
New evidence expected in dig for missing Beaumont children
Fresh evidence is expected to be made public when a decades-long search to find any trace of three young children who disappeared restarts.
Jane, Arnna and Grant Beaumont vanished without a trace during an outing to an Adelaide beach on Australia Day in 1966, triggering multiple searches, some based on as little as a psychic's vision.
The latest attempt to solve the enduring mystery will start on Saturday at the site of the former Castalloy foundry, where it is believed owner Harry Phipps kidnapped, murdered and buried the children 59 years ago.
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Forensic archaeologist Maciej Henneberg, author Stuart Mullins, former South Australian detective Bill Hayes and independent MP Frank Pangallo will address a news conference at the North Plympton site.
Large earthmoving equipment will also start preliminary excavation work at the northern end of the government-owned site, which is about to be sold off for development, after new evidence was uncovered.
'This search will be the last opportunity to search the area where those closest to the case believe their bodies were buried before new industrial or residential developments are built on the site,' said Pangallo, who helped organise the dig.
The search will revisit two sites previously excavated along with a third never-before-searched location and is expected to take about a week to complete.
'While we are hopeful the new search will help solve the mystery, it's also important to discount the site as the children's burial ground if we can,' Pangallo said.
Jane, 9, Arnna, 7, and Grant, 4, vanished without a trace from Glenelg beach on January 26, 1966.
Their parents, Jim and Nancy Beaumont, told police the children left home with sixpence but a shopkeeper recalled Jane buying pasties and a meat pie with a one-pound note.
Phipps has long been the main person of interest in the children's disappearance and presumed murder.
Shortly after his death in 2004, Phipps' son, Haydn, was interviewed and revealed he had seen three children at the family house shortly after the disappearance.
He also told police he was violently abused by his father as a child.
The new search will be the third time the Castalloy site has been examined.
In 2013, police excavated an area after claims by two brothers that three days after the children disappeared, Phipps paid them to dig a 'grave-sized' hole on the factory site.
At the request of Nancy Beaumont, police conducted a second dig in 2018, excavating to a depth of about 1.5 metres before abandoning the effort.

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Reuters
4 hours ago
- Reuters
'I'm not a porn star': 'Diddy' accuser says she asked to stop sex performances
NEW YORK, June 9 (Reuters) - One of Sean "Diddy" Combs' former girlfriends testified on Monday in the hip-hop mogul's sex trafficking trial that she told him in text messages that she felt mistreated in their relationship and asked to stop taking part in sexual performances with other men. "I'm not a porn star. I'm not an animal," the woman, testifying under the pseudonym Jane to protect her privacy, wrote Combs on October 16, 2023, according to a text message she read aloud in court. "It's loveless for me and nothing satisfies you and you always push me to do more and more." The messages could bolster prosecutors' contention that Combs, 55, for two decades coerced women to take part in the sexual performances, sometimes known as "Freak Offs," against their will. Combs is charged with using physical force and threatening to cut off financial support to get women to take part in the drug-fueled, sometimes days-long performances in hotel rooms while he watched. Combs, the founder of Bad Boy Records, has pleaded not guilty to charges of racketeering conspiracy and sex trafficking. His lawyers have acknowledged that Combs was occasionally abusive in domestic relationships, but say the women who took part in Freak Offs did so consensually. Jane, the third alleged sex abuse victim of Combs to testify at his trial in Manhattan federal court, told jurors last week that she was "head over heels" for Combs at the outset of their relationship, which lasted from 2021 through 2024. She testified that most of the time they spent together involved sex performances with male escorts in hotel rooms, even though she wanted to go on dates with just Combs. She said Combs - whose net worth Forbes estimated at above $1 billion in 2022 - threatened to stop paying her rent when she said she wanted to stop having sex with other men. Combs' defense lawyers are due to cross-examine Jane later this week. The trial is in its fifth week. Combs could face life in prison if convicted on all counts. Also known throughout his career as Puff Daddy and P. Diddy, Combs turned artists like Notorious B.I.G. and Usher into stars, elevating hip-hop in American culture and becoming a billionaire in the process.


