Hello fellow people who care about victims of crime,
Hoping to add a piece or two to this ugly puzzle, for whatever it's worth. And to ask us all to please keep in the forefront of your minds the victims, a real family just like yours whose lives have been destroyed by violent crime.
The papers refer to the accused as a former DPP prosecutor however it should be remembered that many of the criminal barristers work for the DPP before going into private practice. I think there are defense barristers out there whose ambition can override their moral and the justice system is a game they are out to win.
There can be no consideration for their client's victims and they can be desentitised to crime and its impact. Perhaps it's their 'coping mechanism so they can reconcile the fact that they are assisting criminals to escape culpability for their crimes.' JMHO as to why a criminal defense lawyer is not as unlikely a suspect as the papers make out.
The accused was permitted to work as a lawyer (for those unscrupulous enough to use someone facing murder charges). He was not allowed to represent clients in a trial by jury, but other than that he was permitted to work. Bail was granted in part so he could work in order to pay for his defense. His "bridge partner" for example is known to have referred work to him. There is a 2008 online article in the Australian called A Man in Limbo which I recommend. There are disparities in that article and the evidence given in court such as when a dinner occured (6 weeks in the winter or 6 months in the summer?) makes a big difference to a back injury! One of the lawyers interviewed said she had information about the deceased's recent movements. Very strange.
Someone made reference to the husband's body language when he was asked about his wife's relationship with the accused. It made me wonder who else's career or reputation was on the line when the deceased threatened to go public. This was a situation involving allegations of adultery, money concealing and gambling. Who else stood to profit from the silencing of the deceased? Was there an accomplice?
Back to the car, found near the bridge partner's vacant residence. Kershaw is not the first street off Hetesbury. A spade and star picket were found on Hetesbury. The murderer drove down Hetesbury past Townsend Rd (north and south). There was backtracking to Kershaw (from the gravesite, it's is in the opposite direction to the home of the accused.) Why Kershaw? Was this part of the original plan to dump the vehicle or was that an afterthought once the car was damaged? Was the idea to wash up in a vacant house? There would have been a lot of soil on whoever dug that grave.
Now going very far off base here. Perhaps an accomplice gave the murderer a ride home? Could the murder have occurred on Kershaw after someone arranged to meet the deceased there, perhaps with evidence of her husband's womanising? Was ayone's else's DNA on the hanky? Perhaps the accused wore the coat home after the murder? It would have been freezing if walking, and, as mentioned, the coat could have been needed to hide the dirt.I wonder if there are liquidamber trees near the car? So many questions that I hope the prosecution has answers to. There was talk in the news of a half-drunk cup of coffee on the kitchen counter. Was there coffee in her system? If she was drugged, would this have shown up in her autopsy? It wasn't until after her autopsy and funeral that the accused was declared a suspect. Time to destroy evidence.
None of this necessarily explains the scraped boots, the soil matching the seed pods to the residence, the name card, and the lies told to the hostile witnesses (I presume neither wanting a conviciton) about the car used. If the plan was to dispose of the boots in the river or similar this may have become difficult once the car broke down.
The theory is that either the accused or the deceased (she was in Melbourne but obviously was invited if there was a card for her too) took both placecards home. They may have landed up in her car for any number of reasons. For example, if they were in his suit jacket or pants pocket and handed to her when she got them from drycleaners.
Or if he used her car and found them in his pocket, then dumped them in the console. Perhaps whoever took them had some sentimental reason for doing so, like to show the deceased which celebrity head she had been allocated. Maybe the accused enjoyed that fact that he was "the queen" and she was someone inferior? Maybe he brought them home to show her what she had missed. Very hard to speculate what may go through the mind of a murderer. Remember, this was just over a week before the murder. The card may have blown out of the car at some point. Extremely odd that the deceased's card was found in her boot (was this her bootscooting boot or the boot of her car?). Her sister is on record saying she had loads of these boots. Perhaps the placecards were in that david jones bag in the boot of the car, the one they said could have been used to cover the body, and hers fell into her boot?
The deceased hated hankies. But was clearly willing to by them for her husband. Maybe the hankie was put there as a mark of derision? Is it a catholic practice to fold the arms of the deceased? Certain elements of this smack of non-randomness.
Gotta wonder what's on the computer the prosecution is trying to access. Maybe proof of the hidden money or the affair? This legal prof priveledge thing is dodgy. It's a delay tactic to block the police from accessing to evidence. The way I see it, if there's nothing to hide, why claim it? It's horrible to think of all the evidence that has been suppressed or excluded for technical reasons. It's bad enough to know evidence may have been destroyed, but knowing evidence has been excluded is worse IMO.
If there is an acquittal, my understanding is he gets to sue the government for defamaition and the proceeds of his entire career which he claims is irreparably damaged. So the government (tax payers) will not only have wasted millions in prosecuting him but more again in compensating him.
The trial judges have a better chance of getting it right than a jury IMHO which is why perps usually choose a jury, however the accused would have only chosen a judge because he would have struggled to find a jury without preconceived ideas about him.
His smugness has worked against him and IMO the public's perception of his guilt comes from this more than from the police naming his as a suspect. The accused said at the funeral, "to know her was to love her." Can you imagine sitting with that smug look on your face as the prosecution shows autopsy photos and pictures of the grave of the mother of your children who you claim to love?
IMO the biggest victims are the girls who were robbed of their mother, their childhood and (if the accused is guilty) may be about to learn that their own father perpetrated all this grief for them. It must be very hard for them to be called as prosecution witnesse (if that is indeed the intention).
Another thing to be aware of. The defense is always handed the prosecution case on a silver platter, months before a trial. Every thing a prosecution witness may say and every piece of evidence tendered by the prosecution was disclosed to the accused as part of the rights of the accused. On the other side, the prosecution has NO IDEA what the defense may have to say and may struggle to pre-empt this. And, while the prosecution has to prove everything they say (the onus of proof being on the accuser to prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt), The defense can say whatever they like to cast doubt and are not required to prove it, the prosecutions can't even question the veracity of the defense without hard evidence to the contrary.
Food for thought. May justice be served, tho it will never bring back the life that was taken.