Hero cop who rescued Cleo Smith from her alleged ‘Bratz doll obsessed’ abductor ditches the suit and tie he wore during her dramatic rescue as he visits the little girl, her mum and stepdad to check in on her progress
- WA Detective Sergeant Cameron Blaine was pictured leaving Cleo Smith's home after check-in on Friday
- Sgt Blaine described the incredible moment they rescued Cleo Smith from a locked home in Carnarvon
- The four-year-old who went missing for 18 days was found by officers at 12.45am on Wednesday morning
- Detective Sergeant Cameron Blaine said he asked little girl three times before she said: 'My name is Cleo'
The hero police officer who led Cleo Smith's rescue has taken a trip to her family home to check in on the four-year-old's progress two days after her incredible rescue.
Detective Sergeant Cameron Blaine was seen leaving the family's home in Carnarvon, Western Australia, on Friday - barely 48 hours after Cleo's miraculous discovery in a locked and run-down house in the town on Wednesday.
The detective was dressed in a casual polo T-shirt and pants as he made a low-key visit to the property - his casual look a striking contrast to the suit and tie he wore on the night he helped rescue the four-year-old.
Little Cleo was found by detectives about 12.45am on Wednesday alone inside a bedroom playing with toys.
Terence Darrell Kelly is accused of kidnapping four-year-old Cleo from a tent she was sharing with her mum, stepdad and younger sister, Isla at the Blowholes campsite on October 16.

Detective Sergeant Cameron Blaine was spotted leaving Cleo Smith's family home on Friday (pictured) after checking in on the four-year-old who was reunited with her family after 18 days missing

Sergeant Blaine paid a visit with fellow officers but sported a more casual look wearing a polo t-shirt and slacks (pictured)
He allegedly locked her in his room full of Bratz dolls for 18 days.
Police broke down the door and found the little girl alive as Detective Sergeant Cameron Blaine asked her three times to tell him her name.
Det Sgnt Blaine earlier opened up about the incredible moment she was rescued to reporters, which he has described as the 'best moment' of his career.
'I just wanted to be absolutely sure that, it certainly looks like Cleo, I wanted to be sure it was her,' he said.
'I said, "what is your name?" She didn't answer, I asked three times and then she looked at me and said, "my name is Cleo." And that was it.
'Then we turned around and walked out of the house. Not long after that, we got into the car and the officer I was with called Cleo's parents and said ''we've got someone here that wants to speak to you''.
'It was a wonderful feeling to make that call. They were ecstatic.'


The low-key visit comes after police officers rescued the four-year-old from a locked and rundown house in the Carnarvon suburb of Brockman on Wednesday (pictured, Sergeant Blaine checks in on Cleo Smith)

Blaine described the moment he found Cleo Smith as the 'best moment' of his career (pictured, Sergeant Blaine departs Cleo Smith's house after her incredible rescue)

Sergeant Blaine opened up to reporters about the incredible moment he first made contact with the missing four-year-old who told him her name was 'Cleo Smith' (pictured)

WA Police have released the first photo of Cleo after she was found at a home in Carnarvon on Wednesday morning, having been missing for 18 days

Cleo Smith and her mother Ellie Smith are pictured on Thursday a day after her dramatic rescue from a run-down Carnarvon home
Kelly was transferred from his padded cell in Carnarvon to a Western Australia Police plane under heavy guard on Friday morning.
The 36-year-old is accused of kidnapping four-year-old Cleo from a tent she was sharing with her mum, stepdad and younger sister, Isla at the Blowholes campsite on October 16.
At least four special operations officers escorted him onto the waiting plane, which is expected to fly him directly to Perth where he'll wait in a maximum security prison until his next court appearance in December.
Detectives, acting off a tip and extensive policework, broke down a locked door inside his home in Tonkin Crescent in Brockman, WA, where they found Cleo in a well lit room playing with toys.
The little girl told the officers her name and was reunited with her parents immediately afterwards.
Kelly has been charged with two offences, including forcibly taking a child under 16.
As the flight left the small town on the country's west coast, locals within the largely isolated community are continuing to piece together a picture of Kelly and how he came to be allegedly involved in one of the nation's most shocking crimes.
Described as a 'loner', Kelly lived alone in a well-known government housing precinct, and was also a regular at Carnarvon Central, according to one shop-owner in the centre which is something of a retail hub and meeting place.

Little Cleo was found alive and well inside a locked room in a home on Tonkin Crescent, just seven minutes from her loving family
Denham French, who relocated to Carnarvon from Thailand seven years ago, operates a sporting goods of sorts store which also sells some clothing jewelry and American football and basketball paraphernalia.
Kelly, he says, would come in 'time to time' and was relatively well known in the area.
'He's a guy who would flow in and out,' says French.
'Sometimes he would come in a few times a week. 'Other times none at all.'

Local shop owner Denham French knew Kelly as a regular. Sometimes he would see him several times a week
French admits one detail in the shocking alleged kidnapping case which came as a surprise to him and others was the revelation Kelly lived alone - something almost unheard of in Tonkin Crescent and the surrounding commision areas where extended families often live together.
It's understood Kelly, who was raised by his late grandmother, has one aunty believed to be living in Carnarvon but she is yet to be identified.
Another unusual detail, he says, is that Kelly was able to remain undetected for so long.
'Because he lived in what you would call an extremely communal area,' Mr French said.
'Everyone knows everyone. The people are communal but they're also transient.
'So they move around and yet they stay close to their communities.
'So the idea that the neighbours knew nothing...that is probably the most surprising thing of all.'
Kelly attended East Carnarvon High School before transferring to Carnarvon Senior, but even then didn't make any significant or lasting friendships.

Terry Kelly lived in Tonkin Crescent, in Brockman, Western Australia for much of his life, raised by his grandmother in the housing commission block
Soon after his grandmother's death in 2020, Kelly appeared to come into some money and bought himself a late-model Mazda.
'He used to park it in the driveway and then close the gate, every day, always went and put the car in the same spot and closed the gate,' one of his neighbours recalled.
Daily Mail Australia can reveal Kelly was pulled over in June 2021 and charged with driving unlicensed.
The court heard he had never held a licence and had no authority to be behind the wheel of a car.