorporating the abduction case files into the existing Family murders case files to assist in detecting any similarities.

The report was also the catalyst for the abduction files to be examined by an FBI criminal profiler who was already examining the Family murders case files.


Dianne - May 15, 2008 05:41 AM (GMT)
2 November 2007: Convicted murderer and Beaumont abduction suspect Bevan Spencer von Einem has completed the non-parole part of his prison sentence, it was announced yesterday. Von Einem, now 61, who is serving a 36-year-sentence for the 1983 murder of Richad Kelvin, is now able to apply for release.

However, the South Australian government yesterday assured the public that there in no immediate danger of von Einem's being paroled. Under legislation passed earlier this year and enacted yesterday, the government can apply to the state's Supreme Court to revoke the non-parole part of von Einem's sentence. It is also understood that even if that the Supreme Court ruled in von Einem's favour and the Parole Board recommended his release, the government would still have the power to veto that recommendation.

Commenting on the case, the state's Attorney-General, Michael Atkinson, said that if von Einem was considering applying for parole he was "wasting his time" 73. The government's policy is understood to be that von Einem should never be released.

Von Einem, who is facing fresh child pornography charges following the discovery of written materials in his possession, has made no move to apply for parole. He remains the prime suspect for several unsolved murders, as well as for the disappearance, presumed abduction and presumed murder of the Beaumont children, and for the abduction and presumed murder of Joanne Ratcliffe and Kirste Gordon from Adelaide Oval in 1973.

monkalup - March 8, 2009 07:20 PM (GMT)
Child killer to face inquest
John Silvester
March 9, 2009
Page 1 of 2 | Single Page View

Derek Percy in 1998. Photo: Simon O'Dwyer
ONE of Victoria's most infamous inmates will be called to give evidence at the inquest into the murder of a seven-year-old girl who disappeared from St Kilda 41 years ago.

Derek Ernest Percy, who has been linked to the deaths and disappearance of nine children, will be subpoenaed to give evidence about the case of Linda Stilwell, who was last seen playing on St Kilda foreshore on August 10, 1968.

Percy has been in custody since he was arrested hours after the murder of Yvonne Elizabeth Tuohy, 12, who was abducted from the beach at Warneet, south-east of Melbourne near French Island, on July 27, 1969.

He was found not guilty on the grounds of insanity and remains in custody.

Linda Stilwell's brother, Gary, said yesterday: "I truly believe he murdered my sister and this will give me the opportunity to see him. I want to eyeball him in the court.

"The inquest will be important for our family as it will be the only closure we will get.

"This will be the venue where we will be able to express our grief and anger at what happened."

Linda's mother, Jean Priest, said: "My little girl, who was only seven when she went missing, deserves an inquest.

"It's nearly 41 years and she seems to have fallen through the cracks as nobody seemed to care until the cold case unit took up her story."

The cold case unit of the homicide squad began to check the Stilwell file five years ago to prepare the inquest brief. Senior Detective Wayne Newman uncovered evidence linking Percy to Linda's disappearance.

Further investigations linked him to a series of similar deaths and disappearances involving children.

A two-year operation code-named Heats, and involving detectives from four police forces, named Percy as a suspect in:

The murders of Christine Sharrock and Marianne Schmidt on Sydney's Wanda Beach in January 1965.

The disappearance of the Beaumont children (Jane, 9, Arnna, 7, and Grant, 4), abducted in Adelaide in 1966
The murder of Allen Redston, 6, in Canberra in September 1966.

The death of Simon Brook, 3, in Sydney in 1968.

And the disappearance of Linda Stilwell.

In 2005, Percy refused to give evidence before NSW Coroner John Abernethy at the Simon Brook inquest on the grounds of self-incrimination. But in 1969, when Victorian homicide detective Dick Knight asked him if he had killed Brook, Percy replied: "I could have."

While Percy will be called at the Stilwell inquest, which is listed to begin on August 31 and scheduled to last six days, he may try to avoid being questioned on the grounds of self-incrimination.

Two days after Percy's arrest for the Tuohy murder, a young policeman and old school friend of the suspect talked to him in the city watchhouse. Asked if he killed Linda Stilwell, Percy said: "Possibly, I don't remember a thing about it."

When Percy was arrested, police found maps marked by hand. One included a line drawn past the spot where Linda Stilwell was last seen.

