A pilot remains in police custody after he was arrested over the disappearance of missing Victorian campers Russell Hill and Carol Clay, as their grief-stricken families desperately await answers.
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A 55-year-old Caroline Springs man is being questioned following a dramatic arrest by specialist police at a remote campsite in Arbuckle Junction, some 280km northeast of Melbourne, on Monday night.
The man, a check captain with budget airline Jetstar, has been in custody for almost two days and his Nissan Patrol four-wheel-drive has been seized.
Victoria Police said on Wednesday afternoon there had been "no updates" since his arrest.
"At this stage, we are not expecting this to change today," a spokeswoman said.
Police said a person can be held in custody for "a reasonable time", with no set limit to that time under the Crimes Act.
The man has been stood down by Jetstar, with the airline saying it will assist the investigation if needed.
Ms Clay's sister Jill Walker said she wasn't aware of the man before his arrest.
"They really have found a needle in a haystack because it's such a remote and huge area," she told Nine's Today.
She was hopeful police had the right person and charges were laid so justice could be meted out through the courts.
"We would love to be able to find the bodies," she said.
"But I feel if we had to make a choice between the two, having the person whose committed this so that they can't do it again is more important in the first instance."
Mr Hill and Ms Clay were last heard from on March 20, 2020, while camping in the Victorian Alps.
Mr Hill left his Drouin home on March 19 and picked up Ms Clay from her home in Pakenham in his white Toyota LandCruiser.
On March 20, Mr Hill made a call via high-frequency radio saying he was at Wonnangatta Valley.
During the call, the experienced outdoorsman said he was having radio transmission issues.
Ms Clay, a former Victorian Country Women's Association president, told friends she was heading away and expected to return home on March 28 or 29.
Investigators were told the couple were camping together at Wonnangatta River near the Wonnangatta camping ground.
Campers found Mr Hill's fire-damaged car at their campsite, which was destroyed by fire, near Dry River Creek Track on March 21.
The pair have not been seen or heard from since.
Multiple searches have been conducted in and around the Wonnangatta Valley, including with cadaver dogs.
Earlier this month, police released images of a blue four-wheel-drive, believed to be a mid-to-late-1990s Nissan Patrol, taken by a safety camera in the area at the time Mr Hill and Ms Clay went missing.
Witnesses reported a number of sightings of the vehicle, including near the campsite, with police yet to track down the driver or exclude them as a person of interest.
Police believe the pair may have had an altercation with another camper, possibly the driver of the blue 4WD.
It was towing a trailer and was heard performing a 20- to 30-point turn on a narrow track the night the pair vanished.
Ms Walker knew the pair were in a secret relationship, despite Mr Hill being married, and believes that was part of the reason they travelled remotely together for their trips.
Australian Associated Press