Age, Biography and Wiki

Melissa Caddick (Melissa Louise Grimley) was born on 21 April, 1971 in Australia. Discover Melissa Caddick's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is She in this year and how She spends money? Also learn how She earned most of networth at the age of 52 years old?

Popular As Melissa Louise Grimley
Occupation Financial advisor (unlicensed)
Age 53 years old
Zodiac Sign Taurus
Born 21 April 1971
Birthday 21 April
Birthplace Australia
Nationality Australia

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 21 April. She is a member of famous with the age 53 years old group.

Melissa Caddick Height, Weight & Measurements

At 53 years old, Melissa Caddick height not available right now. We will update Melissa Caddick's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

Physical Status
Height Not Available
Weight Not Available
Body Measurements Not Available
Eye Color Not Available
Hair Color Not Available

Who Is Melissa Caddick's Husband?

Her husband is Tony Caddick (m. 2000-2013) Anthony Koletti (m. 2013)

Family
Parents Not Available
Husband Tony Caddick (m. 2000-2013) Anthony Koletti (m. 2013)
Sibling Not Available
Children 1

Melissa Caddick Net Worth

Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Melissa Caddick worth at the age of 53 years old? Melissa Caddick’s income source is mostly from being a successful . She is from Australia. We have estimated Melissa Caddick's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2023 Under Review
Net Worth in 2022 Pending
Salary in 2022 Under Review
House Not Available
Cars Not Available
Source of Income

Melissa Caddick Social Network

Instagram
Linkedin
Twitter
Facebook
Wikipedia
Imdb

Timeline

2022

Caddick's life was dramatised in the Nine Network's television miniseries Underbelly: Vanishing Act in 2022 with Caddick played by Kate Atkinson.

2021

Caddick vanished the day after ASIC agents and Australian Federal Police officers raided her home at Dover Heights, Sydney, New South Wales, on the suspicion that she had misappropriated approximately A$30 million from investors, including her friends and family. After months of speculation as to her whereabouts, partial human remains discovered on a beach on the South Coast of New South Wales in February 2021 were confirmed to be Caddick's through DNA testing. She was subsequently declared deceased.

In April 2021, after Caddick's presumed death, ASIC dropped thirty-eight criminal charges against her. In November 2021, the court found that Caddick through her company Maliver, fraudulently appropriated tens of millions of investor's money, and operated without the required financial service licence between October 2012 and November 2020. Her possessions, including her $6 million home, will be sold in an effort to repay the 72 clients who claim that they are owed more than A$23 million. In February 2022, Koletti objected to the sale of the home and the Federal Court gave Caddick's family six weeks to stake their claims over Caddick's home and a penthouse apartment in Edgecliff where Caddick's parents reside. Caddick's parents would be making a claim on the basis of handing their daughter $1.03 million on the understanding they would own part of the Edgecliff home and have life tenancy. In April 2022, Caddick's parents said in a statement filed in the Federal Court that “Melissa dishonestly and fraudulently” took their money. In April 2022, Koletti made a claim through the Federal Court for a share of Caddick's assets including her Gucci wedding dress, $7 million in shares, $2 million worth of jewellery, two properties he claims are valued at $20 million and the proceeds from the sale of their luxury cars. In May 2022, the Federal Court ordered Koletti to vacate the home so it could be sold by liquidators. Caddick's Dover Heights home was sold for an undisclosed sum in October 2022. In December 2022, clothing, art, luxury goods and jewellery belonging to Caddick was sold at auction for $860,000.

How Caddick's foot ended up in the ocean is unknown; nothing has been ruled out by NSW Police, including murder, suicide and the possibility she faked her own death. University of Newcastle Associate Professor of Criminology Dr Xanthé Mallett, who spoke to Seven Network's Weekend Sunrise, pointed out that losing a foot should not immediately mean Caddick is deceased, saying, “When it was just a foot I would caution against the possibility that somebody is deceased. You can survive without your foot.” In an October 2021 interview, Koletti claimed that Caddick never stole any money and that someone killed his wife. Other theories suggested by criminologists include Caddick going into hiding or even cutting off her own foot as a red herring. Alternatively, it has been theorized that Koletti was assisting her in hiding. By December 2022 she was decleared dead.