The Guardian
5 hours ago
- The Guardian
‘Astounding' negligence revealed: governments turn blind eye to staggering prison death toll
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Guardian Australia has spent five months investigating the deadly toll of Australia's inaction to remove hanging points from its jails, a key recommendation of the 1991 royal commission into Aboriginal deaths in custody. The main finding – that 57 inmates died using known ligature points that had not been removed – was made possible by an exhaustive examination of coronial records relating to 248 hanging deaths spanning more than 20 years. Reporters combed through large volumes of coronial records looking for instances where a hanging point had been used repeatedly in the same jail. They counted any death that occurred after prison authorities were made aware of that particular hanging point. Warnings were made via a prior suicide or suicide attempt, advice from their own staff or recommendations from coroners and other independent bodies. Guardian Australia also logged how many of the 57 inmates were deemed at risk of self-harm or had attempted suicide before they were sent into cells with known hanging points. In adherence with best practice in reporting on this topic, Guardian Australia has avoided detailed descriptions of suicide. In some instances, so that the full ramifications of coronial recommendations can be understood, we have made the decision to identify types and locations of ligature points. We have done this only in instances where we feel the public interest in this information being available to readers is high. The worst offender was Queensland's Arthur Gorrie correctional centre, where 10 prisoners killed themselves using the same type of ligature point – exposed bars that authorities knew about but failed to remove. The hangings continued until 2020 despite coronial warnings as early as 2007 that the state government 'immediately make available sufficient funding to enable the removal of the exposed bars'. The same coroner had told authorities the bars 'could easily be covered with mesh' following an earlier death. The same failure was repeated across the state, at Townsville correctional centre, where two inmates were able to hang themselves from known ligature points, and at Ipswich's Borallon correctional centre, where two others died in an almost identical way. The problem is not isolated to Queensland. At the Darwin correctional centre cells were equipped with overhead fixtures that could bear body weight, creating what coroners called a 'classic' hanging point. They were used in two deaths within two years of the prison's opening in 2014 and were not completely removed until 2020. Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email In South Australia the Guardian found 14 deaths from hanging points that were known but not removed, including at the Adelaide remand centre. At least five prisoners have hanged themselves from fixtures at Hakea prison in Western Australia, despite warnings to the state government as early as 2008 it should address all obvious ligature points. Sydney's Long Bay correctional complex recorded five hangings from bars between 2000 and 2017, despite a warning in 2009 that the 'obvious' hanging points had to be removed. Across New South Wales the Guardian identified 20 deaths from hanging points known to authorities but not removed, including at Goulburn, Parklea, Bathurst and Cessnock prisons. Sign up to Breaking News Australia Get the most important news as it breaks after newsletter promotion Guardian Australia asked every state government what has been done to address the problem. You can read their responses in full here. The revelations have prompted renewed calls for action from victims' families. Cheryl Ellis lost her son, Gavin, to suicide in the Darcy unit of the metropolitan remand and reception centre in Sydney's Silverwater prison complex in 2017. The 31-year-old had a longstanding psychotic illness and was a known suicide risk. In his first three days in custody he tried to hang himself twice but was not seen by a mental health clinician for eight days and was not reviewed by a psychiatrist for six weeks. He was sent to a cell with a hanging point – a set of window bars. Another inmate had died by hanging from window bars in the Darcy unit two years earlier. The bars remained in the unit cells after Gavin's death and were used in a third suicide in 2020. The inquest into Gavin's death recommended that all obvious hanging points be removed but delays in the coronial system meant that recommendation did not come until two years after the third suicide. The NSW government would not say whether the bars have now been removed. Cheryl says her son should never have been sent to that cell. She also says the hanging points should not have been allowed to remain in the Darcy unit cells after Gavin's death. 