[ad_1]
Charlise Mutten’s mother has been seen in public for the first time since the nine-year-old alleged murder in January.
Kallista Mutten appeared at Campbelltown Local Court on Tuesday to be sentenced for stealing two guns and ammunition during a home invasion five months before her fiancé allegedly shot and killed her daughter.Â
Mutten’s boyfriend Justin Stein, 31, allegedly murdered the schoolgirl on his family’s multi million-dollar property in Mount Wilson, west of Sydney, on January 11. Â
Mutten, 39, has not been implicated in the alleged murder.Â
He then allegedly stuffed her body in a barrel and drove it around in his red ute before dumping Charlise’s remains by the Colo River.Â
At the time of the murder Mutten was reportedly pregnant with Stein’s child.Â
The 39-year-old pleaded guilty for stealing the firearms, ammunition and a large quantity of silver  silver cutlery and tableware – collectively worth under $60,000.
Last public photo of Kallista Mutten back in January this year before she went to hospital for mental health treatment following her daughter’s death and then drug rehabÂ
Charlise Mutten, who was found dead in January inside a barrel dumped on the banks of the Color River after she ws allegedly murdered 65km away in Mount Wilson at the property of her mother Kaliista’s then fiance, Justin Stein
Police charged Stein with murder, released CCTV which allegedly showed Stein driving around with a barrel in the back of his red ute soon after the girl’s death.
While investigating Charlise’s death, in February detectives found two firearms and ammunition in bushland near where the schoolgirl disappeared.Â
Following forensic examination, police determined the items were allegedly stolen from a Mount Wilson property, known as Sylvan Close, on August 22 last year.
Stein was charged in May with two counts of possess an unauthorised firearm, two of possessing an unregistered firearm and possessing ammunition without a licence. He is yet to enter a plea.Â
Police say Mutten, allegedly accompanies by Stein, committed the break-in of a neighbour’s property and took the rifles, ammunition and silverware stored at the weekender.
Kallista Mutten (pictured) pleaded guilty to stealing two guns and ammunition during a home invasion at Mount Wilson just up the road from where her daughter was allegedly shot dead
Justin Stein (pictured) was also charged with aggravated break and enter of a Mount Wilson property
It is not suggested that Kallista Mutten was involved in Charlise’s death.
Mutten’s lawyer, Bet Turgut, told Katoomba Local Court on Monday that her client was unable to appear in person because she is in a rehabilitation centre.
Court documents seen by Daily Mail Australia list her address at an Odyssey addiction treatment centre in southwestern Sydney. .
She pleaded guilty to charged of break and enter a dwelling in company and steal to a value not exceeding $60,000.
Charlise, who lived with her maternal grandparents, had been holidaying with her mother and Stein at his family’s luxury Blue Mountains wedding venue over the Christmas holiday season last year.Â
Kallista Mutten committed an aggravated burglary on a nearby Mount Wilson property, allegedly in the company of her then fiance Justin Stein, five months before he allegedly murdered her daughter Charlise
Pictured: Wildenstein – the property owned by Justin Stein’s family, where Charlise Mutten went missing
Mutten reported her daughter missing in January, sparking a widespread search for the nine-year-old before her body was found.
According to police, the schoolgirl was alone in the care of Stein on the night she was allegedly murdered.
At the time of the alleged murder, police say Charlise’s mother Kallista Mutten was staying at a caravan park at Lower Portland on the Hawkesbury River, 81km from the luxury Mount Wilson estate where Charlise is believed to have died.Â
Police allege Stein shot and killed the girl on January 11, placed her body in a barrel in the back of his red ute and dumped it 65km away on the Colo River.Â
His case will return to court at a later date.Â
[ad_2]
Source link