Police are now trying to piece together the last 17 days after a missing Marokopa family returned home after going missing almost three weeks ago.

Thomas Phillips and his three children – Jayda Jin, 8, Maverick, 6, and Ember, 5 – had not been seen since September 11. His ute was found on a nearby beach, facing out to sea.

Police and emergency services – as well as hundreds of locals and volunteers – spent days searching for the family in the area of Kiritehere and Marokopa.

Phillips and his children returned to a family farm at 8am this morning.

Phillips’ mother Julia Phillips told Stuff the children were “absolutely fine”.

“They are as bouncy as ever and very well,” she said.

Inspector Will Loughrin, Waikato West Area Commander this afternoon said the family had “experienced 17 days of hell”.

Thomas Phillips, Jayda Phillips, Ember Phillips and Maverick Callum-Phillips have all been found safe and well. Photo / NZME
Thomas Phillips, Jayda Phillips, Ember Phillips and Maverick Callum-Phillips have all been found safe and well. Photo / NZME

“To happen this way, is fantastic for the family. This is a family that experienced seventeen days of hell, really.”

Loughrin confirmed Phillips and his children are well and receiving appropriate support.

Loughrin had been told the children are “happy” and “playing like children do”.

“Our main priority for them is that they’re safe and well.”

Mayor of the Waitomo District Council, which encompasses Marokopa, John Robertson agreed with Newstalk ZB’s Heather du Plessis-Allan the result was “unreal”.

“After three weeks, all the sort of emotions you go through of all those initial days of hope. We knew he was a good bushman … most thought he’d gone to the bush.

“And then, you know, the search changed over the days. And now – wow. Most of us thought we would never see (this).”

He said he knows the area where his ute was found.

“It’s pristine bush. It’s dense bush.”

It would be difficult to find someone there, he said.

“You really have to know it, but I guess he is a bushman and he would know the area well.”

“I guess he could live with a tent, though I don’t know the details of how long he was in the bush or where he was.

“That’s another mystery on this. Three weeks is a lot of time for kids to be with him and survive all that.”

Did he go into the bush to clear his head, the mayor was asked.

“Look, I don’t want to get into any stories about what might have been going on in his personal life, and I don’t know. Theres various stories around but I wouldn’t repeat them.”

The last the mayor knew, Phillips was being interviewed by police.

Will there be grumpiness about the effort that went into finding them?

“There was huge efforts but I think the relief in finding them and joy that the kids are alive and well leaves all those sorts of emotions of all the work that was done …”

“I think everyone will just be overjoyed we had a great outcome.”

Family members, including the three children’s grandparents, were still processing what happened and trying to support one another, Loughrin said.

However they were “ecstatic” that the family has returned.

“We always held out hope that we’d be able to bring the family home alive.”

A member of the public contacted police after sighting a man and three children on a bike early on Wednesday morning.

Police deployed a fixed-wing plane and drones to the area but the family were not found straight away.

All huts and bush areas were searched – but to no avail. After these extensive searches, Phillips and the three children turned up at the farm.

“We are in the early stages and working through what has occurred,” Loughrin said.

Police were speaking with Phillips and the family to establish all the facts about what has occurred.

A man in the Kiritehere area saw a man on a bike with three children yesterday and contacted police. Photo / NZME
A man in the Kiritehere area saw a man on a bike with three children yesterday and contacted police. Photo / NZME

But it was too soon to know how Phillips and the three children survived so long in the bush, he said.

“They were using a tent. They were in dense bush area.”

The Raglan Surf Lifesaving lifeguards joined the search and rescue effort at Kiritehere Beach on September 18. Photo / NZME
The Raglan Surf Lifesaving lifeguards joined the search and rescue effort at Kiritehere Beach on September 18. Photo / NZME

 

It was still unknown exactly how the four got around the remote, forested areas, and whether anybody else assisted Phillips.

Since their disappearance the local community, police and iwi searched for the family extensively.

“If you’ve been out there, that’s dense bush area, a significant amount of area we had to cover.”

Police searched an area 15km south of where the ute was found.

“We have been greatly supported, I can’t speak highly enough of the support we’ve had.”