'The system does not have capital punishment yet it leaves hanging points for inmates to use,' she said. Official data shows suicide by hanging remains the most common cause of self-inflicted death in custody. Considerable progress was made to reduce the rate of hanging deaths in the late 1990s and early 2000s. That progress has stalled since 2008, the data shows. The continued presence of known ligature points is just one factor contributing to hanging deaths. The 248 deaths investigated by the Guardian often involve multiple failings, including breakdowns in psychiatric assessments and a failure to provide proper mental health care, the lack of suitable beds in secure mental health facilities, the absence of proper observation regimes and mistakes in information sharing and cell placement. Deaths in custody continue to disproportionately affect Indigenous Australians, who remain vastly overrepresented in prison populations. Seven Indigenous Australians hanged themselves in 2023-24, a number not recorded since 2000-01. Robert Tickner, the former Labor federal Indigenous affairs minister, led the Australian government's response to the 1991 royal commission into Aboriginal deaths in custody. He helped to secure the agreement of state and territory governments to remove hanging points from their prisons, something he describes as a 'no brainer'. 'There can be no excuses for the failure to act,' he said. 'My very strong view is that the ultimate buck stops with the commissioners of corrections and governments.' Michael Barnes, a former state coroner in Queensland and New South Wales, said the number of deaths from known ligature points was 'astounding'. 'It's hard to think that it's anything other than a lack of commitment that can explain the continuing high rate.' In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Indigenous Australians can call 13YARN on 13 92 76 for information and crisis support. Other international helplines can be found at


Sky News
5 hours ago
- Sky News
Diddy trial latest: Ex-girlfriend 'Jane' tells of sexual encounter with 'cowboy wearing heels' at Trump International hotel
Warning: The updates below contain graphic details of alleged sex trafficking. An anonymous former girlfriend and alleged victim of Sean "Diddy" Combs - known only as Jane - is giving evidence on the 19th day of his trial. Follow the latest below. 15:49:45 'I am not a porn star,' Jane told Diddy, as she reached breaking point The following month, in October 2023, Jane says she was reaching breaking point over Diddy's sexual demands. She says she responded to a text he sent her saying he was "missing" her by saying "call someone else… I don't want to be trapped performing loveless, cold sex". She describes feeling "frustrated" at the pressure she felt was on her to earn "love, respect and romance" from Diddy. Jane says she said she told Diddy she wanted to stop having sex with other men, telling him "sex is sacred to me" and that doing drugs and performing sex for days was "creating a war inside me". Jane can be seen wiping tears from her face, with her head down, as the court takes a brief break. 15:35:42 Jane describes sex with 'cowboy wearing heels' at Trump International Jane describes coming to New York the day after their text argument, saying Diddy had told her he "missed" her and she had calmed down. She says Diddy had told her he would take her for dinner and shopping, and she had believed there would be no "hotel nights" during the stay. However, she says once the plane had taken off, she had received a message from Diddy saying he wanted a hotel night. Jane says: "I took a deep breath. I was upset and a little disappointed." Becoming emotional, with her voice cracking, Jane says Diddy warned her of a "surprise" which she said was him introducing her to a new escort, sending her a picture of a "cowboy wearing heels". She says she met Diddy at the Trump International Hotel & Tower New York, where she was given ecstasy and then, wearing lingerie, had sex with the escort called "Cabrel" in front of Diddy. She says she felt "discomfort" about having such nights "sprung" on her. She says she went on to have sex with the same escort in Miami, too, as Diddy had been "very happy" with his performance. 15:13:24 'I'm doing things that make me feel disgusting with myself,' Jane tells jury Last week, we learned that Diddy was still paying Jane's rent. She has lived in her home for over two years. Describing her feelings over her house, she tells the jury she had begun to feel "guilt trippy things". She says the agreement "made me feel like I had to perform" sex for housing. Jane says she didn't want to feel "obligated" to have sex with Diddy, to "put a roof over my head". She writes in messages to Diddy that she is "doing things that make me feel disgusting with myself," going on to say, "I don't want to keep feeling like this any more". Jane says she sent that message to both of Diddy's two phones, to make sure he got the message. Diddy replies to her: "Girl stop." 14:57:26 Jane says she warned Diddy: 'I don't want to be your hoe for the millionth time' As Jane begins giving evidence, she is being asked questions by prosecutor Maurene Comey. Comey asks her about a yacht trip to Miami. Jane says she had agreed to "partying" at a "hotel night" for two days, after which Diddy had promised he'd take her on the trip, but says it never happened. She says she later saw on social media that Diddy had taken the trip with another woman. She describes being "upset" after hearing Diddy boast during a podcast about "how much sex he had with his girlfriend" on the trip, but says Diddy was "dismissive" about her concerns. Jane says she later texted Diddy saying: "I don't want to be used and locked in a room to perform and fulfil your fantasies." Another text to him said she didn't want to come to New York to be "a hoe for the millionth time". A text back from Diddy denies sleeping with the other woman on the trip, and says: "I'm tired of your false accusations… don't f*** with me… I didn't have sex with anyone." 