William Tyrrell’s birth mother reveals she is pregnant again – and that’s not her only reason to celebrate

William Tyrrell’s biological mother is pregnant with another child and has also hinted at getting married.

The woman, who cannot be named for legal reasons, welcomed a child with her latest partner in December 2022.

A series of photos she posted on Facebook suggests they now have a second.

She posted a photo collage on one of her Facebook accounts with images of herself with her partner and their daughter.

In the images, it looked like she was wearing an engagement ring on her left hand. She also appeared to have a positive pregnancy test.

More recent photo collages show her clearly pregnant.

The woman’s biological son, William Tyrrell, who disappeared without a trace in September 2014 while in the care of his foster parents in Kendall on the NSW north coast, is believed to have celebrated his 13th birthday in June this year.

William Tyrrell’s biological mother (above) appears pregnant with her sixth child, nearly a decade after her first son disappeared without a trace while in foster care

William (pictured) went missing in 2014 while in the care of his foster parents and the Department of Family and Community Services (FACS)

Pictured: William's birth mother wearing what appears to be an engagement ring

William (left) went missing in 2014 while in the care of his foster parents and the Department of Family and Community Services (FACS), leaving his birth mother traumatized. (Photo right: William’s birth mother wearing what appears to be an engagement ring)

In the hours after William’s disappearance, the toddler’s biological mother underwent a police search of her home in Blacktown, western Sydney, which she shared with her then partner, William’s biological father.

In the years after William disappeared, when he became Australia’s highest-profile missing child case, his birth mother suffered run-ins with police and unstable personal relationships.

In 2018, she revealed her heartbreak and pain over the mystery of her missing child in a TV interview, admitting that she felt like “the worst mother in the world” after the 2014 disappearance, adding that whoever has William taken ‘needs a bullet’. ‘.

William was taken from his biological mother and father in early 2012 at just seven months.

At the inquest into William’s disappearance in 2019, the birth mother indicated she had ‘not given up’ on getting William back after he was taken into the care of the Department of Family and Community Services (FACS) and given to foster parents had been given.

By then she had separated from William’s biological father, who told the inquest that FACS had ‘bungled up… (in its) duty of care to keep him safe until he was 18’.

William’s birth mother moved on to another relationship before meeting her current partner and giving birth to their daughter, who was now 13 months old.

If she marries this man – before or after the birth of their second child – it is believed that this will be William’s mother’s first marriage.

Both she and William’s biological father have described the trauma of his case.

The parents were found innocent in what turned out to be a suspected kidnapping by police, who have recently targeted William’s foster mother as a suspected person of interest.

The woman (pictured outside court several years ago) now appears to be living a stable and happy life after the trauma of William's disappearance after he was taken from her

The woman (pictured outside court several years ago) now appears to be living a stable and happy life after the trauma of William’s disappearance after he was taken from her

William Tyrrell (pictured with his biological parents and older sister) was taken from their care and placed with foster parents before disappearing

William Tyrrell (pictured with his biological parents and older sister) was taken from their care and placed with foster parents before disappearing

As the 10-year anniversary of William’s disappearance approaches, friends of his birth mother have taken to Facebook with their best wishes for her new start in life.

William’s foster mother, who also cannot be named for legal reasons, has repeatedly denied any involvement in the boy’s disappearance.

When he disappeared, his status as a foster child was initially overshadowed by NSW legislation banning publicity about children’s out-of-home care status.

The NSW Supreme Court ruled it was appropriate for William’s foster status to be made public, after children’s lawyer Allanna Smith won a legal battle against FACS.

In making his decision, Judge Paul Brereton raised “the tragic likelihood that (William) is no longer alive.”