logo
Top cop in William Tyrrell investigation reveals heartbreaking text from missing boy's foster mum almost 11 years after he disappeared

Top cop in William Tyrrell investigation reveals heartbreaking text from missing boy's foster mum almost 11 years after he disappeared

Daily Mail​26-06-2025
The former lead detective in the William Tyrrell case has revealed the tragic text message he received from the missing boy's foster mother.
Gary Jubelin led the investigation for four years after the three-year-old vanished while playing in his foster grandmother's front yard in the NSW Mid North Coast town of Kendall on September 12, 2014.
Mr Jubelin left the force in 2019 after being accused of illegally recording a suspect in the Tyrrell investigation.
He was convicted of the offence and fined $10,000.
Mr Jubelin, who now hosts the podcast I Catch Killers, said earlier this year that he 'can't let it go' when talking about William's case.
And this week, he revealed a text message sent to him from William's foster mother.
'Another birthday has come and gone; William would be turning 14 today (June 26) and it's been almost 11 years since we last held him, kissed him goodnight and told him we loved him,' it read.
Mr Jubelin disagrees with some NSW Police staff who believe the foster mother had something to do with the boy's disappearance.
Gary Jubelin led the investigation for four years after the three-year-old vanished while playing in his foster grandmother's front yard in the NSW Mid North Coast town of Kendall on September 12, 2014
'I have consistently and publicly stated I do not believe the foster mother was involved,' he wrote.
'There has been no evidence I have seen presented at this inquest into William's disappearance that suggests the foster mother's involvement.'
In April 2022, William's foster mother was charged with giving false or misleading information about the boy's disappearance to a NSW Crime Commission hearing, but was found not guilty in November 2022.
William's foster mother's text message continued on: 'With the passage of time, our love for him has not diminished; our determination to find out what happened to him has not diminished; our fight for those responsible to be held accountable has not diminished.'
She also asked that Mr Jubelin share another message to anyone who has any information at all about the case.
'Please don't give up on William; he deserves more. Someone knows something; don't let the opportunity to help find William slip by. Please report any information that may assist Police find William directly to Crimestoppers on 1800 333 000 or whereswilliam@protonmail.com Make the report today. Help us find our beautiful boy,' it read.
'That is a message from someone who wants answers to what happened to William and for people to be held accountable. She is not giving up hope,' Mr Jubelin wrote.
The former top cop said he thought the case, which has nearly gone on for 11 years, could still be solved.
'Time and again, you see police crack cases that were previously unsolved,' he wrote.
'In William's case, I am aware of information obtained when I was working on the investigation that might provide answers.
'I have suggested that there should be an independent review of the investigation and let facts decide if mistakes were made.'
An inquest into the disappearance of William finished up earlier this year, but no date has been set down for Deputy State Coroner Graham to hand down her findings.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

CCTV appeal as part of rape investigation in Leeds city centre
CCTV appeal as part of rape investigation in Leeds city centre

BBC News

time14 minutes ago

  • BBC News

CCTV appeal as part of rape investigation in Leeds city centre

Police have issued CCTV images of a man they are hoping to speak to as part of their investigation into an attempted rape near a Yorkshire Police said the incident is reported to have taken place at around 01:45 BST on Sunday in Blayds Yard in Leeds city centre.A woman in her 20s had left the Fibre club on Briggate and walked down towards the Revolution de Cuba bar on Call Lane where she encountered a man, who then ran off after a member of staff from a nearby hotel Ch Insp James Entwistle said the man in the CCTV images is described as black, aged in his 30s and 5ft 6ins tall, with short hair and was wearing a white T-shirt. He said: "We are investigating a serious incident which took place in Leeds city centre on a busy weekend night in which a young woman was subjected to an extremely distressing ordeal."There were a lot of people out in the city centre at that time and I'm hoping that the footage we are releasing will help to jog someone's memory of the evening and will help us identify him."He added that anyone with any information is asked to get in touch with woman is also being supported by specially trained officers. Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.

Man released on bail after body found in flat in Leicester
Man released on bail after body found in flat in Leicester

BBC News

time14 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Man released on bail after body found in flat in Leicester

A man who was arrested after the discovery of a body in a flat in Leicester has been released on bail, police have Police said the 46-year-old was detained after a man's body was found at a property in Foxon Street, off Braunstone Gate, shortly before 19:15 BST on force has declined to say what offence he was suspected of committing but said he had been released pending further said a post-mortem examination on Tuesday had proved inconclusive and further tests would be carried out to determine the cause of death. The scene was cordoned off while investigations were carried out on Tuesday but the area has reopened, police have appealed for anyone with information about the death to contact them.

