ADVERTISEMENT
In recent years, New South Wales Police conducted a four-year review of the case. Cheryl’s family had hoped it would reveal new leads, especially after renewed public interest sparked by the Fairy Meadow true-crime podcast, which has been downloaded more than five million times.
Eyewitnesses Left Without Interviews
Kay Tutton looks at the camera as she holds up a black and white picture of herself as a child. She is wearing glasses, a black blouse and is sitting on a grey sofa.
What particularly angered the Grimmer family was the revelation that three potential eyewitnesses who contacted the BBC after the podcast were not formally interviewed by police.
Kay Tutton, now 82, recalled seeing a distressed young girl being led away by a man at Fairy Meadow. She initially went to the police in 1970 after watching a news report, but never received follow-up contact. After reaching out again in 2022, she too said she was not interviewed.
The third woman, who also asked to remain unnamed, said she had been approached by a man on a nearby beach days before Cheryl vanished. She expressed disappointment that her account had not been pursued further.
Former Detective Voices Concern
Retired detective sergeant Damian Loone, who once worked on the case, criticized the handling of these witness accounts. He described one man’s testimony as “very credible” and said he could not understand why it was not pursued.
“I think that’s sloppy police work,” Loone said. “That’s what they should have done and I can’t believe that it hasn’t happened.”
The collapse of the case was devastating for Cheryl’s family. They had briefly hoped justice was within reach, only to watch the case unravel in court.
Petition and Calls for Accountability
ADVERTISEMENT