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"I had visual contact with Lyn Dawson" court hears

<p dir="ltr">Chris Dawson’s judge-only murder trial has aired a recording of the accused's brother-in-law, who claimed that he spotted Lynette Dawson several months after she disappeared back in 1982.</p> <p dir="ltr">A police interview that was conducted between Dawson’s brother-in-law Ross Hutcheon back in 2019 was played in the Supreme Court on Tuesday.</p> <p dir="ltr">Mr Hutcheon claimed that he saw Lynette at a bus stop opposite Gladesville Hospital up to six months after she disappeared.</p> <p dir="ltr">"She looked just like the Lyn that I knew — same colour hair, same hairstyle, same glasses. No obvious attempt to disguise herself," he said in the recording.</p> <p dir="ltr">"The other thing that convinced me … was the fact that it was opposite the hospital and she was a nurse."</p> <p dir="ltr">Mr Hutcheon, who died six weeks ago and was married to Dawson’s sister also called Lynette, had claimed to have told her about seeing the missing mother that day.</p> <p dir="ltr">However, it was reported that Mr Hutcheon had instead reported the incident to police years later in 1999 stating he had "no contact with Lynette Dawson since her disappearance".</p> <p dir="ltr">"I had visual contact with Lyn Dawson, not verbal contact," Mr Hutcheon responded.</p> <p dir="ltr">Ms Hutcheon appeared in court on Tuesday and was questioned why she hadn’t discussed the possible sighting of her sister-in-law.</p> <p dir="ltr">She told the court that other people she knew had reported sightings of Lynette Dawson months after she disappeared and it didn’t cross her mind.</p> <p dir="ltr">"My husband had seen her and I had heard that other people had seen her. I thought she had been seen by people that knew her," she said.</p> <p dir="ltr">Chris Dawson has pleaded not guilty to murdering his wife Lynette, who went missing from the family home in Sydney's Northern Beaches in January 1982.</p> <p dir="ltr">The trial continues.</p> <p dir="ltr"><em>Images: Nine News</em></p>

Legal

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5 minutes with author Lyn McFarlane

<p dir="ltr">In the<em> Over60</em> <em>“5 Minutes With”</em> series, we ask book writers about their literary habits and preferences. Next up is Lyn McFarlane, who is debuting her novel <em>The Scarlet Cross</em> on March 29. </p> <p dir="ltr">Lyn McFarlane is a Canadian-Australian writer, lawyer and former freelance journalist. She splits her time between Sydney, Australia and Vancouver Island, Canada. She holds degrees in economics and journalism and a masters in law. <em>The Scarlet Cross</em> won the Arthur Ellis Prize for Best Unpublished Manuscript in 2019.</p> <p dir="ltr"><em>The Scarlet Cross</em> will keep the reader on their toes as they join Meredith Griffin in the emergency department at St Jude Hospital, who questions why women who all had the same fatal injury were labelled as suicides. </p> <p dir="ltr"><em>Over60</em> spoke to Lyn and asked about where her love of writing came from, how much her own law history contributed to her book, and the inspiration behind <em>The Scarlet Cross</em>.</p> <p dir="ltr"><strong>Could you tell us about your background and your writing style?</strong></p> <p dir="ltr">I have always loved language, and have a deep fondness for writers who can use words with precision and economy. My background as a lawyer may contribute to this, but even before I studied and practiced law, I relished authors - Raymond Carver, Colm Tobin or Cormac McCarthy, spring to mind - who deliver writing that is clean and sparse on its face, but has a top spin that knocks you off your feet. This is the writing style that I aspire to. </p> <p dir="ltr"><strong>What book(s) are you reading right now?</strong></p> <p><em>Crossroads</em> by Jonathan Franzen, <em>The Way it is Now</em> by Garry Disher, and <em>Olive, Again</em> by Elizabeth Strout.</p> <p dir="ltr"><strong>With a background in journalism and degrees in law and economics, did you find that this helped you break into crime writing or help your writing in any way?</strong></p> <p>I have always wanted to write fiction and I have several unpublished short stories and half-written manuscripts to prove it! I don’t think my education and professional life were critical to being a novelist, but both things helped me find the discipline and confidence to follow an idea through to the end of a finished manuscript.</p> <p dir="ltr">You need many things to write a novel. People may think creativity and talent are the main ingredients, but I think it mostly requires hard work, energy, grit, confidence and, in homage to Virginia Woolf, a room of one’s one. It’s also critical to have the support of others around you. All of the things I have done in my life, and all of my relationships, contributed to the writing of <em>The Scarlet Cross</em>.</p> <p dir="ltr"><strong>What inspired you to write <em>The Scarlet Cross</em>?</strong></p> <p dir="ltr">The seed for <em>The Scarlet Cross</em> was planted by my sister, who is an avid crime reader and a former psychiatric nurse. She suggested a hospital as the main setting for a crime. We both agreed that hospitals were these unique public places and the frontline workers within them are often on the coal face of crime. The kernel for the idea was a simple question: What if an emergency nurse observes patients coming in with similar, strange cuts?</p> <p>Those two ideas - the hospital setting and the pattern of patient deaths - set me off on my journey. Then, when I started building the characters, I realised I wanted to have these characters grapple with several important social issues: how people who have mental health issues manage them and how their families help of hinder that; sexual harassment and bullying in the workplace; institutional power.</p> <p dir="ltr"><strong>Which author, living or deceased, would you most like to have dinner with?</strong></p> <p dir="ltr">I think this is the hardest question of all! There are so many, but I would say Margaret Atwood, because acidic wit makes for great dinner table banter.</p> <p dir="ltr"><strong>What book (or books) do you think more people should read?</strong></p> <p dir="ltr"><em>Middlemarch</em> by George Eliot for its piercing intelligence and broad vision of humanity. </p> <p dir="ltr"><strong>How do you deal with writer’s block?</strong></p> <p dir="ltr">I use a mix of practicality, discipline and distraction. The practicality is inspired by a quote from Geraldine Brooks that I have on the corkboard above my computer. It’s a simple question: “Do bricklayers get bricklaying block?” What a lovely chastisement to just “Get on with it”! The discipline comes from my ballet training and my legal career and it says to me: “Lyn, just sit your butt in that chair and start.” The distraction is usually physical - I get up and go for a walk or do yoga. Or, I put on music. Or I do some scaffolding writing, which is writing about what I am writing - to feel like I am advancing the project.</p>

