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“How do you pay someone for 20 years?”: Folbigg’s big compensation question

<p>Since her <a href="https://www.oversixty.co.nz/news/news/kathleen-folbigg-pardoned-after-20-years-behind-bars" target="_blank" rel="noopener">release from prison</a>, Kathleen Folbigg has been the centre of a media frenzy, with networks battling it out to secure an exclusive tell-all interview.</p> <p>Following a fierce bidding war, Seven Network has won the rights over Nine for the interview believed to have cost more than $400,000.</p> <p>A source from Seven said the exclusive interview will be aired on the Sunday evening current affairs show, <em>7News Spotlight</em>.</p> <p>Others have proposed the deal has cost the network close to $1 million.</p> <p>The deal could see her on the list of select few Australians awarded seven-figure sums in light of their wrongful convictions, including Linda Chamberlain.</p> <p>Chamberlain’s lawyer Stuart Tipple said Folbigg needs to be declared innocent and be given compensation for her years in prison, noting she had a solid case.</p> <p>“The sad thing is all she can get is money, how do you pay someone for 20 years?” he said.</p> <p>“And also, I think we need to reflect on an injustice just doesn’t affect Kathleen.</p> <p>“I feel tonight very much for her husband and the father of those children and the injustice that just affects so many people, so many lives.</p> <p>“I feel very, very badly for him tonight and I just think of the whole process of just how harmful it is to them and to our society and our confidence in the whole judicial system.”</p> <p>Robyn Blewer, director of the Griffith University Innocence Project, noted two recent cases to illustrate how Folbigg could be compensated for her 7,300 days in jail.</p> <p>West Australian man Scott Austic received $1.3 million in May 2023 on top of an earlier payment of $250,000 after serving nearly 13 years for murdering his pregnant secret lover.</p> <p>He had sought $8.5 million after being acquitted on appeal in 2020.</p> <p>Both payments were ex gratis, unlike David Eastman’s award of $7 million in damages by the ACT Supreme Court in 2019.</p> <p>Eastman served almost 19 years over the 1989 shooting murder of federal police assistance commissioner Colin Winchester, where he was acquitted at a second trial.</p> <p>"The difference is it was in ACT which has a human rights act and under that, there is an entitlement for compensation under human rights," Dr Blewer told AAP.</p> <p>"Mr Eastman was then able to sue because there was a right to compensation.</p> <p>"The court assessed his damages in the same way they would a tort ... the court went through every time he was injured.”</p> <p>Like Austic, Chamberlain was awarded an ex grata or grace payment. She was awarded $1.3 million in 1992 which now equates to about $3 million.</p> <p>Folbigg will need specific legal advice about whether a civil claim is possible due to NSW lacking a human rights act like that of the ACT.</p> <p>Dr Blewer said she could become reliant on what the government was willing to pay.</p> <p>"Twenty years is a substantial amount of time lost," she said.</p> <p>"It might depend on the good grace of the NSW government."</p> <p>No further steps can be taken until Folbigg’s lawyers obtain the final report of former Chief Justice Tom Bathurst.</p> <p>An application to the NSW Court of Criminal Appeal to quash her convictions will likely follow.</p> <p><em>Image credit: Facebook / Instagram</em></p>

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Rare photos from dingo expert unearthed that show Lindy Chamberlain’s innocence

<p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Lindy Chamberlain’s world was turned upside down in August 1980, when she was jailed for the disappearance of her nine-month-old daughter Azaria.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Lindy insisted a dingo took her daughter from their camping spot at Uluru, but many refused to believe the lack of evidence that pointed to a wild dog attack. </span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Lindy served three years in jail over Azaria’s death, before being pardoned and set free when new evidence arose. </span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Despite many doubting Lindy’s story, one man named Les Harris, an </span><span style="font-weight: 400;">aeronautical engineer and part-time dingo expert, repeatedly tried to give the courts valuable evidence that would clear Lindy’s name. </span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Now, 30 years on, a trove of material he collected throughout the case proceedings, including </span><a href="https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10079223/Dingo-expert-shown-Lindy-Chamberlain-did-not-kill-baby-Azaria-Uluru.html"><span style="font-weight: 400;">photographs and a dingo skull</span></a><span style="font-weight: 400;">, will go under the hammer at an auction house. </span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Among the valuable documents are statements he made explaining how dingoes can easily hold the weight of a baby without dragging it, could have removed clothes using their teeth, and eat their prey whole - with not even bones remaining.  </span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Les Harris was the president of The Dingo Foundation in the early 1980s and based his evidence on his extensive knowledge of Australia’s wild dog. </span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">He was interviewed for a documentary produced by Network Ten and screened in 1984 called <em>Azaria: A Question of Evidence. </em></span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">“Based on the factual evidence available at the very time that this happened, we believe that the probability that a dingo, took, killed and carried off Azaria Chamberlain, is of such a high order as to be nearly a certainty,” Harris said.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">During Lindy’s court proceedings, Les was constantly rebuffed as he tried to share this valuable information. </span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">He wrote to magistrates and judges explaining why a dingo was almost certainly responsible for Azaria's death but his efforts were largely ignored.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Harris’s collection of valuable material on Azaria’s death will be sold by </span><a href="https://sydneyrarebookauctions.com.au/"><span style="font-weight: 400;">Sydney Rare Book Auctions</span></a><span style="font-weight: 400;">, some years after his death in the New England region of New South Wales.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Harris was firmly among those who believed the Chamberlains had nothing to do with the tragic death of their daughter, which became one of the most high-profile cases in Australia. </span></p> <p><em><span style="font-weight: 400;">Image credits: Getty Images</span></em></p>

