Townsville Bulletin

Thieves exploit sleeping mother

- KEAGAN ELDER

WHILE a Towns- ville mother slept, thieves broke into her home, sneaked into her bedroom, held her phone over her face to unlock it and went on a spending spree.

The criminals had jimmied open the front security door and used multigrips to bust the door handle.

Burdell couple Danielle and Raiar Cordwell woke on Wednesday to find their Hyundai Tucson and other belongings missing.

“Both our wallets had been taken, my car keys, my house keys, all gone,” Mrs Cordwell said.

“Then I was like I’ll go get my phone and call the police.

“Then I realised my phone had been unplugged on my bedside table, which meant when we thought about it (the thieves had) been inside our bedroom while we were asleep.

“They’ve walked past our kids in their beds.

“They’ve pretty much watched us sleep, to make sure we were asleep, and then taken the phone from the table, which was literally … 10cm away from my head.”

The thieves then used Mrs Cordwell’s face to override her phone’s facial detection lock.

The phone had baby photos of her youngest child and access to her bank account.

The thieves went on to spend s more than $1000 $ of her money using the phone and tried to transfer $10,000 from the savings account.

Mrs Cordwell, who moved from Melbourne a year ago, said she no longer felt safe in her own home.

“They’ve taken away privacy, our safety. We’re only new to Townsville and we’ve never felt unsafe before,” she said.

The couple’s stolen car was seen driving through multiple suburbs and later found torched near Thuringowa Drive and Dalrymple Road ( pictured).

“Initially, I was just angry,” Mr Cordwell said.

“Then I just wanted to cry. The reality of not getting a car back and being able to have a family car again.

“It was just heartbreak­ing for us, and we have to start from scratch again.”

Messages from the couple’s banks alerting them to unauthoris­ed transfers and pings from the phone finding app compounded their distress.

Mrs Cordwell said her bank alerted her to a $1427 transactio­n and attempted $10,000 transfer.

“To know that they were in my bank accounts and seeing your money and trying to take it was really scary,” Mrs Cordwell said.

Police are investigat­ing the brazen crime.

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