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'Come home': Grandma's plea to fugitive son Tom Phillips to bring back kids

Author
Rachel Maher,
Publish Date
Wed, 9 Oct 2024, 10:30am

'Come home': Grandma's plea to fugitive son Tom Phillips to bring back kids

Author
Rachel Maher,
Publish Date
Wed, 9 Oct 2024, 10:30am
  • Tom Phillips’ mother, Julia, is relieved to see her grandchildren alive and well but wants him to return home. 
  • Tom Phillips and his three children, Jayda, 11, Maverick, 9, and Ember, 8, were filmed in remote central North Island farmland. 
  • Police confirmed the sighting was credible and dispatched officers after receiving a tip on Thursday. 

The mother of Marokopa fugitive Tom Phillips says she is happy to see her grandchildren alive and well but wants her son to “come home”. 

Footage emerged yesterday of the wanted dad and his three children, Jayda, 11, Maverick, 9, and Ember, 8, tramping in remote central North Island farmland, wearing camo gear and carrying large packs after a chance encounter with pig hunters. 

Phillips’ mother Julia told the Herald she was happy to see her grandchildren. 

“We were relieved to see the children alive and well. 

“We thought they would be but you never know.” 

She said she would “love for them to come home”. 

The Te Kūiti-based grandmother said there had been no contact with Phillips or her grandchildren since 2021 despite rumours she was aiding her son. 

Tom Phillips and his three children walking with large packs on.Tom Phillips and his three children walking with large packs on. 

Julia also said the police had asked her to make a public appeal asking for him to return the children but she “didn’t see the point”. 

Yesterday, the children’s mother Cat was emotional when she spoke to the Herald about getting proof her three children – whom she last saw in 2021 – were alive and seemingly in good health. 

The mother of the three missing Phillips children, Cat, is 'relieved' the youngsters are alive after seeing them in a video for the first time in almost three years.The mother of the three missing Phillips children, Cat, is 'relieved' the youngsters are alive after seeing them in a video for the first time in almost three years. 

She instantly recognised each child, captured briefly on a phone camera walking in single file along rugged farm terrain. 

“I’m so happy that they’re all there. 

“I’m so relieved to see all three of my babies. They’re all alive.” 

Tom Phillips, top left, and his three children, Jayda, Maverick and Ember.Tom Phillips, top left, and his three children, Jayda, Maverick and Ember. 

The encounter in Marokopa bush, which sparked a fresh police hunt for the fugitive father, included the children speaking to the hunters briefly, asking if “anyone knew they were there”. 

John McOviney said his 16-year-old grandchild was one of the pig hunters out on his farm on Thursday who came across the man and three children about 6.30pm. 

He said they were all wearing masks and were only 20m from the hunters. 

 

“The children asked: ‘Who else knows we’re here?’ 

“And then they just kept on walking. They were all packed up, they had big packs on. I think the father sort of kept them moving.” 

He said there was a lot of bush on his farm and it was “quite isolated”. 

Speaking to Newstalk ZB, McOviney said when his grandson saw Phillips was carrying a gun they didn’t take the interaction any further, but he called 111 and spoke to police right away. The video footage was sent to police. 

On Monday police said they had determined the most recent sighting of missing man Tom Phillips and his three children was “credible”. 

Police were dispatched on Thursday night after receiving a tip Phillips had been seen in bush west of Coutts Rd in Marokopa with the three children. 

“Patrols began in the area on Thursday night and a search was launched the following morning,” Detective Inspector Andrew Saunders said. 

Saunders said the sighting has opened “a positive line of inquiry” that is now being looked into by investigators. 

“While we cannot go into detail, we want to reassure the public that we have the resources in place to respond to any information or reports of sightings that come in. 

“Our focus is very much on the safe return of Jayda, Maverick and Ember to their whānau and we are doing all that we can to make that happen.” 

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