A woman has come forward to tell police she saw Stilwell at St Kilda on the day she disappeared near a man wearing a dark spray jacket. When Percy was arrested for the Tuohy murder, he was photographed wearing the same-styled jacket.

"I am absolutely sure that the man I saw sitting on the park bench the day Stilwell disappeared is the same man," she told police.

In 2007 police found 35 cardboard boxes and tea chests filled with material from Percy in a South Melbourne storage depot. The material included clippings on sex crimes, stories on child abductions and items that appeared to implicate him in unsolved murders.

http://www.theage.com.au/national/child-ki...sfv.html?page=1

monkalup - March 11, 2009 03:14 AM (GMT)

monkalup - December 10, 2009 04:50 AM (GMT)
http://www.limed.se/2009/12/09/killer-near...ell-vanished-2/
Child killer Derek Percy 'was in St Kilda' on day Stilwell vanished Lauren Wilson From: The Australian December 09, 2009 2:18PM Increase Text SizeDecrease Text SizePrintEmail Share
Add to DiggAdd to del.icio.usAdd to FacebookAdd to KwoffAdd to MyspaceAdd to NewsvineWhat are these?NOTORIOUS child killer Derek Ernest Percy confessed to an old school friend that he was in St Kilda the day Linda Stilwell vanished from the St Kilda foreshore.
Just after Percy had been arrested for the brutal murder of 12 year old Yvonne Tuohy, his former classmate turned Victorian police officer was sent by the homicide squad to interview Percy about his state of mind.

Retired police officer Ronald Anderson told a coronial inquest into the disappearance of Stilwell that Percy was sobbing as he entered the cell. When he looked up he said, Looks like Ive really fu*cked up this time, Ron.

Mr Anderson told the Victorian Coroner's Court he asked Percy if there were any other victims. I cant remember mate, I just really cant remember, Percy told Mr Anderson, inquest heard.

But Mr Anderson said when he pressed his childhood friend about the abduction of the Beaumont children from Glenelg beach in 1966, the disappearance of Stilwell from St Kilda in 1968 and the slaying of three year old Sydney toddler Simon Brook in Glebe in 1968, Percy confessed he was at the locations of each of the crimes that day.

Mr Anderson said he formed the impression that, Derek was very remorseful for himself I thought, he didnt indicate any remorse for the victims.

The Victorian Coroner is examining the abduction and suspected murder of Stilwell, who was snatched from little Luna Park in 1968, just 12 days shy of her eighth birthday.

Edith Jamieson, a mother who had taken her children to St Kilda on August 10, 1968, was the last person to have seen Stilwell alive.

She told the inquest that around 5pm she saw a young girl rolling down the grassy embankment behind little Luna Park in clothing that matched Stilwells that day.

Mr Jamieson said she also noticed a young man with a thin, dark features sitting on a park bench watching the girl. She said she felt vibrations coming from the man and voices speaking to her from within saying, go home little girl you are in great danger.

Percy, 19 at the time of Stilwells abduction, was a sailor with the Royal Australian Navy. He has spent the past four decades behind bars. He is likely to be called to give evidence about Stilwells disappearance this week.

The inquest before Deputy State Coroner Iain West continues.

monkalup - January 17, 2010 02:44 PM (GMT)
http://www.defrostingcoldcases.com/missing...grant-and-arnna
We confess ourselvesdisappointed!In search of Jane, Grant and Arnna
Jan 16th, 2010

Jane Nartare (9), Arnna Kathleen (7), and Grant Ellis (4), known as the Beaumont Children, disappeared from Glenelg Beach, near Adelaide, South Australia, on January 26, 1966. Their disappearance is to this day Australias best know cold case.

Jane, Grant and Arnna Beaumont, photographed during a family trip to the Twelve Apostles, Victoria, Australia in late 1965
The Beaumonts lived on 109 Harding Street, Somerton Park, which is a suburb of Adelaide. Five minutes away by bus was Glenelg Beach where the children often went to play. On January 26, 1966, around 10am, the children took the bus from their home to the beach. Jane was in charge of her siblings, as usual. They were expected back by noon.

The police investigation centered on a tall, blond man who was seen on the beach with the children. He was well build, athletic, and in his mid-30s. Witnesses who reported this noted that the children, usually very shy, seemed at ease with the man. This led police to believe they had met him before. At one of the shops, Jane bought pastries and a meat pie using a 1 note. However, Mrs. Beaumont had not given Jane notes. She had given Jane coins. The store owner was familiar with the family and the children, and he noted that meat pie was not among their usual purchases. All four were seen walking away from the beach around 12:15pm.

