The family of a British toddler found dead in Australia 15 years ago has launched a blistering attack on local police, accusing them of bungling the investigation from the start. As a fresh coronial inquiry opens into the death of 18-month-old Lily Anderson, her parents have demanded answers they claim were buried by a “system of incompetence”. The case, which has sparked outrage in Westminster, is now being wielded as evidence that the UK’s own justice system is failing families in transnational child death cases.
Sources close to the family confirm they have handed over a cache of documents to the inquiry, including internal police emails and forensic reports that they say were suppressed by Australian authorities. The documents allegedly show that critical evidence was overlooked in the initial 2009 investigation, which concluded the toddler died from a sudden illness. But the parents insist she was murdered, and they point to unexplained injuries and a witness statement that was never followed up.
“They saw a grieving British family and decided we were easy to brush off,” the mother told this reporter in a phone interview. She spoke on condition of anonymity due to legal restrictions. “They didn’t want a difficult case. They wanted a closed file.” The father added: “We have been fighting for 15 years. Every appeal was stonewalled. Now the world is watching.”
The opening of the inquiry in Sydney comes after a sustained campaign by British MPs and child welfare charities. The UK’s Home Secretary has written to her Australian counterpart, demanding that lessons be learned and that British families caught in similar tragedies are given legal aid and consular support. A government source confirmed that the UK is reviewing its own protocols for investigating deaths of British children abroad, with a focus on preventing evidence suppression and ensuring families have access to independent legal representation.
This case is not an isolated one. Uncovered documents from a related review show that at least 12 British children have died under suspicious circumstances in Australia since 2000, with families in every instance reporting police hostility or neglect. A whistleblower who worked for the New South Wales police force told this reporter that there is a “culture of minimising child deaths” to protect tourism and avoid diplomatic rows.
“They don’t want negative headlines,” the whistleblower said. “Especially not when the family is from overseas. They think: let them go home and grieve. The truth costs money and hurts reputations.”
The inquiry is expected to last three months. It will hear from former officers, forensic experts and the child’s family. But even before it began, the parents have already filed a formal complaint with the UK’s Independent Office for Police Conduct, arguing that British authorities failed to intervene when the Australian investigation stalled.
A former Scotland Yard detective who now works on international child death cases said: “There is a pattern here. British families are treated as outsiders. The system is broken. We need a dedicated unit to handle these cases, or more children will die and justice will be buried.”
For the Andersons, the fight is personal. They have spent their life savings on legal fees. They have not been able to afford therapy for their surviving child, now a teenager. “We just want the truth,” the mother said. “Not for revenge. For her. So she can rest.”
As the sun set over Sydney, the family laid a single white teddy bear outside the coroner’s court. The inquiry begins tomorrow. The world is watching.











