Beaumont kids: Diggers near anomaly at Adelaide factory

A former police officer investigating the Beaumont children disappearance has revealed the prime suspect’s son told him the location of their final resting place.

The revelations come as police said they were just 80cm from an anomaly in the ground as they excavate land at an Adelaide factory which is at the centre of a renewed search for the missing trio.

Police said the excavation is expected to slow when they reach the anomaly, which is expected to be late on Friday afternoon. 

Former policeman Bill Hayes on Thursday revealed that he spoke with the son of prime suspect – and former owner of the factory – Harry Phipps.

Mr Hayes said Hayden Phipps told him that his father was a paedophile and that he had buried the children in a sandpit at the North Plympton industrial site. 

‘He told me [Phipps] was taking [the Beaumont children] to a place, a factory, that the father owned,’ Mr Hayes told A Current Affair.

‘His exact words were, ”they are in the sand pit, Bill”.’ 

Two brothers told police in 2013 they spent the 1966 Australia Day weekend digging a large hole at the Adelaide factory at the request of owner Harry Phipps (pictured)

Former policeman Bill Hayes said that in the years following their disappearance he spoke with the son of prime suspect in the Beaumont children disappearance  

Former policeman Bill Hayes said that in the years following their disappearance he spoke with the son of prime suspect in the Beaumont children disappearance  

Former policeman Bill Hayes said Hayden Phipps (pictured), the son of the prime suspect, told him that his father was a paedophile and that he had buried the children in a sandpit

Former policeman Bill Hayes said Hayden Phipps (pictured), the son of the prime suspect, told him that his father was a paedophile and that he had buried the children in a sandpit

Phipps died in 2004, but his son, who accused his father of years of sexual abuse, believed he had a part in the crime.

Other family members discredited the son’s story in the years since. 

Phipps also bore a resemblance to an identikit picture prepared at the time, and lived close to Glenelg Beach, where the children were last seen. 

Attention is focused on a small section of ground at the North Plympton site where recent scientific tests revealed the possible presence of a large hole dug there.

The trio never returned after leaving their parents' Glenelg home for an afternoon at the beach on Australia Day, 1966

The trio never returned after leaving their parents’ Glenelg home for an afternoon at the beach on Australia Day, 1966

A digger is seen at the site of a factory in North Plympton in Adelaide on Friday morning

A digger is seen at the site of a factory in North Plympton in Adelaide on Friday morning

The excavation at the North Plympton site commenced at 8am on Friday morning 

The excavation at the North Plympton site commenced at 8am on Friday morning 

Detective Superintendent Des Bray inspects the dig site at a factory in North Plympton

Detective Superintendent Des Bray inspects the dig site at a factory in North Plympton

Two brothers revealed in 2013 they had spent the 1966 Australia Day weekend – when the children vanished – digging a hole at the request of Harry Phipps. 

Detective Chief Inspector Greg Hutchins said there are innocent explanations for the anomaly, but it could also be a major breakthrough in Australia’s most enduring cold case.

‘We have our fingers crossed, we hope for the best but we do want to temper expectations,’ he said at the site on Friday.

‘Clearly we have an anomaly which we need to investigate.’ 

Police said they were 'hoping for the best' as they began excavation on Friday at the Adelaide factory

Police said they were ‘hoping for the best’ as they began excavation on Friday at the Adelaide factory

The industrial site in Adelaide is at the centre of a renewed search for the missing trio

The industrial site in Adelaide is at the centre of a renewed search for the missing trio

The dig got under way on Friday morning and by early afternoon had come within about 80 centimetres of the area of most interest.

Detective Chief Inspector Greg Hutchins said work had proceeded as planned but might slow as more earth was exposed, and police would be guided by forensic experts on site.

‘This is a slow and methodical search. Currently, we’ve excavated to a depth of about a metre,’ Insp Hutchins told reporters at the scene.

‘I can’t have a guess what they might find but now it’s methodical digging, looking.

‘The good thing is it’s very sandy and it’s very easy for them to see or identify any strange object, thing, rubbish, clothing.

‘As they get further down, that’s when we obviously need to be closely observing what’s happening within the dig site.’ 

HOW DID THE BEAUMONT CHILDREN DISAPPEAR AND WHAT LED POLICE TO THE ADELAIDE FACTORY?    

JANUARY 26, 1966

The Beaumont children got on a bus near their home at about 8.45am

They travelled together to Glenelg Beach, to swim at an area between Jetty Road and the Anzac Highway

The trio were due home about 2pm, but failed to return

At about 7.20pm, their father reported his children missing 

An extensive search of the area was conducted by police that night, but the children were not found

NOVEMBER 8, 1966

World-renowned Dutch clairvoyant Gerard Croiset is flown to Adelaide by local real estate developer Con Polites 

He declared to crowds gathered on the beach that the Beaumont children had not been kidnapped, and were rather trapped beneath freshly laid concrete

Mr Croiset indicated the children were at a building site in North Plympton

The public raised $40,000 to demolish the building in their search for the children 

About 30 years later, when the site was being partially demolished, the owners reportedly allowed for a full excavation, but nothing was found

MAY 20, 2013 

The Satin Man by Alan Whiticker is released

The book investigates one theory about the Beaumont Case, which alleges a prominent businessman was behind the murder of the children

In the book, the businessman’s estranged son says he saw the Beaumont children in his father’s backyard – just metres from Glenelg Beach

The man was identified as Harry Phipps in a segment on the book aired on Today Tonight

As a result of the report, two men came forward to police and said they had been asked to dig a trench on the grounds of Mr Phipps’ factory in North Plympton 

AUGUST 2013

Police announce allegations made against Harry Phipps have been discounted, and he is not a suspect in the investigation into the missing Beaumont children 

NOVEMBER 2013

Police dig up a small area of the land surrounding the factory

The dig does not uncover any new information relating to the disappearance

Officers are criticised for not inviting the two men along to the dig, and some claim they dug in the wrong spot

JANUARY 2018

Tests on the soil at Mr Phipps’ former factory reveal an area of soil measuring about one metre wide, two metres long and two metres deep has been disturbed

Following new information from witnesses and the soil tests, police declare a section of land at the rear of the factory a crime scene

FEBRUARY 2, 2018

Police begin excavation at the site in the hope they finally uncover the final resting place of the Beaumont children 

There is currently a police presence at the North Plympton site that is the focus of renewed investigations 

There is currently a police presence at the North Plympton site that is the focus of renewed investigations 

Nine-year-old Jane, seven-year-old Arnna and four-year-old Grant have never been found

Nine-year-old Jane, seven-year-old Arnna and four-year-old Grant have never been found

A range of experts will be present on Friday while the site 9pictured) is dug up

A range of experts will be present on Friday while the site 9pictured) is dug up

The Beaumont children never returned after leaving their parents’ Glenelg home for an afternoon at the beach on Australia Day, 1966.

Their disappearance sparked a wide-scale search operation, but nine-year-old Jane, seven-year-old Arnna and four-year-old Grant were never found. 

An initial excavation at the North Plympton site proved fruitless, but police now believe they may have been digging in the wrong spot. 

Insp Hutchins said police had been in regular contact with the parents of the children, Jim and Nancy Beaumont, and had informed them of Friday’s activity.

‘Clearly the parents of the three Beaumont children have suffered significantly over the last 52 years,’ he said.

A range of experts are present at the site including a forensic anthropologist, a criminologist, crime scene examiners and officers from the major crime division.

The dig is expected to continue for at least several hours on Friday.  



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