
What is the episode about?
Where Is Daniel Morcombe? episode 2, titled 'A Dark Place', reconstructs the chaotic and heartbreaking days immediately after 13-year-old Daniel Morcombe disappeared at noon on December 7, 2003. Daniel was waiting for the bus under a viaduct on Nambour Connection Road on the Sunshine Coast when he vanished without a trace. Host Matt Angel discusses how the community in Queensland mobilized to an unprecedented degree while parents Denise and Bruce Morcombe desperately tried to keep the media's focus on the case. The episode highlights the moment Daniel became known across Australia as 'the boy in the red shirt', and how the police struggled in the early stages to filter through thousands of public tips.
The case behind the episode
The case of Daniel Morcombe is one of the most traumatic criminal cases in Australian history. In this episode, the focus turns to the first technical clues, including witness accounts of a mysterious blue car seen near the bus stop. The investigation begins to circle around local sex offenders in the area, introducing the person who would later turn out to be the perpetrator, Brett Peter Cowan . Although Cowan was on the police radar early on, it took eight years before an extensive undercover operation led to his arrest in 2011. The episode describes the frustration the family felt as early leads ran dry and how they refused to let the case be classified as an unsolved 'cold case'. The discovery of Daniel's earthly remains in the Glass House Mountains later in the investigation confirmed the tragic fate that this episode lays the groundwork for understanding.
About the podcast
The podcast is produced by Campside Media and is part of 'The Binge'. Through exclusive interviews and access to archival material, the series provides an in-depth insight into both the human tragedy and the police work that ultimately led to justice. It is a story of perseverance, where especially the parents' efforts and the establishment of the Daniel Morcombe Foundation play a central role.