Australia LYNETTE MELBIN: Missing from Penrith, NSW - 5 June 1972 - Age 15

1586415079956.png


Lynette Melbin was last seen on Monday 5th of June 1972 by her mother at Woolworths Penrith Plaza. The MP attended Woolworths where her mother worked and informed her that she was going to her boyfriend’s house in Penrith. Lynette never arrived at her boyfriend’s house and has not been seen since. The clothing Lynette had worn when seen by her mother was found at her home and other clothing taken.

If you have information that may assist police, please contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.


Media - https://www.crimewatchers.net/media...rom-penrith-nsw-since-june-5-1972-age-15.406/
 
Last edited by a moderator:
1586415237089.png

1586415248072.png


Penrith’s greatest ever mystery
By Staff Writers
July 15, 2015, 16:14

Monday, June 5, 1972 is a date that would send chills down the spine of Penrith locals, especially the friends and family of Lynette Ann Melbin.

15-year-old Lynette wasn’t a big girl, just 155 centimetres tall with fair hair and hazel eyes, and was living locally with her family and twin sister, who she was very close with.

Lynette was last seen hanging out with three of her friends at Penrith Plaza, where she went and told her mother at work that she was going home to get changed before heading to her boyfriend’s house.

Lynette was never seen again.

And so started one of Penrith’s biggest ever mysteries, that remains unsolved more than 40 years later.

There has been no trace of Lynette since that day in 1972.

Six years after her disappearance, in September 1978, The Sun Herald readdressed her missing persons case.

The report said that Lynette’s grieving father would search the streets of Sydney late at night in the hope he might come across some sort of a clue in his daughter’s disappearance.

As a parent, sibling, cousin or friend could only imagine, never knowing where Lynette disappeared to that night, has taken a toll on her family.

Speaking with television show ‘Missing Persons Unit’ in 2006, Lynette’s mother, Pamela Melbin, retold the tragic story of the day her daughter went missing.

“On the Sunday night she went to babysit her friend’s children in Mt Druitt,” she said.

“I worked at Woolworths at the time, and she’d come in there [on Monday] and asked could she go to her boyfriend’s place.”

Mrs Melbin finished work at 5.30pm, and said that both she and Lynette agreed that’s when she would be picked up.

“When I went to pick her up she wasn’t there,” she said.

Lynette has made no contact with family or friends since that date, and Mrs Melbin suggested the disappearance of her daughter was out of character.

“She wouldn’t even go in the dark to put a bin out, let alone just disappear,” she said to Missing Persons Unit detectives.

On the program, Lynette’s father, Terry Melbin, said when they first reported Lynette was missing, it was hard to convince police she hadn’t just run away.

“Their first reaction was that she had run away, and you couldn’t convince them that she hadn’t run away because she’s very close to her twin sister,” he said.

Mr Melbin spoke of his heartbreak at losing his daughter, and said as the years go on, it had gotten harder and harder to believe that Lynette would be found.

“You go to the Coroner’s Court and you hear them say that somewhere around June 5, 1972, that our daughter met her death. That’s hard to take,” he said.

“We have this horrible feeling that we could go to our graves not ever knowing what happened to Lynette.

“We had four children, we’ve still got four children, but one of them we don’t know where she is and we’d love to find that out.”

In 2006, 34 years after her initial disappearance, Lynette’s case was reopened when a witness came forward and identified a man seen with Lynette in the weeks before she vanished.

The witness was a former member of the Penrith community, who said they had seen a person with Lynette that was much older than her, and that it was out of character for her to be with him.

The witness, who was very young at the time of Lynette’s disappearance, withheld the information under the impression that police had the investigation covered.

Detectives on the case said police would have spoken to this person of interest, but at the time, everyone who knew Lynette didn’t know she had any association with this person.

The Missing Persons Unit said Mr Melbin recognised the face of the man seen with Lynette, after being presented a photo of them together.

Since then, the case has been suspended, with very few fresh leads.

While it is highly likely that Lynette Melbin passed away long ago, her remains have never been found.

If she were alive today, Lynette Melbin would be 58-years-old.

– Dale Drinkwater
 

1586415422555.png 1586415434790.png 1586415441429.png

On June 5, 1972 15 year old Lynette Ann Melbin was hanging out with three friends at the Penrith Plaza in Penrith, New South Wales, Australia. She had told her mother earlier that day at her mother's work place at Woolworth that she was going to go home change and then head to her boyfriends house. They agreed that after work her mother would pick her up. When her mother showed up at the boyfriends around 5:30 p.m. she was told Lynette never showed up. The last time any one say Lynette was at the bus station. It was out of character for Lynette to go missing. She has not made contact with any friends or family since this date.

Lynette was a white female who was 15 at the time of her disappearance. She was 153 cm. She had blonde hair and hazel eyes. She was described as having a medium build.

SOURCES:
http://www.doenetwork.org/cases-int/686dfnsw.html
http://westernweekender.com.au/2015/07/penriths-greatest-ever-mystery/
 

Renewed hope that Lynette Melbin mystery could be solved​

August 26, 2021

Ex-police officer and private investigator, Neville Scullion, who is a family friend of Lynette’s twin sister, Liana Stewart, started looking at the case a few years ago.

“I went through documentation, but a lot has been lost over the years. I ended up canvassing the area and talking to people who were around at that time,” Mr Scullion said.

“We are still piecing together things that may have been missed and used mediums who work with police to try to find out any information.”

Mr Scullion, who is still actively looking into the case, believes they do have a suspect who is alleged to be involved.

“We have knowledge of a person that was most likely involved in Lynette’s disappearance and demise but unfortunately that person is no longer alive so no charges can ever be brought against them,” he said.

“We have identified some sites where Lynette’s remains may be but we are still asking people to come forward if they remember seeing her or anyone she was with.”

Ms Stewart said COVID-19 has caused some challenges with the case, but she will never stop searching for her sister.

“There were plans to bring cadaver dogs to search certain areas of interest but with everything happening at the moment it has come to a standstill which is a shame,” Ms Stewart said.

“My mum has sadly passed away, but all our family wants after everything is to find out where she has been buried and to bring her home.”
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Forum statistics

Threads
3,103
Messages
262,339
Members
1,034
Latest member
jarad adams
Back
Top Bottom