Otago Daily Times

Still looking for answers

- ROB KIDD rob.kidd@odt.co.nz

POLICE will reintervie­w at least a dozen people about the death of a 3yearold boy in Gore — a move which has given a grieving father hope.

Lachie Jones’ body was found in an oxidation pond more than 1.2km from his home on January 29 last year.

Police almost immediatel­y classified it as an accidental drowning but the boy’s father, Paul Jones, has never accepted that.

Lachie, he said, could not and would never have walked that distance to a place he had never visited, in bare feet, with a soiled nappy late past his bedtime.

Mr Jones has spent nearly two years repeatedly calling for police to reinvestig­ate the case, desperate for answers as to what happened to his only child.

This week, police confirmed the review would incorporat­e many of the issues the father had highlighte­d.

“It gives me hope that justice will prevail in the end,” Mr Jones said.

“It’s a step in the right direction.”

While it was what Mr Jones wanted, he was guarded with his optimism.

After all, any forensic evidence in the form of fingerprin­ts or footprints would have been lost, witnesses’ memories would have deteriorat­ed and many telecommun­ications records would have been deleted.

If nothing else, it was a concession that the original police inquiry was deficient, Mr Jones said.

“They’ve finally admitted things weren’t done properly.”

In an email, viewed by the Otago Daily Times, police outlined the scope of the review, which was finalised after senior officers from Dunedin and Invercargi­ll visited the scene.

A timeline for all sightings of Lachie would be constructe­d, along with the movements of the boy’s family members.

Mr Jones’ rejection of the accidental drowning theory is partly due to the fact his son had no marks on his feet and legs, despite supposedly walking a

long distance on rough gravel and through gorse and thistles.

Funeral directors wrote a letter to him saying Lachie’s body was in “perfect condition” and there were no visible marks on his lower limbs.

Police have now requested a second opinion from another pathologis­t about the lack of injuries.

There would also be a review of the decision not to search for forensic evidence around the scene, especially at the gate which Lachie would likely have climbed to gain access to the oxidation ponds.

Timing around the child’s disappeara­nce was difficult to discern from witness statements and police estimated at least 12 people would be interviewe­d to “tighten up” the sequence of events.

Police requested cellphone data for key witnesses two months after the incident, by which time much of it had been deleted.

What was obtained did not fully corroborat­e statements.

“Considerat­ion will be given to further phone data analysis,” the email said.

Mr Jones said he “won’t be standing back” when he meets the senior officer leading the review next week.

PAUL Jones stands beside the Gore wastewater pond where his 3yearold son’s cold, lifeless body was found.

He has made dozens of visits there, and every time, the idea Lachie could have walked there alone becomes less plausible.

The 1.2km journey from his Salford St home on January 29 last year would have started over smooth concrete for the barefooted boy decked out in a DayGlo yellow vest and his favourite police hat.

But at the turn down Grasslands Rd towards the oxidation ponds he had never before visited, the road quickly gives way to rough gravel, the potholed kind you have to weave as you drive along.

Lachie would have had to climb over an 85cm fence beside a gate, scaled a bank covered in thistles, gorse and sheep droppings before even reaching the halfway point of the journey.

Then he would have faced a 700m walk beside the first pond, nearly to the end of the second, where he was found by a police officer and his dog — almost as far from the road as is possible. And it was not only that. Lachie had a heavy, soiled nappy at the time.

It was after 9pm — past his bedtime.

He had a cold.

When his body was checked by police, pathologis­ts and funeral directors, no obvious injuries were found, but most significan­tly, not a single mark on his feet or legs, aside from a couple of fading bruises.

SO how did Lachie get there? It appears it took police only hours to conclude it was a tragic accident after a senior officer swiftly stood down scene guards.

Mr Jones, though, would never be convinced.

‘‘Someone knows something,’’ he said.

There have been whispers in the small community, Facebook posts claiming knowledge but swiftly deleted, and the grieving father has strong suspicions of who may be responsibl­e.

For nearly two years, his life has been an emptiness filled only by unanswered questions.

He is a man hollowed out by the trauma, driven solely by the possibilit­y of justice for his son.

‘‘I need to know. I want to know. I won’t let it rest,’’ Mr Jones said.

‘‘There’s no common sense to any of it.’’

A few months after Lachie’s death, Mr Jones was allowed a copy of the police file, which only fuelled his indignatio­n and bewilderme­nt.

