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When a pair of trail runners discovered
the decomposing corpses of Caroline Clark and Joanne Walters buried
under sticks and leaves in Belangalo State Forest on September 19, 1992,
it was only the beginning of what would eventually result in the capture
of Australia's most famed serial killer. Over the next month searchers
would discover five more bodies stowed away in the woods of the park,
ending the mystery of the disappearances of foot travelers in the area.
The bodies discovered by the runners were
identified as Clark and Walters, both of whom were British and traveling
together on foot. They had last been seen over five months before. Soon
the remains of hitchhikers James Gibson and Deborah Everlist, last seen
near the forest in 1989, were found.
Almost a month later Simone Schmidl,
a hitchhiker who disappeared in January of 1991, was discovered under
the now-familiar pile of brush. When a pair of jeans found near
Schmidl's body were found to be the property of yet another missing
person, the searching continued. Predictably, the jeans' owner, German
Anja Habschied, and her boyfriend Gabor Neugebauer were found nearby
dead. The young couple had been missing since December of 1991.
Aside from the obvious similarities
between the way all the victims had disappeared and been disposed of,
their causes of death were a bit dissimilar.Clark had been stabbed in
the chest area, Clark had been stabbed and shot in the head several
times, Gibson had been repeatedly stabbed, Everist had been slashed in
the face in additon to her stab wounds, Schmidl had also been stabbed,
Habschied was decapitated, and Neugebauer had been shot in the head five
times with the same weapon that killed Walters.
The stabbing victims all
had a unique injury, though, a stab wound to the upper back that severed
the victim's spinal cord and rendered them helpless. Also, many of the
victims were partially undressed with their pants buttoned but not
zipped. Evidence of crude bondage and strangulation was present in most
of the cases.
Authorities were stumped by the case
until 1993 when a man named Paul Onions identified Ivan Milat as the
person who attacked him after picking Onions up near the forest three
years before. Milat and his brother Richard were already suspects in the
killings, though police knew that Richard had been at work on the days
of the abductions.
Ivan Milat was soon charged with Onion's assault and
all seven murders. Faced with some very damning evidence at trial Milat
feebly tried to explain on the stand that he was the victim of an
elaborate set-up perpetrated by his own family. Predictably, he was
found guilty on all counts on July 27, 1995, and sentenced to prison for
life.
Milat has stated plans to escape at every
opporunity but thus far has not made good on the threat. He has, however,
attempted to kill himself at least twice after swallowing such materials
as razor blades and staples.
In June of 2001 Milat appeared at an
inquest into the deaths of three women in 1978 and 1979. Robyn Hickie,
17, Amanda Robinson, 14, and Leanne Goodall, 20, all disappeared from an
area north of Sidney under similar circumstances as Milat's known
victims. Though Milat atended the inquest, he offered nothing to help
investigators and denied having known the women or ever having picked up
a hitchhiker in that area.
MILAT,
Ivan Robert Marko
Australia's
worst serial killer of modern times, Ivan Milat was the son of Croat
immigrants, born in 1945.A
nonsmoker who also shunned liquor, Milat worked as a highway
construction worker and devoted his leisure time to motorcycle riding,
off-road touring in a four-wheel-drive vehicle, and hunting.Friends assumed that his passion for stalking game was restricted
to four-legged targets, but they were mistaken.Today, Milat stands convicted of seven murders committed between
1989 and 1992 and suspected of more dating back to the late 1970s.
Australia's
two-year manhunt for the vicious "Backpack Killer" began in
September 1992 when hikers found the decomposed remains of two women in
the Belanglo State Forest, near Sydney, at a point called Executioner's
Drop.The corpses were
identified as 21year-old Caroline Clarke and 22-year-old
Joanne Walters,
British tourists last seen alive in Sydney on April 18, 1992, while
thumbing rides to Adelaide.Autopsies
revealed that both young women had been sexually assaulted; Walters had
been gagged and stabbed to death, and Clarke was shot 12 times in the
head.
The
discovery of two corpses prompted a
older search, and police soon found
a shallow grave a few miles distant from the first site that contained
the skeletal remains of Australians James Gibson and Deborah Everist.The two 19-year-olds had disappeared somewhere between Liverpool
and Goulburn while hitchhiking to a conservation festival on December 9,
1989.Glbson's pack and
camera were found beside a rural highway two months later, as if thrown
from a passing car.
The
search continued.In
October, authorities found the remains of 21-year-old Simone Schmidl, a
German visitor who disappeared on the same stretch of road between
Liverpool and Goulburn, hitchhiking to Melbourne on
January 21, 1991.Her glasses and camping equipment had later been found in the
brush near Wangatta, a small town in Victoria.According to the medical examiner's report, Simone had been
bound, gagged, and stabbed repeatedly.
The
corpses of two more German tourists, 21-yearold Gabor Neugebauer and
20-year-old Anja Habschied, were found on November 4, 1992.The couple had last been seen alive 10 months earlier, on
December 26, 1991, when they set off hitchhiking ftom King's Cross to
Darwin and vanished without a trace.Their deaths bore all the signs of another sexual attack:
Neugebauer was apparently strangled, then shot six times in the head;
his girlfriend was nude below the waist and she had been decapitated,
her head missing from the scene.
By
that time, Australian police knew they had a serial killer at large.Published photos of the victims brought calls pouring in from
locals who had seen them hiking through the countryside or thumbing
rides, but none apparently had seen the killer-except, perhaps, for Paul
Onions.A British subject
from Birmingham, Onions heard about the "backpack murders" on
television and recalled his own near miss with death outside Sydney in
January 1990.Onions had bcen thumbing rides when he was picked up by the
driver of a silver Nissan four-wheel-drive truck, who introduced himself
as "Bill." A half mile north of the Belanglo State Forest,
Bill had stopped and pulled a gun, declaring, "This is a robbery!" Onions had run for his life through the bush, bullets
whizzing past his head, and managed to escape after a hectic chase.He recalled the gunman well enough to help police prepare a
sketch, including the would-be killer's handlebar mustache.
Investigators,
meanwhile, were reviewing their files on old sex crimes-including a
December 1974 rape allegation filed against Ivan Milat, known to use the
nickname "Bill." On May 22, 1994, a flying squad of 50
officers raided the property in Eagle Vale, a Sydney suburb, where Milat
lived with a girlfriend.The
raiders caught their man in bed, and a search of his home turned up
evidence including firearms linked to the murders and camping gear
stolen from the victims. (A sword, reportedly used to behead Ania
Habschied, was found in a later search at the home of Milats mother.)
Detectives suggested that Milat sometimes killed his victims and then
used their skulls for "target practice" after they were dead,
thus accounting for multiple head wounds.
On
May 31, 1994, Milat was formally charged with seven counts of murder,
plus the attack on Paul Onions and various weapons charges. (Two of his
rifles, as well as a homemade silencer found by police in his
possession, were banned by Australian law.)
At his fourmonth trial in
1996, Milat's attorney tried to undermine the prosecution's case by
fingering alternase suspects, inciuding two of Milat's own brothers,
Richard ánd Walter.Jurors
rejected the ploy, convicting Ivan of all seven murders on july 27, but
presiding justice
David Hunt did tell the court, "In my view, ¡t is inevitable that
the prisoner was not alone in that criminal enterprise." In the
absence of further indictments, however, Milat was the lone recipient of
six life sentences, plus an additional six-year term for the attempted
murder of Paul Onions.
Milat echoed justice Hunt's opinion in February 1997 when
he appealed his conviction on the unusual grounds that he did not act
alone in the murder.No
action has been taken to date on that appeal, but Milat was placed under
tight security three months later after prison guards foiled a
"meticulously planned" escape by Ivan and three other inmates.By November 1997, Milat had fired the attorney who fingered his
brothers as suspects, representing himself in a new-and futile-appeal to
the New South Wales Supreme Court.
Authorities
in New South Wales believe that they have only scratched the surface of
Milat's homicidas rampage. On March 22, 1998, detectives announced a new
investigation into Milat's movements dating back to the late 1970s.According to press reports, he is suspected in the disappearances
of six Newcastle women and an equal number of tourists, including
visitors from Europe and japan.
One
rare survivor, a 41-yearold Newcastle resident, has told police she was
abducted and raped by Milat in 1978.
A second rape victim, attacked the following year, has also been
reinterviewed in an effort to link Milat to the crime.The Newcastle disappearances-long presumed murdersdate back to
1979 when Milat was employed on a road crew working in the area.To date, no further charges have been filed.
Michael Newton - An Encyclopedia
of Modern Serial Killers - Hunting Humans
Ivan Robert Marko Milat
(born December 27, 1944 in Newcastle) is a serial killer who murdered
several tourists and hitchhikers in the 1990s in New South Wales,
Australia. The killings were dubbed the backpacker murders by the press
at the time. Milat is currently serving a life sentence for the murder
of seven hitchhikers, several of whom were international backpackers. He
is of Croatian ancestry.
Ivan Milat had been acquitted on rape
charges in 1971. His lawyer at this time, John Marsden, claimed in July
2005 that Milat was helped by a woman in his murder spree.
Backpacker
murders
In September 1992 the bodies of
British tourists Joanne Walters and Caroline Clarke were found buried in
an area known as "Executioners drop".
In October 1993, two more bodies were
discovered along the same stretch of the remote Belanglo State Forest.
The bodies were identified as those of 19-year-old James Gibson and
Deborah Everist, also 19. Both had gone missing in 1989. It then became
apparent that a serial killer had been responsible for all these
murders.
On 1 November the same year, a fifth
body was found, identified through dental records as Simone Schmidl, a
20-year-old German national who had vanished in January 1991.
More than 300 police officers
conducted a search of the area on November 4, and found two more
skeletons, identified as the remains of 21-year-old Gabor Kurt
Neugebauer and his 20-year-old girlfriend, Anja Susanne Habschied,
German tourists who had vanished two years previously. Habschied had
been decapitated. Police revealed that all victims had been killed by
multiple stab wounds.
Forensic examinations of evidence
gathered at the scene revealed cartridges from a .22 Ruger rifle near
Clarke's body. These were tested against cartridges that had been taken
from a farmhouse outside Sydney. A possible eighth victim was
provisionally added to the list in November.
An examination of unsolved murders
turned up the name of Diane Pennacchio, a 29-year-old mother whose body
had been found in bushland in 1991. She had been stabbed to death and
the body had been placed face down with hands placed behind her back
near a fallen tree, as had those of the previous victims. A triangular
canopy of sticks had been built over the bodies and covered with ferns.
It was not until the end of February
1994 that there was a breakthrough in the investigation. A 20-year-old
woman stated to police that while backpacking in January 1990 in New
South Wales she was offered a lift, which she had accepted. While in the
vehicle the driver had behaved strangely, and she got out of the vehicle
and ran into the Belangalo State Forest. As she ran, the driver fired
shots at her, but missed.
