Alleged serial killer found guilty of two ‘cold case’ murders in Australia

World

A man accused of being the Claremont serial killer in Australia has been found guilty of two of three murders of young women in the 90s.

Bradley Robert Edwards was convicted of the killings of Jane Rimmer and Ciara Glennon, but was acquitted of the murder of Sarah Spiers.

The 51-year-old former children’s athletics coach and telecommunication technician shook his head after being found guilty of the two murders.

All three women disappeared on separate nights in Claremont between January 1996 and March 1997, with the bodies of Ms Rimmer and Ms Glennon later found in bushland.

Ciara Glennon, 27, (L) and Jane Rimmer, 23, were killed in 1996 and 1997
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Ciara Glennon, 27, (L) and Jane Rimmer, 23, were killed in 1996 and 1997

The body of 18-year-old Ms Spier – who was the first woman to be abducted from Claremont’s nightlife strip in January 1996 – was never found.

Edwards was charged with their murders 20 years later, along with the rape of a 17-year-old girl in a cemetery near Claremont.

He pleaded not guilty to all counts against him.

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Justice Stephen Hall handed down the verdict in a Perth court on Thursday.

He said that while the three murders were similar in timing, location and nature, the circumstances in which Ms Spiers was taken and how she died is unknown.

“The propensity evidence makes it more likely that Edwards was the killer of Ms Spiers, but it cannot prove it beyond reasonable doubt,” Justice Hall said.

The trial largely relied on DNA samples taken from the victims, which were flown around the world for testing.

The body of Sarah Spiers has never been found
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The body of Sarah Spiers has never been found

The verdict comes more than two months after the conclusion of a judge-alone trial which sat for 95 days over seven months, costing the Western Australian justice system $11m (£6m).

The majority of the trial was the prosecution case led by Carmel Barbagallo, who called 200 witnesses, news.com.au reported.

Many of them were cross-examined by Edwards’ defence team, led by barrister Paul Yovich.

Bradley Edwards will be sentenced on 23 December
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Bradley Edwards will be sentenced on 23 December

Four witnesses flew in from abroad to give evidence at the trial, including leading British DNA expert Jonathan Whitaker – who made the crucial link between traces of DNA found under Ciara Glennon’s fingernails to Edwards.

Ms Glennon, a 27-year-old lawyer, disappeared from the Claremont area in the early hours of 15 March 1997.

The court heard how Edwards struck her with an object that fractured her skull, “momentarily stunning her”.

Ms Glennon tried to fight off her attacker and severely damaged her left thumbnail in doing so, while the tip of her right ring fingernail tore off, harvesting Edwards’ DNA.

Edwards then slit Ms Glennon’s throat, causing a 20cm wound on the right side of her neck. He then left her body face down and covered with vegetation, only for it to be discovered three weeks later.

The case began with the disappearance of Ms Spiers on 27 January 1996 after she left a club in the centre of Claremont. Her disappearance attracted massive publicity and her fate remains unknown.

A few months later, in the early hours of 9 June, 23-year-old Ms Rimmer disappeared from the same part of Claremont.

Jane's sister Lee Rimmer speaking outside court
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Jane’s sister Lee Rimmer speaking outside court

Her naked body was found 40km south in bush-land by a family picking wild flowers.

Edwards, who will be subject to a psychiatric report, will be sentenced on 23 December.

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