The Binge Cases: Scary Terri - Where Is Daniel Morcombe 8 Daniel

Episode Date: January 11, 2026

As the Morcombes finally learn what happened to their son, they’re faced with further questions as the ripples of their journey spread far and wide. Binge all episodes of Where is Daniel Morcombe...? ad-free today by subscribing to The Binge. Visit The Binge Crimes on Apple Podcasts and hit ‘subscribe’ or visit GetTheBinge.com to get access. Join The Binge’s free newsletter – Patreon.com/TheBinge From serial killer nurses to psychic scammers – The Binge is your home for true crime stories that pull you in and never let go. The Binge – feed your true crime obsession. A Sony Music Entertainment and Campside Media production. Find out more about The Binge and other podcasts from Sony Music Entertainment at sonymusic.com/podcasts and follow us @sonypodcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:01:52 Financial tea drops January 15th wherever you get your podcasts or watch on YouTube. Listen to all episodes of Where is Daniel Morecam? Add free right now by subscribing to The Binge. Visit the Binge channel on Apple Podcasts and hit subscribe at the top of the page. Or visit getthebinge.com to get access wherever you listen. The Binge. Feed your true crime obsession. The Binge. On the day, I'd wake up at 5 a.m.
Starting point is 00:02:37 I have my uniform on, never worn it for. It was orange overalls, black boots, gloves, and a hat. So the only part of us showing really was our face. It's September 4th, 2011, Father's Day. With three children of his own, the first Sunday of every September has always been special for Pat McShane. But this one was different. I said to my wife and kids,
Starting point is 00:03:02 that will give our father's day to a man who needs it more. And when I get home, we'll have our father's day. This morning, he's headed off to his first assignment as a state emergency service volunteer, known locally as the Orange Angels. As I put my boots on that day, I felt something was going to happen. As we drove down approaching the search site, all the houses had red balloons, red hearts, and red streamers. And there was residents just waving vigorously to us. he's this army of people going in to search for Daniel and that lifted me.
Starting point is 00:03:48 It's a long road. It goes for quite a few kilometres and we go a bit further and now's the stop and the bitch man stop and the bitchement stops and then left and right is plantation. It started becoming less formed and more of a track and you could have imagined how Daniel felt Where has this guy taken me?
Starting point is 00:04:11 You know, what's happening? Pat's car continues down the dirt road, flanked by pines. Suddenly, the road spills into a large slab of farmland with macadamia trees. Base camp. The actual search site is further away in the overgrown scrub of an old, deserted sand quarry. It had been raining. It was a bit misty. There was incredible silence.
Starting point is 00:04:46 Pat joins the line of nearly 40 individuals, stretched out across the bush. They're on their knees, heads down, shoulder to shoulder, inching forward slowly. I could hear some of the girls are crying. Daniel's spirit was in the air. His spirit was in the birds, in the trees, in the breeze, in the breeze. and as I was searching, just removing the material, going through every morsel, and then placing it behind me. Like a picture was images of Daniel that had been published. That's all I saw.
Starting point is 00:05:27 We kept on going at the rate of about one metre per hour, as all we were searching. Then Pat notices something. I unearthed an item that was... round it was about four centimeters in diameter and it was like a
Starting point is 00:05:49 like the side of a tennis ball a curvature and it was brown in colour it was porous in texture and it had calcium leaching the other side I called the team leader
Starting point is 00:06:04 and she picked it up and she said that's a yip and it was human they said that's a bone fragment and that's not an entire piece and there's more and we want you to continue searching. So I had about five polyserve my shoulder and I continued searching and then I found another piece and that was like half a chisel and dug again and another piece just rolled out in front of me
Starting point is 00:06:43 and that was like half a bow toy and I was shaking basically we exhumed a human who was the most known child in Australia and I had this feeling
Starting point is 00:07:03 I can't describe it I felt as I held him I felt the love that Daniel had for his mother. And it was a love that I could describe as even when he went to school,
Starting point is 00:07:20 he missed his mother. And from Sony Music Entertainment and Campside Media, this is where is Daniel Warcom. Episode 8. It's an uncomfortable request to make, but I knew I had to try. After seven years of knowing Daniel's story,
Starting point is 00:08:16 of at times, obsessing over it, I felt I needed to retrace his steps from December 7, 2003. From that dream home in Palm Woods to the Hale and Ride bus stop beneath the Keel Mountain Road overpass. From the church parking lot to Coochin Creek. From the macadamia farm to the old sand quarry. Initially, Bruce and Denise weren't so sure. But somehow, one Sunday, I found myself in their car. I got out at each stop.