A second witness, British tourist
Paul Onions, told police that in 1990 he accepted a lift from a driver
in the same area, who then produced a gun from the glove compartment of
the vehicle. As he ran, the driver fired shots at him. Onions was able
to identify the driver from police photographs and identify the vehicle.
Arrest
In May 1994 police carried out dawn
raids on seven properties, taking three men into custody. One of these
men was 49-year-old Ivan Milat, who was charged with armed robbery and
discharging a firearm; he was later to be charged with the murders.
Another was Milat's brother Walter. During the raids police found a .22
calibre rifle that matched the type used in the backpacker murders.
Ivan Milat appeared in court for the
initial robbery and weapon charges on May 23. He did not enter a plea.
On May 30, following continued police investigations, Milat was also
charged with the murders of seven backpackers. At the beginning of
February 1995 Milat was remanded in custody until June that same year.
In March 1996 the trial finally opened and, in July, he received seven
life sentences, one for each of his victims....
Appeals
Milat appealed against his
convictions on the basis that the quality of legal representation he had
received was too poor, and therefore constituted a breach of his common
law right to legal representation, established in the landmark case of
Dietrich v. The Queen. However, Gleeson CJ, Kirby P and Mahoney JA of
the NSW Court of Criminal Appeal held that the right to legal
representation did not depend on any level or quality of representation,
unless the quality of representation were so low that the accused were
no better off with it. The Court found that this was not the case, and
therefore dismissed the appeal.
In 2004, Milat had an application to
the High Court heard by Justice McHugh. The orders sought were that
Milat be allowed to either attend to make oral submissions in an
impending appeal for special leave to the court and that, alternatively,
he be allowed to appear via video link. The application was dimissed on
the grounds that the issues raised could be adequately addressed by
written submission.
The grounds of his impending appeal
were that the trial judge had erred by allowing the Crown to put a case
to the jury unsupported by its own witnesses and had also put forward
alternative cases to the jury, one of which had not been argued by the
Crown. McHugh J indicated that this appeal may be defeated because it
has been brought out of time.
Further
controversies
In June 2006 Milat was embroiled in
controversy when it was found that he had a television and toaster in
his prison cell. Martha Jabour, leader of a group calling itself the
Homicide Victim's Support Group, described the privileges as "an insult
to the families of his victims". The privileges were quickly withdrawn
after a media campaign stirred up the NSW Parliament and Department Of
Corrective Services. After his privileges were withdrawn, he again
threatened suicide, and was moved to a "safe cell" and placed under
24-hour video surveillance.
Other
possible murders
In May 2005 Boris Milat (one of
Ivan's older brothers) said in an interview with the Australian
Broadcasting Corporation's Australian Story "wherever Ivan has worked,
people have disappeared" He also said when asked how many people he
thinks Ivan killed, "about 20 or so..."
At present there are about 6 unsolved
murder cases where Ivan is a suspect.
References
Mark Whittaker and Les Kennedy (1998)
Sins Of The Brother
The Backpacker Murders is a name given to
serial killings that occurred in New South Wales, Australia during the
1990s. The bodies of seven missing young people were discovered partly
buried in the Belanglo State Forest, 15 kilometres south west of the New
South Wales town of Berrima. Five of the victims were international
backpackers visiting Australia, and two were Australian travellers from
Melbourne. Ivan Milat was convicted of the murders and is serving seven
consecutive life sentences plus 18 years.
The term Backpacker murders specifically
refers to the seven murders for which Ivan Milat was convicted. There is
speculation that he may not have been alone when committing the murders,
and that he could have committed up to a total of thirty-seven murders;
if the latter is proven, Milat would become the most prolific killer in
Australian history (ahead of Martin Bryant, who shot dead 35 people in
the Port Arthur Massacre) and one of the most prolific serial killers
ever.
The events depicted in the 2005 Australian horror
film Wolf Creek were loosely based upon his crimes
Details
First and second
cases
On 20 September 1992 a group of orienteers discovered
a decaying corpse while orienteering in the Belanglo State Forest. The
following day, police constables Roger Gough and Suzanne Roberts
discovered a second body 30 metres from the first. Early media reports
suggested that the bodies were of missing British backpackers Caroline
Clarke and Joanne Walters, who had disappeared from the inner Sydney
suburb of Kings Cross in April 1992. However a German couple, Gabor
Neugebauer and Anja Habschied, had also disappeared from the Kings Cross
area sometime after Christmas, 1991 and Simone Schmidl, also from
Germany, had been reported missing for more than a year. It was also
possible that the bodies were of a young Victorian couple, Deborah
Everist and James Gibson, who had been missing since leaving Frankston
in 1989.
Police quickly confirmed, however, that the bodies
were those of Clarke and Walters. Walters had been stabbed 9 times, and
Clarke had been shot several times in the head. Despite a thorough
search of the forest over the following five days, no further evidence
or bodies were found by police. Investigators ruled out the possibility
of further discoveries within Belanglo State Forest.
Third and fourth discoveries and body identification
In October 1993, a local man, Bruce Pryor, discovered
a human skull and thigh bone in a particularly remote section of the
forest. He returned with police to the scene and two more bodies were
quickly discovered and identified as Deborah Everist and James Gibson.
The presence of Gibson's body in Belanglo was a puzzle to investigators
as his backpack and camera had previously been discovered by the side of
the road at Galston Gorge, in the northern Sydney suburbs almost 100
kilometres to the north.
Fifth, sixth and seventh discoveries
On 1 November 1993 a skull was found in a clearing in
the forest by police sergeant Jeff Trichter. The skull was later
identified as that of Simone Schmidl from Regensburg, Germany. She had
been last seen hitch hiking on 20 January 1991. Clothing found at the
scene was not Schmidl's, but matched that of another missing backpacker,
Anja Habschied. Simone Schmidl was found to have died from numerous stab
wounds to the upper torso.
The bodies of Habschied and her boyfriend Gabor
Neugebauer were found on 3 November 1993 in shallow graves 55 metres
apart. They had, like the other victims, been shot and/or stabbed.
Search for the identity of the serial killer
There were similar aspects to all the murders. The
killer had evidently spent considerable time with the victims both
during and after the murders, as campsites were discovered close to the
location of each body and shell casings of the same calibre were also
identified at each site. Joanne Walters and Simone Schmidl had been
stabbed, whereas Caroline Clarke had been shot numerous times in the
head and stabbed post mortem. Anja Habschied had been decapitated
and other victims showed signs of strangulation and severe beatings.
Speculation arose that the crimes were the work of several killers, at
least two, and Ivan Milat's sworn statement had suggested anywhere up to
seven people were involved.
On 13 November, police received a call from Paul
Onions in Britain. Onions had been backpacking in Australia several
years before and had accepted a ride south out of Sydney from a man
known only as "Bill" on 25 January 1990. South of the town of Mittagong,
Bill pulled a gun on Onions who managed to escape, flag down Joanne
Berry, a passing motorist, and report the assault to local police.
Onions' statement was backed up by one from Berry, who also contacted
the investigation, along with the girlfriend of a man who worked with
Ivan Milat, who thought he should be questioned over the case.
Ivan
Milat
Arrest
Milat quickly became a suspect. Police learned he had
served prison time and in 1971 had been charged with the abduction of
two women and the rape of one of them, although the charges were later
dropped. It was also learned that both he and his brother Richard worked
together on road gangs along the highway between Sydney and Melbourne,
that he owned a property in the vicinity of Belanglo, and had sold a
Nissan Patrol four-wheel drive vehicle shortly after the discovery of
the bodies of Clarke and Walters. Acquaintances also told police about
Milat's obsession with weapons. When the connection between Onions and
the Belanglo murders was finally made, Onions was asked to fly to
Australia to help with the investigation.
On 5 May 1994, Onions positively identified Milat as
the man who had picked him up and attempted to tie up and possibly shoot
him.
Milat was arrested on 22 May 1994 at his home at
Cinnebar Street, Eagle Vale, a northern suburb of Campbelltown, New
South Wales after 50 police officers surrounded the premises. Homes
belonging to his brothers Richard, Alex, Boris, Walter and Bill were
also searched at the same time by over 300 police. The search of Ivan
Milat's home revealed a cache of weapons, including parts of a .22
calibre rifle that matched the type used in the murders, plus clothing,
camping equipment and cameras belonging to several of his victims.
Milat appeared in court on robbery and weapon charges
on 23 May. He did not enter a plea. On 30 May, following continued
police investigations, Milat was also charged with the murders of seven
backpackers. At the beginning of February 1995 Milat was remanded in
custody until June that same year. In March 1996 the trial finally
opened. Milat's trial lasted fifteen weeks. His defence argued that in
spite of the amount of evidence, there was no proof Ivan Milat was
guilty and attempted to shift the blame to other members of his family,
particularly Richard.
On 27 July 1996, a jury found Ivan Milat guilty of
the murders. He was also convicted of the attempted murder, false
imprisonment and robbery of Paul Onions, for which he received six years'
jail each. For the murders of Caroline Clarke, Joanne Walters, Simone
Schmidl, Anja Habschied, Gabor Neugebauer, James Gibson and Deborah
Everist, Milat was given a life sentence on each count, with all
sentences running consecutively and without the possibility of parole.
On his first day in Maitland Gaol, he was beaten by
another inmate. Almost a year later, he made an escape attempt alongside
convicted drug dealer and former Sydney councillor George Savvas. Savvas
was found hanged in his cell the next day and Milat was transferred to
the maximum-security super prison in Goulburn, New South Wales.
Appeals
Ivan Milat appealed against his convictions on the
grounds that the quality of legal representation he had received was too
poor, and therefore constituted a breach of his common law right to
legal representation, established in the landmark case of Dietrich v
The Queen. However, Gleeson CJ, Kirby P and Mahoney JA of the NSW
Court of Criminal Appeal held that the right to legal representation did
not depend on any level or quality of representation, unless the quality
of representation were so poor that the accused were no better off with
it. The Court found that this was not the case, and therefore dismissed
the appeal.
In 2004, Milat filed an application with the High
Court and which was heard by Justice McHugh. The orders sought were that
Milat be allowed to either attend to make oral submissions in an
impending appeal for special leave to the court and that, alternatively,
he be allowed to appear via video link. The application was dismissed on
the grounds that the issues raised could be adequately addressed by
written submission.
The grounds of his impending appeal were that the
trial judge had erred by allowing the Crown to put a case to the jury
unsupported by its own witnesses and had also put forward alternative
cases to the jury, one of which had not been argued by the Crown. McHugh
J indicated that this appeal may be defeated because it has been brought
out of time.
Self-inflicted
injury
On 26 January 2009, Milat cut off his little finger
with a plastic knife, with the intention of mailing the severed digit to
the High Court. He was taken to Goulburn Hospital under high security,
however, on 27 January 2009, Milat was returned to prison after doctors
decided surgery to reattach the finger was not possible.
This was not the first time Milat had injured himself
while in prison. In the past, he swallowed razor blades, staples and
other metal objects.