Bryan Kohberger prosecutor admits two key questions from the case will probably never be answered
Bryan Kohberger prosecutor admits two key questions from the case will probably never be answered

Daily Mail​

time14 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Bryan Kohberger prosecutor admits two key questions from the case will probably never be answered

The Idaho prosecutor who led the case against Bryan Kohberger has admitted that two key questions about the stabbing murders of four students will probably never be answered. Latah County Prosecutor Bill Thompson spoke to Idaho News 6 as the 30-year-old criminology student turned mass killer begins his new life behind bars inside Idaho's maximum-security prison. Despite Kohberger finally confessing to his crimes, Thompson said he believes the killer's motive will never truly come to light. He also believes the murder weapon used to slaughter the victims - believed to be a KaBar knife bought from Amazon months before the attack - will never be found. 'I don't think we'll ever know,' he said of the location of the knife. 'I know there's questions. That's human nature for all of us to think, "okay, explain why that happened". I understand that.' But FBI profilers have long said that, due to the nature of the crime, these things will likely remain a mystery, Thompson said. 'I can tell you from the very beginning the FBI brought out members of the behavioral analysis unit, their profilers, to try to help us develop some insights,' he said. 'And they told us early on that, just looking at the nature of the crimes and the fact that there is no direct connection anybody could find between the murderer and the victims, they said in our experience you likely will never know why this happened. 'And even if the murderer would try to say something, it wouldn't make sense to anybody but the murderer and that's the reality.' In the early hours of November 13, 2022, Kohberger broke into an off-campus home in the college town of Moscow, Idaho, and stabbed the four victims - 21-year-old best friends Madison Mogen and Kaylee Goncalves, and couple Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin, both 20 - to death. He was arrested around six weeks later at his parents' home in the Poconos Mountains of Pennsylvania, after his DNA was found on a knife sheath left behind at the scene. Surveillance footage on nearby homes and businesses also captured his white Hyundai Elantra circling the home multiple times in the hour before the murders before speeding away from the scene. After spending more than two years fighting the charges, Kohberger finally confessed to his crimes and pleaded guilty in Ada County Courthouse in Boise, Idaho, on July 2 in exchange for the death penalty being taken off the table. During an emotional sentencing hearing on July 23, Judge Steven Hippler handed Kohberger four life sentences with no possibility of parole for each count of first-degree murder and an additional 10 years for burglary. Under the terms of the deal, Kohberger waived his right to ever appeal and will never have the opportunity to walk free from prison. At the sentencing, Kohberger turned down the opportunity to address the court, leaving the victims' families in the dark about the murders. Kohberger has not revealed his motive for the murders or why he chose his victims. To this day, prosecutors have found no connection between him and any of the victims or the two surviving roommates who lived through the attack. The murder weapon has also never been found despite extensive searches. In the hours after the murders, Kohberger took a drive by the Clearwater and Snake Rivers - vast bodies of water where it is possible he disposed of evidence. While some of the victims' families support the plea deal, Thompson has faced criticism from some for both striking the deal and for not making it a requirement that Kohberger reveals details about his crimes. The prosecutor told Idaho News 6 he stands by his decisions. 'In a case like this, we aren't going to get answers from the defendant. Even if he said something, there would be no way to corroborate it or believe him,' he said. However, he said he respects that the victims' families all have different views on his actions. 'We cannot imagine what it must be like to lose a child the way these families have lost a child, a sister, a brother, a friend. It's just unimaginable,' he said. 'So we support completely everyone has their own way of dealing with it.' Daily Mail forensically re-traced Kohberger's steps in the hours after the murders. He drove by the Clearwater and Snake Rivers - vast bodies of water where it is possible he disposed of evidence Thompson said he engaged very little with the mass killer inside the courtroom. He described how Kohberger maintained a chilling, vacant demeanor even when confronted with the brutality of his crimes and the devastating grief of the families he tore apart. 'Anybody who sees me in court knows I tend to engage with defendants in sentencing,' Thompson said. 'But there was a vacancy, a distance that I saw in this defendant or that I sensed. 'So I think I looked at him once at the sentencing itself and that's when I pointed to him and talked about he's going to go through that door to the department of corrections and that door is going to close forever and he's not coming out until he's dead.' Thompson added: 'That's all that I had to direct at him.' After his sentencing, Kohberger was sent to the Idaho Maximum Security Institution in Kuna to begin his new life behind bars. According to a law enforcement source, he hasn't settled in smoothly. The Daily Mail has learned he is being relentlessly tormented by his new jail-mates, who are shouting through the vents into his cell at all hours of the day. It is rattling the criminology student turned quadruple killer so much that he has made complaints to prison guards about the inmates keeping him awake at night. 'It's driving him crazy. The inmates are tormenting him at night and almost all hours of the day - taunting him through the vents in his cell,' Chris McDonough, a retired homicide detective who now works for the Cold Case Foundation, told the Daily Mail. 'They are literally getting up into the grate and yelling at him. The inmates are taking it in turns doing it. It's relentless.' He added of Kohberger: 'He's extremely annoyed and frustrated. He's complaining to the authorities that he can't sleep because of them.' For now, Kohberger is being held in solitary confinement on J block's restrictive housing unit. The Department of Corrections could move him to general population in future if they deem it safe to do so.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store