Detectives investigating the disappearance of William Tyrrell will conduct fresh searches on Monday morning.
In a statement, the NSW Police Force said further details will be made available at a media conference at 10.30am AEDT.
Daily Mail Australia understands the new search will be held at a site in Kendall – where the little boy disappeared on September 12, 2014, age three.
William Tyrrell vanished from his foster grandmother’s home in Kendall, on the state’s Mid North Coast and has not been seen since.
No trace of William has ever been found and no person has ever been charged.
William Tyrrell vanished from his foster grandmother’s home age 3 on September 12, 2014
It comes after detectives revisited the area the toddler went missing after police announced new information had ‘come to light’ in mid-September.
Officers from Strike Force Rosann returned to the home of William’s grandmother on the seven-year anniversary of the little boy’s disappearance.
The task force announced they would be working under the premise the three-year-old had vanished as a result of ‘human intervention’.
Local detectives and forensic officers once again poured over the home William was last seen as well as the surrounding areas in the rural township.
It marked the first time the area had been extensively combed since the little boy vanished, prompting a frantic operation that saw volunteers and emergency crews search homes, forests, creeks and paddocks.
No trace of William (pictured) has ever been found and no person has ever been charged
Officers from Strike Force Rosann returned to the Kendall home of William’s grandmother (pictured) following the seven-year anniversary of the little boy’s disappearance
Officers have since remained tight-lipped about what new information prompted officers to return to Kendall after nearly a decade.
Strike force officer-in-charge Detective Chief Inspector David Laidlaw said further information had come to light after a review of materials gathered by investigators over the seven-year period of William’s disappearance.
‘As our team continue to conduct inquiries and explore all avenues of investigation, our focus has been identifying if anything has been missed, or if there are any details – no matter how small – that need to be clarified,’ the inspector said in September.
‘Police remain committed to finding out what happened to William, but our most important job here is to bring him home for both families.’
Detectives continue to conduct interviews, searches and other investigative activity, including those under Coronial Orders, as well as reviewing all available materials with the assistance of experts.
Local detectives and forensic officers once again poured over the home William was last seen as well as the surrounding areas in the rural township (pictured)
Little William Tyrrell (pictured) would have celebrated his 10th birthday in June of this year
William vanished from his foster grandmother’s property on Benaroon Drive, Kendall on the morning of September 12, 2014, while playing in the yard in a Spiderman suit with his five-year-old sister.
The children were on a trip at the NSW Mid North Coast with their foster parents after making the five-hour car journey from Sydney.
His foster mother, who had been outside, went inside to make a tea but became concerned when she had not heard him for five minutes.
The little boy would have celebrated his 10th birthday in June.
A $1million reward announced in 2016 remains in place for information that leads to the recovery of William and the circumstances surrounding his disappearance.
The latest development came less than a week after senior sources claimed a new person of interest was being honed in on by police, declaring a breakthrough in the nearly decade-old case was imminent.
However, William Tyrell’s foster parents have called claims by police sources that they are closing in on a new suspect in the toddler’s disappearance ‘fake news’.
William was wearing his Spiderman costume on the morning he mysteriously vanished while playing in the yard of his foster grandmother’s house in September 2014
NSW Police searched bushland at Batar Creek, about four kilometres from where William was last seen in 2014, for evidence back in June of 2018 (pictured)
Chief Inspector David Laidlaw (pictured) is leading the investigation and told Sky News in July he knew who was to blame for William’s disappearance
‘Once again we are forced to watch others objectify William for personal gain,’ a statement from the couple released on September 7.
‘To publish unverified claims, without consideration to the hurt that articles of this nature cause, is disrespectful and devastating to everyone who knows and loves William,’ the statement said.
An inquest into the case was launched in March 2019 which is ongoing.
After 19 months, deputy state coroner Harriet Grahame has postponed her findings from the inquest into William’s disappearance and presumed death.
She was due to release her report in June, however now remains in talks with police who have narrowed in on a new suspect who was previously ruled out.
Chief Inspector David Laidlaw is leading the investigation after former lead detective Gary Jubelin quit the force when he was convicted of breaking the law to covertly record four conversations with a suspect.
‘We believe we can identify who it may be or the circumstances of his disappearance,’ Chief Insp Laidlaw told Sky News in July.
A $1million reward announced in 2016 remains in place for information that leads to the recovery of William and the circumstances surrounding his disappearance
Police returned to the rural township of Kendall the little boy vanished from in September of this year after new information ‘came to light’
‘We have thoughts on what occurred to William, there is a range of thoughts.’
When asked if he knew who was to blame and what happened he replied: ‘Yes.’
William’s foster parents, who are unable to be identified due to state laws, and biological parents have both made public appeals asking for help finding William.
In September, his foster family issued a heartbreaking plea for those involved in his disappearance to finally come forward and end their daily suffering.