It
was a glorious spring day, perfect for a day out in the forest. Ken
Seily stood in a clearing looking slowly about him, breathing the clear,
fresh country air. It was a far cry from the pollution and stress of
Sydney, two hours to the north, where he lived and worked. This was the
time of the week that he looked forward to the most, when his
orienteering club met for their weekly run.
Normally, Ken bushwalked or ran the orienteering courses alone but on
Saturday, 19th September 1992, the club had organized a training day
along some of the many trails that criss-crossed the forty thousand
acres of the beautiful Belangalo State Forest. Ken thought the forest
had never looked so good. Everywhere around him was the lush green
vegetation of towering Eucalypt trees and native shrubs, bordered by
commercial pine plantations. A stark contrast to the blackened
desolation normally left after the many bushfires that had swept through
the area in recent times.
After
a short navigational briefing, Ken and his running partner, Keith
Caldwell, set off on the first leg of the run. The sport is not unlike
rally driving, where the object is to run a pre-determined course within
a specified time, reaching and recording various check points on the
way. By early afternoon, they were deep in the forest close to one of
the most spectacular land marks of the area, "Executioners Drop." So
called because of its sheer fall into a deep, wooded gorge.
After
recording their previous control points, staggered roughly half a mile
apart, they took bearings on the next, Control Number Four, designated
by a large boulder. Approaching the boulder, Ken smelled something bad.
As he got closer the smell became more intense. He thought it was
probably a rotting animal carcass. The forest provided a home to many
wild animals. Kangaroos, wallabies and even the elusive dingo, roamed
free, virtually unhindered my human intervention.
Dismissing it from his mind, Ken concentrated on his navigational
bearings and was about to move on when Keith called to him from the far
side of the boulder, "Can you smell that?" he asked. The smell got
stronger as they approached the western side of the boulder.
Beneath a small overhang they found a mound of debris, approximately 7
feet long and 2 feet high. Stepping closer to the pile of branches and
decaying leaves, the two men, braving the smell, saw what appeared to be
a bone and a patch of hair. They weren't sure it was human until they
saw part of a black T-shirt. They both walked slowly around the mound
until they got to the northern end of it, where they stopped, staring
down at the ground, trying to comprehend what they had found. Protruding
from the pile of brush was the heel of a shoe.
By
this time it was 3.45 p.m. Soon the forest floor would be in darkness as
the sun dipped lower in the sky. They carefully marked the location on
their map, 800 feet south west of 'Long Acre Fire Trail,' one of the
many access trails in the area. A decision had to be made, back track
the way they had come in or complete the course, which would take them
out of the forest and bring them closer to their cars.
They
decided the latter choice would be quickest. Half an hour later, they
rejoined their friends and quickly related the experience. They all
agreed that the authorities should be informed as soon as possible.
Contacting Emergency Services by mobile telephone, Seily, a gentle,
softly spoken man, was asked by the operator, 'Is this an emergency?'
When he replied, 'Not really,' he was disconnected.
Several phone calls later, he was finally connected with the duty
officer at the local police station in Bowral, a pretty little town,
nestled in the Southern Highlands of New South Wales. Seily identified
himself and told the officer, "I've found a body in the Belangalo
Forest." He wasn't sure if they had taken him seriously. It wasn't long
before he saw that they had.
Uniform police arrived just as the light was beginning to fade. They
were shown the way to the sighting by torch light, marking the way with
reflective tape. Local detectives arrived soon after and requested a
crime scene unit from Goulburn, the next major town to the south.
Lighting was organized for the scene and not long after, regional
detectives from the homicide squad arrived. A call was made to the
office of detectives in Sydney's Kings Cross, as well as the Missing
Persons Bureau, as they were known to be investigating the disappearance
of several backpackers who were last seen heading south.
No
one at the scene that day realized that the body that had been found
would lead to the biggest murder investigation in Australia's history.
Nor would they know the extent of pain and suffering, that was shared by
a small group of people from different parts of the world.
The Search
Searching the area the following day, two police constables, Roger Gough
and Suzanne Roberts, found a second body. It was partially covered by a
log just 100 feet east of the first. A shoe and part of a lower leg were
visible below a mound of leaves and branches, that was roughly the same
size as the first.
Early
media reports suggested that the bodies were the remains of two British
backpackers, Caroline Clarke and Joanne Walters. They had been missing
for five months after leaving Kings Cross to travel south together
looking for work. Police were yet to make a positive identification.
In
Australia and across the world, several families hearing of the grisly
discovery, contacted the authorities for more accurate information.
In
Germany, Manfred and Anke Neugebauer listened anxiously to the news,
wondering if the bodies found were those of their son Gabor and his
girlfriend Anja who had disappeared without trace after leaving a Kings
Cross backpacker's hostel just after Christmas Day, 1991.
Herbert Schmidl, in his home in Regensburg, near Munich, listened also
hoping that neither body was that of his only daughter Simone, who had
been missing since leaving Sydney in 1991.
Several hundred miles south of Belangalo, in Frankston Victoria, Pat
Everist, wondered if it was her daughter Deborah and her friend, James
Gibson that were laying dead in the forest. They had been missing since
1989.
Late
in the afternoon of Sunday, 20th September, police confirmed that the
bodies were, in fact, those of Caroline Clarke and Joanne Walters.
Joanne's parents, Ray and Jill Walters had already been in Australia for
a month prior to the discovery, searching in vain for some trace of
their daughter. The police tracked them down in Sydney to give them the
bad news.
Police telephoned Ian and Jacquie Clarke, in England and informed them
that the second body was Caroline's. The timing of the call was indeed
fortunate. Shortly after the phone call, a local radio station carried
the story of their daughter's death.
As
the investigation proceeded it became apparent that the murders were
committed with a high degree of violence and cruelty.
Joanne Walters had been stabbed viciously in the heart and lungs with
one wound so deep that it had cut deep into her spine. Caroline Clarke
had also been stabbed and shot in the head multiple times.
Homicide detectives, Inspector Bob Godden and Sergeant Steve McClennan
were appointed to take charge of the investigation. After his initial
evaluation of the crime scene, McClennan speculated that because the
bodies had been found in an isolated area, it was possible that the
killer lived near by. Crime scene detectives worked around the clock,
analyzing and photographing every inch of the murder scene. Joanne
Walters' body still had jewelry on both hands and she was wearing blue
jeans and black shoes. Curiously the zip of the jeans was undone but the
top button was still fastened.
Fourteen feet from where Caroline Clarke's body lay, six cigarette butts
were found, they were all of the same brand. Someone had obviously spent
quite a bit of time at the scene. Not far from them, a fired .22 caliber
cartridge case was recovered and next to it a piece of green plastic the
size of a large coin.
Ballistic specialists scanned the area with metal detectors and found
nine more cartridge cases 12 feet from Clarke's body. From the ground
directly below her head three bullets were recovered. Detectives from
the Ballistics Squad were confident that, given the condition of the
bullets and the spent cases, they would be able to identify the gun that
fired them. A further 120 feet from the murder scene, a fireplace had
been built from house bricks.
A
strange thing to find deep in a forest.
Over
the next five days, forty police searched a corridor 500 feet wide and
one and a half miles long and did not find any more bodies, nor did they
find the camping gear and personal items belonging to the two girls.
Following the search, police told the media that they had virtually
ruled out the possibility of finding other bodies in the forest. It was
an announcement that would prove to be premature and cause a great deal
of embarrassment to the New South Wales Police Department.
Cause of Death
Dr.
Peter Bradhurst, the forensic pathologist assigned to the case, had the
unpleasant task of performing the autopsies. The badly decomposed
remains of the two girls had been carefully removed from the forest and
transported to the morgue in Glebe, an inner suburb of Sydney.
The
first stage of the forensic investigation was to weigh and x-ray
Joanne's body in search of bullets or other metallic objects. There were none. Caroline's body was next and the
x-rays revealed that, even though her body was decomposed to a much
greater extent than Joanne's, it clearly contained what the radiographer
described as 'radio opaque' objects. To be more precise, four bullets.
Next, Dr. Bradhurst began the external examination, methodically
checking the entire body for physical evidence. Joanne's shirt and hands
showed traces of dark hairs. The rotted remains of a cloth used as a gag
were removed from her mouth, as were other cloth samples at the throat,
suggesting strangulation. An internal examination showed no signs of
vaginal or anal penetration, but given the poor condition of the body
tissue, it was very difficult to tell. Hair and nail samples were taken
for matching with other samples found. A vaginal swab was also taken, as
sperm samples can remain in a body for weeks or even months.
Joanne's chest showed three stab wounds to the right side, one to the
left side and a further stab wound to the neck. When the body was rolled
over, the full extent of what could only be described as a 'frenzied'
attack became clear. A further two wounds were found to the left side,
five more to the right and two to the spine at the base of the neck.
Fourteen wounds in all were recorded and measured. The internal exam
revealed that five of the stab wounds had cut the spine. Dr Bradhurst
speculated that any of the spinal wounds could have been delivered prior
to the fatal blows thereby rendering the victim totally helpless.
Two
ribs had been totally severed. The hands and arms showed no "defensive
wounds," that normally occur when the victim attempts to ward off a
knife attack. This, coupled with the remains of the gag and neck
ligature, indicated that the killer was completely in control during the
murder. The wounds measured 1 1/2" by 1/4" with the profile of a Bowie
knife or similar style blade.
The
arms of Caroline Clarke's body where stretched above her head, which had
a red cloth wrapped around it. Bullet holes were clearly visible in the
decaying cloth. The cloth was carefully removed and the extent of the
injuries became evident. A total of ten bullet holes riddled the skull.
Only four exit wounds were found.
Four complete .22 caliber projectiles were recovered from inside the
skull. The front of the face and the jaw were shattered, possibly
damaged by exiting bullets. She had one single stab wound to the upper
back identical to the wounds of the first victim.
The
bullets from the body were cleaned and passed on to Sergeant Gerard
Dutton, the ballistics expert who was present at the post mortems. He
was confident that they, like the other bullets and fired cases
collected from the scene, would lead to the identity of the weapon used.
A reenactment at the scene later revealed that the gunshot wounds were
consistent with having been fired from three different directions,
however all ten fired cases were found close together. Sergeant Dutton
suggested that the killer may have stood in the one spot and fired the
shots, stopping to move the victims head between volleys. In short he
had used her for "target practice."
In
an unusual step, Professor John Hilton, the head of forensic medicine,
released details of the findings to the large group of reporters, who
had gathered outside the morgue. Not accustomed to giving media
conferences, he spoke in a faltering, hesitant voice. Even though he was
an experienced pathologist, and forensic scientist, he was obviously
disturbed by the extent of the injuries and the sheer brutality of the
attack.
Profile of a killer
Weeks after the discovery of the two bodies, Detectives Godden and
McLennan had amassed an array of physical evidence, but were no closer
to gathering any real clues as to the identity of the person responsible.
There had been several alleged sightings of the girls prior to the
discovery and even a few after the time the girls had died. The trail
was already cold when police became involved. Now it was becoming colder.
