Police and State Emergency Service conduct a search near the Gunnedah farmhouse where a 14-year-old girl allegedly murdered her 10-year-old cousin. Photo / Nathan Edwards / News Corp Australia
WARNING: Distressing content
It began as a shared holiday between female cousins from a well-known and comfortably off family enjoying the school holidays together after the easing of COVID-19 travel restrictions.
The holidays began last Friday, 3 July with the ten-year-old cousin preparing to travel 350km northeast from her home in central western NSW.
She was headed for a property near Gunnedah, which has a population of around 13,000, set in cotton, cattle and crop producing country on NSW's fertile, but drought affected, Liverpool Plains.
The woman immediately dialled emergency services. Paramedics tried to revive the girl but she was already deceased.
Police from Oxley Police District established a crime scene and officers began searching for the woman's missing daughter.
Just after 8.30pm, the police located the teenager on a neighbouring property in a dazed state and arrested her.
They took her into custody and drove her into Gunnedah Police Station.
During the day, the 14-year-old was questioned at the station while police conduct a search of the property which sits on a few hundred hectares of land.
At around 10pm Wednesday night, detectives charged the teenager with her cousin's murder and remanded her in custody until Thursday to appear at Tamworth Children's Court.
Police allege in court documents the girl murdered her cousin between 7am and 7:20am.
Overnight, the 10-year-old's parents were travelling to Gunnedah.
On Thursday police returned to the property to do a line search for the alleged murder weapon and any other items.