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The Teacher's Pet podcast: Lyn Dawson allegedly spotted at royal tour

<p>An elderly blind woman has told the court she swore she saw missing person Lynette Dawson a year after she disappeared from her home in 1982.</p> <p>Elva McBay, 101, gave evidence at a committal hearing in Sydney that aims to see if Chris Dawson will stand trial for the alleged murder of his wife.</p> <p>The 71-year-old father who shared two children with Lynette has pleaded not guilty to killing Ms Dawson, and says he believes his first wife ran away to join a cult deep in the Blue Mountains region.</p> <p>Her body has never been found.</p> <p>Ms McBay became friends with the twin brother of Chris Dawson, Paul, while on a research course for the education department at Kogarah High School.</p> <p>She eventually met Chris Dawson while he played rugby league for Newtown Jets and as a result went on to meet his wife Lynette.</p> <p>In March 1983, Prince Charles and Princess Diana toured Australia and made an appearance outside the Sydney Hospital on Macquarie Street where they greeted and met with fans.</p> <p>It was there, Ms McBay said appearing via video link from Wyong Court to Downing Centre, that she remembered seeing a woman who looked eerily like Ms Dawson.</p> <p>"She was hurrying, she was running, she pushed in and ducked under the barricade ... I saw her face for a few seconds ... I turned to my husband and said 'I think that was Lyn Dawson'," she said.</p> <p>However Ms McBay said her husband was not able to say whether it was Ms Dawson because it happened "so quickly".</p> <p>Before Lynette disappeared, Ms McBay told the court she had seen Ms Dawson in a "distressed state" at her daughter's fourth birthday party.</p> <p>"She was distraught, she was crying, she was trembling — I had never seen her in such a state ever."</p> <p>Chris Dawson has also been charged with one count of carnal knowledge relating to when he was a sports teacher at Cromer High School in 1980.</p> <p>The court heard that one of his students moved into the family home, which Ms McBay described as "very strange".</p> <p>"She [Lynette] said 'I had the most dreadful row with [the girl]' this morning and she said she wanted to get rid of me'," Ms McBay told the court.</p> <p>"I said 'you should get her out of the house before there is any more trouble'," she said.</p> <p>Defence barrister Philip Boulton SC went on to ask Ms McBay whether she had ever seen any violent behaviour from Chris Dawson.</p> <p>"No ... Chris was very quiet, placid, easy-going ... I never saw him bad-tempered ... he was an absolutely wonderful husband and he adored his wife Lyn," she told the court.</p> <p>"They were one of the happiest families I had ever seen."</p> <p>Ms McBay told the court she was left shocked when someone told her Mr Dawson had been charged with his wife's murder just before Christmas in 2018.</p> <p>Three more witnesses are due to give their own evidence over the next week.</p>

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