A 36-year-old man has been charged with the murder of outback nurse Gayle Woodford in South Australia’s Far North.
Mrs Woodford’s body was found in a shallow grave about 1.5 kilometres east of her home town of Fregon on Saturday after a three-day search.
The man, from Mimili, had earlier been charged with the theft of the ambulance Mrs Woodford used for work.
He was one of three people found inside the vehicle when police intercepted it 400 kilometres away in Coober Pedy the morning after Mrs Woodford disappeared.
The 56-year-old nurse, originally from Stansbury on the Yorke Peninsula, was last seen alive when she and her husband went to bed on Wednesday night at their home in the remote APY Lands community, 1,200 kilometres north-west of Adelaide.
She had worked for the Nganampa Health Council for more than five years, which meant often working alone and receiving late-night call-outs.
Forensic investigators were expected in the remote community today to examine the gravesite, which was under police guard overnight.
Police used GPS data collected from the ambulance to trace the vehicle’s movements and eventually located Mrs Woodford’s body.
‘Popular’ nurse remembered.
GPS data showed the vehicle had left Fregon after midnight and was driven to Mimili, and then on to Indulkana and Marla, in the early hours of Thursday.
Special Tasks and Rescue (STAR) Group officers were supported by the police air wing, other police officers and volunteers from the CFS, SES as well as nurses, teachers and community members during the search across the APY Lands.