Australia Australia - Serial Killings, Tynong North/Frankston, Victoria, 6 women killed, 1980-81, Unsolved

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Unsolved murders a 40 year mystery

Over the past four decades scores of top detectives have worked the case to no avail, the advances in technology can’t account for a lack of physical evidence.
The bodies of the women were all found in such a state of decomposition that homicide detectives were unable to determine a cause of death.

DNA evidence was not yet on the scene and it would be another nine years after the first women were found that DNA would be used in an Australian court to convict someone of a crime.

Frankston Murders


On May 30 1980, Allison Rooke (59) disappeared from the Frankston area. Her neighbour confirmed to police that she was headed to Frankston to pay bills and get groceries when she disappeared sometime after 11am.

Allison usually drove, but on that day car troubles forced her to take public transport. However, the usual bus driver didn’t remember picking her up.

Allison Rooke was found on 5 July 1980 hidden among the bushland at McClelland Drive, a few kilometres from where she was last seen.
....


Joy Summers (55) was on her first lone shopping trip to Frankston on October 9, 1981 when she disappeared, Summers suffered a stroke a couple of years before she went missing and was usually accompanied by her partner.

Joy was last seen sitting at a bus stop at 1:20pm just 100m from her home. It is believed she was taken from the bus stop as no bus drivers on the route remember picking her up.

Joy Summers was discovered November 22 1981 in bushland off Skye Road in Frankston, a small distance from where Allison Rooke was found.


Tynong North Murders


Bertha Miller (73) lived in Glen Iris and was a very active member of the Spring Wesleyan Street Mission in Prahran, a church she had attended for 48 years.

On August 10 1980, Bertha caught the same tram from High Street Glen Iris to Prahran as she did every week for Sunday service, meeting a close friend along the way.

But her friend never met her on the tram. It is believed she was taken from the tram stop as she waited.

Bertha was also the Aunt of then Victorian Police Commissioner Mick Miller.
......


Catherine Headland (14) was headed to a holiday job at Coles Fountain Gate when she disappeared. Headland had left home early to meet up with her boyfriend before starting her shift.

On August 28, 1980, after a morning of listening to records and watching TV, Catherine headed to the bus stop on the corner of Manuka Road and the Princes Highway. While the bus driver claimed he picked up a girl matching Catherine’s description at another stop, Victorian Police ruled that Catherine never got on the bus.
.......


Ann-Marie Sargent (18) was between jobs when she disappeared on October 6 1980. She was a frequent hitchhiker and it is believed she got a lift from Cranbourne to Dandenong the day she went missing.

Ann-Marie was last seen at an unemployment office in Dandenong. Her Father strongly believes that she had hitchhiked that day as she had no money when he had seen her earlier that morning.

Catherine Headland, Ann-Marie Sargent and Bertha Miller were found together in November 1980 by men disposing of sheep offal at a quarry off Brew Road, Tynong North.
......


Narumol Stephenson (34) was Thai and had been in Australia just over a year before she went missing from outside a house in Brunswick on November 29 1980.

Narumol and her husband were visiting Melbourne with another couple and after a disagreement about visiting friends late at night, Narumol stayed in the car while the others went inside.

Her husband came outside to check on her regularly, but after a number of hours Narumol disappeared.

Narumol Stephenson was found in February 1983 after a man who taught anatomy and physiology spotted a bone he recognised as human while he waited for assistance with a flat tyre. Her body was found in Tynong North at a different site from the other women.

.........


Investigations and Theories

.......

Personal items were removed from each of the victims, a practice former FBI profiler John Douglas describes as common of serial killers who like to relive the experience of what they’ve done.

In this case, all of the victims were women, they were abducted near public transport or from Melbourne streets, but that’s where the similarities end.

Five of the women were Caucasian, one was Thai, their ages ranged between 14 and 73, half of the women under 35 and the other half over 55.

The older women were found clothed while the younger women were not.

Investigators believed that the reason there are so few similarities between the women is because the murderer was opportunistic rather than selecting individuals based on their characteristics.

A 1985 inquiry into the murders found that they were caused by three separate offenders. In 2017, in conjunction with the release of the $1,000,000 reward per victim, Victoria Police said that they were looking for one suspect in relation to all six murders.

One murderer theory: The current theory supported by Victorian Police is that all six women were murdered by the same person.

Two murderer theory: The theory supported by early investigators was that the victims found in Tynong North were not connected to the victims in Frankston and that the time frame of the murders is the only link between the cases.

Three murderer theory: Frankston and Tynong North murders were committed by separate individuals, but this theory also separates Narumol Stephenson from the other Tynong cases.

Narumol Stephenson was considered to be the outlier, taken well outside the area and time zone that the murder had previously operated in, her circumstances didn’t match the other women.
.........

