Cleo Smith’s biological father has broken his silence after the four-year-old was finally reunited with her family after disappearing from a campsite 18 days ago.
Daniel Staines, who lives about 1000km south of his daughter’s Carnarvon home in in Western Australia, said on Wednesday he is ‘overjoyed’ the little girl was found alive.
‘We are all absolutely overjoyed at the good news this morning and so happy that Cleo has been reunited with her mum and dad,’ the Staines family said in a statement to The West Australian.
‘Thank you to everyone who helped look for her and bring her home, particularly the WA Police, SES and the Carnarvon community.’
They sent Cleo, mother Ellie Smith and step-father Jake Gliddon their ‘best wishes’.
Cleo’s biological father Daniel Staines (pictured right) and his family are ‘overjoyed’ that the youngster was found alive
Cleo Smith thought the photo of her used in ‘missing’ posters was ‘beautiful’, her mum Ellie said
The preschooler was miraculously found on Wednesday morning in a rundown house just 3km from her home in Carnarvon and 75km from where she went missing at Blowholes campsite, on Western Australia’s north coast.
In a local Facebook group, a concerned local suggested people in the small town remove ‘missing’ posters and stickers to prevent the family from suffering any more trauma.
But the youngster’s mother Ellie Smith commented on the post to let people know it was unnecessary.
‘Cleo has seen her photo. She thought it was beautiful,’ Ellie wrote.
It comes just hours after the mother-of-two broke her silence with a heartfelt Instagram post the morning police found her daughter – confirming the little girl was ‘alive and well’.
‘Our family is whole again,’ she wrote.
A close family friend also revealed the emotional message Ellie wrote to her loved ones to let them know her ‘beautiful girl is home’.
Cleo is now back in the arms of her mum Ellie and stepfather Jake (pictured together)
Ellie Smith posted a screenshot to her Instagram stories early on Wednesday morning (pictured)
‘To be woken at 4.50am with my phone going crazy at 4.50am and see the words Cleo is home alive and safe,’ she wrote on Facebook.
‘Seeing Ellie saying her ‘beautiful girl is home’ is nothing short of a miracle. We are so happy for her to be home.’
The Instagram post was the first the relieved mother-of-two uploaded since she was reunited with Cleo after the youngster.
Police broke into a locked house at about 1am on Wednesday in the one of the rooms of the suburban property which is just seven minutes’ drive away from her mother Ellie and step-father Jake’s house.
Other close friends and family members shared the happy news on social media.
Cleo’s grandmother Kathy Smith said: ‘Thank to all for bringing my beautiful granddaughter home.’
Another said she was ‘literally balling my eyes out. Cleo is finally home’.
‘We have the BEST police force in the world,’ another family member wrote on Facebook. ‘Thank you all soooo much.’
‘The best news this morning, thank god,’ a fourth relative shared.
Commissioner Dawson reportedly broke down in tears upon learning the heartwarming news. He said the youngster (pictured) was good as can be expected
WA Police Deputy Commissioner Col Blanch confirmed just before 7am AEDT that Cleo is alive and well and had been reunited with her relieved parents.
One of the officers picked her up into his arms and asked her ‘what’s your name?’ he said.
‘She said: ‘My name is Cleo’.’
Police Commissioner Chris Dawson confirmed he watched the footage of her rescue, and said the little girl was smiling and ‘as well as we could expect in the circumstances’.
‘I saw the vision, Cleo is a beautiful little four-year-old girl,’ he said. ‘She’s alive, well, smiling, so it is a wonderful, wonderful result.’
He also said Cleo’s mother Ellie Smith and step-father Jake Gliddon were feeling emotional, but are ‘strong people’.
‘They have good support around them.’
‘It’s a wonderful result today but it’ll be a tough journey for them.’
Cleo has been reunited with her relieved parents, 18 days after she disappeared from her family’s tent
The home where Cleo was found is just a seven minute drive away from Cleo Smith’s parents home in Carnarvon
A 36-year-old man is currently in custody and being questioned by detectives. Commissioner Dawson told ABC radio the man has no connection to Cleo or her family.
The house has been cordoned off with tape and a neighbour told Nine’s Today Show: ‘S**t, she’s been that close.’
