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Australia

Victoria Police still working to identify man hit by train last month

Police remain stunned about the identity of a man more than a month after he was struck by a train in Melbourne’s inner north.

A train struck the man as it was moving at a slow rate between Royal Park and Jewell railway stations in Brunswick at about 6:33pm on July 7.

However, he suffered significant head injuries, and hospital staff did not initially expect him to survive.

Transit Safety Division Senior Constable Dean Pilati said the man had since woken up, but the extent of long-term injuries was unknown.

“He is conscious and stable, however he is non-communicative,” Senior Constable Pilati said.

“[Medical staff] don’t know the extent of his injuries, in terms of his brain damage, or how he’s going to progress from here.”

The man is described as between 65 and 75 years of age, with no distinct identifying features such as tattoos or scars.

He is described as Caucasian, about 175cm tall, and of medium build. He has a prominent mole below his left eye.

It is unknown exactly what the man was wearing at the time of the incident, but it included black runners with white soles, black socks and a black belt.

Man only able to utter a few words

Police said the man had only been able to mutter the words “Roy” and “Ryan”, but they were unsure if the names referred to family or the man’s own name.

The man has also been able to say the word “Coburg”, leading police to believe he could be from the suburb.

Police have cross-referenced the names with internal databases and conducted doorknocks with potential matches in order to discern the man’s identity, with no success.

Fingerprints and DNA analysis have also failed to shed any light on the man’s identity.

Due to long periods of unconsciousness and a tracheotomy procedure, the man had been unable to communicate with police.

A man in a shirt and tie in front of a victoria police logo
Senior Constable Dean Pilati says the man has been unable to communicate beyond a few words.(ABCNews)

Senior Constable Pilati said the man remained largely non-communicative.

“We’ve tried to do some prompt cards to try and have him spell out words. He’s unable to do that,” he said.

“The hospital have tried to get him to respond by gripping his hands but they’ve been unsuccessful with that as well.”

Police said there were no witnesses to the incident besides the train driver.

A canvas of CCTV footage produced no results, nor did outreach to local homeless support services.

Authorities have not ruled out the possibility that the man is from overseas, explaining the lack of information available.

Police have also explored the possibility that the man may be from a nursing home, but no missing persons reports have emerged from any nursing homes.

Senior Constable Pilati said police were eager to find support for the man.

“If I was in that position, I’d want my family around me, and if I were that person’s family I’d want to be there to support him as well,” he said.

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Australia

Missing family who vanished on road trip found after two days in remote NSW

A young family, who went missing for two days while traveling from Queensland to New South Wales, was forced to drink water from a roadside puddle to survive and used a car mirror to get the attention of a search aircraft.

The harrowing details emerged on Tuesday night after Darian Aspinall, 27, her two kids Winter Bellamy, 2, and Koda Bellamy, 4, and their grandmother Leah Gooding, 50, were found safe and well on Tuesday, two days after they were last seen on Sunday.

The family were found near Tiboobura in NSW, and were being transported to hospital for assessment following an emotional reunion with Darian’s fiancé Linny Bellamy.

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Speaking with 7NEWS, Bellamy said his loved ones had to take drastic measures in order to survive in the outback of NSW.

That meant getting sustenance from a roadside puddle and making themselves visible to aircraft by using a car mirror

The family were reunited on Tuesday afternoon. Credit: 7NEWS

“I can’t believe they managed to stay as strong as they did… they looked after each other and just tried to ration everything out,” Linny said.

Darian’s fiancé Linny Bellamy told 7NEWS he was traveling behind the young family. Credit: 7NEWS

A visibly relieved Linny added that despite being “a bit tired”, his family seemed like their normal selves.

“My daughter said hello and told me she loved me… I haven’t spoken to my son yet, but I’ll speak to him soon,” he said.

The family were moving back to Adelaide, where they were originally from, after spending a year living in Queensland.

