The family of a British toddler who vanished in Australia 18 years ago has publicly criticised the police handling of the case, as a fresh cold case inquiry commences in New South Wales. The child, identified only as Emily, was three years old when she disappeared from her family’s holiday rental in the Blue Mountains in 2006. Her parents, Mark and Sarah Thornton, have long maintained that local authorities failed to act swiftly, a delay they believe cost crucial evidence. Now, with the British government formally requesting a full judicial review, the case has reignited transatlantic tensions over investigative standards.
Speaking from their home in Manchester, Sarah Thornton described the past two decades as a “living nightmare compounded by institutional failure”. She stated that police initially categorised Emily’s disappearance as a “missing person” rather than a suspected abduction, leading to a sluggish response in the critical first 48 hours. “They treated it like a lost wallet, not a lost child,” she said. The Thornton family’s legal team has submitted a dossier of alleged procedural errors to the New South Wales Ombudsman, including claims that officers failed to secure the rental property, interview all neighbours, or request CCTV footage from nearby petrol stations.
Detective Superintendent Fiona MacKenzie of the New South Wales Police Force, who will lead the cold case review, acknowledged past missteps. “Policing has evolved significantly since 2006. We owe it to Emily and her family to apply modern forensic techniques and digital data analysis to this case,” she said at a press conference in Sydney. The new inquiry will re-interview key witnesses, employ geophysical surveying of the surrounding bushland, and collaborate with the UK’s National Crime Agency on behavioural profiling of potential offenders.
This development follows a formal diplomatic request from the British Foreign Office, which cited “unresolved concerns about due process” in Australia’s initial investigation. Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer’s administration has emphasised that the case underscores the need for international protocols on child abduction investigations. “Every child deserves the full weight of the state searching for them, regardless of which jurisdiction they are in,” a Foreign Office spokesperson stated.
The Thornton family’s criticism is emblematic of a broader pattern. Australian cold case reviews have often been triggered by family advocacy groups, particularly in cases where early police actions were flawed. Research from the Australian Institute of Criminology indicates that 40 per cent of unresolved child disappearances between 2000 and 2010 involved delayed forensic responses. Yet, even with renewed scrutiny, the probability of locating Emily remains slim. The Blue Mountains region is a vast, rugged terrain of eucalyptus forests and sandstone cliffs, where decomposition rates in the humid summer months would have been accelerated.
Emily’s case carries echoes of other high-profile disappearances, such as that of four-year-old Ben Needham on the Greek island of Kos in 1991, which was only formally closed in 2018. For the Thorntons, the reopening is a double-edged sword. “We are grateful, but also terrified. After 18 years, any news is bad news, but no news is worse,” Mark Thornton said. The review is expected to take at least 12 months, with a preliminary report due in March 2026.
The British public has rallied behind the family, with a petition demanding a joint UK-Australian taskforce surpassing 200,000 signatures. Scientific contributions may also play a role: researchers at the University of Queensland have offered to analyse soil samples from the rental property for trace elements using mass spectrometry, potentially detecting decomposition byproducts if Emily’s remains were ever present.
As the inquiry begins, the Thorntons remain steadfast. “We want the truth, whatever it is. But we also want accountability,” Sarah Thornton said. “No family should have to beg for basic police work.” The cold case now stands as a test of whether institutional memory and forensic advance can compensate for the irretrievable loss of time.











