GUILTY Australia - Carly McBride, 31, murdered, Muswellbrook, NSW, 30 Sept 2014 *Trial in 2021*

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So where was Carly murdered at?? It's a very public area from Calgaroo Ave to Maccas ( main hwy & near a shopping center) .

Seems they don't have much evidence :eek:
 
Carly McBride murder: boyfriend Sayle Newson committed to stand trial | VIDEO

Detectives had alleged Mr Cunneen engaged in a joint criminal enterprise with Mr Newson to murder Ms McBride, but now say her former boyfriend is solely responsible for her murder while Mr Cunneen helped dump Ms McBride's body.

DPP solicitor Kristy Mulley said it was hoped Mr Cunneen’s matter would ultimately be heard in the Supreme Court alongside Mr Newson.

However, while that application was being determined, Mr Cunneen was committed for trial to Newcastle District Court on August 23.

Video in link
 
So where was Carly murdered at?? It's a very public area from Calgaroo Ave to Maccas ( main hwy & near a shopping center) .

Seems they don't have much evidence :eek:
Carly's body was dumped only 15 minutes away from Maccas and Google Maps indicate it was close by in a forested area. My guess is that the angry new boyfriend was driven by jealousy and went nuts hence police knew where to focus the investigation very quickly.
 
Carly's body was dumped only 15 minutes away from Maccas and Google Maps indicate it was close by in a forested area. My guess is that the angry new boyfriend was driven by jealousy and went nuts hence police knew where to focus the investigation very quickly.
Wasn't her body found outside Scone? Owens Gap is on the other side of Scone.
 
And all the while he professed his love and devotion to Ms McBride.

He was the distraught boyfriend who would do anything to have his girlfriend return safe and sound.

But after searching through his online history, police say the public grief and torment was a lie and that, almost immediately after Ms McBride disappeared, Mr Newson began contacting women online for sex.

The Carly McBride case: the ex-boyfriend and the evidence
 
Detectives say that at about 5pm on September 30, 2014, Mr Newson told someone that Ms McBride was missing.

But when he spoke to police he said it wasn't until 6pm, when he drove back to Ms McBride's ex-partner's home, that he first discovered she had disappeared.

From there he launched a full-scale search for Ms McBride; contacted her family and the police, knocked on doors along the path she would have taken to McDonald's, searched businesses, canvassed for CCTV, printed missing person's posters, created the 'Held Find Carly McBride' Facebook page, spoke with the media and announced a $10,000 reward. At one point Mr Newson said he hoped to gain further publicity by making a joint appeal with the family of missing boy William Tyrell. Police labelled it a "gross and immediate public overreaction" by Mr Newson and said he couldn't afford to pay the $10,000 reward and made the offer knowing he would never have to.

The Carly McBride case: the ex-boyfriend and the evidence
 
Carly's body was dumped only 15 minutes away from Maccas and Google Maps indicate it was close by in a forested area. My guess is that the angry new boyfriend was driven by jealousy and went nuts hence police knew where to focus the investigation very quickly.

She was found at Owens Gap, about 45kms north of muswellbrook.

Google Maps
 
We’re for Sydney | Daily Telegraph

“In stark contrast however, Newson was almost immediately sexually involved with other woman … each of whom he propositioned for sex without hours of reporting her missing to the police,” the police facts state.

“This pattern of behaviour extended over days, weeks and months following the deceased’s alleged death demonstrated the public grief displayed by Newson was also a lie.”

Newson courted the media for the next year as Ms McBride’s parents worked with police in appealing for information about their daughter’s whereabouts.

Ms McBride’s skeletal remains were found on August 7, 2016 and shortly after the discovery Newson allegedly contacted his lawyer, fearful about his imminent arrest.

Police never disclosed Ms McBride’s hands were missing from her remains and it is alleged Newson called her father in the lead up to her funeral and said “he had heard somebody was in possession of the deceased’s hand”.

“It is alleged that this information could only have been known by someone with actual knowledge of the crime scene,” police state.
 
We’re for Sydney | Daily Telegraph

“In stark contrast however, Newson was almost immediately sexually involved with other woman … each of whom he propositioned for sex without hours of reporting her missing to the police,” the police facts state.

“This pattern of behaviour extended over days, weeks and months following the deceased’s alleged death demonstrated the public grief displayed by Newson was also a lie.”

Newson courted the media for the next year as Ms McBride’s parents worked with police in appealing for information about their daughter’s whereabouts.

Ms McBride’s skeletal remains were found on August 7, 2016 and shortly after the discovery Newson allegedly contacted his lawyer, fearful about his imminent arrest.

Police never disclosed Ms McBride’s hands were missing from her remains and it is alleged Newson called her father in the lead up to her funeral and said “he had heard somebody was in possession of the deceased’s hand”.

“It is alleged that this information could only have been known by someone with actual knowledge of the crime scene,” police state.

Thanks for the article, sleuth. He really is a gross grub, isn’t he? Triple ugh!
 

Got him!

Consciousness of guilt, lies and flight
[2-950] Introduction

The Crown can rely upon the accused’s post-offence conduct as evidence of a consciousness of guilt. This will usually be in the form of a lie (either in or out of court) or flight (absconding to avoid arrest or trial). But it can include other forms of conduct: McKey v R (2012) 219 A Crim R 227; see Pollard v R (2011) 31 VR 416, where the evidence of the accused hiding his mobile phone was admitted on this basis. Such evidence will generally be part of a Crown’s circumstantial case or evidence supporting direct evidence such as an admission.

Consciousness of guilt, lies and flight
 

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