They embarked on the journey to Adelaide after leaving the Noccundra Hotel in southwest Queensland between 12.30pm and 3pm on Sunday and were heading to accommodation in the remote far northwest NSW township of Packsaddle along the way.

Linny told 7NEWS he was traveling behind the young family in a truck full of their belongings right before they went missing.

Linny says his family had taken a different route along the way, believing they could get through a road badly affected by the weather, despite advice against taking that road from hotel staff at the Tibooburra Hotel, near Packsaddle.

Darian Aspinall, 27. Credit: NSW Police

But when they failed to turn up at their destination, and Linny hadn’t heard from them, he contacted police.

“They’re my world… but I don’t know what I’d do without them,” he said.

In an update earlier on Tuesday, police said they had begun a major search across Tibooburra, Broken Hill, Wilcannia, Packsaddle and surrounds, with assistance from the Missing Persons Registry, and Queensland and South Australia Police.

But by Tuesday afternoon the missing quartet had been found.

“Following inquiries, a search and rescue helicopter located a vehicle off-track, about 50km southeast of Tibooburra, about 4.15pm on Tuesday,” NSW Police said in a statement.

– With Hannah Foord

Horrific moment child falls out of car window.

Horrific moment child falls out of car window.

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Australia

Police search for young family who vanished between QLD and Packsaddle, NSW on roadtrip

A family of four have gone missing whilst traveling from Queensland to New South Wales, sparking an urgent appeal from police.

Darian Aspinall, 27, her two kids Winter Bellamy, 2, and Koda Bellamy, 4, as well as their grandmother Leah Gooding, 50, were reported missing on Sunday.

Police say the family left Noccundra Hotel in Queensland between 12.30pm and 3pm on Sunday and were heading to accommodation in Packsaddle, a remote township in Far West NSW.

Watch the latest News on Channel 7 or stream for free on 7plus >>

Their stop in Far West NSW was part of the family’s journey to Adelaide, police believe.

However, when the family failed to arrive at the destination and could not be contacted, they were reported missing to police, who have commenced an investigation into their whereabouts.

A family of four have gone missing whilst traveling from Queensland to New South Wales. Credit: NSW Police
Darian Aspinall, 27. Credit: NSW Police

It’s understood they are traveling in a charcoal Hyundai Tucson with Queensland Registration 729CV2.

They are all described as being of Caucasian appearance. Darian has dark brown hair, tattoos on her right arm and wears glasses. The children have brown hair and blue eyes.

Anyone who may have information is urged to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

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Australia

Missing Adelaide woman Colleen South seen on CCTV at Victorian petrol station

A new photo has emerged of missing South Australian woman Colleen South at a petrol station on the day she was last seen.

The 58-year-old was captured on CCTV at Sunraysia Petroleum at Berriwillock, in Victoria’s Mallee region, on Sunday, July 3, about midday.

Ms South tried to purchase fuel at the unattended petrol station on the Calder Highway but had trouble using the self-service machine.

According to a member of Ms South’s family who has seen the footage, another person who was also paying for petrol at that time noticed her struggling and kindly paid the $10 amount Ms South owed.

Victoria Police has confirmed the CCTV footage forms part of their investigation into the disappearance of Ms South, who had left her Adelaide home the day before, on July 2.

Witnesses have reported last seeing Ms South driving her 2006 Hyundai Getz towards Wycheproof, in Victoria’s Mallee.

The photo at the service station was taken four hours before Ms South’s car was spotted by a farmer, crashed into a ditch just outside of Bunguluke, 15 kilometers east of Wycheproof, and about 40 minutes away from the petrol station.

jacket mystery

Ms South’s possessions were found laid out 20 meters away from her car, which was locked. The items included bedding and other personal effects, as Ms South had been in the process of moving house between two Adelaide suburbs at the time of her disappearance from her.

Her Samsung phone, however, was found three weeks later in a playground in Port Noarlunga, south of Adelaide, with its SIM card missing.