‘On the seventh anniversary of William’s disappearance, we ask of the person or persons involved; how much more heartbreak must be endured before you come forward,’ the statement read.
‘When you took William, you plunged our world into perpetual darkness. How long will you continue to make us suffer?
‘When will you choose to come forward and end the nightmare we’ve endured every day for the past 2558 days since you took William from his happy life?’
Meanwhile it has emerged a convicted paedophile ‘person of interest’ in the case had a son who mysteriously died at the same age as William.
The jailed paedophile, 80 (pictured), is a key person of interest in the disappearance of William Tyrrell and is understood to have taken a key interest in the coronial inquiry
The 80-year-old was living in a caravan 12km from the property the three-year-old boy vanished without a trace and has since been unable to give police an alibi.
Described as a ‘dirty old man’, he is currently serving a 16 year prison sentence for the sexual abuse of three young children and was acquitted of a teenage girl’s 1968 murder in the small community of Pitt Town, 60km north-west of Sydney.
Despite being in prison, the man has taken a keen interest in the coronial inquiry into William’s likely abduction and murder – watching every day via Zoom.
It was revealed for the first time by 7 News Investigates that the man’s own young son was, like William, three years old when he died – with the findings of an inquest sealed by a NSW coroner under ‘confidentiality’ rules.
A two-part documentary has uncovered the bombshell new information and revealed the man had been spoken to by police about his whereabouts on the day little William disappeared.
While he has not yet been able to provide police with an alibi, with the documentary claiming no one is able to vouch for his movements that day, he maintains he had nothing to do with what happened to William.
A key person of interest in the case of William Tyrrell (pictured) had a son who died at the same age as the missing three-year-old
This is a caravan the man lived in on the mid-north coast of New South Wales following William’s disappearance in September, 2014
Daily Mail Australia is not suggesting the man had any involvement in William’s disappearance, and is only stating that police have spoken to him.
The man’s friend Ray Porter, who died of kidney failure, allegedly told a nurse he had driven his ‘best fishing mate and that little boy from the television’ 300km north.
Uniting Care nurse Kirston Okpegbue told a coronial inquest last year that Porter had rested his head on her shoulder in August 2019 revealing he believed he was tricked into giving the pair a lift up Pacific Highway towards Queensland – a day after the abduction.
While Mr Porter did not explicitly name the man, the pair were known to be fishing buddies.
Ray Porter (left) allegedly told an aged care nurse he drove William and a fishing mate 300km north day after his disappearance in his white station wagon (right)
‘That was his only friend. The only person I’ve ever seen Ray with was (the man),’ an unnamed associate told the program.
‘And he described the little boy from the TV which would be William Tyrrell.’
The unnamed man also told the documentary he was interviewed by police who told him the man was the ‘number one prime suspect in the investigation’.
Highway cameras captured Porter’s vehicle on the southbound Pacific Motorway camera at Kew on September 13, and on the north and southbound cameras at Port Macquarie the following day.
Williams’ foster mother also told police a white station wagon matching the description was parked near her parents’ property on the morning of his disappearance.
‘When you took William, you plunged our world into perpetual darkness. How long will you continue to make us suffer?’, the little boy’s foster parents said September
The inquest separately heard that a worker at a takeaway shop where the man used to do repairs reported the elderly man making a ‘strange’ comment about William’s whereabouts.
‘Frank made a comment he thought they were searching in the wrong spot for William Tyrrell, which seemed like a very strange comment to make,’ Dean Anderson told the court.
The person of interest also once spoke of smelling something ‘dead’ in bushland by a road in nearby Logans Crossing, Mr Anderson said.
Mr Anderson said he suggested the smell was probably a dead kangaroo, to which the man replied: ‘No, I know the difference between a dead kangaroo and a dead human smell.’
Revelations also came to light that the man was acquitted of the gruesome 1968 murder of 17-year-old shop assistant Hellen Harrison after being put on trial twice.
William had been playing with his little sister in the front yard of his grandmother’s house when he disappeared, his foster mother later stating she took her eyes off him for ‘five minutes’
FBI-trained Kris Illingsworth, who worked as a NSW police detective, said it was almost certainly an opportunistic attack.
‘I believe this offender given he has this preferential idea of being attracted to children and has kicked so quickly into predatory child abductor mode, to me that says it’s an older offender,’ the criminal profiler said.
‘This has years of experience and practice behind it.
‘He sat there for a moment in his car and watched William – this flash of blue, this roaring noise that he’s making – and he’s been checking out the situation thinking that boy attracts me. I am interested in him, so I’ll watch a bit more.
‘And at that time he’s also doing a risk assessment. He’s very cool, calm and collected in what he was doing.
‘This offender has acted with great boldness, skill and cunning.’
***
Read more at DailyMail.co.uk