Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Crown alleged that Lindy Chamberlain had cut Azaria's throat in the front seat of the family car, hiding the baby's body in a large camera case. She then, according to the proposed reconstruction of the crime, rejoined the group of campers around a campfire and fed one of her sons a can of baked beans, before going to the tent and raising the cry that a dingo had taken the baby.
It was one of two separate dingo attacks which occurred on the same day. [45] Girl, 3 4 April 1998 K'gari, Queensland A three-year-old Norwegian girl was attacked by a dingo as she and her family camped at Lake McKenzie. [46] It was one of two separate dingo attacks which occurred on the same day. [45] Two women March 1998 K'gari, Queensland
"A dingo ate my baby!" is a cry popularly attributed to Lindy Chamberlain-Creighton , as part of the 1980 death of Azaria Chamberlain case, at Uluru in the Northern Territory , Australia. The Chamberlain family had been camping near the rock when their nine-week-old daughter was taken from their tent.
The leader of that dingo pack was later euthanized, the department said. It had also been involved in recent biting incidents that led to the hospitalization of a 6-year-old girl, the department said.
“The kids are in the car now, but the coyote is still on the playground. She’s bleeding and crying,” a woman said in the first 911 call.
Chamberlain gave evidence that, in response to others hearing Azaria cry, she went to the tent. Halfway to the tent, she thought she saw a dingo emerging from the tent having difficulty getting out of the tent and shaking its head vigorously. Her view of its nose was obscured. She cried "Michael, Michael, the dingo's got my baby!"
The horrifying footage comes from a 2006 installment of the Mexican talk show 'Con Sello de Mujer' but it's recently gone viral after surfacing on YouTube.
Michael Leigh Chamberlain (27 February 1944 – 9 January 2017) was a New Zealand-Australian writer, teacher and pastor falsely implicated in the August 1980 death of his missing daughter Azaria, which was later demonstrated to be the result of a dingo attack while the family was camping near Uluru (then usually called Ayers Rock) in the Northern Territory, Australia.