Starting point is 00:08:49 I think I just wanted to feel close to the person who has had such an impact on so many, myself included. Bruce and Denise stayed in the car once we got to the quarry. With some directions from Bruce, I walked off, around a locked gate and down a trail. It's actually hard to believe that I'm standing here. You see it a certain way in your head
Starting point is 00:09:13 for almost seven years. Yeah, you see the real place. I trudged across the landscape to the edge of an embankment and stared into the trees. I was standing where the Morgan family had stood, silently embracing each other nearly 14 years prior. They wore blue forensic overalls, gloves, surgical masks,
Starting point is 00:09:49 covered from head to toe so as not to contaminate the search area with their DNA. Because no more than 50 meters from the edge of that embankment, investigators believe they had found Daniel. Within the week, DNA tests confirmed it. As I think Bob Beckinson said, it's a sad answer, but it's an answer. Deputy Commissioner Ross Barnett greenlit Brett Peter Cowan's arrest because he believed that Cowan's recorded confession to undercover operatives
Starting point is 00:10:21 would be enough to secure a conviction. But the idea that any corroborating evidence might still exist to support that confession, it had been almost eight years. It was a heavily wooded area rife with wild animals. The vegetation was dense. Floods had hammered the terrain. We had no real expectation of finding anything. The fact we did was, you know, a small miracle.
Starting point is 00:10:47 And there were more miracles to come. One of the things Brett Cowan had confessed to the underwent, undercover operatives was that after he stripped Daniel's clothes from his body, he tossed them off a nearby bridge into a fast-flowing creek. Tied around some mangrove roots in very shallow water in the creek, we found the band of the underpants that Daniel had been wearing. and they found, buried under a couple of inches of silt and sand under the water, the remains of some of the other clothes that he'd been wearing that day.
Starting point is 00:11:27 They were still there, right where he said they'd be, eight years later. Now, we had no right to be able to recover those items in those circumstances after all that time. You know, he'd had all the luck for about eight years, and then all of a sudden when we ended up starting, to have the luck. In all, just 17 bones were found. We didn't find much of Daniel. I was told that what was found of Daniel
Starting point is 00:11:56 would probably fit in a cigarette box. The day after Brett Peter Cowan's arrest, Bruce and Denise faced a swarm of media outside their home. One journalist asked if they planned to continue the Daniel Morecam Foundation. We said, yeah, we've worked too hard for so many years. We're going to continue and have this foundation grow. Even after the first day,
Starting point is 00:12:26 of Daniel's remains were found, the Morcoms didn't stop. We set up the foundation for the search for Daniel, but we also set it up to educate children on child safety. For months, they had been organizing a tour up the Queensland coast. Bruce and Denise would visit schools and present the foundation's latest child safety curriculum. People were saying, oh, you shouldn't go, you don't need to go on that. We said, no, we're going. What could Bruce and I do? We couldn't sit in a chair at home doing nothing, because that's not part of us. They had made a commitment
Starting point is 00:12:58 and they honored it for Daniel. We had a big trailer and we just drove off and there was about 2,000, 3,000 kilometer trip up there and then another couple thousand coming home.
Starting point is 00:13:12 From one town to the next they were greeted by crowds wearing red and brandishing handmade signs showing their support. We love you Morkums. We won't forget Daniel. Balloons for 2,000, It was extraordinary.
Starting point is 00:13:27 They were astounded by the outpouring of love. Like we'd get to the service station and buy petrol and we'd get there at the counter and the person before us had already paid for it. And then we got to Cairns and they was, I'm not kidding you, there would have been 2,000 people waiting for us in the park there. But it was a difficult journey for the couple. Periodically the police commissioner would ring Denise and myself and he said, look, just letting me.
Starting point is 00:13:55 you know, before the media get hold of it, there'd been another find of Daniel's remains, another bone, whatever it may have been. Sometimes we were within 30 minutes of walking into a school. You need to compose yourself. You're going to meet teachers, school principals, mums and dads, and, of course, kids that you've never met in your life.
Starting point is 00:14:18 So you've got to do your best. But you had to flick that tear away and say, I'm here to make... their life better and safer, and that's what we did. When they returned from the tour, all Bruce and Denise wanted was to collect their son's remains, to finally separate him from the investigation, to take him home.
Starting point is 00:14:43 And we asked them, can we please have a funeral for Daniel? Remai said, You will not receive Daniel's remains until all avenues of appeal have been extinguished. And we just felt it was so interesting. just. It just seemed a play for power that played by our rules as we go through the court processes or for some foreseeable future you won't get Daniel's remains. It seemed almost a ransom.
Starting point is 00:15:16 They waited 15 months. I know we're in Brisbane and we had a newspaper article that it was being written and it was going to be printed on the Friday morning. It was going to be the front page news talking about how the police, the DPP and the coroner wouldn't release Daniel's remains. The coroner phoned Bruce up about four or five o'clock on that Thursday afternoon and said Daniel's remains are going to be released. Maybe the impending front-page news story in no way influenced the sudden release of Daniel's remains after those 15 long months.
Starting point is 00:15:51 Or maybe it did, but only one thing mattered to the morcums. And we were able to start. working on Daniel's funeral that evening and we had it a week later. We went to the funeral parlour and probably one of the most difficult times in your life. A private room within that room was a small white coffin with a gold cross and gold handles, a beautiful coffin really. The undertaker there said would you like me to open the coffin so you can reflect we declined. I didn't want to see Daniel as he is.
Starting point is 00:16:33 I wanted to see and remember Daniel as he was. So I didn't want to look at his remains, those few bones that were in now. So we left the coffin closed, and Denise and I walked out, knowing tomorrow's the day. Daniel Morecam was laid to rest on December 7th, 2012. It was the nine-year anniversary.
Starting point is 00:16:57 of his death. Sunshine Coast parents, Bruce and Denise Morkham, have waited nine long years to bring their son home. And today they will finally give him the farewell he deserves. Will you tell me about the funeral? No, I don't want to. No. My heart broke. I watched those soulful blue eyes, filled with a pain that can't be put into words.
Starting point is 00:17:27 And then... What was that St. Catharines of Siena? Catherine's of Siena. One of the girls from the foundation had organised to sort of say, not the invites, but sort of let people know that the funeral would be on. And a lot of people wanted to have specific seating and parts of the church to have been there.
Starting point is 00:17:47 There were thousands of people there. Quite a few people that you knew from school, teachers. They're asking everyone to wear red, which is the colour that he was wearing, that he was wearing the day he disappeared. We did allow TV cameras into the church. It was our way of thanking the public because they wanted to be there as well.
Starting point is 00:18:15 So while there were perhaps 2 or 3,000 people at the church, inside the church at some outside, it was live broadcast around Australia. Really has touched the hearts and affected everyone, not just here in Queensland, but right throughout the country. On Daniels Coffin, we put a beautiful, photo that Daniel had in a crystal photo frame and also had a couple of Christmas presents that we'd had in the cupboard that Daniel hadn't opened so we put those on top of his coffin as well. You do your best, you shed a tear, say goodbye, you walk outside and the motorcade slowly takes off.
Starting point is 00:18:56 Denise's mum's in tears, Denise's in tears. Don't great. And um, um, we head off to the cemetery where it was a quiet profit service. That's it. Once we had Daniel's funeral and he was in the cemetery and were able to go and say hello to him, it got a lot easier. Dean and Brad, we noticed they seemed to have been quite different. They were more relaxed, just in a better, happier place.
Starting point is 00:19:35 I think knowing that Daniel was now laid to rest. To a mom and a dad, it's the toughest day of your life saying goodbye to your kids. But the next day, it's very uplifting. You know, that chapter's finished. Bruce and Denise had done it. Finally, they had brought their boy home. Reggie, I just sold my car online. Let's go, grandpa.
Starting point is 00:20:21 Wait, you did? Yep, on Carvana. Just put in the license plate, answered a few questions, got an offer in minutes. Easier than setting up that new digital picture frame. You don't say. Yeah, they're even picking it up tomorrow. Talk about fast. Wow, way to go.
Starting point is 00:20:36 So about that picture frame. Ah, forget about it. Until Carvana makes one, I'm not interested. Carvana made easy. On Carvana. Pick up these may apply. New year, new me, right? Eat better and not have any uninvited guests breaking into my house.
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Starting point is 00:21:36 So start the year off right. Protect your home with SimplySafe and get 50% off any new system for a limited time. Go to simplysafe.com slash cases. That's simplysafe.com slash cases. There's no safe like SimplySafe. On March 13, 2014, Brett Peter Cowen was found guilty of the murder of Daniel Morecam. The next day, he received his sentence. It took more than 10 years to convict Brett Peter Cowan.
Starting point is 00:22:02 It took less than an hour to lock him away for life. The judge told Cowan he was beyond rehabilitation and should never be released. They face a lifetime of grief, but for now, the Morecambe family can take comfort. Justice for their son and brother has been won. It would have been so easy to stand up, as human nature would say, that's what you're going to do. You're going to say, I hope you rot in hell, you animal, whatever. You're going to give him a spray. But what the family did, we turned our back to Cowan, and we gave each other a hug.
Starting point is 00:22:36 A few of us were in tears. But that moment, we were not going to give Cowan any satisfaction and disgrace ourselves in court. You want to give that person a piece of your mind. But we didn't say anything. We just turned our back, and that was. That. Cowan's legal team contested the ruling on appeal twice. And twice, they failed.
Starting point is 00:23:01 Today, nearly 22 years after taking Daniel's life, Brett Peter Cowan is serving his life sentence at the Woolston Correctional Center, a high-security prison in Brisbane. He's unlikely to ever see the light of day. And yet, somehow, this isn't where the story ends. The mystery of what happened to Daniel had been solved, but the coronial inquest into Daniel's disappearance and murder always had another aim to assess the investigation.
Starting point is 00:23:34 In December of 2016, the proceedings resumed with a new coroner by the name of Terry Ryan. The question at the heart of the matter, had police missed an opportunity to catch Brett Peter Cowan sooner? These final two days of the inquiry laid bare just how much politics, inside the investigation, and beyond it, had shaped the case from the very start. You might recall Task Force Argos detectives Dennis Martin and Ken King. The two men had been the first to interview Cowan, just two weeks after Daniel had vanished. They had retraced Cowan's alleged movements and identified a 45-minute gap in his alibi.
Starting point is 00:24:16 They had prepared a report. and Kang King had briefed the major incident room on December 22nd, 2003. Both Ken King and Dennis Martin were called to give evidence at the inquest in 2016. While on the stand, Dennis Martin recalled the conversation that took place in the immediate aftermath of King's MIR brief. I had the infamous conversation with the lead detective in the hallway. He was going past, and I said, look, Cowan's your man. I think you should focus on him. And the exact words were similar to that was, just fuck off, what would you know?
Starting point is 00:24:50 And so that was the end of that conversation, you know. What was his name? Condon. Condon, as in Mike Condon, the detective inspector at the time, and the man in charge of the case from beginning to end. Mike Condon was a decorated officer and respected by many. But my conversations with people suggested a reputation that was more complicated. Some said he was a competent and dedicated investigator. Others said he was difficult, prickly, and even a dictator.
Starting point is 00:25:27 But it was never these descriptions of Condon that struck me most. It was the change I witnessed in some people when he was brought up. The energy of the interview would just shift, as if they suddenly remembered they were being recorded. That wasn't so much the case with Dennis Mark. Martin, though. He had no problem sharing his feelings about Condon on the record. He was just a fellow that had a very bad disposition on life. I don't know whether he liked life or hated life. He's just one of those sort of people, just an arsele on life. You know, that's the way it was and that's the way he is. When Condon took the stand during this final part
Starting point is 00:26:08 of the inquest, he denied the conversation with Martin ever happened. And the coroner concluded there was insufficient evidence to find that it took place. Regardless, some people I spoke with still sighed with Martin on this one. One detective said, if you asked 100 people who knew Mike Condon if they thought he said that to Martin that day, 100 people would tell you he did. And Ken King certainly believed his partner.
Starting point is 00:26:36 I trust Dennis anyway, partly because he'd just not have a reason to lie because he's not worried about. Like, he doesn't have some agenda. It's just not in his sense. style to even bother. We reached out to Mike Condon several times, but he declined to be interviewed for this podcast. He said that he doesn't make comment on operational matters in retirement.
Starting point is 00:27:04 But to understand Condon's alleged reaction is to understand where many were at this early point in the investigation. Douglas Jackaway was a prime suspect. He had a criminal history as dark as Cowan's, a familiarity with the area, opportunity, and a shifting alibi. Plus, he had been driving a blue car, one that perfectly matched the blue car so many eyewitnesses had seen near the underpass. The problem? Hindsight. We now know that Douglas Jackway had nothing to do with the crime.
Starting point is 00:27:38 It was Brett Peter Cowan, an argument that Dennis Martin and Ken King made in King's brief to the MRI, that Cowan was an equally compelling suspect who demanded attention. King and Martin also claimed that their report on Cowan was nothing short of extensive. All of the information in the two job logs plus attachments. Photos of Cowan, his car and the car's tire treads, printouts of his criminal history, and the recordings from their interactions with him. But something curious happened in 2011. Following Brett Peter Cowan's arrest, in preparation for court proceedings,
Starting point is 00:28:17 An investigator followed up with Ken King about those early interactions. And I said, well, the reports are a good starting point. And he said, what report? They said that there was no report, the report would have gone missing. It wasn't the only thing that would end up going missing. The recordings disappeared too. As did Ken King's notebook. Ken had left the Queensland Police Service in 2008.
Starting point is 00:28:44 As was standard protocol, he checked in any notebook he had used on investigations over the years. Please keep these things stored should they ever be needed for future matters. One of those notebooks that Ken turned over contained his notes from his days on Operation Bravo Vista. In 2013, he was called to give evidence
Starting point is 00:29:03 at Cowan's pretrial. So I asked for my notebook in case I needed to refresh my memory during the pretrial hearing and I was told it was missing. Apparently it had been misplaced after being signed out by someone on an unrelated matter.
Starting point is 00:29:19 I made it really clear to a few people that I wouldn't be stopping whatever ruckus I needed to cause until my notebook was found. And my notebook was produced at the pretrial hearing. It was found. Ken made clear that given the notebook was found, the court proceedings were in no way impacted. Still, he doesn't understand White ever went missing
Starting point is 00:29:43 in the first place. Then, at the 2016, Inquest, King and Martin learned that their original report had been found as well. But what officers presented was not the extensive report that the detectives swear they turned over to their superiors. The report they produced in the court was a redacted report from some of the facts from that report. It was just over two pages, and notably absent, the attachments, including the printouts of
Starting point is 00:30:13 Cowan's criminal history, which Ken King insists, included. He recognized some aspects of the text as their own, but he was adamant that those pages were nothing more than a summary of the comprehensive report that they had submitted. After discussing all of this with Ken, I put a question to him. Knowing what you know today, the report goes missing, the recordings go missing. Your notebook for a period of time goes missing. Do you believe this was by coincidence? No. The inquiry found no evidence to suggest a more extensive report beyond that of the three-page
Starting point is 00:30:59 document ever existed. But a few years ago, Dennis Martin was doing a cleanup of his old computer files. He came across a hard drive he didn't recognize with a USB stick attached. I was transferring everything on my computer because it's about 30 years old. I opened up the the big hard drive, and in the bottom was a USB stick. And it said, police, I don't know. What's on here? Put it on there. It came up with a few things. It had come up with the operation for Daniel Morecam.
Starting point is 00:31:30 And he was the original report. Had not been changed or touched since 2003. So that was the original report, which was quite lengthy, and had everything that Ken and I had always said it had on it. The police always maintained that Brett Cowan was a primary suspect throughout the case. but police actions, or lack of actions here, might speak louder than words. When detectives seized Cowan's vehicle in the days following King and Martin's brief, materials were collected for testing.
Starting point is 00:32:00 But that material wasn't submitted to forensics for five months, where it remained, untested, for four more years. Dennis Martin recalls submitting suggestions to seize Cowan's computers and phone records, but that wouldn't be done for 18 months. Howan's wife at the time, she wasn't officially interviewed by investigators for 18 months. He was never one of the four suspects displayed on the major incident rooms photo board. Here's what I think. I think that all of this points to something major being missed by the police.
Starting point is 00:32:36 There's one more story worth mentioning here, a story that has bothered me since the moment I heard it. In the lead up to Brett Peter Cowen's confession, Dowen's confession, Detective Grant Limwood and one of the covert's controllers were chatting in Perth. We joked, oh, we'll never have to buy a beer again if we can pull this off and come back, and the reality was quite different, which surprised me. I got the distinct impression that, as weird as it sounds, not everyone's happy sometimes when something like this happens.
Starting point is 00:33:07 The question I keep asking myself is, were the police so determined to tie the blue car to Douglas Jack away and charge him with Daniels' morgue. murder, that they refused to listen to some of their own detectives regarding Brett Peter Cowan? And as it became clear that Cowan might be guilty, were attempts made to cover malfeasance? Did they care so much about being right that they disregarded doing what was right? The inquest itself did not conclude that investigators had acted inappropriately or made improper decisions. Some questions were referred to the Crime and Corruption Commission, but the CCC
Starting point is 00:33:45 too found no evidence of misconduct. But the inquest did agree that, yes, more could have been done to focus on Brett Peter Cowan early on. Detective Limwood feels the same. If you want to write something off properly, as we say, to really run it out, there's a way to do it, and there's a few steps that had been missed. But, and I do know the same people that had to investigate him were probably doing 10 other POWs, so I won't be critical of that.
Starting point is 00:34:16 But in an ideal world, there's a few things that should have been done. But the coroner also said that he didn't believe it was necessary or helpful to retroactively evaluate every element of the QPS investigation. He concluded that even if Cowan had been pressed harder, it was speculative to suggest that the investigation would have drawn to its conclusion any sooner. Linwood also agrees with this finding. I don't know if it ever would have been solved. In a weird way, it's the passage of time,
Starting point is 00:34:45 and it's that sequence of events that led to him perhaps being comfortable enough to one day admit it. I don't know, it's just one of those very interesting convoluted stories that perhaps had to happen the way it did. Does it make sense? It does to me. I try my best to believe that things happen for a reason. In this case, everything led to the Mr. Big Sting. And if it hadn't been for that high-stakes operation, Cowan may have never confessed to the covert operatives. or led investigators to Daniel's remains.
Starting point is 00:35:18 Daniel may never have been found. Still, one of the primary purposes of an inquest is to bring change. It's why Ken King was willing to sit down with me. He harbors no illusion that he is the victim in this story. But if his speaking out can help improve the system even a little bit? Because this is kind of the point we're making is how much better can we do things?
Starting point is 00:35:41 So that next time an offender like this is, investigated. You know, we've somehow, you know, incrementally advanced a society to improve things a bit. As a result of Daniel's coronial inquest, the Queensland Police Service now requires a mandatory, independent review at the 12-month mark of any homicide or suspicious high-risk missing persons case. For better or worse, this investigation had a massive impact on the lives of those involved. Julie Elliott, the police liaison who grew close with the family as they faced their darkest days, for years she struggled with the effects the case had on her emotionally. Ken King and Dennis Martin ended up leaving the police force,
Starting point is 00:36:32 and Grant Limwood saw his days in the homicide division come to an end. And the covert operatives, without whom none of this would have been possible? I tried to reach them through various avenues, but they declined any requests for interviews. Grant Linwood still speaks to some of them, though. And he has seen firsthand the toll it's taken. Oh, they're all absolutely destroyed by it. They're quite sensitive about it and don't, you know, they'll talk openly to me about it, but only in hushed whispers somewhere quiet. They're very, yeah, you can see it's had an effect on them. I couldn't do it. I think, I think they're brilliant.
Starting point is 00:37:10 Every single detective I spoke with went out of their way to make one thing perfectly clear. In the end, all that matters is that the case was solved, that Brett Cowan is off the street, and that the Morcoms got the answers they deserved. There's no one hero to any part of it, but many, many people played a critical role in the very strange sequence of events that led to this ending. Were it not for the extraordinary amount of work
Starting point is 00:37:39 that so many police did fruitlessly chasing every useless red herring across the state, to get rid of that, it wouldn't have been where it was, So that should be recognized. A lot of it went nowhere, but, geez, they were trying. Were it not for then, you know, the assistance of, you know, the coronial process, Peter Boyce, wonderful staff at coroner's office, all of that getting involved, the Western Australia police, the bits, we did, the coverties, you know, it all led to one huge sequence that, you know,
Starting point is 00:38:08 so it always needs to be recognised the part everyone played. Which brings us back to Bruce and Denise. They are, after all, the beating heart of this story. The two people who faced the worst pain, who fought harder than anyone, who refused to give up, who never stopped pushing for answers regardless of the challenges they faced. Perhaps if they hadn't gone through this, they wouldn't be doing what they're doing today. What's up, rich people? It's me, Haley, aka Mrs. Dow Jones. Money is the thing that people least want to talk about, right behind sex and death.
Starting point is 00:38:57 That is why I have taken up on myself to start a new podcast called Financial Tea. Every single week, I will break down what is happening in money right now. Plus, I'm going to bring on experts, entrepreneurs, and influencers to spill their financial tea. You're always going to leave with actionable advice that you can use to level up your own financial game, because it's 2026, we're not playing around anymore. We are getting rich. And of course, you are going to be part of the show too. If I take a break from work to raise a kid,
Starting point is 00:39:30 am I totally screwed when I try to go back? My son is paying half of his girlfriend's boob job, plus 80% of their New York City rent. How do I stop lying to myself about what I can actually afford? Financial Tea drops January 15th, wherever you get your podcasts, or watch on YouTube. I'm walking through downtown Brisbane with Lee Parker.
Starting point is 00:39:55 Get it. It's March 15th, 2005, and I'm on my way to City Hall for the 20th dance for Daniel. That other guy, Lee Parker, that's my best friend.
Starting point is 00:40:08 He was Daniel's age and living on the Sunshine Coast when the abduction occurred. I wouldn't be telling this story if it weren't for Lee. He told me about Daniel, and then he introduced me to Bruce and Denise. We went and bought our red tie.
Starting point is 00:40:21 the entire exterior of the building is lit red for the dance. It's pretty incredible and there are just hundreds of people in formal attire zigzagging through lines in front to be let in this is incredible. As we were checking in I took a quick look at the guest list. I see Julie's here. Pat McShane. How are you? I heard my name. We just saw your name. Oh, okay. We were like, oh my God, that's Pat. We're a total 58. 58, okay.
Starting point is 00:40:55 Thank you, Pat. Peter Boyce, Ross Barnett, Tim Ryan. Everyone was here. All right, now we're walking into the main event. Denise Morkham told me to look up at the ceiling. Oh, wow. There's a giant projection on it. It's all red lights, and it has the logo,
Starting point is 00:41:16 the Daniel Morkum Foundation, established 2005 T-shirt, and a special banner. 20 years of keeping kids safe. And then Denise, Bruce, and Dean walked onto the stage, dressed to the nines. They carried themselves like the celebrities
Starting point is 00:41:32 I'd always been told they were. Ladies, gentlemen, on behalf of the management committee, I welcome everyone to our 20th day for Daniel. Tonight promises to be a very special night. The event was mind-blowing. Never in a million
Starting point is 00:41:49 years could I have imagined how massive the Daniel Morcombe Foundation really is. Its scope and the impact it has had on an entire country was on full display that night. The foundation has made astonishing accomplishments in the last 20 years. Since its inception around the Morcom's kitchen table, it has grown into Australia's leading voice for child safety. Something like 90 people joined Bruce and Denise on the first walk for Daniel. Last year, the 20th day for Daniel began with that walk. An estimated 2 million people wore red and took part across the nation.
Starting point is 00:42:28 The curriculum they've developed has been adopted nationally. Free counseling and assistance is provided for young victims of crime. The list goes on and on, because Bruce and Denise Morkum have dedicated their lives to this cause, to making sure that whatever happened to their little boy never happens to any other child. John Rouse was also at the dance for Daniel that night. He's the one who, at the turn of the century, was brought in to launch the Internet Division at Task Force Argos,
Starting point is 00:43:02 the division which played a pivotal role in the earliest days of Daniel's case. Back then, John was adamant that the general public needed to be made more aware of the dangers of the Internet. So we started organizing public presentations. which led to a chance encounter. It was in a hotel somewhere in the city.
Starting point is 00:43:20 I can't even remember what the nature of the actual event was, but I was speaking probably for about an hour on Argos and what we do and all of that kind of thing. I remember saying that, you know, the reason we do what we do, and we're pushing so hard, is to never let what happened to the Morecambe family happen again to another family.
Starting point is 00:43:39 And that was kind of how I concluded and I was packing up my laptop. And most people had gone, and then one of the organizers came up to me and said, oh, this lady wants to talk to you. And I was like, okay, yeah, sure. But I didn't recognize her. But she was visibly shaken, distressed.
Starting point is 00:43:58 But she didn't say anything. And I, can I help you? Nice to meet you. And she just, she took my hand and shook it and then she left. Look, you trigger people sometimes when you talk about this. You know, it happens. but I didn't realize that it was Denise Morkham that I'd just spoken to. And I'll never forget that.
Starting point is 00:44:20 Daniel's case and Bruce and Denise's perseverance over the years shaped the course of John Rouse's career. I saw the trauma that they were going through, and I just went, I'm going to do everything I can to never let another family go through this. So like at the dance the other night, they got us to record messages. And the message for me to tell you,
Starting point is 00:44:43 them was very simply that, you know, your legacy is the foundation. You know, you can't measure how many children who heard your message that then were safeguarded because they acted on it. We'll never know. But I did say that one of the legacies too actually is also like the beating heart of Task Force Sigols because your legacy was what drove that team to just do everything it could. You know, we went from a very small team of three doing the, dealing with with internet crimes against children to a team of nearly 40. And by the time we finished, we were leading global operations involving pretty much the biggest agencies in the world.
Starting point is 00:45:23 Europol, Interpol, FBI, HSI, R-CMP, the network of intelligence and law enforcement agencies that have come together to share information and resources in the global fight to protect children. It's enormous. A pretty amazing achievement for a small, a relatively small team that are focused on the jurisdiction of the state of Queensland to be on a daily basis identifying child victims globally and sending leads globally. From the moment I first heard their story, it was clear to me that Bruce and Denise's work
Starting point is 00:45:58 had impacted a nation. But my time with John Rouse made me realize something. This average couple, who met on a beach in 1980, who had three boys and settled down in a small town, who worked together on weekdays and planted fruit trees with their children on weekends, who lost a son in the worst way imaginable, and then led the charge to find answers. Their actions inspired a man in his pursuit to save children around the world, a pursuit that over the last two decades has succeeded in ways nobody can quantify, which means that Daniel's story and Bruce and Denise's,
Starting point is 00:46:42 his work hasn't just changed Australia. It's changed the world. It's the ripple effect, you know, the way people touch you and then you carry that forward with other people. That's a big fucking ripple. Yeah. No, it is. But for all the good that has come, the epicenter of this tragic story still haunts me.