In
attempt to try to shed new light on the investigation, Dr. Rod Milton, a
forensic psychiatrist with over twenty years' crime scene experience,
was asked to consult on the case. Dr. Milton had previously aided police
in the hunt, and subsequent arrest, of John Wayne Glover, the "North
Side" serial killer, who had bashed and strangled six elderly women in
1989. The "profile" that Dr. Milton had provided to police was
incredibly accurate except for the age. Milton had suggested that the
killer would be a teenager, based on historical data which indicated the
most serious offences against aged victims were committed by persons
under twenty. His analysis, although slightly inaccurate, led to
Glover's capture. Glover was fifty-nine years of age at the time of his
arrest.
The
detectives drove Dr. Milton to Belangalo at his request. As he explained
to them, even though he had access to the detailed police reports and
photographs, he needed to view the crime scenes for himself so that he
could 'get a feel' for the way that the killer had approached his
victims. He stepped from the car and walked to the two grave sites in
turn. After wandering slowly around the area for some time, he sat
quietly in the middle of the scene and thought about why the killer had
chosen that particular site. Why did he leave the victims the way he did,
what was his motivation?
His
first thought was that the killer was familiar with the area.
From experience he knew that killers very rarely operate in unfamiliar
surroundings. This wasn't a crime of opportunity but rather a planned
murder. Walking between the two graves, he quizzed the police on the
details of the investigation. What was found and where? He pondered the
variations between the two deaths.
Caroline Clarke was killed in a cold and calculating fashion. The way
that the article of clothing had been wrapped around her head indicated
that the killer had done so to "depersonalize" her. The angle of the
shots suggested that the first bullet may have been fired while she was
kneeling. Her clothing was intact, except for her front fastening bra,
which was unclipped. The clothing on her lower body was in place at the
time of death. This indicated to Milton that her killing was not
sexually motivated but more in the style of an execution.
The
single stab wound to her body, he believed, was inflicted after death as
a final example of the killer's control over the victim, or perhaps the
work of an accomplice. In fact prior to Dr. Milton's involvement, Police
thought the murders to be the work of more than one killer. The manner
in which Miss Clarke's body was 'laid out' with the arms above the head
also suggested control and planning on the part of the killer, with the
victim 'acting out' the role of 'supplicant' after death.
In
comparison, Joanne Walter's body and burial site indicated rage and
uncontrolled frenzy. The disarray of the clothing, Milton thought,
indicated more of a sexual attack. The shirt and bra had been pushed up,
but the clasp was still fastened. The zipper of the jeans were undone
but the top button was done up. No panties were found on the body or in
the area.
Milton theorized that because the shoes were still on and laced up, the
jeans had not been taken completely off. It was more likely that they
were dragged down to enable the killer or killers, to commit a sexual
act. Before or after death. The underwear may have been cut off and
taken as a "trophy."
When asked by police for a possible motive, the basis of most homicide
investigations, Milton uttered a single word. "Pleasure." He believed
that if there were two killers involved, one would be older and dominant,
the other although equally sadistic, would tend to be more submissive.
He suggested that they could be brothers, sharing a common interest in
guns and hunting and had probably been involved in other sexually
related crimes either together or separately.
Later at his Sydney office, Dr. Milton recorded his "profile" in point
form.
The
main offender he believed would:-
*
Live on the outskirts of a city in a semi-rural area.
*
Be employed in a semi-skilled job probably out of doors.
*
Be involved in an unstable or unsatisfactory relationship
*
Have a history of homosexuality or bi-sexual activity.
*
Have a history of aggression against authority.
*
Be aged in his mid thirties.
At
no time did Dr. Milton give any indication that the deaths were the work
of a serial killer.
As
the end of the year drew closer, the investigation team dwindled in size
as the resources were redirected to other crimes. They knew that they
would need some startling piece of evidence or a stroke of luck if they
were to solve the riddle of the Belangalo killings.
One Man's Obsession
Bruce Pryor had been into the Belangalo forest many times over the years
collecting firewood. It had become a special place for him. He knew many
of the trails, yet there were still many parts of it that he had not
seen.
As
a local, he had been watching the reports of the killings with more than
a passing interest and, as a parent, he felt deeply for the families of
the girls. He couldn't clear it from his mind and during many trips to
the forest he found himself searching areas that he hadn't been to
before without knowing why.
The
official search had been called off many months before and the
investigation was almost non-existent. The last mention of the case had
been a public meeting in the Bowral Town Hall that had been organised by
police as a means of jogging the memories of local residents, as they
still believed that the killer lived close to the forest.
The
meeting mentioned other young 'backpackers' who were still unaccounted
for. For days after, the thought of more young bodies in the forest
tormented him, interrupting his work and his sleep.
He
set out one morning with no real intention of going to Belangalo but
found himself drawn to the area. He turned down a track that he had been
to before but instead of driving to the end of it as he usually did, he
turned into a small side track called the "Morice Fire Trail." He drove
down it and came to a "T" intersection. He knew the right arm led to a
track called "Cearly's Exit Fire Trail," but he had never been down the
left hand track. The track soon opened up onto a bare rocky area. To one
side of it was a small fireplace, built from bush rocks.
He
got out of his vehicle and wandered slowly around the area still not
sure of why he was there. In a clearing about 150 feet from his car, he
stopped and stared at the ground, his heart pounding in his chest. There
at his feet was a large bone. It looked human. He shook his head trying
to think clearly; maybe it was from a kangaroo. Tentatively he lifted
the bone and measured it against his own thigh; it was the same length.
One end of the bone had teeth marks on it; maybe it was an animal bone.
He lay the bone back down where he had found it and walked further ahead.
He
walked up an incline scanning the ground hoping to find the rest of a
kangaroo skeleton. At the top of the ridge, he turned and walked back to
his car but changed direction slightly, walking through an area
overgrown with weeds. A flash of white caught his eye. Parting the
tangled undergrowth, he saw a sight that raised the hair on the back of
his neck.
The
lifeless eye sockets of a human skull stared up at him. It was small,
possibly an older child or a female. Part of the lower jaw was broken
away and, as he looked closer, he saw a thin cut in the forehead. It
looked like a knife wound.
He
was unsure what to do next. Afraid that no one would believe him, he
took the skull back to his car and wrapped it in a cloth and drove out
of the forest. As he neared the entrance, he saw a vehicle near a small
hut that was used by the orienteering club. Bruce approached the hut and
spoke to John Springett, a local builder who was doing maintenance on
the hut. "Do you have a phone here?" He asked. "I have a mobile in the
truck, why what's up?" Bruce told him of his discovery. "We better call
the police." John got a phone book from the clubhouse and Bruce rang
Bowral Detectives. He got no answer. He tried the police station instead.
"I've found parts of a skeleton in Belangalo forest," he told them.
Half an hour later, two uniformed officers arrived at the hut. "What
have you got for me?" one of them asked. "It's in the car," Pryor
answered. He led them to his vehicle and unwrapped his find. The young
constable, obviously the one who had taken the call, seemed surprised
that it really was a skull. He placed a radio call to the duty
detectives, Peter Lovell and Steven Murphy, who arrived shortly after.
They asked Pryor to show them where he had found the skull.
After studying the area for a short time, Detective Murphy walked
further on. 120 feet into the forest, he stopped and looked down. He
walked back to where his partner stood talking to Bruce Pryor about the
skeleton. "There's a pair of sandshoes sticking out of a pile of brush
back there," he declared casually. They both looked warily at Pryor,
curious as to why he came to this particular location. Several radio
calls later, the search was back on.
Two More Bodies
News of the discovery of additional bodies in the forest spread quickly.
TV network helicopters hovered overhead. Reporters and film crews were
lined up at the access road trying to gain entry. They speculated as to
the identities of the latest victims. "Was it the German couple or maybe
the couple from Victoria?" they asked detectives at the scene. The
investigators said nothing. Their minds were occupied with their own
questions. Had they called off the search too early? Were they searching
the wrong areas? How many more bodies were there?
One
of the searchers found a floppy black felt hat near one of the
gravesites. The Sydney missing persons office was contacted and a review
of files indicated that it may have belonged to James Gibson, a young
Victorian who was last seen hitchhiking south of the forest in company
with a female friend, Deborah Everist, also from Victoria. They had been
missing since 1989. Police had earlier discounted Gibson as a possible
victim after his backpack and camera had been found lying beside the
road 78 miles north of Belangalo in another small forest area called "Galston
Gorge."
Police were puzzled. If one of the victims was Gibson, how did his
property get to the other side of Sydney?
Further investigation of the report indicated that when the pack and
camera had been found, they had been leaning against a guardrail, in
plain view, on the side of a busy road. Were they 'placed' there by the
killer in an attempt to divert attention from the southern forest?
Crime scene police worked into the night to complete their preliminary
investigation and left the scene under heavy police guard. The following
day, scientific officers Grosse and Goldie returned to the gravesites in
company with Dr. Bradhurst and a forensic odontologist, Dr. Chris
Griffiths. Both of the bodies were skeletons; however both were
incomplete. Several bones had been scattered across the site, possibly
by animal activity. Beside the first body, Grosse found a silver fob
chain, a bracelet set with semi precious stones and a silver crucifix.
Given the find and the smaller size of the skeleton it was presumed to
be female.
The
second skeleton was larger and still had a pair of white sneakers laced
to the feet. Dr. Griffiths examined the skull and, after cleaning dirt
from it, compared the teeth with a dental chart that had been supplied
to police earlier.
It
was a positive match. The body was that of James Gibson. Positive
identification of the second body would come later but police were
almost certain that it was Deborah Everist. The remains were carefully
removed and taken to the Sydney morgue for reconstruction and post
mortem examination. As well as the skeletons, several bags of decayed
matter from the immediate area were also taken. It was not known for
sure if they contained vegetable matter or decayed clothing or both. One
of the items from James Gibson's remains was easy to identify; it was
the complete zipper from a pair of jeans. The zip was open; the top
button still fastened.
The
following day Dr. Bradhurst began the task of reconstructing the
skeletons in anatomical order. The bones had been boiled in a special
solution to clean the skeleton and make any injuries easier to identify.
Dr.
Bradhurst began with what was left of James Gibson. The decayed matter
that accompanied his remains was sifted and found to contain several
hand and foot bones, some jewelry and buttons.
As
the remains began to take shape, the extent of the wounds became clearer.
One stab wound had penetrated the mid-thoracic spine, slicing upwards
through three vertebrae, splitting the canal holding the spinal column.
As with the previous bodies, the wound would have paralyzed the victim
first. To do so much damage to a young healthy body would have taken
great physical strength.
Two
stab wounds had punctured the breastbone, with cuts to the ribs
indicating two more wounds to the left and right sides of the front of
the chest and two more in the upper back. Seven major wounds marked the
skeleton. Many more could have penetrated the body without touching bone.
The stab wounds in the breastbone were measured; they were very close to
the size of the wounds inflicted to Walters and Clarke.
