Second Pheobe housemate charged with weapons offences
Missing Queensland teenager Pheobe Bishop’s haunting last phone to her boyfriend in Perth has been revealed as a second housemate is sensationally charged.
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Missing Queensland teenager Pheobe Bishop’s last phone call was reportedly to her boyfriend who she was on the way to visit in Perth.
It is being reported that the 17-year-old called the boy as she travelled to the Bundaberg Airport from Gin Gin on her way to go see him.
However, he told The Daily Mail that he was unable to hear anything before the phone call cut off.
Queensland Police say Pheobe did not make it to Bundaberg Airport, despite her housemates James Wood and Tanika Bromley saying they dropped her there.
Her boyfriend said he waited for hours at Perth Airport before becoming concerned, posting on social media the day after Pheobe vanished “Maybe I deserve all the pain I am feeling right now, I mean it is my fault, I should have done better”.
It comes as Wood is been charged with one count each of unlawful possession of weapons Category D/H/R (short firearm) and authority to possess explosives.
Police will allege a shortened firearm and ammunition was located in a Hyundai ix35 and a Gin Gin house at the centre of the search for the missing 17-year-old.
Bromley, has also been charged over weapons located in the car.
Wood was given a notice to appear and will face Bundaberg Magistrates Court on June 13.
On Wednesday morning Bromley showed her face in public for the first time since Pheobe went missing.
She was driven into the back of Gin Gin Police Station on Wednesday morning where she must report as part of her bail conditions three times a week.
She arrived in a grey ute and was driven into the back of the police station about 11.30am, trying to avoid the eyes of waiting media.
Typically, those reporting to stations on bail conditions enter through the front door.
Ms Bromley was dressed in a long-sleeved hooded shirt which covered her face, jeans and sunglasses.
A police officer helped escort the car out of the driveway as it left.
She was peppered with questions by journalists about Pheobe, but Ms Bromley looked out the passenger window, clasped her hands together, and remained silent.
Her appearance comes as police suspended searching a rugged and isolated section of Good Night Scrub National Park for the Gin Gin teenager after her flatmates told police they dropped her at Bundaberg Airport on May 15.
Officers say they have no evidence of Pheobe going to the airport and for days have searched Good Night Scrub National Park with forensic teams and cadaver dogs.
Investigations are ongoing and police are continuing to run out several lines of inquiry.
In addition to investigative work, physical searches will continue as needed and as information is provided.
The greater Gin Gin area remains the focus of the investigation.
Her flatmates – Ms Bromley and her partner James Wood – had their vehicle seized after saying they dropped her at the airport.
Police allegedly found a shortened firearm, ammunition and two replica handguns during a search of a grey Hyundai ix35.
It was not suggested the flatmates or the firearms had any connection with Pheobe’s disappearance.
Ms Bromley, 33, has been charged with two counts of authority required to possess explosives and one count each of possessing/acquiring restricted items and unlawful possession of weapons. Mr Wood has not been charged with an offence
Magistrate John McInnes on Tuesday told Bundaberg Magistrates Court Ms Bromley did not appear as a flight risk.
He said his concerns over whether to grant the Gin Gin mother bail related to potential interference by Mr Wood.
He granted bail after saying he determined any risk of interference would not be at her own doing.
The matter has been adjourned to June 23.
Outside court, Detective Inspector Ryan Thompson said the weapons found in the car had not been linked to the teen’s disappearance.
“That vehicle was seized by police, it was treated as a crime scene. A number of examinations were conducted on that vehicle and item seized and that has since been released by police,” he said.
“There’s no suggestion at all that this weapon was involved in this investigation …”
Police separately said they believed some evidence may have been moved from the national park area before officers began their search.
Insp Thompson said police were trying to work out what evidence had been moved from the search site after they received information.
He said several items had been seized from the national park area and were undergoing forensic examination but declined to detail what had been found.
Police suspended the search in the national park on Tuesday and said investigations were ongoing.
Inspector Thompson said there were no signs of a struggle where the items were found, but police had expanded the search area as they appealed for footage of the Hyundai ix35 between May 15 and 18.
“There are other areas that are forming part of this investigation that we’re interested in as well, and that’s why we’re appealing for information in relation to the movements of that vehicle,” he said. The Hyundai emerged on the streets of Bundaberg with what appeared to be altered number plates on Monday after it was released by police.
Insp Thompson said police were aware of the incident and were investigating.
Police have said Ms Bishop had lived with Ms Bromley and Mr Wood in their Milden St rental property for “a while” before her disappearance. That property has also been a crime scene.
Pheobe’s mother Kylie Johnson on Tuesday posted that she had seen “judgments, accusations and untruths” in relation to daughter.
“Finding it hard to get out of bed today,” Ms Johnson wrote online.
“To find the strength to put one foot in front of the other and know what to do, what to think or what to say.”
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Originally published as Second Pheobe housemate charged with weapons offences