More tragic revelations come to light in the alleged murder of a Mildura toddler.
It has been revealed that the home Nikki Francis-Coslovich lived in was visited 14 times by government officials in the months before her death.
Her father was urging them to protect his daughter, whom he alleged was being exposed to ice use, just days before the toddler disappeared.
There were numerous reports about the concerning state of her home environment and the potential threat of physical harm to the two-year-old – who was often found in dirty clothes and with matted hair.
Yet, child protection closed the case five weeks before her little body was found lifeless in the roof cavity of her mother’s Mildura home on August 25.
And, worse still, they did not identify her alleged killer – her mother’s 31-year-old partner John Torney – as a threat.
In fact, he didn’t even get a mention in the series of reports obtained by the Herald Sun.
The newspaper reports workers found the family home was chaotic, unhygienic and of “significant concern”.
The reports found her home environment posed “the potential for physical harm”.