Otago Daily Times

Mike seemed to be ‘a bit out of sorts’

- EMILY MOORHOUSE

CHRISTCHUR­CH: A school staff member who was one of the last people to speak to missing boy Mike ZhaoBecken­ridge described him as ‘‘out of breath and panicky’’ the day he disappeare­d.

‘‘He just seemed a bit out of sorts and a bit worried and concerned,’’ the staff member told the Coroner’s Court yesterday afternoon.

Swedishbor­n helicopter pilot John Beckenridg­e broke a court order and picked up his 11yearold stepson from his Invercargi­ll school on March 13, 2015.

A week after the pair’s disappeara­nce, Mr

Beckenridg­e’s darkblue 4WD Volkswagen Touareg went off an almost 90m cliff near Curio Bay, but when police recovered the vehicle there were no signs of any bodies. The pair have been missing ever since.

However, Mike’s mother Fiona Lu is convinced her son is still alive and her former partner staged the pair’s death after she moved her son from Beckenridg­e’s Queenstown home to Invercargi­ll with her new partner.

Now, coroner Marcus Elliot is looking into the case at the Christchur­ch District Court to consider whether it is likely the pair are dead.

The hearing, which began on

Monday, is expected to take two weeks and will hear evidence from witnesses, including someone who believes she saw the pair overseas four months after their disappeara­nce.

The court heard evidence yesterday afternoon from a staff member at Mike’s school, who cannot be identified.

She told the court Mike had arrived at school on March 13, but he was pulled out of his music class in the morning to take his iPad from him, as requested by his mother’s partner Peter Russell.

The staff member said Mike took an ‘‘unusually’’ long time to deliver the iPad to her office and was seen coming in from the front of the school, near the public road, rather than from the direction of his classroom.

She described the boy as ‘‘panicky’’ and breathing heavily as if he had been running.

She took the iPad from Mike and sent him back to his music class, instructin­g him to use a staff door, leading to an external door to go directly through the school rather than having to walk around the school grounds. She said Mike was very reluctant to go this way.

CCTV footage showed Mike going through the first door, but he was not seen exiting the second door.

Mike turned up at his music class but sometime between lunch and the end of the school day, he disappeare­d.

The woman described Mike as a good pupil with ‘‘excellent attendance’’ but noted he had told others he was not going to be at the school for very long, insisting he would return to Queenstown.

‘‘He always said he was going back to live with his dad in Queenstown.’’

Later that afternoon, when there was still no sign of Mike, police were called, launching a massive search dubbed Operation Mike.

The court also heard that staff at Mike’s previous school said he was very close with Mr Beckenridg­e and would ‘‘likely be traumatise­d’’ after leaving him.

Police divers recover John Beckenridg­e’s car from Curio Bay in May, 2015.

Heartbreak­ing texts sent from Mike to his mother before his disappeara­nce read: ‘‘You do not deserve to be my mum. You certainly do not deserve my love.’’

As police continued their search, they were alerted to a reported sighting of the pair on March 19 at a campsite off Weir Rd, on the Haldane Estuary, about 14km from the cliff Mr Beckenridg­e’s vehicle went off.

Detective Aaron Dempsey conducted a scene examinatio­n of the tent set up at the campsite with various items such as a generator, two empty 1litre fuel containers, an air mattress and a cooking device, noting that the tent was ‘‘quite well kept’’.

Swab testing and further examinatio­ns revealed a plaster with Mike’s fingerprin­ts on it as well as boot prints of a shoe belonging to Mr Beckenridg­e, which would later wash ashore in the Curio Bay area.

Dempsey also said it appeared to him that the tent was erected out of sight from other campers and there was a small firepit, but it was hard to tell when it had been lit.

As police continued their search members of the public joined in, something Det Dempsey said was very helpful.

On Monday, Lisa Preston KC outlined the case.

Mr Beckenridg­e met Mike’s mother Ms Lu, who is from China, in 2006. Ms Lu’s parents were raising Mike at the time.

The pair later moved with Mike to Queenstown. Their relationsh­ip broke down in 2014. Shortly after that, Ms Lu moved to Invercargi­ll.

In February 2015, the Queenstown Family Court made an order that Ms Lu had care of Mike.

Mike was unhappy to be taken away from his stepfather and was secretly communicat­ing with him by email, pleading for Mr

 ?? PHOTO: STEPHEN JAQUIERY ??
PHOTO: STEPHEN JAQUIERY
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