The
second smaller skeleton was in a poorer condition. Part of the jaw was
broken away. Several fractures were found at the back of the skull. Four
'slash' marks to the forehead, two on each side, were not deep enough to
have been fatal but had etched into the skull at the hairline. A further
stab wound had penetrated the lower back close to the spine.
While Bradhurst was completing his examination, crime scene analysts
were combing the gravesites for further clues. Thirty feet from the body
they found a black bra with a stab wound through one of the cups. Later
a pair of gray tights was found under leaf litter close to the female
gravesite. They had been tied with a loop at either end, possibly used
as a primitive restraint. Later that day, the female remains were
confirmed by dental charts as being those of Deborah Everist.
The Task Force
Superintendent Clive Small was deputized by Comissioner of Police Tony
Lauer to take over control of the investigation. His first task was to
combine the individual groups of detectives involved in the
investigation into one cohesive unit. Small was an experienced detective
with a reputation for being thorough, and, more importantly, objective.
He was well respected in the department and the courts for his
dedication, his ability to separate the facts from the bulk of erroneous
information and to present those facts in a meticulously detailed
fashion.
The
investigation was officially named "Task Force Air." The name was
intended to be "Eyre," named after a salt lake in the centre of
Australia, in keeping with the department's tradition of using
geographical place names. The name had been subsequently misspelled in a
press release as "air" and quickly became the official title.
Small appointed as his second in charge the equally talented and
meticulous, Detective Inspector Rod Lynch. Lynch's job was to set up and
coordinate the Sydney headquarters of the investigation while Small,
based near the forest in Bowral, would oversee the onsite investigation.
Lynch was faced with a challenge almost from the beginning. The building
that was allocated as his headquarters was a converted factory that had
once been the home of Sydney's Criminal Investigation Branch. Having
lain idle since the C.I.B. had relocated to larger premises, it was in a
bad state of repair. It had no phones, air conditioning, computers,
furniture and the plumbing was substandard.
After solving these and other logistical problems, he began recruiting
detectives for the task of following up on the many thousands of pieces
of information that had already been received. The next task was to set
up a public hot-line in cooperation with the media, which would appeal
to the general public for any information regarding the events in the
forest. From his broad experience in major investigations, Lynch knew
that this would increase his team's workload dramatically but would be
the most valuable resource of "real evidence," as opposed to the "circumstantial
evidence" that had already been collected.
Small called off the examination of the forest for several days to
enable him to view maps and surveys of the area and plan a more
expansive search of the general area. Chief Inspector Bob May from the
Tactical Support Unit was put in charge of the search team. He divided a
map of the main forest area into grids, every inch representing 750
square feet. Forty officers walked each grid side by side, examining
every inch of the forest floor. If anything of interest was found, they
would shout "find" and scientific police would come forward, take
photographs, mark the position on the map and bag any evidence found.
The
search was further enhanced by teams of dogs that had been specially
trained to detect the presence of phosphorous and nitrogen in the soil.
A decaying body will emit traces of these chemicals long after death.
The dogs had been used extensively in the United States to "sniff out"
old Civil War graves.
Meanwhile another search was under way. The bullets and shell casings
taken from the scene, having been positively identified as being from a
"Ruger" repeating rifle, were the only positive leads that could link
the killer to the scene. From their inquiries, police learned that over
50,000 such rifles had been imported into Australia between 1964 and
1982. The manufacturers provided a list of their distributors in
Australia, who in turn provided a list of the gun shops who had
purchased them. While gun shops were required by law to keep a record of
each firearm sold, there was no such legal requirement for any
subsequent "private" sales of the firearms. Police were faced with a "needle
in the haystack" scenario.
A
list of all such weapons owned by residents in the areas surrounding the
forest was drawn up with the intention of impounding the rifles for test
firings in an attempt to find a match. The plan was leaked to the press,
which infuriated investigators, as they believed that the killer, upon
hearing the news, would dump the murder weapon.
Members of the local gun club were contacted and their weapons examined.
One of the members told the detectives that a friend of his had
witnessed something suspicious in the forest the previous year. Police
later contacted the man who gave them an incredibly accurate description
of two vehicles, one a Ford sedan and the other a four-wheel drive that
he saw driving down one of the trails into the forest.
He
told them that as the first vehicle passed him, he looked in and saw a
man driving and in the back seat were two other men. Between them was a
female with a cloth tied around her head like a gag. In the second
vehicle were two men, one driving and the other sitting in the back next
to another female who was also bound. He gave police detailed
descriptions of all the occupants including clothing, coloring and
approximate ages. He stated that at the time, he had written down the
details of the numberplate of the second vehicle on a scrap of cardboard
but had since lost it. Police typed out an official statement and asked
him to read it and, if he agreed with the details, sign it. He signed
his name "Alex Milat."
How Many More?
Twenty-six days had passed since Deborah Everist's body had been found
in the forest. The searchers were tired. They had covered most of the
allotted search area and were now entering the final gridded section
three miles east of the last grave. Confidence was running high to the
point that the police public relations section were already compiling a
press release expressing the opinion that no further bodies would be
found in Belangalo Forest.
The
search team leader, Sergeant Jeff Trichter, led the searchers into a
small clearing. A pair of pink women's jeans and a length of blue and
yellow rope lay in plain view. Next to them was an empty .22 bullet
packet. The find was not unusual as a lot of strange items had been
found that were seemingly unrelated. Moving deeper into the clearing
they found more articles. Empty drink cans riddled with bullet holes, a
length of wire bent into loops, cartridge cases and empty bottles. At
the edge of the clearing, Sergeant Trichter saw something that fired
warning signals into his brain. A primitive fireplace.
Knowing that the final part of the search was going to be intensive,
Trichter decided to give his men a lunch break and spend the rest of the
day in the area. No sooner had they resumed when one of the men called 'find.'
The
line stopped and Trichter walked to the edge of the rocky outcrop where
Senior Constable Rullis stood with his arm raised. It was a bone and it
looked human. Ten feet further on at the base of a pile of timber lay a
skull. The sight was marked and the crime scene squad was summoned by
radio.
Beyond the timber lay the, now familiar, pile of sticks and brush.
Protruding from one end of it was a large bone inside a brown leather 'hiking'
boot. Searchers spread out and scoured the area around the grave but no
further remains were found. John Goldie, the senior crime scene
investigator, identified the remains as female. She appeared to be alone.
A
distinctive purple headband was found on the skull. That and the
clothing found near the body, after comparisons with missing persons
reports, indicated that the skeleton was all that remained of missing
German girl, Simone Schmidl. The other items mentioned in the report, a
large backpack and other camping equipment, were not found. Dr Chris
Griffiths, the forensic odontologist, was summoned to the scene and
shortly after he arrived with his file of dental charts, the body was
officially identified as Simone.
This young adventurous girl who her family and friends had called "Simi,"
had been last seen on January 20th, 1991, in Liverpool, west of Sydney,
hitch-hiking south. The confident and seasoned traveler who had seen
much of the world ended her days in a lonely forest thousands of miles
away from the safety and security of her home.
In
Germany, Simone's parents heard the news in the worst possible way -- on
the radio. They contacted German police for confirmation and, even
though Australian authorities had advised them of the discovery, the
German police department did not confirm the identification until more
than two weeks after Simone's remains had been flown home and buried.
The
original press release was aborted and another sent out in its place.
It
basically said that police now believed that there were more bodies in
the forest. Speculation was rife that the next bodies found would be
those of the two Germans, who were still unaccounted for.
Simone's body was found still partially dressed with her shirt and
underclothing pushed up around the neck. A pair of green shorts hung on
the pelvis with the cord ties undone. Several items of jewelry and two
coins were found next to the body. The pink jeans were not Simone's, but
matched the description of a pair worn by another German girl, Anja
Habschied. She and her boyfriend Gabor Neugebauer, had been missing
since December 1991.
Two
days later, as the search continued, the remains were transported to
Sydney for the post mortem. Dr. Bradhurst examined the almost complete
skeleton. He had no doubt that it was the work of the same killer.
There was no injury to the skull. The chest and back showed numerous
stab wounds to the left and right sides, front and back, including the "tell-tale"
knife thrusts to the spinal area, which had severed the spinal column
completely. No sooner had he completed his grisly task than he was
summoned back to the forest. The message was simple, "We've found two
more."
Dr.
Bradhurst and Dr. Griffiths were conveyed to the scene by police
helicopter and taken to the site of the new graves which lay 150 feet
apart at the very edge of the prescribed search area denoted on the map
as "Area A."
Dr.
Griffiths had in his possession the dental charts for the boy, Gabor.
The charts for his companion, Anja, had not arrived from Germany.
Gabor's remains were under a pile of brush partially covered by a large
log. It took several burly police officers to lift it away from the
grave.
Dr.
Griffiths confirmed Gabor's identity. His skeleton was complete with the
remains of decayed clothing evident, including a pair of jeans with the
zip opened and the top button fastened. The second body, although not
officially confirmed as Anja's, was that of a young female. The upper
clothing was bunched up around the shoulders and no lower clothing was
found on or near the body. The pink jeans had been found some distance
away. The female skeleton had one striking feature, the head and the
first two vertebrae were missing. No other wounds were evident.
On
closer examination Dr. Bradhurst deduced that the head had been severed
from the body cleanly by a sharp instrument, possibly a machete or sword.
The angle of the cut indicated that the victim had probably been in a
kneeling position with her head down when the cut was made. It showed
all the signs of some form of "ritual" decapitation.
The
Task Force Commander, Clive Small, gave a short media interview near the
gravesites. He told reporters that following the discovery of the new
bodies that they were now looking for a "serial killer." It came as no
surprise. The media had been reporting that opinion since the
investigation began.
Back at the morgue, Dr. Bradhurst examined Gabor's remains. The mouth
contained two gags. One that had been tied across the mouth using a
"reef" knot. The other had been placed in the mouth prior to the other
being tied. Even though Bradhurst had performed all of the autopsies, he
still retained the details of them all in his mind. One thing that
didn't escape his attention was the fact that this gag was tied with a
different knot. The last gag used, the one on Joanne Walter's body, had
been tied in a simple overhand, or "granny" knot.
The
size of the cloth in the mouth cavity made strangulation very likely.
Supportive to this theory was the fractured hyoid bone in the throat,
which is usually an indication of manual strangulation. The jaw was
fractured in several places. The skull showed six bullet entry wounds,
three from the left rear and the others from the lower rear. One exit
wound was found on the right side. Gerald Dutton the ballistics
investigator on the case, was present when the examination of the skull
took place. Four bullets were recovered from inside the skull. A fifth
bullet was recovered from the bones of the upper body.
Dutton had found no fired cases near the body and the angle and
alignment of the entry wounds versus the exit wounds indicated that
seven bullets had been fired into the skull. When found, the skull had
been laying on its side but, after searching the soil under the grave,
no spent bullets were recovered. Gabor had not been killed at the
gravesite. Later, several fired bullets and empty cartridge packets
would be found near the new graves. Over ninety fired cases were found
scattered around the area. After examination under a comparison
microscope, the cases and bullets were positively identified as the same
as those found at the Walter's site.
