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Desperate Search for Missing 4-Year-Old in Unforgiving Australian Outback
10 Oct
Summary
- 4-year-old Gus Lamont vanished from remote outback station in September 2025
- Extensive search efforts by police, SES, and military found no trace of the boy
- Family and community still searching, but police say survival chances are slim

On September 27, 2025, 4-year-old Gus Lamont disappeared from his grandparents' remote outback station near Yunta, South Australia. The incident has gripped the local community and sparked a desperate search effort that has so far yielded no results.
According to police, Gus was last seen playing in the sand outside the family's homestead around 5 pm. When his grandmother went to call him inside half an hour later, he had vanished. Authorities immediately deployed a large-scale search, involving police, the State Emergency Service (SES), and even the Army, but they found no trace of the young boy.
The search was scaled back on October 3, 2025, with police stating that Gus had likely become lost in the harsh, unforgiving landscape of the Australian Outback. Despite the grim outlook, Gus's grandparents, Josie and Joshua Murray, remain hopeful and continue searching for their beloved grandson.
The remote location of the family's Oak Park Station, a 40-kilometer drive from the tiny town of Yunta, has added to the challenges of the search. The Outback's majestic beauty is matched only by its relentless dangers, even during the day, with the searchers narrowly avoiding encounters with kangaroos, feral goats, and deadly snakes.
As the investigation has progressed, the case has garnered significant attention on social media, with a range of theories emerging about Gus's disappearance. However, the family has faced intense scrutiny, with some questioning their absence from the media and the limited information they have shared.
With the Yunta police station now closed and the search efforts winding down, the case has been handed over to the Missing Persons Unit. Gus's devastated father, Joshua Lamont, remains hopeful but acknowledges the grim reality that his son may not have survived the harsh Outback conditions.




