Wednesday, June 22, 2005

Kristy Scholes

Personal Details
Last Seen: 22 June 2005
Year of Birth: 1981
Age: 24
Height (cm): 165.0
Build: Medium
Hair Colour: Brown
Eye Colour: Green/Hazel
Complexion: Medium
Racial: Aboriginal
Circumstances: Police are investigating possible links between the murder of an Aboriginal woman in the NSW central west and the suspicious disappearance of a close relative.
The body of Kristy Scholes, 24, a mother of two, was found by police in a locked room at a West Dubbo home, after she was reported missing by a friend that afternoon.

Police issued an arrest warrant for 31-year-old Malcolm Naden in August 2005 in connection with the death of 24-year-old mother-of-two Kristy Scholes and the disappearance of his cousin, Leteesha Nolan.

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Time to up the bounty on fugitive murder suspect
BY DAN PROUDMAN CHIEF POLICE REPORTER
10 Sep, 2010 04:00 AM
THE state government is under pressure to increase the bounty for fugitive murder suspect Malcolm Naden, who remains a step ahead of authorities despite being the state's most wanted man.
Opposition police spokesman Mike Gallacher has raised the bounty in Parliament, asking the government whether the $50,000 was enough for someone to give up the suspected double murderer.

Mr Gallacher is expected to raise the issue to police minister Michael Daley during estimates committees next week after Attorney-General John Hatzistergos referred questions on Wednesday.

Naden has been on the run for five years, including the last three with the first bounty on a fugitive since Jimmy Governor in 1900 the man made famous in The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith.

The Newcastle Herald understands senior police had lobbied the government for much more than the $50,000 granted for any information leading to the arrest of Naden before it was announced by then police minister John Watkins in 2007.

"I challenge the government to consider whether they should re-evaluate the $50,000," Mr Gallacher told the Herald.

"Obviously someone knows where this guy is but the money is not attractive enough for them to give him up.

"They need to flush him out, and to do that they need to increase the reward."

Naden, the chief suspect in the disappearance of Lateesha Nolan and the murder of Kristy Scholes in Dubbo in 2005, is believed to be in possession of two .22 calibre rifles stolen during his raids on remote Barrington Tops properties.

His DNA matched the profile from blood at a burglary at Stewarts Brook, on the western edge of the Barringtons, and his fingerprints were found at a property at Mount Mooney, north-west of Gloucester.

Tuesday, January 4, 2005

Lateesha Jane NOLAN

Personal Details
Sex: Female
Year of Birth: 1980
At Time of Disappearance on the 930PM Tuesday 4 January 2005
Age: 24
Height (cm): 165.0
Build: Medium
Hair Colour: Brown
Eye Colour: Green/Hazel
Complexion: Medium
Nationality:
Racial: Aboriginal
Circumstances: Lateesha was last seen in Dubbo.

Police are investigating possible links between the murder of an Aboriginal woman in the NSW central west and the suspicious disappearance of a close relative.
The body of Kristy Scholes, 24, a mother of two, was found by police in a locked room at a West Dubbo home, after she was reported missing by a friend that afternoon.

Police issued an arrest warrant for 31-year-old Malcolm Naden in August 2005 in connection with the death of 24-year-old mother-of-two Kristy Scholes and the disappearance of his cousin, Leteesha Nolan.


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Police seek man on run after cousin found dead
By Les Kennedy August 22, 2005
For the past 16 years Malcolm John Naden lived a hermit-like existence in a sparsely furnished bedroom at his grandparents' home in Dubbo. He kept the door bolt locked from the inside.

He would leave his sanctuary through the bedroom window, though in the past year he rarely ventured outside. His reading material included the Bible, encyclopedias and books about bush survival.

The stocky, quiet, 31-year-old unemployed shearer and former skinner and boner at Dubbo abattoir also sketched, but police will not reveal the nature of the drawings they found in his room last July 23.

They had broken into the room that day and found the strangled body of his cousin Kristy Scholes, 24, on the floor beside his single bed. She had been missing for two days and the alarm was raised when one of her two small children was found crying outside the home, in Bumblegumbie Road.

His disappearance and the murder of Ms Scholes, who had been living in the home while her neighbouring house was being painted, has also been linked with the disappearance last January of another cousin of Mr Naden, Lateesha Nolan, 24.

Ms Nolan was last seen at 9pm on January 4, when she dropped off two of her four children at the same house. The next night her blue 1996 Ford Falcon station wagon was found in acar park in the town centre, four kilometres away.

Homicide squad detectives yesterday made a statewide appeal for information on Mr Naden's whereabouts.

The head of the investigation, Detective Sergeant Bryne Ruse, said police believed Mr Naden had fled to another town, to Sydney or had taken to living off the land with his knowledge of bush skills.