14:20:59 'Jane' returns to the stand A former girlfriend of Sean "Diddy" Combs, testifying under the pseudonym "Jane", has now returned to the stand to continue giving evidence. She is wearing a white jacket. On Friday, she told jurors about days-long sex sessions with male escorts in hotels, saying she was given "multiple doses" of ecstasy to keep her awake during some of the longest "debauchery" or "hotel nights". Today is her third day on the stand. 14:15:54 Day 19: Court is in session Before testimony resumes, we are hearing a series of discussions between defence and prosecution lawyers as to whether certain pieces of evidence are admissible. Over the weekend, the defence called for a mistrial, arguing that Cassie Ventura and Bryana Bongolan lied about Bongolan being "dangled" over a 17th floor balcony by Diddy in September 2016. The defence say the government should have known this was not possible, and say Diddy was away on the East Coast at the time of the alleged incident. The government has also asked to recall Dr Hughes, a psychologist who spoke earlier in the trial, talking about "trauma bonds" between an abuser and their victim. Both of these issues are expected to be addressed by Judge Arun Subramanian tomorrow. 14:02:38 Welcome back We are back with our live coverage of the trial of hip-hop mogul Sean "Diddy" Combs, on day 19 of the trial. Proceedings at the federal court in Manhattan are due to start at around 2pm UK time. We are scheduled to hear more evidence today from a former partner of Combs, testifying under the pseudonym "Jane". It's her third day on the witness stand, as we begin week five of the trial. 22:31:00 What you need to know after day 18 of Diddy's trial - scroll down to catch up An anonymous former girlfriend and alleged victim of Sean "Diddy" Combs continued her evidence against the rapper on the 18th day of his sex-trafficking trial. If you're just checking in, here's a round-up of all the key updates: Jane began her evidence by telling jurors that Combs would become "incensed" if she asked for the "entertainer" to wear a condom, adding the rapper said he "didn't want to see a rubber while he was watching"; As she began to recall "hotel nights" she became emotional in court, saying she was given "multiple doses" of ecstasy to keep her awake with the longest session lasting around three days; She explained that she felt she had to take the drugs "because when I wouldn't it would just feel too real"; Recalling a sobriety party in Beverly Hills, she said she went to the bathroom after having sex with two men and threw up, but Combs told her "let's go, third guy is here"; Jane said Diddy would call an assistant or security when he ran out of drugs, and told the court she also picked up a "white envelope" of drugs and "put it in my luggage" for Combs; Explaining how "entertainers" were chosen, Jane said Combs chose who took part in the hotel nights at first, before she then started to pick them from late 2021 because she "didn't like to be surprised by a stranger"; But she recalled one occasion when she was "repulsed" by an entertainer who she described as being "really sweaty" and "smelled"; Jane said Combs filmed hotel nights "several times" and even directed what he wanted her to do - from putting baby oil on the man to touching herself; The rapper also asked her to get nipple piercings because "that's what he wanted from his girl" and paid for her veneers as "he didn't like my teeth"; In a voice note played out to jurors, Combs told Jane "I can do whatever the f*** I want" after she said she needed a "breather and a break" from him; Jane will return to the stand to continue her evidence on Monday. 21:59:59 Court finishes for the day It's just reaching 5pm in New York, and that's all we're going to hear from Jane today. She will return on Monday to continue giving evidence. We'll be back with a recap of today's hearing soon - in the meantime scroll through our posts to catch up on what was said in court. 21:57:58 'At any moment he could cut me off', Jane says after Diddy voice note left her 'cold' Jurors are played an audio message from Sean "Diddy" Combs to Jane after an argument between the pair in August 2023. "I'm not going to be playing these games with you at all, nah, you are going to have a rude awakening, you will have silence," he said. "You can be mad and have a spat, that's all it is, you got me on my job, it will never work like that over here, you need to get on your job... I am trying to be clear, I am going to disappear on you." When asked about what she thought Diddy meant by saying he was going to disappear on her, Jane says she was "pretty alarmed by that message". "I was just really cold and its true that at any moment he could just do that if he wanted to... cut me off." Prosecutor Maurene Comey asks Jane what Diddy meant by telling her "you need to get on your job". "Expectations of me," she replied.