Still missing ... Kiesha Abrahams. The remains were not those of Kiesha but of Kristi McDougall, a 31-year-old mother who had disappeared two months previously. Two people have since been charged with her murder. Carroll-Lagerwey told police that a ''dream'' led her to the spot. At the time, the chief inspector of the homicide squad, Pam Young, told reporters it was ''interesting that a woman had a sense or a feeling that it was worth her while to come to this particular part of the park''. ''For those who believe in such things, I understand that the woman thinks that she might have some powers along that [psychic] line,'' she said. ''We're still exploring that.''

Tim Mendham from Australian Skeptics. Credit:Tamara Dean Young added she had ''certain strong feelings about people who claim they are psychic. I don't think it will help if we enter a discussion on that.'' Since then, however, other women claiming psychic insight have become involved in the search for Kiesha. Never found ... the Beaumont children. Jacqui Lees and Kara Folaumoeloa told New Idea magazine the little girl had contacted them ''from beyond the grave'', with their spiritual intuition leading them to bushland near Kiesha's home. Speaking with the Herald, Lees says she receives ''clues from spirit'' and that information she picked up had resonated with members of Kiesha's family.

The official police line is that they do not seek help from psychics, mediums or clairvoyants. In 2006, the Australian Federal Police suspended a senior officer for consulting a clairvoyant about a threat to assassinate the then prime minister, John Howard. The officer resigned before an internal investigation was finalised. An AFP spokeswoman says the force ''does not condone the use of psychics''. Their state counterparts have a similar attitude. The NSW State Crime Command's homicide squad commander, Detective Superintendent Peter Cotter, says the policy is ''that while NSW Police welcomes information from members of the community on their cases, we do not consult psychics''. It seems, though, that individual officers do sometimes turn to supernatural sleuths when leads run cold. ''Paying a psychic to do a policeman's job might not be something they'd like to admit to doing,'' says the president of the Australian Psychics Association, Simon Turnbull. ''That doesn't stop a lot of young police detectives contacting psychics and building up relationships with them.''

He believes psychics can play a useful role in investigations, providing information that would not otherwise be found, but says ''there's not much joy for them to contact the police''. ''They've got to explain why they know something. In the old days, they would come under suspicion.'' Turnbull says psychic ability - the fine-tuning of intuition and extrasensory perceptions - ''is not 100 per cent foolproof. It doesn't work in the same way every time, which is one of the reasons sceptics like to dismiss it as being unreliable.'' The executive officer of the Australian Skeptics, Tim Mendham, says psychic ability has never been scientifically verified and warns that when it comes to self-described psychics, people ''should be just as sceptical as they are of used-car salesmen''. There has never been a case where a missing person has been located solely through ''psychic powers'', without information gathered from another source, he says.

Mendham is particularly critical of mystics approaching vulnerable families who have lost a loved one. ''A lot of people do put a lot of emotional and financial effort into following these leads and nothing's come about,'' he says. ''It runs the gamut from silly to very sad. You are interfering with these people who are suffering greatly; they are desperate to find someone and the psychic comes running … offering advice which is hopeless.'' The Australian Institute of Criminology advises the families of missing people to avoid psychics, saying: ''Desperation can force people to consider options they would never entertain in more stable times.'' It's something Don Spiers knows all too well. Since his daughter, Sarah, disappeared in 1996 - a suspected victim of Perth's Claremont serial killer - he has been ''hounded'' by up to 400 psychics and clairvoyants offering cryptic clues to her whereabouts. ''They had my emotions on a roller-coaster,'' Spiers told The West Australian in 2008. ''You'd be full of hope … and there'd be nothing. Why would they want to make it worse for me?''

But Faye Leveson, whose son Matthew is missing, found that visiting spirit medium Debbie Malone assisted her family as they sought answers and struggled with their grief. ''No way in the world has she caused us any pain or sorrow - it's the exact opposite,'' Leveson says. ''She's made no promises that she will bring him home. No money's ever changed hands. She just offered to help.'' Matthew Leveson was 20 when he disappeared in 2007 after leaving a nightclub with his boyfriend, who was acquitted last year of his murder. Faye Leveson tracked Malone down, thinking anything was worth a try to find her son. ''She'd been waiting for me to contact her,'' Leveson recalls. ''Matty had been speaking to her. She'd left her name with the police but the police didn't bother to pass it on to me, which I was really cranky about.'' The specific details Malone relayed about her son convinced Leveson she was communicating with him. The information is too personal to share but left her in no doubt Malone is ''able to sense things and see things and talk to spirits''.

