Family of British toddler criticises police as Australian inquiry into cold case murders begins
A New South Wales parliamentary inquiry has begun examining unsolved murders and long-term missing persons cases, including the 1970 disappearance of British toddler Cheryl Grimmer from an Australian beach. Cheryl's brother, Ricki Nash, criticized police, stating the family has endured over 50 years of consequences due to alleged police failure in 1971.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedA New South Wales parliamentary inquiry has begun examining unsolved murders and long-term missing persons cases, including the 1970 disappearance of British toddler Cheryl Grimmer from an Australian beach. Cheryl's brother, Ricki Nash, criticized police, stating the family has endured over 50 years of consequences due to alleged police failure in 1971. Cheryl, aged 3, vanished from Fairy Meadow beach near Wollongong, with no leads at the time. A suspect was charged in 2017, but the trial collapsed when his confession was ruled inadmissible, and prosecutors dropped the case. The inquiry will also investigate if serial killer Ivan Milat was responsible for additional murders.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedRicki Nash stated that Cheryl Grimmer was 'an amazing funny little girl' and not just a case file.
The suspect, known as 'Mercury', denies any wrongdoing and prosecutors dropped the case.
A suspect was charged with Cheryl Grimmer's abduction and murder in 2017, but the trial collapsed after his confession was ruled inadmissible.
Cheryl Grimmer, 3, disappeared from Fairy Meadow beach in Wollongong in January 1970.
The family of a British toddler who disappeared from an Australian beach criticizes police for perceived failures over 50 years.