The
ballistic evidence showed conclusively that the same weapon that
murdered Joanne Walters had been used only 200 feet from Anja and
Gabor's remains. Dr. Bradhurst completed the examination of Anja's
skeleton and found no other evidence of additional wounds.
Most horrifying was the fact that the seven had died in various ways.
They had been either beaten, strangled, shot, stabbed and decapitated
and almost certainly sexually molested in some way, male and female
alike. Given the extent of the injuries and the various methods used to
inflict them, the investigation team deduced that the killer, or killers
spent more time with each victim as the crimes progressed. This fact
indicated that, apart from being cruel and sadistic, the perpetrator was
a calculating and confident individual.
The Sole Survivor
Paul Onions had arrived in Australia eager to see the country about
which he'd heard so much. He stayed at a modest backpacker hostel in
Sydney's Kings Cross, spending his time seeing the sights and generally
having a good time partying with friends. As his money dwindled, his
thoughts turned to part time work. His visa was good for six months but
his money looked like it was running out before that time expired. He
asked around the city but found casual work hard to come by.
One
of his friends suggested fruit picking. After making further inquiries,
he learned that most of the work on offer was in the 'Riverina' district,
several hundred miles to the south. He decided to save the cost of the
fare by taking the train to Liverpool, south west of Sydney and
hitchhiking from there. On 25th January 1990, he set out early for the
station and was soon standing on the side of the Hume highway in
Liverpool waiting for a ride.
The
heat was searing as he stood trying to flag down a suitable southbound
vehicle. His only possessions were a small pack containing a Sony
Walkman, a camera and several items of clothing. He walked south trying
desperately to thumb a ride. Stopping at a small shopping centre, he
bought a drink and was seriously contemplating returning to the hostel
when a fit, well-muscled man approached him and asked, in a distinctive
Australian accent, "You need a lift?"
Paul told him his destination and accepted his offer of a ride gladly.
The two men climbed into the stranger's four-wheel-drive vehicle and
headed south. The first thing Paul noticed about the man, apart from his
muscular build, was his long "Zapata" styled moustache. They talked for
a while and Paul introduced himself and the man told him his name was "Bill."
Paul's new found friend was full of questions:
"Where
you from?"
"When
are you due back?"
"Who
knows you're here?"
"What's
your occupation?"
So
many questions but "Bill" seemed friendly enough so Paul answered them.
"Bill" told Paul that he worked on the roads, was from a Yugoslavian
family, lived near Liverpool and was divorced. They drove for an hour
and "Bill's" demeanor began to change. His language became more
aggressive and critical. He became agitated and launched into a racist
tirade about "gooks" and "pommies" and shortly after became morose and
refused to talk.
By
mid afternoon after leaving the southern town of Mittagong, Paul noticed
that "Bill" was acting strangely, varying his speed and looking in the
rear view mirror every few seconds. Paul, feeling tired and drained from
the trip, began to feel uneasy. "Bill" leaned forward adjusting the
radio and said, "I think I'll pull over and get some tapes from the
back." As they pulled up on the side of the freeway, Paul looked down
and noticed a tray full of tape cassettes in the front console between
the seats.
As
"Bill" got out, Paul decided to get out as well. "Get back in the car,"
"Bill" told him, his voice full of menace. Not wanting to alarm him any
further, Paul complied. As soon as they got back in the car "Bill"
reached under the driver's seat, pulled out a large black revolver and
pointed it at Paul.
"This is a robbery," he said. Again he reached under the seat and
produced a coil of rope. Paul, highly alarmed, tried to reason with
"Bill."
"What's going on? What are you doing?" he asked.
He
was told in a firm but controlled manner, "Shut up and put your seat
belt back on." Paul, scared out of his wits, started to obey but instead
grabbed for the door handle and leapt to the ground. Paul ran away from
the car hearing the words, "Stop or I'll shoot," from behind him.
Panicking, he ran into the oncoming traffic causing cars to swerve
alarmingly trying to avoid this "madman" on the road. Briefly he looked
back expecting to see "Bill" chasing him. Instead, he saw him standing
casually by his vehicle grinning. "Get back here, you," he called. Paul
managed to flag down a van. As it slowed, he ran to the grass dividing
strip in the middle of the highway. "Bill" lunged at him from behind,
tackling him to the ground. Paul managed to break free and ran to the
van and threw himself in front of it. The driver, Joanne Berry, a local
resident, slammed on the brakes and before she could protest Paul leapt
inside the van screaming, "He's got a gun, help me!"
Joanne, against her better judgement, drove away. In the car were her
sister and four children. She feared for their safety and was about to
ask him to get out. She looked into his face and seeing his look of
terror, decided to take him to the nearest police station which was in
the opposite direction. As she turned the van around, she noticed the
other man running back to his car. He looked like he was carrying
something. Anxious to put some distance between them, she accelerated
rapidly.
When they reached Mittagong police station, it was closed. They drove on
to the next town, Bowral. Paul related his story to Constable Janet
Nicholson at the front desk, describing his attacker, the vehicle and
the pack he had left behind. He detailed its contents including his
passport and return ticket to England. After filling out a detailed
report, Constable Nicholson circulated the man's description and the
details of his vehicle via radio and advised Paul to return to the
hostel. He explained his financial predicament and was given twenty
dollars. She explained to him that without a registration number they
had very little chance of locating the suspect vehicle. He went to the
British High Commission when he returned to Sydney, to replace his
passport and to borrow additional funds. He got the passport, but no
cash. A woman waiting behind him felt sorry for him and gave him twenty
dollars. He was amazed at her generosity.
Weeks later, after deciding to stay in Australia, he found a well paying
job. His girlfriend arrived from England shortly after and they traveled
around the north of Australia for a few weeks, then left for home. After
arriving home, Paul attempted to settle back into a normal life but over
the next year had trouble sleeping and developed a string of mysterious
illnesses.
Several years later, Paul learned of the discovery of the bodies near
where he was attacked. The thought chilled him to the bone as he relived
the incident in his mind.
Back in Australia, the investigation was still dragging on. Over two
hundred police still searched the forest. At the task force
headquarters, thousands of calls regarding the events in Belangalo
poured in every week. Two such calls in particular were interesting. One
was from a woman who claimed her boyfriend worked with a man who she
thought should be checked out. He owned a property near the forest,
drove a four-wheel-drive and owned a lot of guns. His name was Ivan
Milat.
The
second call was from Joanne Berry who described the time that she had
picked up Paul Onions after his attack. These, like the other calls, had
to be recorded and entered onto an extensive computer database, which
was becoming increasingly overloaded. In short, they were buried under
the weight of the many crank calls and alleged sightings.
Paul Onions called the Australian High Commission and was given the
'hotline' number of the task force. On 13th November 1993, he told the
officer who answered the telephone the details of his attack in 1990 and
was asked why he hadn't reported it then. When he replied that he had,
he expected the officer to ask him where and when and the name of the
officer he spoke to. Instead he was thanked for the information and the
call was terminated. When he didn't hear any word weeks later he decided
that his report was of no value and did his best to clear his mind of
it.
The
official search of the forest was suspended on the 17th November 1993.
No
more bodies or additional evidence had been found.
Overload
By
December 1993, it was apparent that although an enormous amount of
information had been compiled, the investigation wasn't progressing at
an acceptable rate. Ten thousand "running sheets" had been assembled,
mostly by hand. Of the thousands of calls received over the "hotline,"
police had produced a list of two thousand "persons of interest" that
callers had suggested may have committed the crimes or had some
knowledge of them.
The
sheer volume of data overloaded the computer system. The program called
T.I.M.S. (Task Force Information Management System) was made up of
multiple databases that stored the information in various subject areas.
However, it was unable to cross-reference more than a single inquiry
because the system had not been designed to handle the volume and
complexities involved in an investigation of such magnitude.
The
decision was taken to introduce a new program, which would be more
powerful and flexible enough to handle the task. This meant long weeks
of data entry and compilation, which meant all data received in the mean
time would have to be processed by hand. Detective Senior Constable
Gagan, the senior analyst for the Task Force, assembled his team and
began the long grueling process. Every file had to be read, assessed and
set aside to be entered into an appropriate section of the data base at
a later time.
One
such file came to the attention of the analysis team because of the
unusual surname of the person involved. The name was Onions, Paul Onions.
They read the report and added it to the "lead" file for further
attention. Several weeks later a similar report came to light. It was
Joanne Berry's statement regarding the Onions incident. It, too, was
filed for further attention.
Early in the New Year, thirty-seven detectives were working full time on
the investigation, the main focus was tracking down the suspect firearm
and ammunition used in the offences. Two of the new detectives assigned
to the case, Senior Constables Gordon and McCluskey, were given the job
of following up on a file that contained three separate leads. Gordon
looked at the name on the file folder. "Milat."
Lynne Butler and Paul Douglas were interviewed and confirmed their
earlier statements. The third lead was from the woman whose boyfriend
had worked with Ivan Milat but as she hadn't given her name, Douglas
decided to go to the company in question, "Readymix" and ask about Milat.
Richard and Ivan Milat had both worked there at one time. They learned
that Ivan had been a hard worker and was highly respected. Richard, on
the other hand, was remembered as being crazy and unpredictable.
Time sheets were requested for both men but when matched up later with
the approximate times and dates of the offences, Richard was found to
have been working on every occasion. However, his brother Ivan had been
away from work when each of the murders had taken place. Gordon felt
that Milat was fast becoming the prime suspect but when he raised the
subject with his superiors he was told, "Get more evidence."
Gordon searched criminal records and found that Ivan Milat had been
found guilty of committing various offences and had served several years
in prison. None of the offences indicated that he was a potential serial
killer. After digging further through the archives, he found something
that really aroused his suspicion. In 1971, Ivan had picked up two girls
hitch hiking from Liverpool to Melbourne and had allegedly raped one of
them. Both girls testified that he was armed with a large knife and
carried a length of rope. He was later acquitted when the prosecution
case was dismissed as unproven.
Gordon and McCluskey again went to their superiors to request phone taps
on Milat's house and to have listening devices installed in his car.
Clive Small refused. Gordon was not impressed. Small had made the
correct decision. The law was very firm on the subject of electronic
surveillance. It was only to be used when all other methods of acquiring
evidence had been exhausted. He also knew, from long experience, that
although one suspect stood out, to build a strong case they would have
to investigate and eliminate any other suspects.
Several days later he assigned four detectives, including Gordon and
McCluskey, to work full time following up the "Milat" leads and also
arranged for a surveillance team, known as the '"Dog Squad," to follow
Milat and watch his house. The "Milat" team began the exhaustive task of
interviewing, checking and crosschecking statements and amassing
evidence. It was a task that would occupy them several months. For
Detective Gordon it was a frustrating time but he was still quietly
confident that they were close to their man.
Think Tank
To
strengthen his investigation team, Superintendent Small began to
assemble a team of experts to examine the motives and "state of mind" of
the type of person that would have committed these hideous crimes.
