TL74 KIDNAPPER FINALLY FACES JUSTICE AFTER 56 YEARS

KIDNAPPER FINALLY FACES JUSTICE AFTER 56 YEARS

The disappearance of Cheryl Grimmer: How teen who snatched British toddler from Sydney beach may finally face justice… 56 years later

He was just seven when his little sister was snatched from idyllic Fairy Meadow Beach – but 56 years later not a day passes that Ricki Nash doesn’t think about what happened on that fateful day in 1970.

He remembers it all: Cheryl giggling in her blue swimming costume as she ducked away from him into the ladies’ changing rooms; the growing terror on his mother’s face when they couldn’t find her; the blame and guilt that took root and grew like tentacles around him for the rest of his life.

‘I was supposed to keep her safe,’ he says, speaking to the Daily Mail after a decision by Australian prosecutors which means the chilling cold case into the disappearance of three-year-old British toddler Cheryl Grimmer might finally be solved after all these years.

‘The guilt I have carried for leaving Cheryl alone that day has only been intensified by the knowledge that the case was mismanaged,’ says Ricki, who has spent his life seeking justice for his sister.

‘That burden is something I’ve lived with for decades and the failures that followed made it far heavier than it ever should have been. I’ve lived a life of hell.’

Cheryl’s story is one of a little girl lost but it’s also one of a family ruined. That glorious day on the beach should have provided snapshots to send back to Bristol to show how lucky the Grimmer family had been in choosing to emigrate to Australia as Ten Pound Poms 18 months earlier.

Instead, a single moment has defined a life of sorrow, of a family torn apart by silence and blame.

Cheryl’s parents, Carole and Vince, went to their graves never knowing what happened to their little girl; her three brothers have lovingly and diligently pursued answers and justice that, to date, have failed to arrive.

A decision by Australian prosecutors means the chilling cold case into the disappearance of three-year-old British toddler Cheryl Grimmer (pictured) might finally be solved after all these years

A decision by Australian prosecutors means the chilling cold case into the disappearance of three-year-old British toddler Cheryl Grimmer (pictured) might finally be solved after all these years

The teen who confessed to killing the little girl – referred to in the files by his alias Mercury because he was a minor – is now in his 70s (pictured in 2017 being escorted by police)

The teen who confessed to killing the little girl – referred to in the files by his alias Mercury because he was a minor – is now in his 70s (pictured in 2017 being escorted by police)

Ricki Nash (pictured with his sister as a youngster) said not a day passes by that he doesn't think about what happened to his younger sister Cheryl Grimmer on that fateful day in 1970

Ricki Nash (pictured with his sister as a youngster) said not a day passes by that he doesn’t think about what happened to his younger sister Cheryl Grimmer on that fateful day in 1970