Just days after revealing a family member was a suspect in what has now been declared a major crime, police are further pushing forward in their search for Gus Lamont.

Police have returned to Oak Park Station, the Outback sheep station where four-year-old Gus Lamont was last seen.
Now part of a dedicated team, members of SA Police Task Force Horizon have returned to the property, located 43km south of Yunta, to continue their investigation.
The announcement comes after police revealed a member of Gus’s family was a suspect in what has now been declared a major crime.
At a press conference earlier this month, Detective Superintendent Darren Fielke said police did not believe Gus was alive, with his disappearance now a criminal investigation.
He went on to reveal that someone living at the remote Oak Park station property was now a suspect, but stressed that “Gus’s parents are not suspects in his disappearance”.
No arrests have been made or charges laid.
Gus was last seen by his grandmother on September 27.
He was playing in the dirt near his family homestead, 43km south of Yunta, about 5pm.
Since then, more than 160 SAPOL members and 230 non-SAPOL resources, including SES, Australian Defence Force, indigenous trackers, community groups, have been involved in the search.
Police said the latest group of officers was expected to remain in the area “for at least the next two days”.
“An update on the search activities will be provided as they progress,” a police announcement on Monday morning said.