Knowing that the end result of the long and protracted saga, that the
case had become, would be a trial of epic proportions, Small wanted the
opinions of several experienced professionals to further enhance and
support the weight of evidence.
The
police psychiatrist, Dr. Rod Milton was essential to the proceedings.
Since the beginning of the case, he had studied and reviewed every shred
of information as it came to hand. He watched carefully as his original
profile began to take realistic shape.
Small's second choice was Dr. Richard Basham, the Dean of Anthropology
at Sydney University. Basham, an American, had assisted police
previously with investigations of Asian crime in Australia. His forte
was psychological anthropology but he was well versed in experimental
and clinical psychology. Milton and Basham were wary of each other at
first, but came to respect each other's abilities very quickly. Another
member was Bob young, a trained sociologist and computer analyst. His
expertise was in research methods and was very experienced in the
handling of large amounts of data.
Small still believed that the killer lived somewhere in the southern
highlands, the region that incorporated Belangalo. His plan was to
organize a "door to door" survey of the entire area, in search of the
murder weapon. The panel disagreed. They reasoned that police resources
were stretched to the limit as it was. Most of them felt, particularly
Basham, that the person and or weapons that they sought was mentioned
somewhere in the mountain of information that had already been received.
As
the group reviewed some of the files, one particular statement (Alex
Milat's) was mentioned. Small told them of the depth of detail it
contained and suggested that the person who gave it must possess a "photographic"
memory. Basham suggested that to retain such detail could also mean that
he might have been part of the events that he had recalled so well. It
was an interesting theory. Basham also was of the opinion that more than
one person was involved, probably a brother. When part of the ballistic
evidence was presented, the panel discussed the scratches that were
found on some of the spent projectiles, possibly caused by a crude
silencer.
"Well,
a silencer could mean that this man is living in a fantasy world,"
Basham said. "He probably owns a motorcycle too. He considers himself an
outlaw."
Milton agreed. He went back to the "brothers" theory. "We could be
looking for a group of brothers who spend their time in the forests
shooting cans and wounding animals and generally "showing off with each
other."
Small's ears pricked up. "We have a family just like that on file," he
said.
"Well watch them closely," Basham replied, "One or more of them could be
who you are looking for."
The
discussion turned to the probable location of the killer. Milton
suggested that the killer might not live in the immediate vicinity but
may visit the area regularly and could even own or rent a property near
by. After studying maps, they deduced that the killer would most
probably live in an area to the North, close to the Hume highway. The
fact that all of the victims had, at some stage, been seen at or near
Liverpool and their bodies found in Belangalo forest strengthened that
theory.
The
members of the panel were unaware of the interest the police were taking
in the Milat family, in fact their name hadn't been mentioned during the
briefing. Small knew that they still had a long way to go to build a
case but couldn't help thinking how closely the Milat family matched the
theories.
Closing In
The
painstaking search for supportive evidence continued through to March
1994. The "Milat" team obtained records of all premises and vehicles
that the Milats had owned in the past. They found that three of the
Milat brothers owned a small property on the "Wombeyan Caves" road,
twenty five miles from Belangalo. In addition, one vehicle found was a
silver "Nissan Patrol" four-wheel-drive that had been owned by Ivan
Milat.
The
new owner was interviewed and showed police a bullet that he had found
under the driver's seat. It was .22 caliber and was later analyzed and
found to be consistent with the empty boxes found in "Area A" and
cartridge cases found at the Clarke and Walters gravesites. Milat had
sold the vehicle two months after the bodies of the two English girls
had been discovered.
Detective Gordon and his team were uncovering numerous pieces of
evidence but still needed something to tie it all together. Additional
evidence that would put Ivan Milat and his vehicle in the area at the
time of the offences. They tried using the "new" computer database in
the hope of finding the match that they were looking for, but after
entering keywords such as "silver four-wheel-drive," "Liverpool," and "hitchhiker,"
no matches were found. The system was better than the previous one but
was still not capable of providing the information that was required.
They began the unenviable task of sorting through the boxes of reports
by hand, some still not entered into the database. The job took weeks.
Finally on 13th April, Gordon found the note regarding Paul Onions' call
to the hotline five months earlier. He read the report describing the
events of January 1990 and as he read he realized that if this man was a
credible witness, his testimony could give them the link that they were
looking for. Onions' statement described the vehicle, the area where the
attack was committed, and the driver. Gordon took his newfound evidence
directly to Superintendent Small.
Small was furious, how had such an important piece of evidence been
overlooked? He immediately called for the original report from Bowral
police but it was missing from their files. Fortunately, Constable
Nicholson had taken a full report in her notebook, which provided more
details than the original statement. Knowing that Richard and Ivan Milat
were similar in appearance, police checked the two men's work records
and confirmed with their employers that Richard had been working on the
day of the attack but Ivan had not.
In
addition, while checking Ivan's work records they found that he had been
working in the "Galston Gorge" area at the time when James Gibson's pack
had been found. Several of Ivan's work mates were interviewed and told
of his interest in guns. One friend of Ivan's, Tony Sara, told police
that Milat had owned a motorcycle and a four-wheel-drive Nissan and kept
an "arsenal" of guns at his house. He told them the story of the time he
and Ivan were on the way to a job and drove past the Belangalo Forest.
"You wouldn't believe what's in there," Ivan had said, but when Sara
pressed him for details, Ivan just smiled and said nothing more.
At
the end of April, Paul Onions received an important telephone call from
Australia. Detective Stuart Wilkins told him that he was an important
witness in the "backpacker" case and could he fly to Sydney as soon as
possible? He was totally confused. From the beginning he had felt that
the Australian police had no real interest in him or his story. Now all
of a sudden, he was their "star' witness." What had taken them so long?
A
week later, he was being driven out of Sydney towards Liverpool by
police who wanted him to "get his bearings," before they interviewed him
further. As they drove through Liverpool, he pointed out the small shop
where he had met "Bill." The shop, a newsagency, was called Lombardo's.
After they had driven further south on the expressway, Onions told them,
"This is wrong. We went through a town."
"You must be mistaken," they answered. "There's no towns on this road."
Police later discovered that at the time of the attack on Onions,
January 1990, the expressway had not been completed and the Hume Highway
had originally gone through the centre of Mittagong.
As
they approached the attack site Onions began to feel uneasy. He detailed
the conversation, his voice trembling as he spoke about the tapes, the
gun and the rope. He pointed out approximately where he had escaped. It
was less than a mile from the entrance to the forest.
The
next day he was shown a video "line up" of a group of suspects. For
purposes of identification, each image was individually numbered one to
thirteen. Onions was left alone to view the images as many times as he
liked. He was told to take his time. He felt strange. Four years had
passed since the attack and here he was looking for the man who did it.
He looked through the tape again and again. Two images seemed to stand
out, numbers four and seven. He kept looking.
A
short time later, he called the detectives and pointed to the single
image on the screen, "That's him, number four."
"Are you sure?"
He
was spooked by their question. "I better take another look."
He
ran through the tape several times more and finally declared, "Yes I'm
sure. The man who attacked me is number four."
Paul Onions had positively identified Ivan Milat.
Small was immediately informed and, after consultation with Lynch, he
made his decision. They now had sufficient evidence to arrest Ivan Milat
for the assault on Paul Onions. As well as the arrest warrant, they
applied for search warrants of Ivan Milat's home in Eaglevale, a suburb
just off the Hume highway and a few short miles from Liverpool. On the
premise that Ivan hadn't acted alone, police also applied for search
warrants to search the houses of Ivan's mother and his brothers,
Richard, Walter and Bill. The property near the forest was also to be
searched, as was the home of Alex Milat, who had moved to a town called
Woombye, which was located several hours drive north near Brisbane,
Queensland.
All
warrants were granted.
The Raids
The
logistics of organizing multiple raids across two states were daunting.
Over three hundred police would be involved. To maintain secrecy most of
them would not be informed of the location and timing of the raids until
just before the event. The raid on Ivan's house was code named "Air-1."
As
Ivan Milat's hours of work were erratic, it was decided to raid his
house at 6:30 a.m. on 22nd May 1994, a Sunday. Fifty police, including
members of the heavily armed "State Protection Group," general duties
officers and police negotiators, were assembled at 2 a.m. at
Campbelltown police station. Campbelltown was halfway between Liverpool
and Ivan's house.
Present at the early morning briefing, besides Small and Lynch, was Dr
Rod Milton. He briefed the chief negotiator, Wayne Gordon, on how best
to approach Ivan, who was to be contacted by telephone after the
premises had been surrounded. Milton suggested that Gordon use a firm
and authoritative tone, as he believed that Milat would try to take
control of the situation. Surveillance police had reported that Ivan's
girlfriend, Chalinder Hughes, was also in the house. The plan was to
calmly ask them to come out of the house, affect the arrest and search
the premises.
At
precisely 6:36 a.m., the team was in place. Detective Gordon dialed
Ivan's number. A male voice answered. When asked if he was Ivan Milat,
he answered, "No." Gordon confirmed the address. It was correct. Gordon
then introduced himself and advised Ivan that police were stationed
around the property, were in possession of a search warrant, intended to
gain entry and search the premises in relation to an armed assault. He
advised Milat to come out with his girlfriend and surrender to police.
Ivan mumbled something and hung up.
After several minutes, nothing had happened. Mindful of the guns that
Milat was known to possess, police were reluctant to storm the house.
The presence of his girlfriend was also a prohibitive factor. Gordon
again dialed the number and spoke to Milat a second time. When Gordon
asked him why he hadn't come out as requested Ivan replied that he
thought it was a joke. Gordon convinced him that it was no joke.
Several minutes later, the front door of number 22 Cinnabar Street,
Eaglevale opened and Ivan Milat and Chalinder Hughes stepped onto the
front lawn and were taken into custody by two members of the State
protection group. Several more of the group entered the house and
"swept" the house for other occupants.
After the premises were secured, the search began. Ivan was handcuffed
and advised of his rights. He was also advised that he was to be
questioned in relation to seven bodies that had been recovered from the
Belangalo state forest. In reply Milat said, 'I don't know what you are
talking about.' The "specialist" search team was comprised of Gerald
Dutton, the ballistics expert, Andy Grosse, the senior crime scene
investigator and two other detectives. They began a methodical search of
the four-bedroom house.
At
the other premises, the additional raids had gone smoothly. Police were
beginning to search each of the homes at virtually the same time.
Damning Evidence
The
first item found in Ivan's house was a postcard. He was asked who it was
from. He replied that it was from a friend in New Zealand. It began with
the words, "Hi Bill." Ivan was asked if he was also known as "Bill." He
replied, "No, it must have been a mistake." When a bullet was found in
one of the bedrooms, police asked Ivan if he owned any firearms. He said
that he didn't. When asked about the bullet, he said it was left from
when he went shooting with his brother. The rooms were searched one at a
time. In the second bedroom, two sleeping bags were found in a wardrobe.
They were later identified as belonging to Simone Schmidl and Deborah
Everist.