At about 3 pm, the postman saw the children walking alone away from the beach, along Jetty Road, in the general direction of their home. The postmans detailed description combined with the fact that he was familiar with the family, led police to trust this statement. The details that the postman gave were that the children were happy and they greeted him. It turned out that the postman was the last person to see the children alive. The postman did not state whether he saw the children carry their belongings such as the beach towels, books, and other things they had with them. No belongings of the Beaumont children were later found at the beach.

This is astonishing if you remember that Mrs. Beaumont expected her children to be back by noon. These usually very obedient and reliable children were now three hours late and they did not seem concerned or worried about the delay. This clashed with Janes character in general. Look at this letter police released. The letter was written by Jane, on January 24th, when she was babysitting her siblings. Her parents were out for maybe an hour or two. Here is what she wrote:

Dear Mum and Dad,

I am just about to go to bed and the time is 9. I have put Grants nappy on so there is no need to worry about his wetting the sheet. Grant wanted to sleep in his own bed so one of you will have to sleep with Arnna. Although you will not find the rooms in very good condition I hope you will find them as comfortable as we do. Good night to you both.

Jane XXX

PS I hope you had a nice time whereever you went.

PPS I hope you dont mind me taking your radio into my room Daddy.




This nine year old girl sounds very responsible, mature, concerned for her brother and sister, as well as for her parents. She is knowledgeable(sheets getting wet and the consequences), aware of the normal order of things (radio taken into her room), and she is concerned about her parents opinion (hope you find the rooms comfortable, hope you had a nice time, hope you dont mind me moving the radio, etc.). After reading this, can you imagine the same girl not being concerned about arriving home three hours later than expected?

Vidocq thinks there are two possibilities. One is that the tall man assured Jane that he knew her parents very well. He assured her that he was going to make a phone call to let their mother know they would be late. He assured Jane that everything would be alright. The only person who could have done that is someone Jane met before and in different settings, hence a friend of the family. The second possibility is that Jane was not her shy self, and that would only have been possible if she had been given a relaxing drug. Remember that the meat pie was not a regular purchase? Is it possible that the meat pie was later drugged with a relaxant, when the children were not watching? Since the postman did not differentiate between Jane and the other siblings when he mentioned they looked happy, Vidocq assumes all three must have eaten from the meat pie.

After what police calls the last confirmed sighting involving the postman, several people told police that they had seen the children. Some witness statements were made immediately, others were reported much later. Reports from people who had seen the children kept coming in, all were diligently investigated, but none led to results, despite nationwide efforts to find the children.

Losing their children in such a tragic way took its toll on the Beaumont marriage. Nancy and Jim remained in the old family home for as long as they could, but tension built and eventually they separated. Neither parent has ever been accused of any wrongdoing, nor has either ever been considered a suspect. To this day, they both have the sympathy of the entire nation.


Wanted poster for the missing Beaumont children. Courtesy Alan Whiticker
In a tragic situation like this, there are always people who have the sick need to cause even more pain. Letters started to arrive at the Beaumont residence signed by Jane. The letters were investigated and, at the time, followed up. However, modern day fingerprinting technology determined that the letters were a hoax from a man who was a teenager at the time the children disappeared. Sadly, due to statutes of limitation, no charges were ever filed. The identity of the man has not been revealed. Vidocq hopes he is ashamed of himself.

From all the possible suspects, one emerged as more likely than the rest. Police was alerted to this person while they were investigating other murders.

In 1973, Joanne Ratcliffe (11) and Kirsty Gordon (4) disappeared. They were last seen during a football match in the Adelaide Oval Stadium, when they went for a restroom break, unaccompanied by their parents. People reported that they did see the two girls around the Oval. In contrast to the Beaumont children, they did not appear to be relaxed or unconcerned. They were accompanied by a man. After that, they vanished. A sketch was made, but as you can read from the link below, it isnt a very good one. For more information and the sketch, I refer you to the website by Russel Brown here.