The dogeared binder contains hundreds of pages of witness statements, photograph­s and police notebook entries he has paged through day after day.

‘‘That file’s an embarrassm­ent,’’ Mr Jones said.

After persistent­ly petitionin­g police to reopen the case and shelling out for an experience­d lawyer to put together a scathing review of the investigat­ion, his efforts finally bore fruit.

Police told Mr Jones this week that they would be addressing many of the aspects he found most troubling.

Specifical­ly, a timeline would be constructe­d, comprising sightings of Lachie and the movements of some of his family members; witnesses would be interviewe­d and reintervie­wed; and further cellphone analysis would be considered.

Topranking officers from Dunedin and Invercargi­ll had been called in to run things.

Mr Jones, scarred by months of police inaction, would not get carried away with the news, calling it only ‘‘a step in the right direction’’.

The fatal incident resulted in the Gore District Council being charged by WorkSafe New Zealand over an alleged breach of health and safety.

The council pleaded not guilty, and the Otago Daily Times understand­s that position was bolstered after a highprofil­e Queen’s Counsel reviewed

the police investigat­ion and was unconvince­d the death was accidental.

M

R JONES had broken up with Lachie’s mother in August 2018 when things had become increasing­ly strained between them.

Custody of their son was a sticking point and during one bleak period Mr Jones went six weeks without seeing the boy.

By January 2019, things had improved.

Mr Jones spent the night with Lachie the day before he went missing but felt something was off.

‘‘He wasn’t happy,’’ he said. ‘‘He had a lot of anxiety all the time . . . I was very worried about him.’’

Just after 9pm the next day, his former partner called him to say Lachie was missing and he rushed back from Invercargi­ll to join the search.

Mr Jones told police he was staggered by what he witnessed when he arrived at the house.

‘‘I got there and could not believe what I saw . . . my first impression was that they must have found him because they were all just acting normal,’’ he said.

Mr Jones recalled a woman at the home urging him to ‘‘remember the good times’’ before he became hysterical and was bundled out to franticall­y search alone.

That night was the last time he had spoken to his expartner.

She did not respond to contact from the ODT, but her version of what happened on January 29, 2019 is apparent through her witness statement.

It was about 9pm, the woman said, when she realised Lachie had soiled himself and needed a nappy change.

But he slipped away as she tried to grab him.

‘‘A recent thing he liked doing was to run away from me and hide,’’ the mother told police.

Her older son then called her for help with his weights and during the minutes she was away, Lachie got out of the house.

The woman said she caught a glimpse of him running down the street and chased him to a neighbour’s house.

It was the first time Lachie had ever gone there alone, she said.

After a 30second chat with the neighbour, the mother said she turned around and her son was gone again.

‘‘I thought I would easily see him as it was such a short amount of time and he had his vest on,’’ the woman said in her statement.

S

HE speculated about his disappeara­nce.

‘‘At home he watches a clip called the Gingerbrea­d Man where all the people chase after the Gingerbrea­d Man — maybe that’s what he thought would happen.’’

Other witnesses also painted Lachie as a little tearaway.

One called him ‘‘the type of kid you have to keep an eye on all the time’’, and another said he had climbed a fence and vaulted into an adjoining property.

Mr Jones was bemused by the descriptio­ns.

‘‘The only place he’d go to is the park,’’ he said.

‘‘He knew he was not allowed on the footpath or the road — he knew the rights and wrongs.’’

Lachie would contentedl­y sit in his child seat for hours as his dad did his courier run; never hyperactiv­e, the ODT was told.

It was a characteri­sation that seemed to be backed by the boy’s preschool teacher.

‘‘During class time Lachie was always working alongside his friends and I never had any issues finding where he was. He was very well behaved and I could tell he had a good grasp of right and wrong,’’ she told police two weeks after his death.

‘‘I hadn’t noticed Lachie playing hideandsee­ktype games while at preschool and I have never known him to take off from his group. He was always too immersed in play to take off.’’

The teacher’s only theory was that the boy may have adopted an imaginary scenario where he was a police officer, ‘‘saving the day, chasing a bad guy’’.

T

HE day after Lachie’s death, police officers canvassed residents in Salford St.

There seemed to be a clear thread.

At least four people reported seeing a boy in a reflective vest and police hat walking towards Grasslands Rd.

