Man committed for trial over old ransom note - The Canberra Times (ACT : 1926 - 1995) - 21 Jan 1995
21 January 1995
Man committed for trial over old ransom note
A man accused of sending an obscene ransom note to the family of abducted eight-year-old Eloise Worledge was committed for trial yesterday, 19 years after the girl's disappearance.
Kenneth Benfield, 36, from Mildura, north-west Victoria, was charged with black-mail last July after police matched his fingerprints with a print on a ransom note demanding $10,000 from the Worledge family.
But a document tendered in court said police did not believe Benfield had abducted the child, whose whereabouts had never been discovered. The case still baffles police.
The letter was sent in the weeks after Eloise went missing from a bedroom of her family's Beaumaris home in January 1976.
The ransom note, tendered as evidence in Melbourne Magistrates Court court during yesterday's committal hearing, was addressed to Eloise's mother, Patsy Worledge, and signed "Fred". It contained obscene language and suggested the girl had been sexually assaulted.
The court heard yesterday that at the time the note was written Benfield would have been
17.
A fingerprint expert, Sergeant Terry Claven, said that while reviewing outstanding major
crimes in Victoria last July police had matched Benfleld's fingerprint with the print
on the letter.
Cross-examined, he agreed that the match had been made 18 years after the crime. A previous review of the Worledge case and several previous attempts at finding a match had been made since the girl's disappearance. "I can't explain why it wasn't identified," he said. "It's one of those things we will never know."
A police fingerprint-matching computer system had been set up in 1987 and, at that time,
Benfield's prints had been on its database. Sergeant Claven said it was "beyond reasonable
doubt" that the fingerprint on the letter was Benfield's.
Patsy Worledge said in a statement tendered in court that her family had received hundreds of letters after her daughter's disappearance, some of which had been sent to police.
Fix this textMagistrate Jelena Popovic ordered Benfield to stand trial in the County Court. Benfield reserved his plea and was allowed bail.