2020

Caddick vanished on 12 November 2020, the morning after ASIC agents and the Australian Federal Police raided her home in Dover Heights. She was last heard by her son, who detected a door shutting at around 5:30 am and presumed it was Caddick going for her daily exercise. Caddick left behind all of her possessions, including her mobile phone. On 26 February 2021, Michael Willing, assistant commissioner of the New South Wales Police Force, held a press conference regarding a break in the Caddick disappearance: the previous Sunday on 21 February, a shoe containing a decomposed human foot was discovered washed up on Bournda Beach on the state's south coast, just south of Tathra, some 500km from where Caddick was last seen. The shoe matched her size and fit the description of the footwear she was seen wearing during the raid of her home on November 11 2020. Subsequent DNA testing of samples gathered from her toothbrush, as well as from family members, confirmed the foot belonged to Caddick.

2012

It has been reported that Caddick did not work when she lived in England and quickly found herself bored with her surroundings. Claiming she needed to brush up on her financial skills, she persuaded her husband to agree to letting her travel to Switzerland for a conference. Tony later learned from a mutual friend that Caddick had actually travelled to Paris to meet with Anthony Koletti, her hairdresser from Sydney, and discovered that she had paid for his international travel expenses to continue their affair. Upon being confronted by Tony, Caddick cleaned out their home in Essex, emptied their joint bank accounts, and moved back to Sydney with their son in January 2012. Upon returning to Australia, she falsely claimed to family and friends that Tony had been a controlling and abusive spouse. The couple divorced in 2013, and Caddick married Koletti later that year.

During an eight-year period, from October 2012 until 2019, it is believed Caddick misappropriated A$30 million in client funds which primarily came from family and friends. It is understood she deposited these funds into 37 bank accounts. The Federal Court of Australia discovered that her behaviour intensified each year, with her most profitable year being 2019. Caddick had allegedly spent investors’ finances on two homes in Sydney’s eastern suburbs, as well as luxury cars, designer clothing, artwork and jewellery.

2003

Shortly afterwards, Caddick was hired as a financial advisor for Wise Financial Services, a subsidiary of ING, and eventually purchased a 25% stake in the business after borrowing $750,000. By 2003 she had become so well-regarded in her field that she was featured on a cover of the trade magazine IFA (Independent Financial Advisor). However, Caddick fell out with Wise when the company refused to allow her to recommend property and shares to her clients due to compliance rules.

2000

Caddick's first husband, Tony Caddick, was a builder's labourer originally from England. They married in a ceremony at the Garrison Church in Millers Point, Sydney, on 20 April 2000. Their son, born in 2006, was aged 14 at the time of Caddick's disappearance in 2020. At his wife's urging, Tony, who had studied political science back in England, completed his law degree and was admitted as a solicitor. In 2010, the family moved abroad to Essex to live closer to Tony's family while he commuted daily to his job in London.

1998

After initially working in NRMA's investment division, Caddick joined the Sydney branch of a boutique investment bank as an office administrator. It has been alleged that in 1998, six months after taking the job, she was discovered to have stolen less than $2,000 from the company by forging her boss's signature on several cheques. It is understood that rather than pursue prosecution, the company gave Caddick the option of leaving the office without the police being summoned or the money being returned.

1971

Melissa Louise Caddick (née Grimley; born 21 April 1971–disappeared 12 November 2020) was an Australian woman who vanished in November 2020 amid an investigation by the Australian Securities & Investments Commission (ASIC) for carrying on a financial services business without holding an Australian Financial Services (AFS) licence.

Melissa Caddick was born Melissa Louise Grimley on 21 April 1971, and grew up in Lugarno, a southern suburb of Sydney.