hundredmillionlifetimes
Banned
As the search for the absent Madeleine (TM), bolstered by the further branding of 'loss nostalgia' via an aggressive advertising campaign just orchestrated by the affected parties, continues, concerned Mediums turn their attention to the likelihood of a spectral rendezvous between Madeleine McCann and Lindy Chamberlain's lost baby, Azaria Chamberlain, at Uluru/Ayer's Rock in Australia ...
"A Dingo Took Her!"
"Azaria Chamberlain disappeared on the night of 17 August 1980 on a camping trip with her family. Her parents, Lindy and Michael Chamberlain, reported that she had been taken from their tent by a dingo. An initial inquest, highly critical of the police investigation, supported this assertion. The findings of the inquest were broadcast live on television - a first in Australia. Subsequently, after a further investigation and second inquest, Azaria's mother, Lindy Chamberlain, was tried and convicted of her murder, on 29 October 1982 and sentenced to life imprisonment. Azaria's father, Michael Chamberlain, was convicted as an accessory after the fact and given a suspended sentence.
The media focus for the trial was extraordinarily intense and sensational. The Chamberlains made several unsuccessful appeals, including the final High Court appeal. After all legal options had been exhausted, the chance discovery of a piece of Azaria's clothing in an area full of dingo lairs led to Lindy Chamberlain's release from prison, on "compassionate grounds." She was later exonerated of all charges. While the case is officially unsolved, the report of a dingo attack is generally accepted. Recent deadly dingo attacks in other areas of Australia have strengthened the case for the dingo theory.
The story has been made into a TV movie, a feature film [A Cry in the Dark], and a TV miniseries. There have also been numerous books about the case. Outside of Australia, the incident is often referred to as the Dingo Baby case."
Meanwhile, other paranormal specialists, skeptical of the Uluru connection, point instead to the disappearance in 1900 of a group of schoolgirls at the Hanging Rock while their supervisors were having a picnic at the base of the Rock, suggesting instead an intervention by the pre-historic elemental forces of Mother Nature:
"On Saturday 14th February 1900 a party of schoolgirls from Appleyard College picknicked at Hanging Rock, near Mt. Macedon in the State of Victoria. During the afternoon several members of the party disappeared without a trace …"
Opposing these more orthodox paranormal practitioners are a small group of revenant hunters who maintain that the present child-centred hysteria is merely a hauntological re-enactment and re-visitation of the Brady Twins, forever and ever being axed to death by the patriarchal caretaking spectres of the Overlook Hotel, as likely to recur in a holiday resort in Portugal as one in Colerado ...
... ho ho ho [as the Bishop said to Santa Claus].

"A Dingo Took Her!"
"Azaria Chamberlain disappeared on the night of 17 August 1980 on a camping trip with her family. Her parents, Lindy and Michael Chamberlain, reported that she had been taken from their tent by a dingo. An initial inquest, highly critical of the police investigation, supported this assertion. The findings of the inquest were broadcast live on television - a first in Australia. Subsequently, after a further investigation and second inquest, Azaria's mother, Lindy Chamberlain, was tried and convicted of her murder, on 29 October 1982 and sentenced to life imprisonment. Azaria's father, Michael Chamberlain, was convicted as an accessory after the fact and given a suspended sentence.

The media focus for the trial was extraordinarily intense and sensational. The Chamberlains made several unsuccessful appeals, including the final High Court appeal. After all legal options had been exhausted, the chance discovery of a piece of Azaria's clothing in an area full of dingo lairs led to Lindy Chamberlain's release from prison, on "compassionate grounds." She was later exonerated of all charges. While the case is officially unsolved, the report of a dingo attack is generally accepted. Recent deadly dingo attacks in other areas of Australia have strengthened the case for the dingo theory.
The story has been made into a TV movie, a feature film [A Cry in the Dark], and a TV miniseries. There have also been numerous books about the case. Outside of Australia, the incident is often referred to as the Dingo Baby case."
Meanwhile, other paranormal specialists, skeptical of the Uluru connection, point instead to the disappearance in 1900 of a group of schoolgirls at the Hanging Rock while their supervisors were having a picnic at the base of the Rock, suggesting instead an intervention by the pre-historic elemental forces of Mother Nature:


"On Saturday 14th February 1900 a party of schoolgirls from Appleyard College picknicked at Hanging Rock, near Mt. Macedon in the State of Victoria. During the afternoon several members of the party disappeared without a trace …"

Opposing these more orthodox paranormal practitioners are a small group of revenant hunters who maintain that the present child-centred hysteria is merely a hauntological re-enactment and re-visitation of the Brady Twins, forever and ever being axed to death by the patriarchal caretaking spectres of the Overlook Hotel, as likely to recur in a holiday resort in Portugal as one in Colerado ...

... ho ho ho [as the Bishop said to Santa Claus].