Family members have said the bright colored jacket Ms South was wearing at the petrol station, was not uncovered in items found near her car.

The jacket is different from the description of a black and white jumper that a witness had previously reported seeing her in.

A purse and other items on grass near a car and a police car
Colleen South’s belongings found near her locked car did not include the red jacket she was wearing in the CCTV footage.(Supplied: Veronica South)

In a statement, Victoria Police said the physical search for Ms South had been scaled back.

“However we continue to investigate the circumstances surrounding her disappearance including any reported sightings and or new information that comes to light,” the statement said.

Ms South’s family has not ruled out foul play and is planning to return to the Wycheproof area this week to continue searching for her.

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Australia

Wife of missing man Bruce Fairfax faces seven-year wait or Supreme Court for death certificate

The wife of a man missing since 2017 says she feels hamstrung by the fact she cannot obtain a death certificate and move forward with her life, almost five years after they were separated on a bush path in far southern Tasmania.

Louise Fairfax was with her husband Bruce when the pair set out to walk the track at Duckhole Lake, a flooded sinkhole surrounded by dense forest south of Hobart on October 14, 2017.

The pair, who were experienced hikers, were with their dog when they became separated on the path. The dog was later found.

A search involving police, SES volunteers and hikers was launched, with helicopter flyovers employing thermal detection methods to try and penetrate the thick scrub.

No trace of Mr Fairfax has ever been found.

Mr Fairfax, 66 at the time he disappeared, had Parkinson’s disease and would be unable to survive without his medication for more than a week, Tasmania Police said.

a woman in a pink top on top of a very tall mountain, with ocean and hills in the background
Louise Fairfax on top of Precipitous Bluff in south-west Tasmania.(Supplied: Louise Fairfax)

This week, police featured Mr Fairfax as one of the seven “long-term” missing people as part of Missing Person’s Week.

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Australia

NSW Police hope recreation of unknown man’s face can solve 35-year mystery

NSW Police hope facial reconstruction technology will help identify an unknown man found dead in Sydney’s south-west 35 years ago.

The digitally-constructed image of the unknown man has been released as part of Missing Persons Week 2022.

Detective Chief Inspector Glen Browne manages the state’s Missing Persons Register and said it was the first time the unit has used forensic facial reconstruction tools to try and identify a deceased person.

“These types of images are produced only when all other means of identification have failed,” he said.

“Yet it’s margin of error for much of the face is relatively small and the end result is quite lifelike.”

The man’s body was found on the railway line at Guildford on March 31, 1987, about 200 meters south of the Hawkesbury Street overpass.

Investigations at the time determined the man’s death was not suspicious but he has never been identified.

Detective Chief Inspector Browne said he hoped the reconstructed image would generate new leads in the case.

“Unfortunately, the man sustained serious facial injuries when he died,” he said.

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Australia

The 33-year-old mystery of vanished Rockhampton woman Michelle Lewis

It was a typical Saturday night for best friends Kerry Bartley and Michelle Lewis, spent watching movies and making plans for the next day.

Not wanting to worry her foster mum, Michelle said good night to her friend and hopped on her most prized possession, her mountain bike, about 10pm.

The ride home was less than a kilometer and should have only taken a few minutes but Michelle never made it home.

“That was the last time I’ve seen or heard from her,” Kerry said.

Kerry stands in front of microhpons, straight face, bob length hair, glasses.
Best friend Kerry Bartley is urging anyone with information about Michelle Lewis’s disappearance to come forward.(abcnews)

Kerry was the last person to see Michelle Coral Lewis alive before she vanished in central Queensland on Saturday, January 14, 1989.

“It’s been 33 long years,” she said.

“Every year that passes becomes harder, not easier, because there are no answers.

“How does someone, and their bike, just disappear?”

It is a $500,000 question police are determined to answer, with help from the public.

Who was Michelle Lewis?

Kerry and Michelle’s bond began when they became neighbors in Rockhampton at 13 years old.

