
Pheobe Bishop's harrowing final days from frantic texts to living in squalor
Human remains found in bushland have been confirmed to be missing teenager Pheobe Bishop, who vanished on the way to the airport a month ago. Her flatmates have been charged with her murder
When Pheobe Bishop headed to the Bundaberg airport in southern Queensland, Australia, she was on her way to see her boyfriend, ready to escape the 'hellhole' she was living in. Her devoted partner was even planning to surprise her with a dream trip and waited eagerly for her arrival - but she never got on her flight.
The 17-year-old vanished on 15 May, and the mystery around her disappearance has gripped the world. Now a tragic update has emerged, as remains found in bushland an hour away from the airport have been confirmed by her family as Pheobe's, mere hours after the teen's flatmates were charged with her murder.
The teenager was living with a couple more than a decade her senior when she disappeared. James Wood, 34, and Tanika Bromley, 33 were charged with Pheobe's murder three weeks after she went missing, on 5 June.
The next day, the local police found human remains near Good Night Scrub National Park. It is claimed that Pheobe was murdered shortly after she was last seen and that her body was moved a number of times before it was found in bushland. Wood and Bromley have both been charged with murder.
The home they shared with Pheobe during the last weeks of her life has been called a 'House of Horrors' - with an Australian news organisation gaining access to the filthy and squalid property.
The footage shows every surface stacked high with rubbish: yellowing bed sheets, bin bags, bits of rotting food, and empty drink bottles covered the floor. A chain can also be seen, as well as dog mess. "The air tastes dirty," the landlord of the property said, according to The Sun, adding, "I don't know how people can be breathing this."
On the morning of 15 May, Pheobe's flatmates were set to give her a lift to the airport - their car was spotted on CCTV nearby Bundaberg - where the teenager was set to fly to Brisbane, and then onto to Perth, to see her boyfriend. But she never entered the terminal.
Just moments before she was due to board the flight to Brisbane, Pheobe phoned her boyfriend but he couldn't hear anything before it cut off. At the time, he didn't think anything was wrong and turned up to the airport to meet up as planned, but she never turned up. Shortly after the call, Phoebe's phone was switched off.
The Sun reported that a family member said: "She didn't check in for her flight to visit her boyfriend who she spoke to on the phone at 8.30am. Her phone has been switched off from this point. She hasn't contacted anyone at all, no one has seen her."
All of Pheobe's social media use stopped after she went missing, and the last time she used her bank account was said to have been on May 14, the day before she vanished.
Her boyfriend is said to be traumatised by the loss and is left unable to carry out his promise made to Pheobe before she was tragically killed.
Heartbreakingly, her boyfriend had been planning a trip for his girlfriend, with a touching promise that he never got to carry out. Speaking on behalf of the teen, his father, Rick, shared with the Daily Mail Australia that his son "absolutely adored Pheobe" and the couple would video call "all night, every night, falling asleep".
He added that they would tell each other who had been "sleep-talking" the following day, as Rick noted that it "was a bit cute".
In messages she sent to a friend before she vanished, Pheobe admitted that all was not well in her life, saying she had "been better" and that she couldn't wait to get out of the home she shared with the older couple.
She wrote: "I've been better, but I focus on the good s***. I take of (sic) to WA in three days! Get out of this s**t home for a bit so that will be good, just packing atm."
Her distraught mother, Kylie Johnson, released a statement saying it was unusual that Phoebe wouldn't get in contact, but the teen's aunt Caz Johnson, has alleged that the 17-year-old sent messages suddenly on April 26. The messages from Pheobe said: "Up s*** creek but s*** happens."
She added: "I'm flying the f*** out of here to see my boyfriend...If it goes to plan I'm not coming back. I can't do s*** anymore. I need to get out of this hellhole."

