Nearly two decades after three-year-old Emily Harper vanished from her family’s holiday rental in Byron Bay, Australian authorities have announced a cold case review. The British toddler, whose disappearance in 2005 sparked an international search, has never been found. Her parents, Simon and Olivia Harper, now face the reopening of an investigation they accuse of being mishandled from the start.
Speaking outside the New South Wales Police headquarters in Sydney, Olivia Harper, a former primary school teacher, described the family’s ordeal as a series of systemic failures. “Every step of the way, we were met with delays, missteps, and a baffling lack of urgency,” she said. “Now, nearly 18 years later, they say they’re ‘revisiting’ the case. Justice delayed is justice denied, and Emily has been denied far too long.”
Emily vanished on the afternoon of 3 March 2005, while playing in the garden of a rented beach house. The property backed onto a national park, a dense corridor of eucalyptus and scrubland. Within hours, local police launched a search but failed to cordon off the area effectively. Dogs and volunteers arrived the next day, but by then, any potential scent trails had been compromised by foot traffic and weather.
Simon Harper, a civil engineer, recalled the initial response as “chaotic and uncoordinated”. “They treated it like a missing child case in a small town, not an international incident. We had to demand that Interpol be notified. We had to push for media coverage in the UK. It felt like we were the ones driving the investigation, not the police.”
The family’s criticism sharpened after a 2007 coronial inquest that failed to determine the cause of Emily’s disappearance. The inquest heard conflicting accounts from neighbours, a transient known to camp in the park, and a taxi driver who reported seeing a child matching Emily’s description near a highway junction hours after she vanished. No charges were ever laid.
Now, the New South Wales Police Force has dedicated a team of experienced detectives and forensic analysts to review all evidence using modern techniques. This includes re-examining DNA from the family’s rental car, re-interviewing witnesses with cognitive interviewing methods, and employing geographical profiling to map possible search paths. A spokesperson for the force stated, “We remain committed to finding answers for the Harper family. This review is a thorough and independent examination of the case, utilising all available resources.”
However, the Harpers remain sceptical. “They have had nearly 18 years,” Olivia Harper said. “Why now? Because the British media put pressure on? Because the Australian Federal Police finally admitted they dropped the ball? We want answers, but we also want accountability.”
The cold case review is expected to take six months, with an interim report due in three. For the Harpers, who maintain a small shrine for Emily in their home in Oxfordshire, time is measured in more than months. “Every birthday, every Christmas, every time another child goes missing, we relive it,” Simon Harper said. “We hope this review finds the truth. But nothing can bring back the years we’ve lost.”









