Gold Coast residents tried to get help for baby before beach death

Gold Coast residents have told of how they tried to get help for a baby sleeping rough with her parents, months before the girl was found dead on a beach.

Child protection advocates are demanding an inquiry after Gold Coast residents revealed they tried to get help for the baby of a homeless couple, months before the girl was found dead on a beach.

Two locals say they contacted police and other authorities months ago, raising serious concerns about the welfare of the nine-month-old.
They told authorities the baby was sleeping rough near Surfers Paradise Beach, where she was found dead on Monday.

Gold Coast resident Erin Sorensen says she went to police two months ago, fearing for the baby and a toddler who was also with the couple.

"It was winter and the dunes were freezing every time the sun went down. I didn't think that was good for a baby or toddler," she wrote on Facebook.

"I reported it straight away and monitored the following week. And if authorities did the job correctly this little girl would still be here!"

The baby's parents - a man, 48, and woman, 23 - are in custody but have not been charged.

Another resident wrote to the Gold Coast City Council in May, expressing similar fears as the family spent winter nights sleeping on a wooden platform in a park. At night the baby could be heard crying.

"Why was the baby left with the parents, just why," the resident, who was not named, told The Gold Coast Bulletin.

Council staff wrote back after five days, telling the resident to raise the matter with other authorities as it was not a council responsibility.

A support worker from homeless services did visit the family but the couple refused help, the Bulletin reported.

Child safety advocate Hetty Johnston says there must be a public inquiry into how the baby was left in such a heart-breaking situation.

"The public needs to understand the system they are paying for and how broken it is," the Bravehearts founder told AAP.

"If they (child services) did know about this family, we need to know what happened here. And if they didn't know, then there's something seriously wrong there."

The baby's parents were known police. Queensland's child safety department won't say if it was aware of the family's circumstances.

Queensland police declined to say what action was taken over Ms Sorensen's complaint.

Detectives are trying to determine if the baby was dead before she was found by a passer-by at the water's edge. It's believed she had been in the water at some point.

Meanwhile, NSW Police are looking at the couple's movements in the Tweed Heads area, on the border with Queensland, where they were also known to have been sleeping rough.

Queensland police expect to receive the results of an autopsy on Tuesday.


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