Families of Unsolved Cases Tell Australian Inquiry of Police Failures
L'essentiel
- Families of missing persons and unsolved murder victims have testified at a NSW parliamentary inquiry, detailing decades of alleged police failures.
- The inquiry is examining cases potentially linked to serial killer Ivan Milat, with families expressing deep pain over lack of answers.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
Families of individuals who disappeared or were murdered decades ago are testifying before a New South Wales parliamentary inquiry into unsolved cases. They are detailing alleged failures by the police in handling these investigations.
The brother of a British toddler who disappeared from an Australian beach has told an inquiry that the family has lived with the consequences of police failure for more than 50 years.
"If [the police] had done their job in 1971, we would have known the truth years ago," Ricki Nash told a New South Wales (NSW) parliamentary inquiry looking into cases of unsolved murders and long-term missing people.
"Cheryl was not a case file, she was an amazing funny little girl," her elder brother Ricki Nash, told the inquiry on its first day of public hearings.
The twin brother of Kay Docherty who went missing near Wollongong in 1979 at the age of 15, also spoke at the hearing.
"Both my parents went to an early grave without answers or knowing what happened to their only daughter," said Kevin Docherty. "They virtually died of a broken heart eight years apart."
Kevin Docherty was one of several families detailing the failures of police in handling the disappearances of their loved ones.
"As mum always said, when she went to that police station that night, there was one good cop, there was one bad cop," he said, telling the inquiry that the police wrote her off as a runaway and as a result, little was done to try and find her.
The case of Kay Docherty is one of several being examined in the inquiry that may have links to the notorious Australian serial killer, Ivan Milat.
Between 1989 and 1992, Milat kidnapped and murdered at least seven victims aged 19 to 22 - three Germans, two Britons and two Australians. The backpackers were picked up when hitchhiking on a long stretch of road between Sydney and Melbourne. Each was taken into NSW's Belanglo State Forest.
The family of Keren Rowland also gave a submission to the inquiry outlining their belief that she may have been Milat's first victim. Rowland was just 20 and five months pregnant when she disappeared in February 1971 in Canberra.
À surveiller
Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes
The inquiry will recommend changes to police protocols for handling missing persons and unsolved cases.
Probable · En quelques mois
Further potential links between the discussed cases and Ivan Milat will be investigated.
Possible · En quelques semaines
Questions ouvertes
- What specific actions or inactions by the police contributed to the unsolved nature of these cases?
- What are the potential links between these cases and serial killer Ivan Milat?
- Will the inquiry lead to any reforms in police procedures for missing persons and unsolved murder cases?
- What is the current status of the investigations into the disappearances of Cheryl, Kay Docherty, and Keren Rowland?




