Olympic Hopeful Hid Multiple Pregnancies And Births From Everyone Before The Last Baby Vanished Without A Trace

In 1995, Keli Lane looked like the future of Australian water polo. A silver‑medal‑winning performance with the Junior Women’s team at the World Championships in Quebec marked her as one of the country’s brightest young athletes.

By then, she was already being tipped as a possible contender for the 2000 Sydney Olympics. To the public, she was the “golden girl”: disciplined, driven, and seemingly on a straightforward path to sporting stardom.

But behind that image, prosecutors later said, Lane was living a double life built around secrecy.

Over roughly seven years in the 1990s, she was said to have become pregnant multiple times, weaving a pattern of concealed terminations, adoptions, and at least one birth that ended in tragedy.

That hidden history would eventually become the center of one of Australia’s most controversial criminal cases – one that has divided the public for years and landed Keli in jail with an 18-year sentence.

An Olympic hopeful was accused of hiding multiple pregnancies before her newborn daughter disappeared and was never seen again

The story crystallizes around Tegan Lane, the infant daughter whose disappearance in 1996 set everything in motion.

Lane gave birth to Tegan on 12 September 1996 at Auburn Hospital, roughly 38 weeks into the pregnancy. Two days later, on 14 September, she was discharged from the hospital and left with the newborn sometime between about 11 am and 12 pm. 

By 3 pm, she had arrived at her parents’ home alone, and by that evening she was at a friend’s wedding in a white dress, accompanying her then‑partner, rugby union player Duncan Gillies.

Olympic Hopeful Hid Multiple Pregnancies And Births From Everyone Before The Last Baby Vanished Without A Trace

Image credits: Netflix

No one saw Tegan after Lane left the hospital.

For years, Tegan simply vanished. Lane later claimed she had handed the baby to the child’s father, a man she identified as Andrew Norris, and that he had taken Tegan away.

However, no independent evidence confirmed Norris’s existence, and no trace of Tegan ever surfaced. Unlike most homicide convictions, the case was built without a body, a confession, any forensic link, or an eyewitness to a homicide.

A child protection inquiry set in motion the investigation that would eventually land Lane in jail

Olympic Hopeful Hid Multiple Pregnancies And Births From Everyone Before The Last Baby Vanished Without A Trace

Image credits: Netflix

Lane’s life in the 1990s was already marked by secrecy. She had been in a relationship with Gillies between 1994 and 1998, yet he later testified that he knew nothing about her pregnancies at the time.

In 1995, Lane gave birth to a child and placed the baby for adoption, a move that later became central to the prosecution’s theory of motive.

Less than a year later, in 1996, came Tegan’s birth and disappearance. Years afterwards, in 1999, Lane was again pregnant and traveling to Queensland to seek a late‑term abortion, only to be refused because the fetus was viable.

Olympic Hopeful Hid Multiple Pregnancies And Births From Everyone Before The Last Baby Vanished Without A Trace

Image credits: ABC News (Australia)

Three months later, she gave birth to a boy and again placed him for adoption, telling the adopting social worker that this was her first child and that Gillies was the father.

It was there that the cracks began to show. The social worker, suspicious that Lane’s story did not add up, started asking questions.

Eventually, it emerged that Lane had actually given birth at least three times before: in 1995, in 1996 with Tegan, and earlier in her relationship with Gillies.

When confronted, Lane first denied that the earlier children existed. Later, she shifted her account, claiming that Tegan was living with a family in Perth..

Lane said she handed Tegan to the baby’s father, but police said her account kept changing

Image credits: Netflix

In 2001, Lane was interviewed again by police, this time while she was pregnant with another child.

By then, the pieces of the larger puzzle were starting to fit together. Lane told investigators that she had met Norris at a unit block in Balmain on Friday nights after drinking at the Town Hall pub.

She described him as having a long‑term partner, Melanie, who worked in retail, and claimed that Tegan had been handed to Norris in the Auburn Hospital car park, later changing her account to say the handover had occurred inside the hospital foyer.

The prosecution seized on those inconsistencies.

Image credits: Netflix

Authorities later said there were nine documented versions of how Tegan had left the hospital, each one different enough to suggest that Lane was improvising.

During the trial, the Crown argued that the shifting stories were calculated lies designed to obscure what had really happened to the baby. Lane, however, maintained that she was simply trying to reconstruct events from memory and that the variations did not prove guilt.

Lane also reportedly told police that she had hidden her pregnancies because she feared the reaction of her family and friends, and that she was uncertain who some of the fathers were.

In an intercepted phone call, she told her mother, “I had no other choice,” referring to why she said she had handed Tegan to Norris.

Without a body, the police launched a frantic search to find Tegan Lane

Image credits: ABC News (Australia)

By 2005, Tegan had been missing for almost a decade, and the unanswered questions had grown too heavy for the police investigation alone.

A coronial inquest began in June 2005 and ran until February 2006, presided over by State Coroner John Abernethy. The inquest heard evidence about the extensive efforts police had made to find Tegan, including DNA‑based searches and attempts to track down children named Tegan across Australia.

Image credits: Netflix

In the end, Abernethy concluded that he was “comfortably satisfied” that Tegan was deceased and that she had likely met with foul play. He ordered that a d**th certificate be issued and recommended that the case be passed to the New South Wales Homicide Squad for further investigation.

Police widened their search, checking records from more than 9,000 primary schools in an attempt to locate Tegan.

Image credits: Netflix

Two girls named Tegan Lane were found in Queensland, and another possible lead emerged on a Torres Strait island. All were ruled out. Investigators also tried to track down Andrew Norris, Melanie, and Noeline Norris, the woman Lane described as Andrew’s mother.

No one matching those profiles was ever located.

Still, there was no body, no direct proof of a crime, and no forensic confirmation of cause of passing.

On 17 November 2009, the New South Wales Director of Public Prosecutions, Nicholas Cowdery, announced that Lane would be charged with the homicide of Tegan Lane.

The trial rested entirely on circumstantial evidence, but prosecutors insisted that did not make the case weaker

Image credits: Netflix

Lane’s trial began on 9 August 2010 in the Supreme Court of New South Wales before Justice Anthony Whealy.

The prosecution, led by Mark Tedeschi QC, argued that Lane had taken Tegan life because children repeatedly interfered with her ambitions: her education, her social life, and especially her chances of representing Australia in water polo at the Sydney 2000 Olympics.

CREDIT

Leave a Comment