Police search warrant for 6/34-36a Darlinghurst Road, Kings Cross will expose the gang which is known for alleged Paedophilia called the Pink Triangle.
Detective Dark has received emails from me asking for the Police search since June 2014 as he is in charge I was told of Team 1.
Who investigates the police.....no one.
1970 Cheryl Grimmer three,
disappears from Fairy Meadow Beach. Her parents
receive a ransom note but the kidnapper fails to show, unsolvved case.
It was January 12, 1970,
when the Grimmers' world was turned upside down.
The
wind turned bitterly cold about 1.30pm. Carole Grimmer sent her children to
shower at the nearby change sheds.
After
about 10 minutes, Stephen and Ricky, 7, returned to tell her that Cheryl, who
was wearing her royal blue one-piece swimming costume, was still in the men's
change rooms.
Mrs
Grimmer went to fetch her but Cheryl was nowhere to be found.
Detective Sergeant James Dark
said police had re-examined suspects, the ransom note, and the lock of an
unknown person's hair that was sent to police, but investigators did not get
enough evidence to charge anyone.
The
ransom note, demanding $10,000 and saying Cheryl was unharmed, was sent to
police in the days after she disappeared.
The
kidnapper specified a meeting time and place but did not show up. No more
ransom demands were made.
Carrying her swimmers and towel
in a bundle, Cheryl was standing near a bubbler when witnesses saw a man pick
her up and run into the car park.
At an
inquest last year into her disappearance, a coroner ruled that Cheryl died soon
after the man took her. It heard that a reinvestigation in 2008 examined the
possibility that Cheryl was either killed and buried, or kept by her abductor
and brought up under another name.
Detective Sergeant Dark said the
huge police operation and publicity might have put off the offender. ''I
genuinely believe that someone out there has information,'' he said.
The
Police Minister, Michael Gallacher, said the family relived the kidnapping
''day after day, week after week, year after year''.
The
kidnapper, described then as in his 30s or 40s, could be elderly or dead, but
the family still needed to know what happened, he said. ''The release today of
the reward is an incentive for people to come forward. But there's a bigger
incentive: the family.''