A second neighbour claimed to have seen the arrested man buying nappies from the local Woolworths supermarket.
‘The other day, like, I think it was Monday, we saw him in the Woolworths buying nappies but we didn’t click on who it was or what he was buying them for, who was buying for,’ they told Sunrise. ‘Until now.’
They described the man who lived at the house as ‘quiet’ and said they wouldn’t expect him to be involved.
Another neighbour told the Today show: ‘S***, she’s been that close.’
Cleo’s mum Ellie Smith (pictured during her daughter’s disappearance) has been regular public appeals for her daughter to be found
Cleo Smith (pictured) was kept prisoner in a rundown home near where her family lives
Thousands of overjoyed Australians flocked to Ellie’s Instagram to say they are ‘crying tears of joy’.
‘Cried as soon as I turned the TV on and saw this on the news. So happy she is safe and well!’ one woman wrote.
‘I think a lot of people are crying with relief for you this morning! I can’t imagine how you must be feeling. So happy for you,’ another shared.
Someone else commented: ‘Mums all over Australia are crying tears of relief for your family.’
A woman who followed the story from the UK said: ‘Have been watching from UK and I’m so happy for you all. What an amazing job the police have done. Have an amazing reunion. You never gave up hope. Enjoy being whole again.’
Deputy Commissioner Blanch said: ‘This is the outcome we all hoped and prayed for.’
‘It’s the outcome we’ve achieved because of some incredible police work.
‘I want to thank Cleo’s parents, the Western Australian community and the many volunteers.
‘And of course, I want to thank my colleagues in the Western Australia Police Force.’
The news has sparked an outpouring of relief worldwide.
‘What wonderful, relieving news,’ Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison tweeted from Glasgow.
‘Cleo Smith has been found and is home safe and sound.
‘Our prayers answered.
‘Thank you to the many police officers involved in finding Cleo and supporting her family.
Cleo was found in her hometown of Carnarvon in Western Australia, 75km from where she went missing on October 16
Cleo Smith has been found alive and well, 18 days after she vanished from a tent
Police Commissioner Chris Dawson said Wednesday was one of the most memorable in his 45-year career.
‘Oh, look, to find a little girl, a vulnerable little girl after 18 days, you know, obviously people think the worst, but importantly, hope was never lost and the fact she’s been found alive,’ he said.
‘I think Australia is rejoicing, you know, it is such a wonderful outcome,’ he said.
Police interviewed more than 110 people who were at the Blowholes campsite on the night Cleo arrived with her family on October 16.
The little girl was last seen in her family’s tent, at the vast campsite on WA’s northwest coast, around 1.30am before his mother and stepfather realised she was missing five hours later.
Detective Superintendent Rod Wilde says the family had stayed near their tent all evening and had not socialised with other campers.
‘I think it’s more than likely an opportunistic-type event,’ he told Perth radio 6PR on Tuesday hours before Cleo was found.
‘We know they got there on the Friday night, it was getting dark, and there would have been limited opportunity for people to observe Cleo at that time.’
Police have stressed the girl’s mother, Ellie Smith, and her partner, Jake Gliddon, are not suspects, nor is Cleo’s biological father.
Investigators have spoken to the vast majority of people who were at the campsite, but are still yet to hear from the driver of a car seen leaving in the middle of the night.
Cleo Smith (pictured) has miraculously been found alive after vanishing from a remote campsite in Western Australia
‘We’ve had over 1000 calls to Crime Stoppers from the public,’ Supt Wilde said.
‘We’ve still got a long way to go, a lot of work in front of us but we’re making progress.’
Police this week collected more than 50 cubic metres of rubbish from roadside bins stretching from Minilya to Geraldton.
It was transported to Perth, where forensic officers and recruits sorted through hundreds of bags in search of items that may help them find Cleo.
The state government offered a $1 million reward for information leading to Cleo’s location.
Police say the girl’s disappearance was immediately treated with the highest priority, although it took two hours to establish a roadblock at the site.
Detectives have made several visits to Cleo’s family home in Carnarvon, sought CCTV footage from a range of businesses in the area and collected samples from a campfire at the Blowholes site as the investigation continues.
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