At first glance, the man once known as Simon Kadwell might have seemed to have a relatively normal life. He lived in a modest home in the small town of Nannup, Australia, along with his girlfriend Chantelle McDougall, their 6-year-old daughter Leela, and their friend Tony Popic, who lived in a caravan parked outside the house. On first appearances, the family seemed happy, and Kadwell was described as friendly and charming, but there were strange things going on behind their façade of normalcy. This would lead down a dark road of weird cultists and a mysterious vanishing of a whole family that would never be solved.
These Australians come from different walks of life but they all share one thing in common.
Their photographs hang in the homes of devastated loved ones who cling to hope they will one day walk through the door.
More than 38,000 people go missing in Australia each year, but 95 per cent are found within a month.
This Christmas, there will be 2,600 families whose loved ones are unlikely to be joining them at the table.
More than 38,000 people going missing in Australia each year. While the majority are found, there are currently around 2600 people who are considered permanently missing
There is a name for the torture they endure daily - ambiguous loss - a grief defined by the lack of closure or understanding of the fate that befell their missing loved one.