During the next few years, bodies of murdered young men turned up around Adelaide. In 1979, the body of Neil Muir (25) was found. His body was badly mutilated. In 1982, the badly mutilated body of Mark Langley (18) was found. It appeared that he had been subjected to surgery. His body had been shaved and his abdomen was sliced open. Doctors found that a part of his bowels had been removed. He died from a massive loss of blood. More bodies were found, such as the dismembered skeletal remains of Peter Stogneff (14) and the badly mutilated body of Alan Barnes (18). Barnes has been subjected to similar mutilations as Langley. In 1983, the similarly mutilated body of Richard Kelvin (15) was found.

During the investigation into Kelvins death, witnesses told police to check on a 37 year old accountant named Bevan Spencer von Einem. One credible witness, identified in police reports only as Mr. B., told police about a conversation he had with von Einem. Von Einem spoke about children that he had picked up from a beach. He had taken them home and performed experimental surgery on their bodies. Somehow he had been able to connect them with each other but during the procedure, one of the children had died. He then decided to kill all the children to protect himself. He said he had disposed of their bodies near the Myponga Damin. Von Einem was familiar with and frequented Glenelg Beach. He was also fond of children. The reference to experimental surgery matched the mutilated bodies found in recent years. Then, von Einem told the witness that he had also taken two girls from a stadium during a football match. He spoke about the Oval and that he had killed those girls but he did not elaborate any further.


Von Einem was charged with the murder of Richard Kelvin.
During Kelvins autopsy, it became clear that he had been drugged with Mandrax. The drug proved to be a solid lead. Police began searching for prescriptions for Mandrax and eventually they found von Einem. He was known to police. Von Einem had been questioned before over the deaths of three young men and an alleged sexual assault of another. You can read about the Kelvin investigation here.

Von Einem was sentenced to life at Yatala Labour Prison. Justice White imposed a non-parole period of 24 years. Under South Australian law, a third of the non-parole period could be taken off for good behaviour in prison. The then-Attorney-General of South Australia immediately appealed the leniency of the non-parole period, and on March 29, 1985, the Court of Criminal Appeal in South Australia increased the non-parole period to 36 years, a record at the time in Australia. Von Einem has not applied for parole yet. In July 2007, von Einem was transferred to Port Augusta prison.

The assumption is that von Einem was responsible for the before mentioned mutilated bodies. No accomplices were ever charged. He never cooperated with police to investigate other deaths and did not talk about possible other killings. However, in September 2007, police made public that they had questioned von Einem again in Yatala. The fresh investigation centered on the possibility von Einem may have been present at a search for Grant, Arnna and Jane Beaumont the day after they vanished from Glenelg on January 26, 1966. They followed the discovery of video footage by Channel 7 that showed a man with a striking resemblance to von Einem, who would have been aged 20 at the time, avidly watching police divers search a drain at Glenelg. You can read that story here.

It is a known fact that murderers often return to the scene of the crime to watch police search, and that sometimes they even offer to help the authorities. They can stay informed about the investigation this way, but watching the search also stimulates them. The speculation is that von Einem drugged the Beaumont children, as he had Kelvin, to get them to accompany him.

The cases of the Beaumont children and of Joanne Ratcliffe and Kirsty Gordon remain open. Some say von Einem could not possibly have been involved with the Beaumont childrens disappearance, because, at the time that they disappeared, von Einem was much younger than the tall man as described by the witnesses.

According to various Australian newspapers, the South Australian Government will appeal to the Supreme Court to have von Einem serve a life sentence.

Ell - January 30, 2012 12:22 PM (GMT)

On his deathbed, a good friend of your fathers tells you that man is not your dad.

He kidnapped you from hospital when you were four, your dad's friend says. He told me so himself.

Sadly, its not entirely surprising. As your family grew around you, you never felt part of it.

You looked different, you felt you were treated differently.

You even aged differently to the people you were raised to believe were your brothers and sisters.

So when you hear of your dads friends admission, you hit the internet.

You enter your birthdate into the search bar on a global database of missing persons and suddenly, shockingly, you find yourself staring back at you.

Theres just one small problem. The match offered by the DOE Network just happens to be Grant Ellis Beaumont.

As in, the Grant Ellis Beaumont that was taken from an Adelaide beach along with his two sisters on Australia Day back in 1966.

Well, two small problems. The other is you were raised in Kentucky, USA.

David Estes says his earliest memory was waking up in hospital in 1966. His hip was broken, his back fractured in several places. He was four years old.

He was picked up by a married couple and taken to their home in Irvine, Kentucky.

They claimed they were the biological family at that time but I didnt recall, it was the first time Id laid eyes on them, Mr Estes told news.com.au.

