Reports

Gus Lamont’s grandmother reveals WHY she’s the ‘main suspect’ in his disappearance – and exposes the missed clues that point to a mystery person on her remote family station in explosive interview

Gus Lamont’s grandmother has lashed out at police, claiming she was wrongly treated as the prime suspect in his disappearance while officers missed clues suggesting a stranger was on her property the day he disappeared. 

In an explosive first interview since her grandson went missing, Josie Murray described herself to Seven’s Spotlight program as the police’s ‘main suspect’.

She claimed cops suspect she buried four-year-old Gus after he suffered a fatal injury or accident, but do not believe she had hurt him. She has denied any wrongdoing.

Gus disappeared from Oak Park Station near Yunta, South Australia, on the evening of September 27, with his grandmother among the first to notice he was gone. 

Ms Murray claimed detectives dismissed a moved bed stead and weather station, along with boot prints and tyre tracks in the red dirt as evidence someone else had been on the property when Gus vanished. 

However, she said the first mistake was made before the investigation had even begun, claiming one officer failed to turn up after she called police at 8pm that night. 

‘After (the first officer, Luke) arrived, there was a second one on his way,’ Ms Murray said.

‘Luke and I were sitting on the hill outside the house trying to spot (the second officer’s) flashing light, and this went on for some time.

The grandmother of missing toddler Gus Lamont has lashed out at police in a bombshell interview, claiming she was wrongly treated as the prime suspect while officers missed clues a stranger was on her property the day he disappeared

‘(I tried) to describe how he should get to the property… and eventually he just gave up and went back… so he actually never arrived on the property.’

Ms Murray said on the morning after Gus went missing she noticed a bed stead next to the house had moved as well as a weather station. 

‘I remember looking out the window, because it was starting to get light by that stage and there was a bed stead which had been moved,’ she said. 

‘Not quite 180 degrees, but a substantial amount to when I last saw it. 

‘It was heavy and a child would not have been able to shift it. 

‘I also saw the weather station had been moved… but I’m not sure when that happened.’

She said her suspicions Gus had been abducted grew stronger when she saw tyre tracks going past the bed stead and weather station. 

‘These wheel tracks were (from a) small tire, medium sized car with not much tread on them, not an off-road type tread and it was definitely a passenger type,’ Ms Murray said. 

Josie claimed a bedstead (above) had been moved from where it had been left on the property

Josie claimed a bedstead (above) had been moved from where it had been left on the property

When she took a look at the dam near the property, Ms Murray said she saw what seemed to be Gus's footprint, but police dismissed it as that of one of the searchers, despite its size

When she took a look at the dam near the property, Ms Murray said she saw what seemed to be Gus’s footprint, but police dismissed it as that of one of the searchers, despite its size

‘I thought that’s strange too, and I started to think almost immediately, I wonder if someone’s come in.

‘All the time I was thinking, you know, there’s a chance that he’s been taken by someone.’

When she took a closer look at the dam near the property, she said she also saw what seemed to be Gus’s footprint. 

However, she said police dismissed it, claiming it was a searchers’ boot print despite its small size.

‘I found these footprints near the dam,’ she said. 

‘The dam was nearly dry, it was mostly mud, and we actually took one of Gus’s boots out there and I took it, laid it next to this footprint and took a photograph of it and I said it’s gotta be him because it’s the right size.

‘The police kept on saying ‘no’, and that it was a police diver.

She said she also told the police officer Luke to not rule out abduction as a possibility. 

Gus, 4, disappeared from Oak Park Station near Yunta, South Australia , on the evening of September 27, with his grandmother Josie Murray among the first to notice he was missing

Gus, 4, disappeared from Oak Park Station near Yunta, South Australia , on the evening of September 27, with his grandmother Josie Murray among the first to notice he was missing

‘I’m pretty sure I talked to Luke McCoy and said, look, don’t rule out abduction,’ she said.

‘There’s signs that something has occurred in front of the bomb shelter, and that was where Gus was when we last saw him and we’re suspicious.’

Ms Murray said she was also concerned about the hundreds of vehicles which drove up to the property in the days that followed, searching for Gus and for evidence.

‘My immediate thought was, my God they’ve destroyed any chance of tracking him if he’d walked out on the road or anything because the road was already pounded up, starting to get dusty, and they’d made a mess,’ she said.    

Ms Murray revealed that detectives later said she was right about destroying any chance of tracking the child.

‘They admitted to me later they think it was a mistake to come in with all those vehicles so early when they should have gotten a guy (tracker) from Port Augusta who had been at our place catching dogs and trapping them,’ she said. 

‘We needed to get him there while there was still a chance to find [Gus’s] track, and he arrived three days after.’

Ms Murray said she also found it ‘ludicrous’ that detectives later labelled her as the ‘main suspect’, and said they believed she had buried Gus after he suffered a fatal accident.

Police had 'almost certainly ruled out abduction because they believe it is so unlikely that a stranger would be so opportunistic to go into a property so remote'

Police had ‘almost certainly ruled out abduction because they believe it is so unlikely that a stranger would be so opportunistic to go into a property so remote’

‘To think I could go out there and do something like that, to think I’d be stupid enough to do it is ludicrous,’ she said. 

‘To think I could face the trauma of doing that would also be ridiculous.’

She said it would be impossible to bury a body without detection due to conditions on the remote family sheep station. 

‘When it’s so dry and dusty like that, there’s no way you can bury something without leaving evidence that the ground has been disturbed,’ Ms Murray said. 

‘The amount of searching that went on with a helicopter, with the fixed wing, with the drones, with everything, you would see signs of someone being buried.’

She said even if Gus had been thrown into the dam, investigators would have found out. 

‘I mean obviously they were thinking about the dam and I had several neighbours who said to me afterwards it would be, again, ridiculous to think that he’d gone into the dam,’ she said.

‘There was weed all around the dam and if anything had gone in there, you would disturb that weed and it’d be obvious.’

7News Adelaide crime reporter Hannah Foord said police had ‘almost certainly ruled out abduction because they believe it is so unlikely that a stranger would be so opportunistic to go into a property so remote’.

According to Ms Murray, one of the two main reasons police felt there was no chance Gus had been abduction was that ‘there was only four-wheel drive access to Oak Park’. 

‘That’s absurd because the Hilux they’ve taken down there to do tests on is a two-wheel drive,’ she said. 

‘Shannon (Gus’s other grandmother) has a two-wheel drive, Jess has got a two-wheel drive, the buggy’s a two-wheel drive,’ she said. 

She claimed the other reason police dismissed the theory was that cameras showed no signs of any other vehicle entering, which she also described as ‘laughable’. 

‘The other thing that they said was that the footage on the security cameras on the property next door where you come in from Yunta Road showed that no-one had come out to Oak Park in that time frame,’ Ms Murray said. 

After she identified the camera showed the part of Oak Park they called Breakneck Creek, Ms Murray claimed she was told that it ‘wasn’t working at the time’.

  • For more: Elrisala website and for social networking, you can follow us on Facebook
  • Source of information and images “dailymail

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Back to top button

Discover more from Elrisala

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading