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The Beaumont Children, Part I-Suspects, Confessions, and the Long Search
In Part II of The Beaumont Children series, the investigation moves beyond the beach and into the long, difficult years that followed — the suspects, the confessions, the property searches, and the slow realization that this case would never resolve cleanly.
By early 1966, South Australian police were already overwhelmed with hundreds of tips about men across Adelaide, many with no connection to Glenelg at all, as the case transformed from a missing-children investigation into a national trauma.
Season 2-Episode 24.The Beaumon…
This episode examines how that flood of information reshaped the case:
• Why dozens of men falsely confessed
Using historical reporting from The Advertiser, ABC News investigations, police statements, and long-form case reconstructions, this episode explores how an investigation can become layered with names, claims, and locations — and still remain unresolved.
The Beaumont children did not become famous.
And everything that followed was built around that absence.
Visit midnightmysteryarchive.com for timelines, case notes, and source material.
Follow The Midnight Mystery Archive on Substack for behind-the-scenes research and long-form written analysis.
Join the Midnight Mystery Archive Facebook Group to discuss the evidence with other listeners.
And if this episode helped deepen your understanding of the case, consider leaving a rating or review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify — it helps careful, evidence-first storytelling reach new listeners.
#TrueCrimePodcast #TrueCrimeCommunity #ColdCase #UnsolvedMystery #CrimePodcast #PodcastDiscovery #LongFormPodcast #IndiePodcast #UnresolvedCases #BeaumontChildren #AustralianColdCase #GlenelgBeach #MissingChildren #ColdCaseAustralia #TrueCrimeAustralia #UnsolvedAustralia #MidnightMysteryArchive
By The Midnight Mystery ArchiveThe Beaumont Children, Part I-Suspects, Confessions, and the Long Search
In Part II of The Beaumont Children series, the investigation moves beyond the beach and into the long, difficult years that followed — the suspects, the confessions, the property searches, and the slow realization that this case would never resolve cleanly.
By early 1966, South Australian police were already overwhelmed with hundreds of tips about men across Adelaide, many with no connection to Glenelg at all, as the case transformed from a missing-children investigation into a national trauma.
Season 2-Episode 24.The Beaumon…
This episode examines how that flood of information reshaped the case:
• Why dozens of men falsely confessed
Using historical reporting from The Advertiser, ABC News investigations, police statements, and long-form case reconstructions, this episode explores how an investigation can become layered with names, claims, and locations — and still remain unresolved.
The Beaumont children did not become famous.
And everything that followed was built around that absence.
Visit midnightmysteryarchive.com for timelines, case notes, and source material.
Follow The Midnight Mystery Archive on Substack for behind-the-scenes research and long-form written analysis.
Join the Midnight Mystery Archive Facebook Group to discuss the evidence with other listeners.
And if this episode helped deepen your understanding of the case, consider leaving a rating or review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify — it helps careful, evidence-first storytelling reach new listeners.
#TrueCrimePodcast #TrueCrimeCommunity #ColdCase #UnsolvedMystery #CrimePodcast #PodcastDiscovery #LongFormPodcast #IndiePodcast #UnresolvedCases #BeaumontChildren #AustralianColdCase #GlenelgBeach #MissingChildren #ColdCaseAustralia #TrueCrimeAustralia #UnsolvedAustralia #MidnightMysteryArchive