They were very abusive. She was always abusive, cussing, throwing stuff at you they were just a mean family.

Always in fights, drunk. It was always a real bad place to live.

She was mean.

So mean in fact, it was all Mr Estes needed to decide she couldnt be his natural mother.


David Estes' birth certificate. Picture: Supplied


She really did steal a child

Just why the couple kidnapped him wasnt such a mystery, according to Mr Estes. He said his mom had several social security accounts and false identities. It was all about money, he says.

It wasnt an easy life, but Mr Estes learned to live with it, up until 1980.

He had four brothers and sisters, her biological kids, as far as Mr Estes knew.

But I didnt look like any of them at all. They looked like old people and I looked very young, still do compared to them.

In 2004, he had his blood type compared to his mothers. He says a doctor of hers at the hospital claimed she wasnt his biological mother and the blood test proved it.

I felt relief, knowing that what I knew was true, that she really did steal a child, he said.

Soon after followed the bombshell from his fathers friend.

He got drunk one night and told some friends of his, broke down in tears and told them that hed claimed that he basically did kidnap me, he said. And they told me ... that he did do it.

Fast-forward several years to the moment he first saw Grant Beaumonts four-year-old face on the DOE Network.

I was more or less in tears, Mr Estes said. When you see your own face, it hits you like a sledgehammer.

The day Australia lost its innocence

Tomorrow's Australia Day marks 46 years since the moment which occupies a sad niche in history as the day Australia lost its innocence.

Grant, 4, Arnna, 7, and Jane Beaumont, 9, were spotted leaving Glenelg Beach with a man police suspect had befriended them on possibly several previous visits to the same beach.

The children were unaccompanied by their parents. They, nor their bodies, have never been found.

And Australian parents views about letting their children out of sight have irrevocably changed, hence the much-quoted reference to innocence lost.

Mr Estes is sympathetic to the detail of the case, but to an American, the cultural significance is neither here nor there.

He simply sees the match as the strongest line of inquiry in the search to find his true parents.

Thats when the real problems begin.

'The police, they just laughed at me

For the record, Mr Estes's mother told Kentucky state police that this isn't the first time her son has tried to deny his parentage.

She claims he once approached Oprah Winfrey claiming he was the lost love child of Elvis Presley.


David Estes now and an image created by News Ltd in 1997 of what Grant Beaumont might have
looked like as an adult. Picture: Supplied/News Ltd
But Mr Estes is sticking to his story. He's spent the past few years just trying to get his birth record changed to match the name under his social security number, one of several "suspicious" discrepancies surrounding his birth.

He claims he "remembers the name Grant.

But I dont remember the name Beaumont. But what would you expect from a four-year-old?

Mr Estess first step was to call the FBI. They told him to go ahead and call the Australian Police, claiming they didnt have the jurisdiction to investigate overseas.

In September, he sent four pictures to the South Australian Police, the earliest of which he claims is an "identical" match to Grant Beaumont.


David Estes as a teenager. Picture: Supplied
He said the Kentucky State Police were now waiting on a call from SA Police confirming they are willing to investigate Mr Estess claims further.

SA Police confirmed to news.com.au that contact was made and they offered this statement:



We are aware of Mr Estes and his claims. A MCIB investigator spoke with him via phone on 9 Sept 2011 about his claims. He was requested to send certain items to us so his claims could be further explored. To date nothing has been received.


Mr Estes sent his birth record, which he sent on October 31. He said they already have the photos of him as a four-year-old boy, a teenager and a current photo.

He wont pay the expense of a DNA sample until SA Police ask directly for it, as "it costs $10,000".

Now, following their conversation with Kentucky state police and the claims made by the woman who raised Mr Estes, SA Police won't be pursuing him for DNA.

An angry Mr Estes claims getting South Australian police to take him seriously has been a trial in itself.

He said when they finally got back to him following his initial approach to them with his claims the detective laughed at me, like its funny or something.

The main source of his frustration isnt so much the fact SA Police aren't being as helpful as he would like. Its the fact theyre the only avenue through which he can contact the Beaumont childrens parents, Jim and Nancy.

In recent years, they have divorced and live at undisclosed addresses, determined to live out their lives away from media scrutiny.

What would you do?

Mr Estes understands the difficulty he faces in getting his story taken seriously.

But put yourself in his shoes, he asks. What would you do?

