For months, the disappearance of four-year-old Gus Lamont sat heavy on the conscience of South Australia. A child gone without a trace. A vast rural property. Endless searches that yielded nothing but questions. At first, there was hope. Then confusion. Now, there is something far darker.
This week, police confirmed a devastating shift in the case: investigators believe Gus Lamont is dead. And for the first time, they revealed that a member of his own family is now a suspect.
The announcement sent shockwaves through a case already defined by silence and contradiction.
Gus was reported missing on September 27 from Oak Park Station, an enormous outback sheep property owned by his maternal grandparents. Early public understanding suggested the boy lived there full-time, making the remote land the central focus of search efforts. For weeks, crews combed the terrain, examined vehicles, and scoured the surrounding area.But new information has quietly dismantled that narrative.
Contrary to widespread belief, Gus did not primarily live at Oak Park Station. Instead, he lived with his parents, Jessica Murray and Joshua Lamont, and his one-year-old brother in an Adelaide home registered under his
grandmother’s name. The family frequently visited the station, but it was not the boy’s permanent residence.

That revelation alone has reframed the timeline — and raised troubling questions about where Gus truly was in the days and weeks before he vanished.
A neighbour from the Adelaide street where Gus lived offered what may be the last confirmed sighting of the boy by anyone outside his family.
“I only saw him probably a couple of weeks before he disappeared,” the neighbour said. “They’d walk to the playground with their dogs. He was a lovely little boy.”
Those ordinary moments — a walk, a greeting, a child at play — now carry unbearable weight. After that, Gus seemed to disappear not just physically, but socially. Police have consistently refused to say when he was last seen outside Oak Park Station, a silence that has only deepened public concern.