Sergeant Ruse said police also wanted to speak to Mr Naden about the disappearance of Ms Nolan.

Anyone with information on Ms Nolan's disappearance and the murder of Ms Scholes are asked to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

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Police fear for missing NSW mother
ABC Australia Online
Police in the central-west New South Wales are going statewide in their appeal for help in finding a Dubbo woman who has been missing for more than two weeks.

Lateesha Jane Nolan left her grandmothers house saying she would be right back, but has not been seen since.

The 24-year-old's blue station wagon was found the next day abandoned on the other side of town near the Macquarie River.

Aerial and extensive searches of the river have found no sign of Ms Nolan.

Dubbo Crime Manager Mick Willing says police hold grave concerns for the safety of the mother of four.

"It's completely out of character for her to be away from her kids for any length or period of time," he said

Ms Nolan is described as 165 cm tall with brown hair and was last seen wearing a blue shirt and tracksuit pants.

Friday, December 17, 2004

Charlotte Rose Keen

Plea For Clues To Baby's Murder

THE murder of Charlotte Rose Keen has torn a family apart as the search for her killers intensifies.
Grandparents Bob and Lesley Keen say their son Graeme is close to a breakdown over the brutal killing of his daughter, just three days before her first birthday.
Charlotte was taken off life support on December 17, after a five-day battle with massive injuries that police say were intentionally inflicted.
She was sent to Wodonga and Albury Hospital on December 12, then airlifted to the Royal Children's Hospital where she died.
Mr Keen said his son was suffering greatly and they were desperate to get justice and peace of mind.
"All this is breaking us apart, Graeme's devastated. Charlotte was an only child and she was precious to him."
Graeme and his former partner Renee Jones, 22, split just months before the tragedy and had dual custody of Charlotte. Ms Jones was living with another man, Brett Penrose.
Mr Keen said his son was so distraught he had isolated himself. "He won't even talk to me at the moment," he said. "He's so upset, he's not handling it well at all."
The suspicion about her killers has led police to call for witnesses, but Charlotte's grandparents say they aren't sure what happened that fateful night.
"To coin a phrase, there's no smoking gun, there's no hammer with blood on it," Mr Keen said. "Because it's such an intensive investigation we have to wait for police to do their work.
"If she had've died of a serious illness, it's a different matter because you have time for something like that, but this you can't prepare for."
Lesley Keen said her son was to pick up his daughter on the night of her death, but arranged to let her stay at her mother's Phefley Court home, because of another commitment in Wodonga.
"He's a broken man," Ms Keen said. She described Charlotte as a happy girl just starting to walk and talk.
They have pleaded for public help to give their family some closure in this case.
"If we even suspected for one minute something was wrong, we would've had her out of there in nothing flat," Mr Keen said, "but it came like a bolt out of the blue."
Detective Inspector Steve Francis of the homicide squad yesterday described the injuries sustained by Charlotte as non-accidental.
"The fact she was transferred from the local hospital to the intensive care unit to the Royal Children's hospital indicates the extent of those injuries," he said.
Det-Insp Francis said family members and people known to them had been interviewed.
Police also revealed the 34-year-old de facto has two children to another relationship who visited the home where paramedics attended to the injured Charlotte.
Herald Sun (14-2-2005)
Anthony Dowsley and Holly Lloyd-McDonald

Wednesday, August 11, 2004

Kylee Ann SCHAFFER

Personal Details
Sex: Female
Year of Birth: 1985
At Time of Disappearance on 11 September 2004
Age: 19
Height (cm): 165.0
Build: Solid
Hair Colour: Coloured/dyed
Eye Colour: Brown
Complexion: Medium
Nationality:
Racial Appearance: Caucasian
Circumstances Kylee was last seen at Willawarrin.

Wednesday, April 28, 2004

Kylie Maree LABOUCHARDIERE

Personal DetailsStatus: Murdered
Convicted:Paul Wilkinson
Kylie has not yet been recovered
Sex: Female
Year of Birth: 1980
At Time of Disappearance on 28 April 2004
Age: 23
Height (cm): 175.0
Build: Thin
Hair Colour: Coloured/dyed
Eye Colour: Blue/Grey
Complexion: Light Brown
Nationality:
Racial Appearance: Caucasian
Circumstances: Kylie Maree Labouchardiere, last seen at her Erina home in 2004. Her lover Paul Wilkinson was sentenced for 24 years in May 2009 for the her murder. Kylie was last seen in Erina.

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Police worker on murder charge
Article from:
By Kara Lawrence

April 18, 2007 12:00am

A FORMER NSW Police Force employee has been arrested and charged over the murder of a young student nurse who disappeared three years ago.

Police yesterday charged Paul James Wilkinson, 31, who was dismissed from the police force last year, with the 2004 murder of Kylie Labouchardiere, a 23-year-old from the Central Coast,.

