Mrs G Norris
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Let him have it, he'll still end up in there until the day he dies .. Guaranteed.
Adrian Ernest Bayley in battle for legal aid to challenge rape convictions
December 9, 2015 5:35pm
SERIAL rapist and killer Adrian Ernest Bayley is fighting for legal aid in a bid to cut up to a decade from his minimum sentence and the potential to avoid dying in jail.
Bayley is arguing a refusal to publicly fund his appeals was a breach of the Charter of Human Rights, was “legally unreasonable” and that claims of undermining “public confidence” in the legal aid process in his case were “irrelevant”.
http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/la...alSF&utm_source=HaraldSun&utm_medium=Facebook
http://www.msn.com/en-au/news/austr...st-rape-conviction/ar-BBuh3dK?ocid=spartanntp
3 years taken off his sentence
Thank you They'll for your post. My eyes went crossed eyed reading this. I certainly don't understand the court system. I'll keep my fury to myself. My thoughts are with her family. Give them strength.
Jill Meagher: Conviction documentary reveals how killer Adrian Bayley was caught
By Chloe Brice
Updated Tue Sep 27 09:18:46 EST 2016
Posted Tue Sep 27 05:16:28 EST 2016
'It took six days to catch Jill Meagher's killer, about six hours for him to confess, and six minutes for a judge to remand him in custody.
But before notorious rapist and murderer Adrian Bayley was locked up, Jill's husband Tom Meagher, while coming to terms with the highly publicised disappearance of his wife, became suspect number one.'
'In a new ABC documentary which delves inside the 2012 murder case, detectives admit to the "awful" treatment of Mr Meagher in the early stages of their investigation.'
'Beyond the headlines of a case that triggered a national outpouring of emotion were the personal journeys that underpinned the search for Jill.
"She was a young woman, simply going about engaging in ordinary activity and died in that process," retired Supreme Court judge Frank Vincent.
These were the reasons the case so powerfully resonated with the public, he said.'
'Three days after Bayley was charged, 30,000 people staged a now-iconic march down Sydney Road in Brunswick, to remember Jill and to reclaim the night.
The emotional toll was so great for some close to the case that two forensic investigators, who attended the scene of Jill's body, never came back to work.
Sergeant Iddles said his former colleagues, Sergeant Butler and Sergeant Rowe, both struggled after the investigation, with Rowe eventually deciding to leave the homicide squad.
"The investigation is obviously very intense. For me personally, you know, I go home at night and I cry," Sergeant Iddles said.'
Conviction premieres [tonight] Tuesday 27th September at 8.30pm [EST] on ABC.
http://mobile.abc.net.au/news/2016-...for-jill-meagher's-killer/7864120?pfmredir=sm
There's a documentary coming up on the ABC on Sept 27 called Conviction.
"This hour-long documentary revisits the crime that gripped the nation: the abduction, rape and murder of Jill Meagher in September 2012"
http://www.thecourier.com.au/story/...-in-one-hour-but-deserves-so-much-more/?cs=36