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Bowraville murders: NSW police commissioner applies for retrial Bowraville relatives welcome retrial application, but 'don't want to get hopes up'
(about 2 hours later)
The NSW police commissioner has applied for the retrial of a man acquitted of murdering two of three Aboriginal children who went missing 26 years ago. The brother of one of three Aboriginal children murdered in the same town 26 years ago said he is trying not to get his hopes up after the NSW police commissioner applied for a retrial of a man acquitted of killingtwo of the three children.
The children – four-year-old Evelyn Greenup and 16-year-olds Colleen Walker and Clinton Speedy-Duroux – disappeared from Bowraville on the NSW mid-north coast within five months during 1990 and 1991.The children – four-year-old Evelyn Greenup and 16-year-olds Colleen Walker and Clinton Speedy-Duroux – disappeared from Bowraville on the NSW mid-north coast within five months during 1990 and 1991.
In separate trials local man Jay Hart was found not guilty of murdering Clinton and Evelyn, whose bodies were found in bushland on the outskirts of town, but the commissioner, Andrew Scipione, has sent a submission to attorney general Gabrielle Upton calling for Hart’s retrial, a police spokeswoman confirmed on Tuesday. In separate trials a local man, Jay Thomas Hart, was found not guilty of murdering Clinton and Evelyn, whose bodies were found in bushland on the outskirts of town, but the commissioner, Andrew Scipione, has sent a submission to the attorney general, Gabrielle Upton, calling for Hart’s retrial, a police spokeswoman confirmed on Tuesday.
Colleen’s clothing was pulled from a nearby river but her body has never been found.Colleen’s clothing was pulled from a nearby river but her body has never been found.
In an 18-volume brief of evidence, Scipione’s submission reportedly alleges Hart is linked to all three killings and details new evidence unearthed in a fresh investigation by detective chief inspector Gary Jubelin. Lucas Craig was eight when his sister Colleen disappeared. He was pleased police had made the referral, but was not confident it would result in a trial. The application has been rejected twice in recent years.
“We just don’t want to get our hopes up so soon because we have been let down so many times,” Craig told Guardian Australia.
“Seeing what they say put into action is when we will probably start feeling better about it. It’s just you get your hopes up all the time and then get let down; you just kind of give up on the words that they say. It’s like they just say it to make themselves look good.”
In an 18-volume brief of evidence, Scipione’s submission reportedly alleges Hart is linked to all three killings and details new evidence unearthed in a fresh investigation by DCI Gary Jubelin.
The new evidence, according to the Australian, is the evidence of two delivery drivers who claim they saw a white man, matching Hart’s description, standing over an Aboriginal teenager who was lying on the road outside Bowraville the morning Clinton disappeared.
Related: Australia's Serial: Dan Box on the making of true crime podcast BowravilleRelated: Australia's Serial: Dan Box on the making of true crime podcast Bowraville
Under the double jeopardy law the court of criminal appeal may order an acquitted person be retried for a life sentence offence if there is fresh and compelling evidence.Under the double jeopardy law the court of criminal appeal may order an acquitted person be retried for a life sentence offence if there is fresh and compelling evidence.
Upton’s office confirmed it had received Scipione’s letter. Lawyers for the families have previously argued that because the cases had not been heard in a joint trial before, evidence for each murder could be considered fresh and compelling from the perspective of the other murders.
In 2014, after a 12-month investigation, a NSW parliamentary inquiry found flaws in the way police investigated the crimes.At the time, Jubelin, who has worked on the case since 1996, said families had been let down by the justice system. But previous applications, which have been decided by two former attorney generals and the director of public prosecutions, have ruled on a narrower definition of “fresh” evidence, meaning that anything which has been included in a brief of evidence by the prosecution, whether it was admitted by the court and put before a jury or not, could not be considered “fresh” evidence.
He told the inquiry race had affected how the murders were investigated, saying there were overwhelming links between the murders and that they must be heard in a single trial. Upton’s office confirmed it had received Scipione’s letter, sent on Monday, which reportedly included a 150-page summary of the evidence, but had not yet received the full brief of evidence which was signed by Scipione and sent over on Tuesday morning.
In 2014, after a 12-month investigation, a NSW parliamentary inquiry found flaws in the way police had investigated the crimes. At the time, Jubelin, who has worked on the case since 1996, said families had been let down by the justice system.
He told the inquiry that race had affected how the murders were investigated, and said there were overwhelming links between the murders and that they must be heard in a single trial.
Upton, who has previously said any application would be independently reviewed, has the power to refer the matter to the court of criminal appeal.Upton, who has previously said any application would be independently reviewed, has the power to refer the matter to the court of criminal appeal.
The NSW premier, Mike Baird, confirmed this month that any application would be reviewed by a legal expert from another jurisdiction.
Craig said that gave him more confidence in the process.
“It’s good that it’s going to someone else because when it stays with the same people you are going to get the same answers,” he said.
Media coverage of the case, including a five-part podcast made by the Australian, which described the deaths as Australia’s “least-known serial killings”, has brought it back to public attention.Media coverage of the case, including a five-part podcast made by the Australian, which described the deaths as Australia’s “least-known serial killings”, has brought it back to public attention.
On the podcast Jubelin said the family had been let down by the justice system and everything that surrounded it: police, the courts and the media.On the podcast Jubelin said the family had been let down by the justice system and everything that surrounded it: police, the courts and the media.
“One thing I found unique about this investigation, and I have been doing homicide for a long time and I get the sense of things that attract the public’s attention, is here we have three kids murdered living in the same street and I am absolutely gobsmacked by the amount of people that have never heard of it,” Jubelin said.“One thing I found unique about this investigation, and I have been doing homicide for a long time and I get the sense of things that attract the public’s attention, is here we have three kids murdered living in the same street and I am absolutely gobsmacked by the amount of people that have never heard of it,” Jubelin said.
The podcast also included an interview with one of the delivery drivers, Michael Scaffidi, who told reporter Dan Box that he saw “an Aboriginal juvenile – 18, 17, 16, in his late teens – laying on the road” and that another man, who he described as “Caucasian, white” emerged from the side of the road.
Additional reporting by Australian Associated Press