At the time Ms Labouchardiere went missing, Wilkinson was an Aboriginal Community Liaison Officer – a civilian police force employee – based at Redfern police station.

After a lengthy investigation police early yesterday went to Wilkinson's Yarrawarrah home in the Sutherland Shire, but he was not at home.

About 2pm Wilkinson walked into Sutherland police station to be questioned over Ms Labouchardiere's disappearance.

Mr Wilkinson told The Daily Telegraph that he went to the station in relation to the suspected murder but that the real story had yet to emerge.

Ms Labouchardiere was last seen leaving her grandmother's Erina home about 6pm on Wednesday, April 28, 2004.

She had told her grandmother she was going to Goulburn but previously had made arrangements to move to Dubbo, where she was due to meet a removalist the day after her disappearance.

Last year police said phone records indicated Ms Labouchardiere had got off a train at Sutherland station about 9pm on April 28.

The young woman, who had just been accepted into a university nursing degree course when she disappeared, had also recently separated from her husband, a Royal Australian Navy sailor.

The Daily Telegraph last year revealed that the trainee nurse had received 18,000 phone calls and text messages from one man in the five months leading up to her disappearance, and it is believed that police will alleged that Wilkinson was behind the calls.

In June last year police searched bushland in the Royal National Park in Sydney's south, hoping to find evidence to confirm her suspected murder.

Ms Labouchardiere's body has never been recovered.

Wilkinson appeared in Sutherland Local Court charged with murder yesterday afternoon where he was refused bail.

He will appear in Central Local Court tomorrow.

Man in court for murder of nurse in 2004
19th April 2007, 12:48 WST - The West Australian


After three years of investigation police should have provided at least a partial brief of evidence against a man charged with murder, a Sydney court was told.
Paul James Wilkinson, 31, a former NSW police force employee, was charged on Tuesday with murdering 23-year-old Kylie Labouchardiere.

The young student nurse was last seen alive at Sutherland, in Sydney's south, at about 6pm on April 28, 2004.

Wilkinson's lawyer, Frances McGowan, told Sydney's Central Local Court her client had been "harassed by police" during their three-year investigation and she had expected to have some information about the police case before his appearance in court.

"After three years, I would expect the defence to have a partial brief," Ms McGowan said.

"I want to establish the strength of the Crown case."

Wilkinson appeared via videolink from Silverwater Jail and his parents were in the court.

Ms Labouchardiere, an enrolled nurse, packed two suitcases on the day she disappeared and left the home she shared with her grandmother on the NSW central coast, saying she was travelling to Goulburn.

Phone records indicate she was at Sutherland railway station about 9pm that day.

Police searched a specific area of the Royal National Park but did not find a body.

The police prosecutor told the court the Crown would provide a partial brief of the police investigation to Ms McGowan by May 8.

Magistrate Alan Moore remanded Wilkinson in custody to appear in Central Local Court on May 24.

AAP
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Paul James Wilkinson admits to killing lover Kylie Labouchardiere
Article from:
Exclusive by Kara Lawrence and Kim Arlington

November 24, 2008 12:00am

FOUR years ago, Paul James Wilkinson was making headlines with wild allegations of corruption at a parliamentary inquiry into policing in Redfern.

An Aboriginal liaison officer with NSW Police since the late 1990s, he claimed his house had been burnt down and police had threatened to kill him because of his whistleblowing.

Wilkinson was hiding his own deadly secret. Five months earlier he had strangled his young, pregnant girlfriend and would later try to pin his crimes on an innocent police officer.

Although he pleaded guilty to murder on November 12, he has led police on a $250,000 wild goose chase as they try to find the body of his victim, 23-year-old student nurse Kylie Labouchardiere.

After more than four years of playing cat-and-mouse with Gosford detectives, the 33-year-old has finally admitted to killing Ms Labouchardiere.

She was training at Sutherland Hospital as a nurse and lived in The Shire with her husband, a naval officer, until shortly before her murder.

They separated amicably and she moved into her grandmother's house in Erina. By then she had already become romantically involved with Wilkinson.

Neither friends nor family knew of Wilkinson's existence.

Their relationship began in December 2003, and he soon began bombarding her with texts and phone calls.

The pair exchanged more than 20,000 in the five months leading up to her death on April 28, 2004.

The month before she died, Wilkinson abruptly stopped turning up to work. That coincided with Ms Labouchardiere's news - doctors had confirmed she was pregnant.

It was believed to be Wilkinson's child. But he was living in Picnic Point with his wife and their newborn son.

Ms Labouchardiere made plans to move to Dubbo. She booked a removalist to meet her there on April 29 but she failed to show up. The night before she left her grandmother's home in Erina saying she was going away with friends but would be back to join her family at an engagement party the following week. She caught a train south.

