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The child safety charity set up by the parents of murdered schoolboy Daniel Morcombe has cut ties with the ‘Where’s William Tyrrell’ campaign.
Bruce Morcombe told Daily Mail Australia the charity he and wife Denise run – the Daniel Morcombe Foundation – and their ‘Keeping Kids Safe’ campaigns were ‘completely at arm’s length’ from Where’s William? – which is not a registered charity.
The split comes three years after child advocate Hetty Johnson’s Bravehearts charity disaffiliated from Where’s William? – allegedly over a fundraising dispute. Â
Concerned members of the public contacted the Morcombes about the link between the two organisations after police charged William’s foster parents with offences against a female child.
Where’s William uses the Daniel Morcombe logo on its website and claims it has ‘the support of the Daniel Morcombe Foundation’ and works ‘in collaboration with the NSW Police Force’.
OSupporters of the Morcombe Foundation questioned the link after a senior detective told court William’s foster mother ‘knows where the missing toddler’s body is’ during her court hearing for the charge of lying to the NSW Crime Commission.
Following Magistrate Miranda Moody’s acquittal of her last month, William’s foster mother made a tearful plea outside the court, saying ‘Her Honour has … found me not guilty of lying to the crime commission.Â
‘With this behind me, I hope that police focus on finding William and what happened to him.’Â
The Daniel Morcombe Foundation informed inquirers it has not been connected with Where’s William ‘for some years. We do not fundraise or collect donations on their behalf’.Â
The charity set up by the parents of murdered Queensland schoolboy Daniel Morcombe has cut ties with the Where’s William Tyrrell campaign and is trying to get its name and red t-shirt logo off the Tyrrell website
Bruce Morcombe said the Daniel Morcombe Foundation was ‘completely at arm’s length from the Where’s William? campaign and the Foundations says ‘our name and logo (circled) are still appearing on the “Where’s William” website … and we are endeavouring to get these removed’
‘I am aware our name and logo are still appearing on the “Where’s William” website … and we are endeavouring to get these removed,’ the email read.Â
‘However, as the Foundation does not own these platforms we do not have any direct access and are reliant on other parties to action our requests.’
When asked about The Morcombe Foundation’s position, the person who runs Where’s William, PR supremo Claire Collins, said: ‘That’s news to me. I know absolutely nothing about what you have suggested.’Â Â
Mr Morcombe said the DMF had held monies on behalf of Where’s William in the past and still had $1500 ‘sitting on our books for two years’.
‘We have made contact over the last couple of months,’ he said.Â
In response to public concerns after police charges against the foster parents, he said: ‘I appreciate the air is very different today.’
Bruce and Denise Morcombe established their foundation after their 13-year-old son (above) was abducted and murdered on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast in December 2003 while waiting for a bus
The Morcombes’ charity actively campaigns to educate children about staying safe in physical and online environments, and supports young victims of crimeÂ
Bruce and Denise Morcombe established their foundation after their 13-year-old son was abducted and murdered on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast in December 2003 while waiting for a bus.
Daniel’s partial remains and some clothing were found eight years later and paedophile Brett Peter Cowan was later convicted of the boy’s murder.
The Daniel Morcombe Foundation campaigns to educate children about staying safe in physical and online environments, and supports young victims of crime.
William Tyrrell disappeared age three on September 12, 2014 from his foster grandmother’s house at Kendall on the NSW Mid North Coast and no trace of him has yet been found.Â
Where’s William? was established by Sydney mother-and-daughter public relations firm Insight Communications acting on behalf of William’s foster parents and launched by then detective Gary Jubelin with Hetty Johnson in 2015.
The Where’s William? campaign was set up to ‘manage public consciousness … and empower William’s (foster) parents as the foremost voice for William’ but has never been a registered charity
Insight Communications’ mother-and-daughter PR supremos Claire and Alice Collins (above) work pro bono for the site which partnered with registered charities Bravehearts, then DMF
It was not publicly revealed until 2017 that William was a foster child who had been removed from his biological parents by the then Family and Community Services department.