“Michelle was a creature of habit and over the weekends mostly spent the whole day at my place,” Kerry said.

A former Glenmore High School student, the “tomboy” was “very independent”, with only a handful of “close female friends”.

Close-up black and white photo of a woman smiling
Michelle Coral Lewis disappeared in Rockhampton, central Queensland, in January 1989.(Supplied: Queensland Police Service)

Like many 21-year-olds in Rockhampton, Michelle found joy in socializing at Flamingo’s Nightclub.

“Michelle had a rough upbringing, but she had a heart of gold and was loyal to her friends,” Kerry said.

She tried a range of jobs, including one at a local piggery and another at a panel beater shop, but struggled to land permanency.

“Michelle never had much to call her own,” Kerry said.

“She had nothing. But she would save everything to give to somebody else.”

Michelle’s traumatic childhood

Michelle was “abandoned by her mum” at just “a few weeks old”, then raised by her grandma.

Adaline Salhus, known better as Dell, stepped in to foster Michelle when her grandmother died.

She spent about four years living with Dell and her family in North Rockhampton.

But when Dell woke up at 7am on January 15, 1989, she found no trace of Michelle, or her beloved bike, and reported her missing.

The former lead investigator, retired detective Ann Gumley, said it was a case that has haunted her well beyond her 34 years of service.

“Because of the kindness shown to her by her [foster] mother Dell Salhus, Michelle would not have done anything that would have made Dell concerned,” Ms Gumley said.

Ann standing in front of microphones, short gray hair, wearing glasses.
Former lead investigator, retired detective Ann Gumley, says the case still haunts her.(abcnews)

Dell, who has since died, told police at the time that Michelle was very responsible and always phoned if she was going to be home late.

“She had such a sad life, and then to just disappear just seemed so unfair,” Ms Gumley said.

“It’s very hard to comprehend that someone can just disappear off the face of the earth and no-one knows anything about it.”

How the original investigation unfolded

Michelle was last seen on her bike leaving Kerry’s house on Stenlake Avenue, North Rockhampton, around 10:45pm, intending to ride a short distance to her home on Alexandra Street.

Ms Gumley said police launched a major investigation and completed 150 tasks, initially taking 42 statements.

“A large number of persons were located, interviewed and statements obtained.

“However, there was nothing to indicate to us as to how Michelle disappeared.”

Ms Gumley said she had done everything she could to try to find Michelle.

“We had to try and keep the ball rolling as much as we could to try to get as much information as we could,” she said

“But once that information dries up, that leaves us with nowhere to go.”

Ms Lewis’s case was reviewed in 1999 as part of the investigation into crimes committed by notorious serial killer Leonard John Fraser, who died in 2007.

But police said there was no information to suggest he was involved in Michelle’s disappearance.

Bike with white, dark red and black frame, black seat and handle bars.
Michelle Lewis was last seen alive riding this maroon and white mountain bike on Saturday, January 14 1989.(Supplied: Queensland Police Service)

Can you help?

Detectives are urging a man, who called police around midday on February 18, 1989, but hung up before speaking to detectives, to come forward.

Michelle is described as 155 centimetres tall, with black shoulder-length hair and brown eyes and had two tattoos on the inside of her ankles, one a cross, the other her initials, ML.

She was last seen wearing a hot pink tie-dye singlet top with the word surf across the front, a pair of multi-coloured board shorts and white Dunlop sneakers.

Pink tie dye tank top with yellow letters SURF.
Michelle Lewis was last seen alive wearing this pink tie dye singlet top that says “surf”.(Supplied: Queensland Police Service)

Even after 33 years, the former lead investigator said she remained committed to seeking justice for Michelle.

“Miracles do happen,” Ms Bartley said.

“If there is anyone out there who may have some information, regardless of if they feel it is insignificant, please let the investigating officers know.

“If they find Michelle’s bike, they’ll find Michelle. If they find her, they’ll find her bike.

“That’s the way I look at it because she never went anywhere without that bike.”

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