A new taskforce was created for the case in 1998, but despite the exhaustive efforts of different detectives over the years, nobody has ever been charged for the murders.



Suspects

Raymond Edmunds (a.k.a Mr Stinky)......

Edmunds was not believed to have been the offender in the Tynong North and Frankston murders as he had been living in New South Wales at the time of the time of the murders.
While there is the possibility that Edmunds returned to Victoria for the murders, Police believe that he lacked the charm and interpersonal skills required to get the women into a vehicle without a significant struggle.
------

Bandali Debs

A man whose actions were once described by a NSW Supreme Court judge as ‘lacking humanity’........

Debs was in his late 20s when the Tynong North and Dandenong murders started in 1980, but his earliest violent conviction wasn’t until 1988.
The woman Debs murdered in Sydney was also found naked near a quarry, similar to some of the victims found at Tynong North.
-------

Harold Janman

Unlike the other two suspects, Janman was never convicted of any violent crimes, the only blemish on his criminal record comes from soliciting sex workers.

The reason Janman become a key person of interest in the case was because he was well known for offering lifts in the area that the Frankston victims were taken from.

Despite living in the Frankston area for over a decade at the time of the first disappearances, Janman only began offering people lifts in the same time frame as the murders.
When interviewed, he claimed that he had been to the bank in Frankston with his wife on the day that Joy Summers disappeared, an alibi supported by his wife.

However, his bank records didn’t tell the same story that he did.

While Janman had close ties to Frankston, he also had connections to Tynong North.
.........

But all of the evidence against Janman was circumstantial; gut feelings, odd behaviour and coincidences doesn’t make somebody a murderer.

Harold Janman always maintained that he was innocent and was not involved with the murders.

Harold Janman died on Wednesday 26 August 2020, two days short of the 40th anniversary of Catherine Headlands disappearance.

Unsolved murders a 40 year mystery - Bayside News

 
Prime suspect in 40-year Melbourne murder mystery dies - August 30, 2020

One of the main suspects in the deaths of six women dumped in scrub near Tynong North and Frankston in the early 1980s has died.

Harold Janman, 88, who was interviewed by police about the murders in 1981 and repeatedly proclaimed his innocence, died on Wednesday.


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The murders of Allison Rooke, Bertha Miller, Catherine Headland, Ann-Marie Sargent, Narumol Stephenson and Joy Summers remain unsolved.
.........

Janman told police he offered women lifts on the Frankston-Dandenong Road, where Rooke and Summers disappeared in 1980 and 1981, because he was a friendly guy and just wanted to help people.

When he drove with the police along the road, Janman pointed to nine bus stops where he offered women lifts. Two of the stops were where Rooke and Summers were waiting when they disappeared.

He lived at Garfield, near the Tynong North murder ground, for many years.
Janman had repeatedly declared his innocence to police and to the media. He told A Current Affair in 2018 that he had "never hated a person or disliked them enough to wish them dead and take their life."

There has never been any hard evidence linking him to any of the murders.



Prime suspect in 40-year Melbourne murder mystery dies

BBM - that's an odd thing to say because these crimes wouldn't be thought as a revenge or hate crime. They're about control and sexual gratification, the victims were killed because the perp got a kick out of it or he feared being identified, it was a means to an end. It's not about hating them or wishing them dead, these poor women were taken because of a sick desire to rape and kill. Catherine was still a child, 14 years old.
He probably said differently to the police I would hope because that statement isn't a confident, 'no, I didn't kill anyone.' imo


Janman seems to be a good fit, I wonder if the police searched his home or sheds for the trophies that were taken from the victims? If he was the perp, he lived a long life, free from prosecution, his neighbours and friends probably didn't even know he was a suspect in those murders.

Police didn't advance forward with this case at all, sadly. :(

There is a $6 million reward for information in the Tynong North and Frankston murder cases. Call CrimeStoppers on 1800 333 000.
 
Bandali Debs

A man whose actions were once described by a NSW Supreme Court judge as ‘lacking humanity’........

Debs was in his late 20s when the Tynong North and Dandenong murders started in 1980, but his earliest violent conviction wasn’t until 1988.
The woman Debs murdered in Sydney was also found naked near a quarry, similar to some of the victims found at Tynong North.


Adele Bailey's body was found down a mineshaft in Bonnie Doon, in 1995

Behind paywall, I think.
 
1659456344146.jpeg

  • Adele Bailey's body was found in an abandoned mine shaft in Victoria in 1995
  • She vanished 17 years prior and no-one has ever been arrested over her death
  • It has been revealed cops were tipped off that Bandali Debs might be involved
  • The lead was buried in the original investigation with cops looking elsewhere
  • Debs is in jail, convicted of shooting two police officers and two sex workers
  • A subsequent investigation found the tip-off should have been follow
 

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