Days passed as he worried family could not reach her by phone. When her family went through the phone records, they found the startling amount of calls from the same number and rang it.

Wilkinson told the family he was helping with a complaint she had made to police about being sexually assaulted. He said she had been having an affair and had gone to South Australia.

In early May, her family reported her missing to Gosford police. Later that month, Wilkinson set fire to his rented home in Picnic Point, causing substantial damage. He recently pleaded guilty to the arson but shortly after Ms Labouchardiere's disappearance he told police she and a man had assaulted him, tied him up and set fire to the house.

The following year, Wilkinson approached the Police Integrity Commission and accused a serving NSW police officer of Ms Labouchardiere's murder.

Wilkinson claimed to have been present when the officer murdered her in the Royal National Park at Sutherland and buried her near a firetrail.

The officer, sources say, remains mystified as to why Wilkinson nominated someone he did not know well to undergo a gruelling investigation, only to be exonerated.

When police arrested Wilkinson in April last year, he was cocky as he told The Daily Telegraph the "real story" was yet to emerge.

Detective Senior-Constable Glenn Smith told Wilkinson's sentencing hearing on Friday police could no longer rely on him to assist with finding the remains. The court heard Wilkinson had nominated two places in the Royal National Park and three at Mooney Mooney.

The closest they have come is finding a doona in a quarry at Mooney Mooney.

Ms Labouchardiere's family have told police they can no longer deal with the cruelty of false hope of finding her remains - then being dashed again.

Killer keeps deadly secret
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BY MARK O'BRIEN - The Leader
27/11/2008 4:00:00 AM
A YARRAWARRAH man who admitted strangling Central Coast woman Kylie Labouchardiere in 2004, has refused to help police find her body, despite awaiting sentencing in the NSW Supreme Court.
Paul James Wilkinson, 33, pleaded guilty earlier this month to the murder of Ms Labouchardiere and a charge of damaging property by fire.

Ms Labouchardiere, 23, vanished in April 2004 after leaving her grandmother's Erina home. Police were unable to trace her movements beyond Sutherland railway station, where she was last seen.

Before her disappearance, she was training to be nurse at Sutherland Hospital and had formerly lived in the shire with her husband, a naval officer. The couple had separated amicably. Wilkinson was arrested after handing himself into Sutherland police station in April last year.

He has directed police to six locations - two in the Royal National Park and four on the Central Coast - where he claimed Ms Labouchardiere's remains would be found. None of those places yielded any clues as to the whereabouts of Ms Labouchardiere's body.

Female remains discovered last month near Heathcote were not related to the case.

The matter is listed for mention in the NSW Supreme Court on December 2, when a sentencing date will be fixed.

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Girlfriend-killer James Wilkinson facing sentence
Article from:
April 23, 2009 12:00am

WHEN Kylie Labouchardiere arrived in Sydney with two packed suitcases, the pregnant 23-year-old thought she was starting a new life with her married lover.

The student nurse had already arranged for her furniture to be sent to Dubbo, where she and Paul James Wilkinson were to set up house together.

But instead of leaving his wife, Wilkinson murdered his girlfriend in April 2004 and weeks later tried to cover his tracks by burning down the rental house he shared with his spouse.

In the ensuing years, he told lie after lie, including blaming a policeman for her murder and indicating fake spots where her body was buried.

Yesterday in the NSW Supreme Court, the 33-year-old former NSW Police Aboriginal liaison officer faced a sentencing hearing after finally admitting to her murder last November.

At one stage, he agreed to plead guilty to manslaughter, and said he had been provoked into strangling his pregnant girlfriend.

He also pleaded guilty to arson and will be sentenced next month.

Tuesday, March 30, 2004

Jennifer Helen Lane

Personal Details
Last seen: Wednesday, 31 March 2004
Year of birth: 1952
Height: 175cm
Build: Heavy
Eyes: Brown
Hair: Black
Complexion: Fair
Gender: Female
Distinguishing Feature:
Circumstances
Jennifer flew from Adelaide to Alice Springs on 30th March 2004, where she booked into accommodation for 1 night. She was last seen on the 31st March and has not made contact with any family or friends since.

Friday, October 24, 2003

Ariel LIVESEY

Personal Details
Sex: Female
Year of Birth: 1973
At Time of Disappearance on the 24 October 2003
Age: 30
Height (cm): 165.0
Build: Medium
Hair Colour: Red/Ginger
Eye Colour: Green/Hazel
Complexion: Fair
Nationality:
Racial Appearance: Caucasian
Circumstances Ariel was last seen at Katoomba, wearing a purple mauve top with logo GRRRR on the front and a brown corduroy windcheater. She was also wearing a pair of white sneakers