NSW Supreme Court judge Justice Paul Brereton ruled William’s status could be revealed and he was likely dead.Â
Gary Jubelin left the NSW police force in 2019 and was later convicted for illegally recording a man now cleared of being a William Tyrrell suspect.Â
Via Where’s William?, Claire and Alice Collins from Insight PR sell T-shirts, caps and ribbons emblazoned with William’s image or in the colours of the SpiderMan suit he was wearing when he vanished.Â
The pair offered the merchandise outside the inquest into William’s death and have accompanied William’s foster mother in support to her court hearings.
Daniel Morcombe was murdered in 2003 and his partial remains eight years later by a team including Griffith University Professor Jonathon Olley who worked on the William Tyrrell dig (above) at Kendall last yearÂ
Where’s William? is not legally a charity, and cannot directly collect donations, but struck up an arrangement with the registered charities Bravehearts, and when that relationship collapsed, the Daniel Morcombe Foundation.
On its website, Insight notes it manages the Where’s William? campaign pro bono, and with no official spokesperson and yet in its first year had massive media coverage, online traffic and social media reach.
Claire Collins told Daily Mail Australia apart from not knowing anything about the Daniel Morcombe Foundation cutting ties with Where’s William?, that the campaign would not comment.Â
On June 26, 2015, Insight Communications stated the campaign would ‘manage public consciousness … and empower William’s parents as the foremost voice for William’ and the following year was boosted by a record $1m reward from the NSW Government.
After being acquitted of lying to the NSW Crime Commission William Tyrrell’s foster mother (above with the boy’s foster father) pleaded with police to ‘focus on finding William and what happened to him’
Despite Bruce Morcombe saying the foundation he and wife Denise run in the same of their son being ‘completely at arm’s length from the Where’s William campaign, the Tyrrell website still references the Morcombe charity and Claire Collins said the split was ‘news to me’
A senior detective told a court on November 3 he still believed William Tyrrell’s foster mother knew where the toddler’s remains were. Above, police search for remains at Kendall
‘The reason why we chose to go … partnering with a registered charity is we could have total transparency,’ she said.
‘After the partnership with Bravehearts ceased, there was a small amount of money over and we partnered with the Daniel Morcombe Foundation … the transfer was direct.’Â
The campaign’s website whereswilliam.org contains messages from William’s foster parents, who cannot be named for legal reasons.
They include two signed ‘William’s mummy’, saying ‘William needs the voice of many, his is silent’ and ‘I pray that someone will say something. It’s too big a secret to keep’.
The inquest into William’s disappearance by NSW Coroner Harriet Grahame is on hold as police continue to search for the missing boy’s remains.
A four-week search at Kendall, and in particular along Batar Creek Road in the town, was conducted a year ago, and in July police again returned to search further.Â
Where’s William? campaign chief Calire Collins has accompanied the missing toddler’s foster mother (above) to several court hearings and says the boy could still be alive
Where’s William? was set up by Claire Collins for the foster parents and launched by then detective Gary Jubelin who was taken off the case and left the police force in 2019
PR expert and Where’s William? campaign head Claire Collins said she believes William Tyrrell could still be alive, saying ‘there’s no evidence to the contrary’
On the eve of last year’s search, senior police named William’s foster mother as a person of interest in the case.Â
The 57-year-old has always denied any connection to the boy’s disappearance, including to the NSW Crime Commission, and no charges against anyone have been laid.
In the last year, NSW Police have charged William’s foster mother with two charges of assaulting and two of intimidating a ten-year-girl in a family home, which are due to be heard in January.
The foster father will face the court on one count of common assault, and one count of intimidation.
He is also charged with lying to the NSW Crime Commission.Â
On November 4, NSW Magistrate Miranda Moody found the foster mother did not lie to the Crime Commission about hitting a female foster child with a wooden spoon.
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