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Scottish Sun
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Nicole Nyamwiza, Senior Lecturer in Criminology at The University of Law said: "Refusing to reveal the location of a body is a pattern we've seen in several high-profile cases. It's often about control. "Even after conviction, the offender can still dictate the terms of closure. "In the case of David Gilroy, the continued silence keeps the family in a state of suspended grief, and that in itself is a form of harm. This is not unique. 11 11 Images shown in court show scratches on Gilroy's hand that were consistent with a struggle Credit: Handout 11 It is thought Gilroy lured Suzanne to the basement garage (pictured) and killed her Credit: Handout 11 An umbrella, which was seen on the parcel shelf of the killer's car on the way to Lochgilphead, but thought to have been put inside the boot after the body was dumped Credit: PA:Press Association 11 Suzanne and Gilroy seen for the last time together on CCTV in an Edinburgh supermarket, two days before she disappeared Credit: BBC "Ian Simms, who was convicted of murdering Helen McCourt in 1988, never revealed where he left her body. That refusal went on for decades. Despite forensic evidence, despite a conviction, he held on to that final piece of power. "For some individuals, particularly those with controlling or narcissistic tendencies, keeping that information back is deliberate. It sustains attention, preserves denial, or simply continues the exercise of control." Murder convictions where no body is found are rare, and the Pilley case is one of a handful in the UK where the decision has relied on circumstantial evidence. Despite their torment, Suzanne's family have refused to give up and launched Suzanne's Law in her name to stop killers who refuse to disclose the location of a victim's body from getting parole. Nicole added: "There is also a wider issue here about what justice really means. If someone can serve a sentence without ever disclosing what happened to a victim's remains, we have to question how we assess accountability or rehabilitation. "Proposals like Suzanne's Law are an important step. They recognise that justice involves more than time served. For many families, justice starts with being able to bring their loved one home." 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Daily Mail
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EXCLUSIVE Gut-wrenching moment Pheobe Bishop's gran learns the missing teen's grisly fate - as she lifts the lid on the bitter rift that has ripped apart her family
Pheobe Bishop's grandmother burst into tears and wept uncontrollably as she was told the missing teen's remains had been found, before revealing new details on the devastating rift that is tearing her family apart. Queensland Police confirmed on Tuesday that the human remains found on June 6 in Good Night Scrub National Park outside of Gin Gin, near Bundaberg in central Queensland, were those of the murdered 17-year-old. Karen Johnson - mother of Pheobe's mum, Kylie Johnson - was overwhelmed with emotion when Daily Mail Australia broke the tragic news at her home in Windsor, north-west of Sydney. The shattered grandmother seemed unaware her granddaughter's body had been located almost two weeks ago, before they were formally identified by post-mortem forensic testing this week. She begged for more information on whether police had 'found Pheobe yet' and if her body was 'still complete' before she sobbed as the heartbreaking reality sank in. 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Police ruled her disappearance a homicide, and charged her Gin Gin housemates James Wood and Tanika Bromley with murder and two counts each of interfering with a corpse. The couple are remanded in custody ahead of an August 11 court date. Carolea fanned the flames of the family rift with a series of fiery statements about Pheobe and her mother when she appeared on Network Ten's The Project. Carolea appeared on the show in silhouette to leak private texts from Pheobe - sent about three weeks before she went missing - in which she described her living situation as a 'hellhole'. Kylie immediately hit back online and accused her estranged sister of knowing nothing about her daughter or their family. This week, Carolea sparked another fierce response from Kylie for questioning her claims that Pheobe had a disability. Kylie had praised her late daughter for never letting herself be defined by her 'disability' - thought to be borderline personality disorder. But Carolea, who referred to herself as the 'aunty by blood', insisted in a Facebook post that Pheobe ' had no disabilities but [was] a child who was out of control '. The comments triggered a furious reply from Pheobe's mum. 'I'm sorry but blood doesn't make you family,' she wrote back in a furious Facebook post. 'Showing up, being present, and unconditional love makes you family. 'Please refrain from referencing my daughter as your family. She may be blood related, however you know nothing about her.' On Instagram, Carolea used her bio to take another blast at her relatives, posting: 'No I will not back Kylie, [other siblings] Cristal or Troy, or the person who had us. 'They can all rot in hell.' Grandmother Karen was visibly upset when asked about her daughters' war of words, and revealed she has not escaped the anger. She confirmed Carolea's words about 'the person who had us' was directed at her. 'I don't talk to Carolea,' she admitted. 'Me and her had a big falling out.' Karen revealed that Kylie has texted her occasionally in the past month, and recalled the heartbreaking moment she contacted her to tell her Pheobe was missing. 'I was shopping at Woolies and Kylie rang me and she said, "Mum... Pheobe's missing",' she said as she began to sob once more. 'And I thought... yeah... but then it hit me. It really hit me'. Karen said she saw Pheobe 'once every one to three years' on family trips to Kylie's home state of New South Wales. But she still wanted to know why her granddaughter had been living in squalid conditions at Wood and Bromley's trash-strewn Gin Gin rental home. 'I am disgusted that that's where she was living... living in that condition,' she said. 'Why was she? I would love to know.' It's understood that last year, Pheobe's older sister Kaylea, now 18, was looking for a home for herself and her sibling to rent 'due to family circumstances'. Karen, despite living 1300km away from her Gin Gin family members, wished the apparently troubled teens had come to stay at her modest Windsor unit. 'Pheobe knew she could always come down. My door was always open,' she said. Karen did not attend the community memorials for Pheobe, held last week in Gin Gin and Bundaberg, but had watched a livestream online. 'They did a good job, but now I think it's time to let it go,' she said. She was unsure if she would attend Pheobe's private funeral, which she understands is happening 'toward the end of the month'. It's understood Pheobe's remains will soon be given to her family after forensic tests are completed.