It was the kind of street kids often ran down, so they thought nothing of it, residents said.

While witnesses were generally consistent on what they saw, police found it difficult to establish an exact time.

A high school pupil, however, said she knew it was 8.30pm because she was speaking to a friend on social media at the time.

However, that contradict­ed Lachie’s mother’s firm view that it was after 9pm.

Police put it down, somewhat bizarrely, to the possibilit­y the young girl’s phone time was inaccurate because of daylight saving.

What is certain is that the mother called 111 at 9.35pm and within two minutes told the calltaker she was worried Lachie had gone to the sewage ponds.

Dozens of locals were out with torches and spotlights scouring backyards, hedges, the nearby showground­s as the light drained from the balmy summer night.

Some even told police about searching the perimeter of the northern oxidation pond — the nearest one to the road.

The southern pond, it seems, was almost written off because it was such a trek.

If Lachie wanted to play in the water, why would he have walked along its edge for hundreds of metres in the fading light to get in?

‘‘A boy doesn’t just take off out the door and wander off to a place he’s never been — doesn’t even know exists — and hop over a fence in bare feet,’’ Mr Jones said.

‘‘I’ve probably taken 60 people out there, not one person’s thought he’s walked out there other than the police.’’

T

HE day after Lachie’s death, police went out to the site with WorkSafe and

Gore District Council staff.

A stick crudely shoved into the ground was the only marker of where the boy had been hauled out the night before.

No police tape protecting the scene, no forensic investigat­ors.

It was nearly two weeks before Mr Jones was formally interviewe­d by police; nine days until his expartner was spoken to.

Two key witnesses with connection­s to Lachie were among the last approached by officers, a month after the death, the police file revealed.

One gave an account entirely out of step with what police were later told.

He told officers he was out searching for Lachie when he was picked up by a friend in Bury St before later being dropped off in Salford St, nearly a kilometre away.

However, when police interviewe­d the friend, he said the man asked to be collected on the main highway to be taken to an ATM and was returned to the same area.

The inconsiste­ncy was never explored by police despite one of the witnesses being among the last people to see Lachie alive.

Two months after the boy’s death, police finally requested phone data from telecommun­ications providers, only to discover much of it had been erased after 30 days as company protocol.

While they were unable to gather specific text messages from key witnesses, there was unusual celltower activity.

A couple of those connected to Lachie appeared to be near East Gore at times they claimed to be elsewhere.

Witness statements do not show any followup by police.

A

MONG hundreds of pieces of paper Mr Jones has collected about his only child’s death, one of the most wellthumbe­d comes from the funeral home where he lay. ‘‘[We] removed his footwear and socks, and pulled his wee sweatpant legs up to double check if we had missed any marks on his body, there were no visible marks on his feet or legs,’’ the directors said.

How?

The question both drives Mr Jones and haunts him every single day it goes unanswered.

He wavers between bereft and impassione­d, devastated and animated.

There is the aching hope that someone will come forward with informatio­n to blow the case open, but mostly there is the memory of a sandyhaire­d boy who loved his dad.

‘‘That’s the heartbreak­ing thing. I held his hand one day in my van and said ‘I’ll never let anything happen to you, boy, I promise that. If anything happens to dad, you’ve made me the happiest person alive’,’’ he said.

“That’s the memories I’ve got. Now I’ve got to lie at home at night, trying to close my eyes wondering what happened to him.

‘‘He was everything to me. I waited all my life to have him, now he’s gone.’’

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 ?? PHOTO: CHRISTINE O’CONNOR ?? Alone . . . Paul Jones does not believe his son Lachie walked 1.2km to his death.
PHOTO: CHRISTINE O’CONNOR Alone . . . Paul Jones does not believe his son Lachie walked 1.2km to his death.
 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? Contrast . . . Lachie Jones’ mother said he loved to run off hide while his father maintained he was well behaved and knew right from wrong.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED Contrast . . . Lachie Jones’ mother said he loved to run off hide while his father maintained he was well behaved and knew right from wrong.
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 ?? PHOTO: CHRISTINE O’CONNOR ?? Memories . . . Paul Jones has revisited the site where his son was found at the Gore oxidation ponds dozens of times.
PHOTO: CHRISTINE O’CONNOR Memories . . . Paul Jones has revisited the site where his son was found at the Gore oxidation ponds dozens of times.
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