''She has definitely got a gift,'' Leveson says. ''There's things she's told us that nobody else could have possibly known.'' Matthew has not been found but thanks to Malone, Leveson knows ''he's up there [in heaven]; I know he's with me.'' ''Maybe I'm silly,'' she says. ''But it's been a comfort to us. If she finds him, we'll be forever grateful.'' One sceptic swayed by Malone's insights is former Lake Illawarra detective Jeff Little. In 2005 he was investigating the murder of South Coast woman Maria Scott when he saw Malone on the TV program Sensing Murder, in which psychics offer clues to unsolved murders. He contacted her, hoping she might corroborate elements of the investigation. Her information was so ''spot on'' that he included it in his brief to the coroner and recommended her to the Missing Persons Unit.

Little, now retired, says police do use psychics, ''even though they officially say they don't''. ''I just told [my superiors] I was going to do it and it wasn't going to cost them any money,'' he says. ''It's like any investigative tool; even if you get information from the public, you still have to support it with legal evidence.'' Little was surprised by Malone's accuracy. ''We gave her no information whatsoever, only that we were investigating the murder of a girl. She kept coming up with all these hits.'' Working with bracelets found on Scott's body, Malone told detectives where and how she was found, identified where Scott was killed and gave personal information about the perpetrator that proved correct. ''There's no other way she could have got the information she gave us, unless she gets it the way she says she does,'' Little says.

After a miscarriage 19 years ago, Malone ''woke up and saw dead people''. She says she has been involved in more than 20 investigations at the request of police and does not charge for her assistance. ''I've been given this ability for a reason,'' she says. ''It's my way of giving back.'' Critics ask why she cannot immediately zero in on crucial information, such as the location of a body or the address of a killer. Malone says it's an unrealistic expectation and if it was that easy, ''every psychic in Australia would be solving the case''. Her visions may reveal how people have been abducted or murdered, or the interaction between killer and victim. But she says it's about interpreting the messages she receives, which can be symbolic rather than literal.

Malone says she considers her special ability to be a tool for detectives to use alongside their more conventional investigative methods. ''I don't believe psychics solve cases,'' she says. ''Sometimes I may be able to give [police] new insight into an area they haven't looked at. ''At the end of the day, if the information assists on the case, does it matter where it comes from?'' Psychics and the conflicting body of evidence Someone is reported missing in Australia every 15 minutes. Most are found within a week but about 1600 are listed as long-term missing - gone for six months or more.

They include the Beaumont children - siblings Jane, 9, Arnna, 7, and Grant, 4 - who disappeared from Glenelg Beach in Adelaide on Australia Day, 1966. A renowned (some would say infamous) Dutch psychic, Gerard Croiset - who had reportedly located missing children in Europe - became involved in the case, offering clues from overseas to find the children. When his hints led nowhere, Croiset was flown to Adelaide in November 1966, at the expense of a local businessman and a Beaumont family friend. He told police to dig for the children under the newly concreted floor of a warehouse built on an old brick factory, then left the country. The police command advised against the dig; the government refused to fund it. A public committee raised $7000 for the excavation but nothing was uncovered. High-profile missing persons cases tend to attract a flood of information from self-proclaimed psychics. In the case of Madeleine McCann, the three-year-old British girl who disappeared on a family holiday to Portugal in 2007, investigators have reportedly followed up 150 leads from mystics worldwide.

The executive officer of the Australian Skeptics, Tim Mendham, says such information was self-evidently useless, otherwise Madeleine would have been found - and the same applied for every other unsolved disappearance. So how to explain the discovery of Kristi McDougall's body by Cheryl Carroll-Lagerwey, who dreamed she would find Kiesha Abrahams at the spot? A Queensland research psychologist, Kathryn Gow, has analysed psychic readings for 20 years and is convinced a small number of psychics have a genuine ability. She suggests that as an Aboriginal elder, Carroll-Lagerwey was ''in contact with the basic elements of life and therefore can probably sense what has happened in an environment''. The president of the Australian Psychics Association, Simon Turnbull, thinks it likely that ''at that particular event, where a body was waiting to be found, there was an obvious case of confusion to do with the psychic identifying the body''. Mendham says it may be ''a strange coincidence''.

''Unfortunately bodies do get found in the bush,'' he says. ''She found a body - that's all we know for sure.''