The family of a British toddler has condemned police failures as an Australian cold case inquiry exposes glaring gaps in cross-border justice. Two-year-old Lily Thompson vanished from a holiday park in Cornwall in 2019, but the investigation stalled, leaving her parents without answers. Now, a renewed probe by Australian authorities into an unrelated child disappearance has uncovered evidence that Lily may have been taken abroad, forcing a reckoning with how international cases are handled.
Speaking from their home in Manchester, Lily’s mother, Sarah Thompson, said: “We have been let down at every turn. The police told us they were doing everything possible, but we later discovered vital information was never shared with Australian officials. Our daughter is not a statistic, she is a little girl who deserves justice.”
The case has reignited debate over the resources allocated to missing persons inquiries, particularly when they cross borders. The National Crime Agency has admitted that coordination with international partners is “challenging” due to data-sharing restrictions and differing legal frameworks. For families like the Thompsons, this translates into endless waiting and heartache.
Experts say the problem is systemic. “The current system relies on goodwill rather than obligation,” said Dr. Fiona Walsh, a criminologist at the University of Leeds. “There is no mandatory protocol for sharing evidence between UK police and their Australian counterparts. This creates a black hole where cases can disappear.”
The Australian cold case inquiry, led by New South Wales Police, has reopened investigations into the disappearance of three children. They have now linked forensic evidence to Lily’s case, prompting calls for a full joint taskforce. But the Thompsons argue that this should have happened years ago.
“We have spent four years fighting for basic answers,” said Sarah Thompson. “We have been told that police have no powers to compel witnesses overseas. But why was no one even sent to interview them? It feels like our daughter’s life is worth less because she was taken to another country.”
The family is now demanding a public inquiry into the handling of cross-border missing person cases. They argue that current laws fail to protect vulnerable children and force families to navigate a labyrinth of different agencies with no single point of accountability.
A spokesperson for the Home Office said: “We understand the distress of the family. The UK has strong relationships with international law enforcement but we recognise that there is more to do. We are reviewing procedures to ensure that no child falls through the cracks.”
But for the Thompson family, words are not enough. “We need action, not promises,” said Lily’s father, Mark. “Every day we wonder if she is safe, if she is scared. The police need to treat every missing child as if they were their own. Until they do, other families will suffer as we have.”
The case highlights a wider issue of regional inequality in policing resources. Wealthier families often have the means to hire private investigators and lawyers to push cases forward. For working class families like the Thompsons, the burden of fighting for justice falls on them alone.
“We are not giving up,” said Sarah Thompson. “Lily is out there somewhere, and we will find her, with or without the help of the system that has failed us.”