Starting point is 00:47:11 Bruce and Denise Morgan lost their son. that pain, the pain of losing a child. As a father myself, it's hard to even think about. But I've seen the effects of that loss in people like Bruce and Denise. And it never leaves you. Everyone's life changes. Yeah, it was a fork in the road moment. Like we have many of those, everyone does in their life. But a life-changing event like losing a son, particularly in a criminal act and in the public arena over years and years is a significant fork in the road. You know, you sort of wonder what would have happened if Daniel was still around. He might be a vet.
Starting point is 00:47:52 He might have his own business, might be married with kids, you know, just different things like that. They think about that last part a lot. Not only do you lose that child, but you lose that child who would have been a parent and you don't. Maybe their children. And you lose the grandchildren from Daniel. So, you know, that's often not spoken about and thought about.
Starting point is 00:48:13 It was very caring, very trusting, and he would have been an enormous parent in his own right, but all gone. But the loss of Daniel hasn't taken away from their relationships with their other two sons, or their children. There was one last stop I had to make before I headed home to L.A. Hey. How are you? Oh, my God. This place is magical. Frogs hopping everywhere.
Starting point is 00:48:43 There's wallabies everywhere. What are wallace? I like little kangaroos. They're like everywhere here. So you got twas next door. Pretty cool. My name's Dean Morecam. I'm Daniel's older brother.
Starting point is 00:48:56 I'm 37. I have my own business. I'm married and I have two beautiful young girls. Dean runs his own successful tree-cutting business, following in his father's footsteps. He dedicates time to the foundation. But it's clear to me that what matters most to Dean is family. Most weekends, we kind of like to go take the girls down to the lullabar down to the beach.
Starting point is 00:49:21 There's a path where it gets the juices for the girls. I'll get a coffee, and that's kind of what the girls like doing. So it's pretty nice part of the world down there. He told me his wife loves riding horses, that his oldest loves drawing, and that his youngest, well, she loves eating. She just eats constantly. And they're just growing up so fast. And before you know it, they're 30 years old with husband and kids.
Starting point is 00:49:50 And time's just gone. So I guess you just got to appreciate the moments and enjoy the time, really. They definitely love the Nana and Par and try to go see them nearly every weekend, make an effort to do the family thing as much as it kind of can. Tell me about your mom and dad. Everyone will probably know them as Daniel's mom and dad. But my parents just seem like regular people. You don't really know anything different.
Starting point is 00:50:17 We had a good childhood growing up. I had motorbikes. My brothers had ponies. We had everything you could kind of want. Looking back, we had a great childhood, really. And then the December 7 happened, and I guess everyone's life changed. But to me, they're still just my parents.
Starting point is 00:50:39 And now the grandparents, to my kids, kids and they'll do anything that they can to help them out as well. It kind of gives you a reason and a purpose to kind of to keep going, to enjoy the next kind of moment, whether you're taking a swimming lessons or just doing some drawing or a puzzle or just the simple moments is probably what it's kind of all about, really. Unlock all episodes of Where is Daniel Morecam? Add free right now by subscribing to the binge podcast channel. Not only will you immediately unlock all episodes of the show, but you'll get binge access to an entire network of other great true crime and investigative podcasts. All ad-free. Plus, on the first of every month,
Starting point is 00:51:38 subscribers get a binge drop of a brand-new series. That's all episodes, all at once. Search for The Binge on Apple Podcasts and hit Subscribe at the top of the page. Not on Apple? Head to getthebinge.com to get access wherever you listen. If you'd like to make a donation to the Daniel Morecam Foundation, please visit danielmorkum.com.a.u. Where Is Daniel Morecambe is a production of Sony Music Entertainment and Campside Media. It was hosted, reported, and co-written by me, Matt Angel. Joe Barrett is the managing producer and co-writer. Grace Valerie Lynette is the associate producer.
Starting point is 00:52:35 Additional production support from Tiffany Dimack. The series was sound designed, composed, and mixed by Garrett Tiedeman. Our studio engineer is Trino Madriz. Fact-checked by Tracy Lofgren-Lee Lee. A special thanks to Ashley Ann Crigbaum and Doug Slaywin and our operations team, Ashley Warren, Sabina Mara, and Destiny Dinkle. Campside Media's executive producers are Josh Dean, Vanessa Gregoriatis, and Matt Cher. Sony's executive producer is Jonathan Hirsch.
Starting point is 00:53:08 For Pace-Hetter Productions, the executive producer is Jessica Rhodes. Allison Mommassee and Brian Daly are the associate producers. For Mad Jimmy Productions, the executive producers are me, Matt Angel, and Suzanne Coot. Consulting producers are Dan Angel, Lee Parker, and Andrew Fairbank. If you enjoyed Where is Daniel Morecam, please rate and review the show wherever you get your podcasts.

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