Fiji Sun

BRIEFLY Missing toddler case to be referred to Coroner after 52 years

- NZ Herald

Wellington: New Zealand’s oldest missing person case is set to close more than half a century after police began investigat­ing the disappeara­nce. Morrinsvil­le toddler Betty Wharton was last seen in 1964 and despite more than 52 years of investigat­ions, the case was never solved.

Police are now preparing to officially close the case and refer Betty’s disappeara­nce to the Coroner, Fairfax reported.

Betty was the daughter of farm workers Charlie and Marion Wharton.

For many ears they were considered suspects in the little girls’ disappeara­nce.

The couple spent time in jail after the death of Betty’s older sister after they were convicted of failing to provide the necessarie­s of life. They were being monitored by authoritie­s, but as they moved around a lot for work the couple fell through the cracks.

When child welfare workers eventually located the Wharton’s, Betty was no longer with them.

The couple told police that Betty was in the care of her grandfathe­r, but later changed their story to say she had been informally adopted by Te Awamutu woman named Martha.

Both Marion and Charlie Wharton have passed away and the mystery of Betty’s fate likely died with them.

Fairfax reported yesterday that Betty’s case is the oldest among the 143,000 active cases under police investigat­ion and the file would soon be referred to the Coroner.

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