In the not-too-recent past, SA Police have investigated several leads on the case, including the fact the Beaumont children may be living in New Zealand, the possibility of a confession from several convicts and a family that claims their father was involved.

The detective in charge of the Beaumont case, Sergeant Brian Swan, receives six tips a month and told News Limited he believed the mystery will be solved.

Knowing this simply adds to Mr Estess frustration.

When you see your own face and it says above it Missing Child, it really takes its toll on you at times, he said.

You dont know whether to scream, cry, holler or whatever.

(Jim and Nancy Beaumont) are 80 years old.

If it turns out to be true, I may have three or four years left with them. This picture is as identical as they come.

Theres an excellent possibility I could be their missing child. Its not to upset them or not to hurt them, but the portrait does favour me quite a bit and Id like to know what they think about that.

I want to give it everything I got and even if nothing comes of it, I just want (the Beaumonts) to know that I did try to find them.



Read more: http://www.news.com.au/national/us-man-dav...5#ixzz1kwXNksgJ

monkalup - March 25, 2012 02:17 AM (GMT)
US man David Estes claims DOE Network shows he is 'identical match' for Grant Beaumont

by: Penelope Debelle
From: The Advertiser
January 25, 2012 11:30PM
22 comments

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David Estes

David Estes (far right) claims he is an "almost identical match" to Grant Beaumont as a four-year-old. Picture: Supplied Source: Supplied
David Estes

An exhibit was set up in 1966 in an attempt to jog the public's memory. Picture: Supplied Source: Supplied

THE saga of the missing Beaumont children has yet another bizarre chapter - 46 years after they became victims of the most infamous unsolved crime in Australian history.

An American man, David Estes, is claiming that he is Grant Beaumont, the youngest of the three children snatched from the Glenelg foreshore on Australia Day, 1966.

Mr Estes, who lives in Kentucky, has claimed that he was kidnapped from hospital when he was four.

He said he remembered waking up in hospital in 1966 with a fractured back and a broken hip.

Curious about his beginning, Mr Estes said he entered his birth date in a global database for missing people last year - and found Grant Beaumont staring back at him.

"I was more or less in tears," Mr Estes said from the US.

"When you see your own face, it hits you like a sledgehammer."

Start of sidebar. Skip to end of sidebar.
Man claims he's Beaumont child
Could this man really be Grant Beaumont?
Yes, it's highly possible
No, it sounds like rubbish
Who knows?
The Beaumont children mystery

End of sidebar. Return to start of sidebar.
In September, Mr Estes sent four pictures to South Australia Police - which he said were an "identical" match to Grant Beaumont, who was aged four when he disappeared.

He so far has not sent a DNA sample that would conclusively establish his claim.

Mr Estes said it would cost $10,000 and he would not do it unless directly asked.

Detective Superintendent Grant Moyle yesterday asked that respect be shown for the children's parents, Nancy and Jim Beaumont.

"The ongoing publicity of the Beaumont (children's) abduction causes considerable distress for Mr and Mrs Beaumont," the Major Crime chief said.

"Out of respect for them on the anniversary of the abduction, I do not wish to provide any further comment at this time."

Mr Estes' mother has not supported his claims - and said it was not the first time her son had tried to deny his parentage.

She said he once approached former TV host Oprah Winfrey claiming to be the lost love child of Elvis Presley.

Mr Estes' claims are just the latest in an incredible murder mystery that gripped the public imagination from the day the three children failed to catch the bus home after a morning at the beach.

Almost a year after their disappearance, a Dutch psychic, Gerard Cloiset, flew into Adelaide to help find the children.

Nancy Beaumont said then she did not believe in clairvoyance but she and her then husband Jim Beaumont presented him with a small gift. After looking around a warehouse in the suburb of Paringa Park, he left empty handed.

In the late 1990s, local businessman Con Polites supervised a dig under concrete in the same warehouse but without success.

Adelaide author Stephen Orr - whose book Time's Long Ruin, inspired by their disappearance, was short-listed for the Commonwealth Writer's Prize and the Miles Franklin Award - said yesterday the grieving parents should be left in peace.

"Nancy Beaumont is still alive and functioning and has to deal with this," he said, adding that the latest claims seemed to have little credibility.

"As claims about the Beaumont children go, this is a bit of a shocker.

"It's got all the difficult, inexplicable probabilities covered up.

"It's just silliness."
http://www.couriermail.com.au/news/nationa...o-1226253980527




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