The trial of a man accused of murdering a British-born toddler in Australia nearly 50 years ago cannot proceed, a judge has ruled.
Three-year-old Cheryl Grimmer, whose family had emigrated from Bristol, vanished from a beach in New South Wales in 1970.
Cheryl, who had a distinctive belly button which protruded around 10mm, was spending the day by the sea with her mother and three brothers when she went missing - believed to have been kidnapped from outside the shower block at Fairy Meadow Beach. Witnesses at the time reported seeing a man leaving the beach with a child wrapped in a white blanket.
The following year a 17-year-old boy claimed during a police interview to have murdered her, although investigators did not have enough evidence to support his confession and he was not charged.
The case was reopened in 2016 and the suspect, who cannot be named due to his age at the time of the alleged killing, was arrested and charged in 2017.
The alleged killer then mounted a challenge against the admissibility of the police interview in the New South Wales Supreme Court.
On Friday, Justice Robert Hulme ruled the interview was inadmissible as evidence.
“The Crown accepts that its case cannot succeed without it,” he said in his judgment.
Mr Justice Hulme said that the interview should not be admitted in evidence due to the “particular circumstances of the case”.
“These circumstances primarily relate to the manner in which the interview was conducted and the particular vulnerability of the accused at the time,” he said.
Though a body has never been recovered, a coroner’s inquest in 2011 concluded Cheryl was dead.