A WRONG TURN THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING
Investigative sources reveal that Celine Cremer may have veered off the main trail to find a “shortcut” back to the parking lot, and this decision led her deep into the dangerous, moss-covered jungle. The fact that the phone was found in a location unrelated to the trail led police to believe that the original theory was wrong from the start. Click the link in the comments below. 👇
Celine Cremer search party given hope by mobile phone find, as they wait for improved weather conditions
Tony Hage, who found Celine Cremer’s phone on Saturday, with Rob Parsons. (Facebook: Rob Parsons)
Emotions were running high after the phone belonging to missing Belgian tourist Celine Cremer was found on the first day of a renewed search for her in the wilderness in Tasmania’s north-west.
One of the key searchers, adventure filmmaker Rob Parsons, said it was a like a twist of fate.
“I don’t think there was a dry eye in the area,” Mr Parsons, who has been cataloguing his own private searches for Ms Cremer on YouTube, said.
“Everyone was so emotional. Everything was building up to this point where her friends could be here for the discovery. It felt like it was meant to be.”
The last confirmed sighting of Ms Cremer was in Waratah in Tasmania’s north-west on June 17, 2023.
She was reported missing on June 26.
Her car was found near the walking track to Philosopher Fal
Some of Ms Cremer’s friends also flew in from Belgium to help out.
“The more time I spent up on that hill, the more I realised that luck was going to play a big part in it, and the more people you have the better chance you have of that luck,” Mr Parsons said.
“It’s really a numbers game. The police were similar in the beginning stage, but unfortunately, at that point, the data that Celine was on the other side of the hill hadn’t been retrieved.”
Mother grateful for search efforts
Mr Parsons said Ms Cremer’s mother, Ariane, was being updated on the search by her daughter’s friends and by police.
He read out a message she’d sent in an online group chat:
“Dear all, From Belgium we want to express our gratitude to the whole crews. You are wonderful and a special mention for Tony Hage.”
Mr Hage was the volunteer who found Ms Cremer’s phone.
Around 35 people were part of the search on Saturday.
Search party waiting for better weather conditions
It is expected the search will resume on Tuesday, depending on weather conditions.
Mr Parsons welcomed the police reinforcements, saying it was tough bushland with horizontal scrub.
“You find yourself weaving in and out of branches and bushes and crawling to get through stuff, so it’s very hard going,” he said.
“Because of that, it’s been really hard to systematically cover the hill because there are some pockets that are just so hard to get into.
“We’ll just cross our fingers and keep putting in the work.
“We’ve got a few fine days coming up, so we’ve got a really good opportunity to get that final closure.
“I think now we know for sure that Celine headed south off the hill, this has eliminated a lot of the area that needed to be searched, so we’re right on the tail.”
ls, just outside Waratah, the next day.
The initial search for Ms Cremer continued for two weeks, and police have done follow-up searches since, but no further signs of Ms Cremer have been found until Saturday.
Mr Parsons said he was searching with Celine’s friends from Belgium when they heard the phone had been found.
“It must have been a twist of fate because everyone was heading toward the same direction minutes before the phone was found, and then there was a call out that someone had found a phone.
“There was a lot of emotion and a lot of excitement.”
Mr Parsons said he got to the site where the mobile phone had been found just as search organiser Ken Gamble was pulling on gloves to pry it out of the ground.
They quickly worked out the phone was the same model as Ms Cremer’s phone, and one of her friends had noted the serial number of her phone, which matched the phone that was found.
Find ‘put so much wind in everyone’s sails’
The search for Ms Cremer was postponed on Sunday due to poor weather, but Mr Parsons said the phone find meant there would be renewed hope when the search resumed.
“It put so much wind in everyone’s sails,” Mr Parsons said.
“Because it’s tough terrain out there and it’s easy to get worn out and feel like you’re helpless.
“But having that happen before lunch on the first day — it was incredible.”
Two-and-a-half years after the initial police-led efforts to find Ms Cremer, officers will again search for the 31-year-old, but will join rather than lead the current search.
Inspector Andrew Hanson told ABC Radio Mornings that Tasmania Police had been collaborating with search leader Ken Gamble throughout.
Inspector Hanson said information was being shared both ways.
“Our role [now] is really to acknowledge the work that Ken’s done, but it really is to help support him,” he said.
“The area that needs to be searched now, it’s still a very large area … it’s the kind of area where you can’t get technology into, you can’t search in any other way than boots on the ground.
“Our role will be to support that search by providing extra numbers simply to increase the footprint on the ground.”
‘Luck was going to play a big part’
Mr Parsons said nobody blamed police for not finding Ms Cremer’s phone in 2023, when she went missing.
“They didn’t have the army we’ve got at the moment,” he said, adding that, through social media, he had recruited 25 experienced off-track walkers for the new search.
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