Vanished Swedish Tourist's Parents Offer Reward
Matt Neal
Warrnambool Standard, Australia
__________________________
The parents of a Swedish tourist who vanished in the south-west in March have offered a desperate Christmas reward for more information.
Max Castor was last heard of when he mailed a mysterious farewell letter from Warrnambool to his family on March 31.Mr Castor's parents have posted a $5000 reward with the International Rewards Centre, which hosts millions of dollars in rewards for missing people. The blond-haired 20-year-old sparked a police search after he wrote to family sayingsomething strange had happened and he had to disappear.
Mr Castor was believed to have caught a bus to Port Campbell on April 1 and was seen walking east along the Great Ocean Road. Four days later he visited a shop in Wye River looking for a campsite and was given a bottle of water by a shopkeeper.
Dec 26, 2005
Matt Neal
Warrnambool Standard, Australia
__________________________
The parents of a Swedish tourist who vanished in the south-west in March have offered a desperate Christmas reward for more information.
Max Castor was last heard of when he mailed a mysterious farewell letter from Warrnambool to his family on March 31.Mr Castor's parents have posted a $5000 reward with the International Rewards Centre, which hosts millions of dollars in rewards for missing people. The blond-haired 20-year-old sparked a police search after he wrote to family sayingsomething strange had happened and he had to disappear.
Mr Castor was believed to have caught a bus to Port Campbell on April 1 and was seen walking east along the Great Ocean Road. Four days later he visited a shop in Wye River looking for a campsite and was given a bottle of water by a shopkeeper.
Dec 26, 2005