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POST
investigations

The POST has a proud history and track record of award winning investigative journalism that has at times led to significant outcomes including the overturning of wrongful convictions. We run regular stories about crime and justice matters, including major murder convictions and related matters. You can find a collection of major articles below.

An arresting photo on the front page of the POST in February 1994 kicked off an 11-year campaign by the POST to solve two historic murders. A selection of pages from the years in between tell the stories of a serial killer, two wrongfully-convicted men and the final verdicts in their fight for justice.

True murderer revealed

The serial killer who stalked the western suburbs of Perth, Western Australia sixty years ago left a horrific legacy, plus two enduring mysteries. The big question was: were two teenagers, John Button and Darryl Beamish, wrongly jailed for two extra murders claimed by the serial killer, whose confessions to those murders were disbelieved? The cases of these two men for decades split opinions and raised passions in public, police, political, legal and media circles.

Then in 1996 the POST teamed up with former journalist Estelle Blackburn to re-open one of those cases, a motor vehicle hit-run murder. The POST conceived and organised forensic tests that proved in court the innocence of John Button, the jailed innocent man, 37 years after he was convicted.

Remarkably, this new court verdict also opened the door for the second innocent man, Darryl Beamish, freeing him from the crushing stigma of his conviction for a vicious axe murder 46 years earlier.

Although based on a completely different set of facts, this second case was swung by the verdict in the first – that the serial killer had been telling the truth about those two murders all along. The POST also took a leading role in that appeal.

The tests: A Case of Science and Justice, The Skeptic – 2002 Vol. 22 No. 3

The full story of both cases is examined in the book, Presumed Guilty: When Cops Get it Wrong and Courts Seal and Deal; by Bret Christian, published by Hardie Grant Books, Melbourne. Scroll down for the link.

The POST soon became drawn into many other cases in which the police had targeted the wrong suspects, who in some cases were convicted of murder but later released.

A 42-year-old Susan Christie, mother of two, once a brilliant academic and pianist, was seen chatting cheerily with her neighbour outside her flat in Daglish. She was never to be seen again, alive or dead. Six months later her ex-husband Rory Christie was charged and jailed for her murder.

But that was not the end of the story. POST editor Bret Christian, and three other individuals has severe doubts about the evidence, until finally justice was done.

When 27-year-old lawyer Ciara Glennon became the third young woman to vanish from Claremont’s entertainment strip, it became clear that a serial killer was stalking the town’s up-market streets.

The families of the victims, and their entire communities were traumatised. It would be 24 years before the crimes were finally resolved.

The POST took a sceptical view of the investigation from the early days, and made many revelations that turned out to be uncannily accurate.

Like Hansel and Gretel tracking dropped bread-crumbs, a police helicopter followed a trail of oil that had leaked from a damaged car as it limped through the dark bush roads of Kings Park, in central Perth.

Police made a horrific discovery at the point where the oil trail started: the body of a mother of two, buried in sandy soil off a rough fire-trail.

Ten years later the murder remained unsolved, but the case was still making waves as the dead woman’s innocent husband fought back persistent accusations that he had killed his wife. The POST was there every step of the way, its investigations revealing many hidden details about this extraordinary case.

Publications

Delve further into the remarkable true accounts of some of the western suburbs’ biggest crime stories from POST editor Bret Christian. 
Books can be purchased direct from the POST offices or online via the links below.

Presumed Guilty by Bret Christian

I’m only 40 pages in but already I can’t put this book down. It just shows how wrong the justice system can be and how the truth can be framed. How many more innocent people are there in our gaols?

Reviewer

Presumed Guilty

by Bret Christian

“Explosive … A page turner” –  The West Australian

At the centre of this in-depth and often chilling book is the tragic murder, in 1959, of twenty-two year-old Perth woman Jillian Brewer, and the mostly inconceivable wrongful arrest and conviction of a young deaf man, Darryl Beamish, for the act.

Charting in extraordinary detail the procedural errors, fantastical egos and often deliberate obfuscation of truth that took place in the Beamish conviction, along with many other cases, Christian reveals the startling array of potholes and pitfalls that continue to threaten the execution of proper justice in our society.

Readers will be glued to their seats as they encounter the jaw-dropping recollections Bret Christian has compiled of badly interpreted forensics, biased testimony, mismatched and botched statements of fact, and downright dirty policing tactics. All at once horrific, mind-blowing and puzzling, the stories Christian has unearthed might well be fiction but tragically, are all true.

Bret Christian️ tells this true story brilliantly, he rightfully points out that due to the oversights and a shockingly bad police investigation the killer remained at large for over 20 years.

Candi, Victoria

Stalking Claremont

by Bret Christian

Winner of the 2021 Ned Kelly Award for Best True Crime

The gripping true story of the notorious Claremont serial murders and the nation’s longest and most expensive investigation to catch the killer.

In the early hours of January 27, 1996, after an evening spent celebrating in the Perth suburb of Claremont, 18-year-old Sarah Spiers called a taxi. But when the cab arrived, she’d already gone and was never seen again. Four months later, 23-year-old Jane Rimmer disappeared from the same area, her body later found in bushland south of Perth. When the body of a third young woman, 27-year-old Ciara Glennon, was found north of the city, having vanished from Claremont in August 1997, it was clear a serial killer was on the loose, and an entire city lived in fear he would strike again.

A massive manhunt ensued. However, almost 20 years later, after the investigation had failed to make an arrest, until forensic evidence linked the murders to two previous attacks – and an unlikely suspect.

A riveting story of promising young lives cut short, a city in panic, an investigation fraught by oversights and red herrings, and a surprising twist that absolutely no one saw coming.

Making the news in this week's edition...

Jack bus-ted…then he pedalled home

“My wife said, ‘How was your ride?’ and I said, ‘Pretty terrible!’”

A 69-year-old man rode home to Nedlands with a fractured hip and two broken ribs after a bus knocked him off his bike in Kings Park. “By the time I got home I was in a bad way,” Jack Richardson said. Photo: Paul McGovern

St Hilda’s Sandra is school’s ‘Wikipedia’

For decades Sandra has archived St Hilda’s artefacts, photos, and memorabilia.

A newly-created heritage centre at St Hilda’s Anglican School for Girls captures some of the school’s rich 128-year history. Photo: Paul McGovern

Hanging around the galleries

In James’ satirical work he isolates subjects from their known environments.

Floreat artist James Giddy, known primarily for his large-scale mural work which has included the former Corner Gallery in Subiaco and silos in Wickepin, now stages the second part of a three part series, Strangers to Mortality.

Donnelly Lakes is an inland waterworld

“We love the abundance of water, sitting by the main lake, kayaking and watching the mist on a winter morning.”

Water is a precious resource, and this property between Nannup and Pemberton has megalitres of it – in hot tubs and a 2.4ha lake.

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