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The one person Lindy Chamberlain cannot forgive

<p>Lindy Chamberlain-Creighton has been wronged by many people, but there’s one person in particular that she says she can never forgive.</p> <p>The 68-year-old revealed at the National Christian Family Conference in Sydney on Monday that she struggles to forgive her ex-husband Michael Chamberlain.</p> <p>Three decades ago Lindy was wrongfully jailed for life over the murder of her newborn baby, Azaria, after a dingo had snatched her from a tent.</p> <p><img width="258" height="344" src="http://cdn.newsapi.com.au/image/v1/1c96d640850da512f570f8c696cf5a1d" alt="Lindy Chamberlain-Creighton has learned to forgive." style="float: left;"/>Lindy told the audience she tried not to “get stuck on bitterness and resentment”, <strong><a href="http://www.news.com.au/national/courts-law/you-cant-get-away-from-it-the-person-lindy-chamberlaincreighton-struggles-to-forgive/news-story/cb9f61e19af2487d566f3bbb74171640">news.com.au</a></strong> reports.</p> <p>“You can’t get away from it. It sleeps with you at night. It goes to the bathroom with you. It showers with you. It has parties with friends with you. It’s always there. You need to choose your battles wisely. You don’t have to attend every argument you’re invited to. A fight without a foe - where’s the battle?</p> <p>“If you’re holding the anger… you’re not hurting them at all. They’re succeeding well beyond their wildest dreams. It’s you that’s dying.”</p> <p>The publication asked Lindy who she struggled most to forgives: the Northern Territory Police, the media, the judicial system or the public – all of whom screamed murder when Azaria went missing from a camp site at Uluru in 1980.</p> <p>“No, it’s my ex-husband,” Lindy replied. “That’s private.”</p> <p>Lindy, who divorced Michael in 1991, also revealed the scars from her past are slowly healing after 32 years. She said it was the Australian public's “responsibility” to “carry the pain” after many wrongly accused her of murdering her baby daughter.</p> <p>“People often get involved in things and take sides with no knowledge,” she said.</p> <p>“I’ve never felt I had to carry that pain. That’s their responsibility. God and I knew the truth and that was enough for me. Because all the way through I felt absolutely positive that at some stage He would make sure that it all came out right.”</p> <p>Lindy, who had always maintained that a dingo snatched her baby, was found guilty of murder and sentenced to life in prison in 1982. In 1986, a crucial piece of evidence was found – Azaria’s jacket – after an English tourist David Brett fell to his death from Uluru. His body was recovered from an area of dingoes, where police discovered the baby jacket. Lindy was released from prison in 1998, the Supreme Court of Darwin quashed all convictions and declared the Chamberlains innocent.</p> <p>But it wasn’t until 2012 that Azaria’s death was officially ruled as a result of her being taken by a dingo.</p> <p>Lindy told the audience in order to be happy she had to forgive, focus on positives and let the past go.</p> <p>“It’s not what happens that counts. It’s how you choose to deal with what happens,” she said.</p> <p>“You can choose if you’re going to live with anger, regret and revenge and miserably think yourself a victim. Or you can choose to be a hero in your own life and forgive the past and move on.</p> <p>“It doesn’t happen immediately. Sometimes I go back and have to remind myself to start all over again. It isn’t easy.”</p> <p><strong>Related links: </strong></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong><a href="/news/news/2016/05/parliament-house-architect-romaldo-giurgola-dies/"><em>Parliament House architect Romaldo Giurgola dies aged 95</em></a></strong></span></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong><a href="/travel/domestic-travel/2016/04/10-images-canberra-unique-hotel/"><em>10 images from Canberra’s most unique hotel</em></a></strong></span></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong><a href="/travel/travel-tips/2016/05/tripadvisor-reveals-favourite-landmarks-australia/"><em>Sydney Opera House not Australia’s favourite landmark</em></a></strong></span></p>

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