An unfinished note, blood in her apartment and a missing blanket: Mystery of Australia’s own ‘gone girl’ whose body has never been found
An unfinished note, blood in her apartment and a missing blanket: Mystery of Australia’s own ‘gone girl’ whose body has never been found
The only traces left behind when Elisabeth Membrey disappeared were bloodstains in her house and a half-finished letter.
More than 22 years later the body of the young Melbourne woman has never been found and no-one has been imprisoned for what police believe is a murder.
After the night of December 6, 1994, it appeared someone had tried to clean her Ringwood apartment of bloodstains and her doona was missing, The Herald Sun reported.
A partially finished letter to a friend in the United Kingdom made police think she'd been disturbed while writing it.
Police later found blood in her car, the ABC reported.
They believed her body was wrapped in her doona and the car used to dispose of it.
According to The Herald Sun, red dirt was found in the tyres of Me Membrey's red Mazda and forensics indicated the car had been driven for about four hours at 60-70 kilometres per hour.
She only drove her car on sealed roads, leading police to believe the killer drove the vehicle.
And in 2015, internet sleuths tried their hand at helping with the investigation.
One proposed Ms Membrey's body was on a property less than an hour from where she lived.
On it, a track of red soil - similar to that in the victim's car's tyres - led directly to a dam.
Police searches at numerous locations turned up nothing.
For a decade, police investigations focused on her former colleague before turning to a man called Shane Bond in 2006, the ABC reported in 2014.
According to The Herald Sun, a former housemate of Mr Bond said early the next morning, he returned home covered in blood.
It was reported that the case against him was built on evidence from people who said he had confessed to Ms Membrey's killing.
Prosecutors said Mr Bond had a crush on Ms Membrey, but a jury in 2012 didn't believe it and he was acquitted of the charges against him due to a lack of evidence.
He said the accusations ruined his life, The Herald Sun reported.
On the 20th anniversary of Ms Membrey's disappearance, her parents, Joy and Roger, appealed for information, the ABC reported.
'We're left up in the air. We've got no body, we don't know why, how, or where. So the anxiety is extreme all the time, the not knowing,' Mrs Membrey said.
They just wanted to bury their daughter.
The investigation remains open and there's a $1 million reward for information leading to a conviction.
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