In
one of the other bedrooms, a bag was found containing several personal
items that indicated that it was Ivan's workbag. He confirmed that fact
to police. Also in the bag was a Bowie-style knife, 12 inches long. In
the same bedroom was a technical manual for the road-making machine that
Ivan operated at work. Inside it was a small book that sparked Dutton's
interest. It was an owner's instruction manual for a Ruger .22 caliber
rifle. Ivan refused to comment on the find.
A
photo album contained a photograph of a Harley Davidson motorcycle and a
holster. In the holster was what looked to Dutton like a Colt .45
handgun. It was the type that Onions had described. A box of .45
ammunition was later found in Ivan's bedroom. One other framed
photograph showed Chalinder Hughes wearing a striped Benneton top. It
was identical to a top that Caroline Clarke owned.
The
garage, which was attached to the house, was next. On a rack of portable
shelving against a wall, a nylon sleeping bag cover was found. It
contained a rolled tent. Wrapped around the tent was a purple headband
identical to the one found around Simone Schmidl's skull. Also in the
bag was a homemade silencer. When Milat was taken into the garage and
asked about the bag, he stated that he had never seen it before.
The
ceiling of the garage had a "man-hole" which opened into the roof cavity.
One team member climbed a ladder to search it. Nothing was found until
the insulation material was removed. Tucked inside one of the wall
cavities was a plastic bag. It contained what looked like gun parts.
Dutton was summoned and identified the parts as being a complete breech
block assembly, a trigger and a magazine. All were from a Ruger .22
rifle. Another object was below it in the cavity but was beyond reach.
Finally, after unsuccessfully trying to retrieve it, police resorted to
cutting a hole in the adjoining wall and found that it was the rotary
magazine from the same weapon.
Milat was taken from the house and conveyed to Campbelltown police
station where he was questioned. The entire interview was recorded on
both video and audio tape. During the interview, Milat was evasive and
uncooperative. The interview finished an hour later and Ivan was then
charged with the robbery and attempted murder of Paul Onions.
Back at his house, police had found electrical tape, cable ties and a
bag of yellow and blue ropes similar to those found at the crime scenes.
After searching more thoroughly inside a bedroom wardrobe, another part
of the Ruger rifle was found hidden inside a leather work boot.
More camping and cooking equipment was found in the kitchen pantry,
belonged to Simone Schmidl. The police had hoped that they would find
some evidence linking Milat to the murders, but were completely
unprepared for the amount of property that was found.
As
the search progressed, more items came to light: a camera, which proved
to be Caroline Clarke's and a water canteen which had a scratched area
on it as though a mark had been erased. Later, subjected to light
analysis, the name "Simi" could be clearly seen. A fully loaded Browning
automatic pistol was found wedged under the washing machine.
At
the other locations, more evidence was found. Rifles, shotguns, knives,
crossbows and an incredible amount of ammunition. Nearly all the camping
gear belonging to the victims was found in the raids. The most
disturbing find of all was unearthed in a locked cupboard in the house
of Margaret Milat, Ivan's mother. A long curved cavalry sword.
Gerald Dutton, the ballistics expert, had been working on the case since
the first fired cases and bullets had been recovered from the forest. He
worked long hours examining all the ballistic evidence and was
eventually rewarded for his diligence. The fired cases and several of
the bullets matched the Ruger .22 rifle that was found in Ivan Milat's
home.
Ivan Robert Marko Milat was charged with the murders of the seven
backpackers and was committed to stand trial. At a bail hearing, several
weeks after the arrest, Ivan dismissed his lawyer after being advised by
his counsel to plead guilty. Ironically it was the same lawyer that had
won him an acquittal during the 1971 alleged rape trial. The trial was
set down for June 1995. But Ivan Milat did not stand trial in June. In
fact it was almost a year before the case came to court. It was delayed
while Milat's lawyers argued with the state's Legal Aid office over
their rate of pay. Eventually they accepted the original offer and were
ready to go to trial.
The Trial
Ivan Milat sat passively in the courtroom as the jury filed in for the
first day of the biggest murder trial in Australia's criminal history.
The presiding judge, Justice David Hunt, asked the crown prosecutor to
begin. Mark Tedeschi QC (Queens Counsel) made a brief opening statement
during which he told the jury that Ivan Milat would be proven guilty of
seven cruel murders, whether he had accomplices or not. He wasted no
time in calling his first witness, Paul Onions.
Milat stared at him as he took the witness stand, the hint of a faint
smile on his lips. Onions positively identified Milat as the person who
attacked him. Tedeschi led him through his evidence and Onions waited
for Milat's defense counsel, Terry Martin, to attack his testimony
during cross-examination. The attack did not come. A few points of
identification were challenged, but not the scrutiny that he was
expecting.
After Onions stepped down, the parents of each of the victims were
called to the stand one at a time. The courtroom was hushed as they
spoke about the last time they seen their children alive. Some
suppressed sobs and others struggled to control the seething anger that
they felt when they looked into the eyes of the "monster" that stood
accused of murdering their children.
The
list continued as the evidence was presented: 356 exhibits and hundreds
of photographs all had to be explained in detail. The days crawled by in
the hot and stuffy courtroom as each witness was called. The public
galleries were full every day. Members of the media from all over the
world jostled for position in the crowded press gallery, knowing that
the case was big news.
When the T-shirt that Joanne Walters last wore was displayed, bearing
numerous cuts, front and back, the courtroom fell silent. So too when Dr
Bradhurst took the stand to describe the injuries inflicted on each of
the victims. The most dramatic moment was when he was shown the sword
found at Ivan's house. He suggested that it was very likely the type of
weapon used to decapitate Anja Habschied.
The
enormous weight of evidence and the long list of witnesses took weeks to
present. Gradually, during cross-examination of the prosecution
witnesses, the defense tactics unfolded. They were determined to
convince the jury that Ivan was not responsible for the murders but
instead implied that his brothers, Richard and Walter, committed the
crimes and implicated him by "planting" the evidence at his house.
Twelve weeks and 145 witnesses later, the prosecution completed its
presentation of a strong case.
The
first witness called by the defense was Ivan Milat. Martin led him
through the accusations that had been made. His defense was simple: he
denied everything. During cross-examination, Tedeschi proved merciless.
He
pursued Milat on every point. When asked how he came to be in possession
of the property belonging to the victims he answered, "Someone's trying
to make me look bad."
He
faltered after Tedeschi reminded him that the gun parts that he said
were put in his home by someone else, were painted in camouflage colors
in the same fashion as his other hunting equipment. Tedeschi pointed out
that it was an amazing coincidence, considering that Milat had already
admitted that the paints used were in fact his. On the sixty-fourth day
of informed and the juror excused from further proceedings.
In
the trial's fifteenth week, after all the evidence has been presented
and argued against, the final summations begin. Tedeschi told the jury
of Ivan Milat's arrogance in believing that he would get away with the
attack on Onions and the abduction and murder of seven young people --
an arrogance that prevented him from disposing of the property belonging
to his victims. His address ran for three days as he spelled out the
many pertinent facts that indicated that Ivan Milat was the killer, none
of which had been suitably explained by his defense.
Martin began his summing up by telling the jury that obviously someone
in the Milat family was responsible for the murders, but not his client.
He tried to explain away the damning evidence as a conspiracy against
Ivan by his own brothers. He began to narrow down his attack, suggesting
that Richard made the comments about the murders to his friends at work
and "may" have been in a position to commit all eight crimes, even
though he was at work at the times of the offences. He ended his
comments in the same vein: his client Ivan Milat had been set up.
Justice Hunt took two days to summarize the evidence for the jury. At
2:42 p.m. on the 24th July, he sent the jury out to consider their
verdict. Three days passed, still no verdict. Meanwhile the Milat family,
confident of an acquittal, made plans for a celebratory dinner. A
strange ritual considering Ivan's defense was based on the implication
of members of his own family.
On
Saturday, 27th July 1995, the remaining jurors filed into the courtroom
to deliver their verdict. Justice Hunt asked Ivan to stand as the by the
jury foreman read the verdicts. As each of the eight charges were read
the verdict was the same. Guilty. Ivan Milat was asked if he had
anything to say.
He
replied, "I'm not guilty of it. That's all I have to say."
The
sentences were then handed down. For the attack on Paul Onions, six
years' imprisonment. For the remaining seven counts of willful murder, a
life sentence for each. Ivan Milat was sentenced to prison "for the term
of his natural life."
Epilogue
On
the Sunday following his conviction, Ivan was transported to a maximum-security
prison in Maitland, south west of Sydney. After the normal prison
induction of showers and the issue of bedding, Milat was "welcomed" to
the jail in a manner that he could not have expected. While waiting in
line to be assigned to a cell, he was approached by a tall, well-built
inmate and punched to the ground.
Despite his bad start, Ivan settled into prison life in a cell in A wing.
Several months later, on the 17th July, he was involved in a foiled
escape attempt that was masterminded by George Savvas, a former city
councilman who was serving time for drug trafficking. Ironically, Ivan
was immediately transferred to the high security wing of Goulburn jail,
only a few short miles from Belangalo Forest.
The
next day Savvas was found hanged in his cell. To this date, Ivan Milat
has not been charged for his part in the escape attempt.
As
a follow up to the Milat story, several reporters approached members of
Ivan's family for interviews. Some of them refused; others demanded
money.
Richard Milat, when asked by the press if he feared he would be arrested
in relation to the murders, replied, "not really, if they wanted me
they'd have me by now." Margaret, Ivan's mother, was shocked by the
sentence handed down on her son, but told reporters, "if he did these
crimes then he deserves to be punished."
Other reporters tracked Ivan's brother Boris down to a secret location,
where he was supposedly "hiding" from his family. When asked if he
thought that Ivan was innocent, he answered, "all my brothers are
capable of extreme violence, given the right time and place individually.
"He continued, "the things I can tell you are much worse than what
Ivan's meant to have done. Everywhere he's worked, people have
disappeared, I know where he's been.'
He
then asked the reporters if they thought Ivan was guilty, they replied
that they did. "If Ivan's done these murders," he told them, "I reckon
he's done a hell of a lot more."
"How many?" they asked.
His
reply was disturbing. "About twenty eight."
Ivan Milat to this day continues to profess his innocence. He has formed
a support group that lobbies the government for his release.
Ivan Milat was moved to solitary confinement after prison officers found
a hacksaw blade hidden in his cell. The searchers, using a metal
detector, found the blade inside a packet of biscuits. At the time of
the routine search, Milat was already segregated from other prisoners in
the maximum-security wing of Goulburn jail. He has indicated that he
will attempt escape at every opportunity.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Several books have been written on Ivan Milat and the "Backpacker"
murders. Two of them, Sins of the Brother by Mark Whittaker and Les
Kennedy (Pan Macmillian Australia, 1998) , and Fate by Neil Mercer (
Random House Australia, 1997), were used as reference for this story.
You
can order the book Sins of the Brother directly from the Australian
Online Bookshop
Several newspapers including The Sydney Morning Herald and the
Australian also provided extensive coverage of the case.