POLICE JUST SMASHED THE DOORS DOWN! 🚨⚠️

What they found beneath the floorboards of that derelict house in Alice Springs has sent shockwaves through the entire Northern Territory tonight. As the K9 units breached the perimeter, the dogs didn’t just bark—they went into a frenzy the moment the bed frame was moved, uncovering a hidden void that NO ONE was supposed to find. 🐕💨

Rumors are swirling about a “second lair” used by Jefferson Lewis during those 5 days of terror, and the items recovered from the dirt are far more chilling than the clothing found at the Todd River. Was he really acting alone, or does this abandoned house hold the secret to a much larger, darker network hiding in plain sight? 🕵️‍♂️🌑

The community is at a breaking point, and the truth about what happened in those final hours is about to break the internet.

See the leaked photos and the full evidence list here! 👇🔥

The red dust of the Australian Outback has long held secrets, but none as haunting as those currently being unearthed in a dilapidated, sun-bleached shack on the fringes of Alice Springs.

Sources close to the investigation of the murder of 5-year-old Sharon Granites—affectionately known to her community as Kumanjayi Little Baby—report that a tactical police raid on an abandoned residence has yielded “pivotal” new forensic evidence. The breakthrough reportedly occurred late yesterday when specialized K9 units, led by the Northern Territory Police Dog Operations, exhibited “extreme agitation” upon entering a back bedroom.

A Bed Frame, a Void, and a Chilling Discovery

According to local reports and leaked details from community forums on Discord and X, officers were forced to break down the barricaded doors of the property. The house, located within striking distance of the Todd River where the initial evidence was discovered, had been marked as a “location of interest” following a tip-off from an anonymous community member.

The moment of truth came when investigators moved a rusted bed frame in the corner of the room. Witnesses say the police dogs began barking frantically, alerting handlers to a concealed space beneath the flooring. While the NT Police Commissioner has maintained a tight lid on the specific nature of the finds, forensic teams were seen carrying out several high-priority evidence bags containing what appeared to be organic matter and personal effects.

“The dogs didn’t just pick up a scent; they reacted as if they’d found the source of the trauma,” wrote one user on a popular True Crime Reddit thread. “If this house was where she was held before being moved 5km south, then the timeline of Jefferson Lewis’s ‘six days of freedom’ just got a lot darker.”

The 6-Day Fuse: A System in the Crosshairs

The prime suspect, Jefferson Lewis, 47, remains at the center of a national firestorm. Lewis had been a free man for a mere 144 hours before allegedly snatching the non-verbal 5-year-old from the Old Timers town camp on Anzac Day.

The drama has shifted from the manhunt to a scathing critique of the Australian justice system. Outraged residents in Alice Springs and beyond are demanding to know how a man with a violent history—including aggravated assault—was allowed to reside in the same home as a vulnerable child without immediate electronic monitoring or strict supervision.

“This wasn’t a failure of the community; it was a failure of the state,” a prominent activist posted on Facebook, a sentiment that has garnered tens of thousands of shares. “They let a wolf into a nursery and then acted surprised when the sheep went missing.”

DNA, Doonas, and the Todd River Crime Scene

The case against Lewis is already bolstered by “irrefutable” DNA evidence. Forensic analysis of a child’s underwear and a doona (quilt) found in the dry bed of the Todd River last week confirmed two DNA profiles: the victim’s and the suspect’s.

However, the “Abandoned House” discovery adds a new layer of complexity. If Sharon was held captive there, as the dogs’ reactions suggest, it contradicts the initial theory that she was taken directly into the bush. It suggests a level of premeditation and “luring” that has left even seasoned investigators visibly shaken.

A Town at the Breaking Point

Alice Springs is a powder keg. Following Lewis’s arrest on May 2nd, clashes erupted outside the courthouse as grieving relatives and angry locals sought their own brand of justice. The Warlpiri family of “Little Baby,” including respected elders and politicians like Jacinta Nampijinpa Price, have called for calm, but the pain is visceral.

The victim was a child who couldn’t speak, a girl who communicated through hand gestures and smiles. Now, her silence has become a deafening roar for reform.

What Comes Next?

Jefferson Lewis currently faces one count of murder and two counts of sexual assault. As the forensic teams continue to “scrape” the abandoned house for every hair and fiber, the prosecution is reportedly preparing to argue for life without parole—a rare move that reflects the sheer brutality of the crime.

For now, the people of Alice Springs wait. They wait for the full autopsy results. They wait for the funeral of a little girl who should have been safe in her bed. And they wait to see if the “House of Horrors” holds the final clue to why this tragedy was allowed to happen in the first place.