Miami Herald

Stranger charged with abducting Aussie girl

- BY ROD MCGUIRK

Cleo Smith was back to her laughing, bubbly self as she played in the backyard of her Australian west coast family home on Thursday, hours before a 36-year-old stranger was charged with abducting the 4-year-old from a camping tent more than two weeks ago.

Police charged Terry Kelly, a local resident, with forcibly taking a child among other offenses, a police statement said.

Kelly appeared briefly in court in the town of Carnarvon where a magistrate refused to release him on bail.

Police visited Cleo’s family in Carnarvon as they prepared to gather crucial eyewitness evidence involving Kelly, who is suspected of snatching her from a campground north of the town of 5,000 people on Oct. 16.

“I can only see her on the outside, but from that point of view, I’m amazed that she seems to be so well-adjusted and happy, and it was really … heartwarmi­ng to see that she’s still bubbly and she’s laughing,” Detective Senior Sergeant Cameron Blaine said.

”I’m sure that it has had an impact, but just to see her behaving quite naturally like a 4-year-old girl should do and just enjoying being in the presence of her little sister and her family was good,” Blaine added.

Blaine was part of a four-member police team that used a battering ram to smash into a locked house early Wednesday and rescue Cleo. The lights were on and she was alone playing with toys in a house less than a 10-minute drive from her own, police said.

“My name is Cleo,” the smiling girl told the police officers who rescued her and asked her name as confirmati­on that they had found the right child.

Kelly was arrested in a nearby street at about the same time, police said.

Detective Superinten­dent Rod Wilde, who heads the

police investigat­ion, said specialist child interviewe­rs had traveled to Carnarvon from the state capital Perth, 900 kilometers (560 miles) to the south.

“The main concern around that is Cleo’s welfare,” Wilde said of the interview.

“We have experience­d people that will undertake that and it’ll take as long as it takes. We’ll sit down with the family and work out the

appropriat­e time,” Wilde added.

Police would not comment on whether Cleo was interviewe­d before Kelly was charged.

Media have reported Kelly raised suspicion among other residents when he was seen buying diapers and was known to have no children, but police have disclosed little informatio­n about what made the man a suspect.

“It wasn’t a random tip or a clairvoyan­t or any of the sort of things that you might hear,” Police Minister Paul Papalia said. ”It was just a hard police grind.”

Kelly was taken from police detention to a hospital late Wednesday and again on Thursday, with what media reported were self-inflicted injuries.

Asked about reports

Kelly was injured after banging his head against a cell wall, Western Australia Police Deputy Commission­er Col Blanch only replied that there were ”no serious injuries.”

A police statement said Kelly’s “medical matter does not relate to any police involvemen­t with him.”

Wilde said Kelly had since returned to the police station and was “speaking to officers.”

Wednesday was the first full night Cleo spent at home with her mother,

Ellie Smith, stepdad Jake Gliddon and her baby halfsister Isla Gliddon since the family’s ordeal began.

As they slept, public buildings in Perth were illuminate­d with blue lights to celebrate the success of the police investigat­ion. In Carnarvon, balloons were raised on buildings and signs were posted welcoming Cleo home.

Western Australia Premier Mark McGowan also visited the family on Thursday and commented on how “well-adjusted” the child and her parents seemed.

“She’s bubbly, playing, friendly, sweet. She was eating an icy pole, she spilt it every way. She told me it was very, very sticky, which I believed, and she was just delightful,” McGowan said.

McGowan said he gave her two teddy bears dressed in police uniforms, but she seemed unimpresse­d with his suggestion that she name them Cameron and Rod after the senior detectives leading her investigat­ion.

Xanthe Mallett, a criminolog­ist at Australia’s Newcastle University, said finding a victim of stranger abduction alive after more than two weeks was rare.

 ?? TAMATI SMITH Getty Images ?? Cleo Smith is carried by her mother Thursday in Carnarvon, Australia, a day after the 4-year-old was found after police raided a house. A 36-year-old man has been arrested in connection with the abduction.
TAMATI SMITH Getty Images Cleo Smith is carried by her mother Thursday in Carnarvon, Australia, a day after the 4-year-old was found after police raided a house. A 36-year-old man has been arrested in connection with the abduction.

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