William Tyrrell's birth mother was warned toddler had 'a black eye from accidental fall' before she saw him for the final time – as its revealed the boy was in a 'neglectful state' after his birth parents took him on the run
- William Tyrrell's birth mother was told her son had 'black eye' from accident
- Comment came before her final contact visit with son, coronial documents said
- Biological mother could still see a 'faint bruise' near William's eye during the visit
- The woman saw William for last time for two hours on August 21, 2014
- There is no suggestion whatsoever that the black eye was the result of anything but a typical accident of a toddler
- Both William’s foster and biological parents have been ruled out as suspects in his disappearance
William Tyrrell’s birth mother was told her son 'had a black eye' from an accident just before her final contact visit with the toddler five years ago, coronial documents said.
Two days after William went missing, his biological mother recalled in a police statement that she had been told her son had fallen and gotten a black eye after losing his balance clambering on top of his foster mum.
'(The case worker) said that William was climbing on the female foster carer and he had lost his balance and fell and that was how he got a black eye.
'Apparently it had happened on a Saturday but I don’t know how long it had happened before this visit.'
The biological mother could still see a 'faint bruise' near William’s eye when she saw him for the final time for two hours at the Chipmunk Centre at Macquarie Centre on August 21, 2014.
There is no suggestion whatsoever that the black eye was the result of anything but a typical accident of a toddler. Both William’s foster and biological parents have been ruled out as suspects in his disappearance.

William Tyrrell’s birth mother (pictured) was told her son 'had a black eye' from an accident just before her final contact visit with the toddler five years ago, coronial documents said

Both William’s foster and biological parents have been ruled out as suspects in his disappearance (pictured, biological father)

Two days after William went missing, the biological mother recalled in a police statement that she had been told her son had fallen and gotten a black eye after losing his balance clambering on top of his foster mum (pictured, William Tyrrell)

The biological mother could still see a 'faint bruise' near William’s eye when she saw him for the final time for two hours at the Chipmunk Centre at Macquarie Centre on August 21, 2014
William was 'happy sitting on my lap and giving me a cuddle' and was 'more affectionate than usual' during the visit, the birth mother said in her statement.
The police statement was released late on Friday by the coronial inquest investigating William’s September 14, 2014 disappearance.
In the statement, the birth mother recalled what she did in Sydney on the day her son disappeared, including a phone call she may have had with William’s grandmother and her trip to the shops to buy baby products.
'I didn’t take him. I had nothing to do with it,' she said.
Police statements made by William’s female foster carer were also released. Her statements revealed William presented to DOCS workers 'in a neglected state' after his birth parents ran away with him for 'five to six weeks' in 2012.
In the statement, the female foster carer said she and her husband were approved as carers by DOCS in 2011. They were, at some point, told William was going to be 'surrendered and come into our care'.
'We got a call and were told that the natural parents had taken off with William,' the foster mother said.
'He was found a short time later and DOCS removed him. William spent a night in hospital.
'The DOCS social workers told us that William was presented in a neglected stated (sic) and he was checked medically.
'We got William the next day.'
The female foster carer recalled how William was crawling around pretending to be a tiger and roaring in her mother’s backyard in Kendall, on the morning of September 12, 2014, when he vanished.
'He walked around the side of the house. I told him to make sure he stays close on the grass.

William was 'happy sitting on my lap and giving me a cuddle' and was 'more affectionate than usual' during the visit, the birth mother said in her statement

In the statement, the birth mother recalled what she did in Sydney on the day her son disappeared, including a phone call she may have had with William’s grandmother and her trip to the shops to buy baby products Pictured: Kendall, the town where William was last seen
'I heard "Roar". It sounded really close and loud like he was just around the corner.
'Mum and I laughed and we spoke... after a couple of minutes I thought "oh he is quiet".
'Mum said the same thing. William is (quiet) usually when he is sick.
'He wasn't sick.
'I told Mum that I would go and check. I walked around the corner, nothing. I could not see him.
'I stood there for a second. I looked and couldn't see him at all ...
'I walked down the bottom around the trees, at the bottom of the block. I walked back up the other side of the house.
'I was calling out to William. William did not answer'.
The inquest continues in August.