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Here's the interview. It's quite interesting, Robin Bowles who seems to be ready for battle, has had letters from four lawyers.
Interesting, but damn she's a terrible speaker.
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Here's the interview. It's quite interesting, Robin Bowles who seems to be ready for battle, has had letters from four lawyers.
Interesting, but damn she's a terrible speaker.
Its very dangerous to just believe everything that is fed to you from the media.THIS
People saying he didn't do it are the same people saying Martin Bryant wasn't the shooter at Port Arthur.
You know the type.
Oh the American government planned September 11.
Cold hard facts and evidence presented in court are glazed over. Those people.
It’s even more dangerous to listen to right wing nut jobs who believe everything is a conspiracyIts very dangerous to just believe everything that is fed to you from the media.
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Except there is absolutely no evidence of a gunshot in the Falconio case.THIS
People saying he didn't do it are the same people saying Martin Bryant wasn't the shooter at Port Arthur.
You know the type.
Oh the American government planned September 11.
Cold hard facts and evidence presented in court are glazed over. Those people.
FTFYIts very dangerous to believe nothing fed to you from the media.
Sue Williams, the author of one of the books about Murdoch, has no doubts about his guilt
Curious though, I didn't know Lees and Falconio had stayed at the same caravan park as Murdoch.
I have seen reference that the log used by PF of the Kombi's movements had the exact mileage of a return trip to Sedan from Bolivar unaccounted for in the entries.Nor did I.
Interesting coincidence.
Curious though, I didn't know Lees and Falconio had stayed at the same caravan park as Murdoch.
That's a fact which was downplayed by the prosecution. Even now, many are still unaware. The usual reason backpackers pay for caravan parks is to have a decent shower and do their laundry, as do others living on the road. Shared laundries are a common source of contamination. Some even have reminder notices requesting users to respect others by keeping belongings seperate.
That's a fact which was downplayed by the prosecution. Even now, many are still unaware. The usual reason backpackers pay for caravan parks is to have a decent shower and do their laundry, as do others living on the road. Shared laundries are a common source of contamination. Some even have reminder notices requesting users to respect others by keeping belongings seperate.
I've been looking at their timeline and quite noticeably it now appears, the night Lees and Falconio slept in their van is documented but details of where they stayed the night of the 13th is absent. There's a gap.
June 25: They left Sydney in their orange camper van and headed to Canberra, Melbourne and South Australia before travelling north towards the country's red centre, sleeping in the back of their camper van either on campsites or in lay-bys at the side of the road.
Wednesday July 11: They made friends with some Canadian backpackers whilst visiting Uluru and gave them a lift in their camper van to King's Canyon in the Watarrka national park, and on to Alice Springs, where they continued their travels separately.
Thursday July 12: They spent the day sightseeing before staying the night in the van in an Alice Springs lay-by.
Friday July 14, 10am: Mr Falconio visited Maureen Laracy, a Deloittes accountant in Alice Springs, who told him he owed the tax office money because he had been paying tax as an Australian resident, rather than as a non-resident, while working in Sydney. Later, he bought a ticket for a flight he had planned to take to Papua New Guinea with a friend.
Meanwhile, Ms Lees was at the library in Alice Springs, checking her emails, before the couple met each other to have breakfast together at the Green Frog cafe.
Friday July 14, 11.30am: Ms Lees rang her friend, Amanda Whelan, in Sydney to say they were going to visit the Camel Cup races, where they spent two to three hours and watched the Miss Camel Cup beauty pageant, before eating at the Red Rooster restaurant.
Friday July 14, around 4pm: Ms Lees drove north from Alice Springs while Mr Falconio read JD Salinger's Catcher In The Rye before falling asleep in the back.
Friday July 14, 6.21pm: The couple bought fuel from the Ti Tree Roadhouse and "shared a smoke", a joint of cannabis, as they watched the sun set. Mr Falconio then bought some lollies and took over the driving as they headed north along the Stuart highway. Ms Lees said she saw a small fire at the side of the road along the way.
Friday July 14, around 7.30pm: A vehicle drew level with the couple's camper van around six miles (11km) north of Barrow Creek and Ms Lees looked across to see a dog sitting in the cabin next to the driver of the 4x4, who was indicating a problem with the exhaust area of their van.
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Timeline: Peter Falconio murder
Key events leading up to the murder of British backpacker Peter Falconio on a desert highway in the Australian outback on July 14 2001.www.theguardian.com

Highway 1 caravan park, Boliver.
The stay at Bolivar, where Murdoch also stayed, was in Adelaide, so somewhere between June 29 and July 11.I've been looking at their timeline and quite noticeably it now appears, the night Lees and Falconio slept in their van is documented but details of where they stayed the night of the 13th is absent. There's a gap.
June 25: They left Sydney in their orange camper van and headed to Canberra, Melbourne and South Australia before travelling north towards the country's red centre, sleeping in the back of their camper van either on campsites or in lay-bys at the side of the road.
Wednesday July 11: They made friends with some Canadian backpackers whilst visiting Uluru and gave them a lift in their camper van to King's Canyon in the Watarrka national park, and on to Alice Springs, where they continued their travels separately.
Thursday July 12: They spent the day sightseeing before staying the night in the van in an Alice Springs lay-by.
Friday July 14, 10am: Mr Falconio visited Maureen Laracy, a Deloittes accountant in Alice Springs, who told him he owed the tax office money because he had been paying tax as an Australian resident, rather than as a non-resident, while working in Sydney. Later, he bought a ticket for a flight he had planned to take to Papua New Guinea with a friend.
Meanwhile, Ms Lees was at the library in Alice Springs, checking her emails, before the couple met each other to have breakfast together at the Green Frog cafe.
Friday July 14, 11.30am: Ms Lees rang her friend, Amanda Whelan, in Sydney to say they were going to visit the Camel Cup races, where they spent two to three hours and watched the Miss Camel Cup beauty pageant, before eating at the Red Rooster restaurant.
Friday July 14, around 4pm: Ms Lees drove north from Alice Springs while Mr Falconio read JD Salinger's Catcher In The Rye before falling asleep in the back.
Friday July 14, 6.21pm: The couple bought fuel from the Ti Tree Roadhouse and "shared a smoke", a joint of cannabis, as they watched the sun set. Mr Falconio then bought some lollies and took over the driving as they headed north along the Stuart highway. Ms Lees said she saw a small fire at the side of the road along the way.
Friday July 14, around 7.30pm: A vehicle drew level with the couple's camper van around six miles (11km) north of Barrow Creek and Ms Lees looked across to see a dog sitting in the cabin next to the driver of the 4x4, who was indicating a problem with the exhaust area of their van.
![]()
Timeline: Peter Falconio murder
Key events leading up to the murder of British backpacker Peter Falconio on a desert highway in the Australian outback on July 14 2001.www.theguardian.com
Yeah, I know, until you posted the timeline I hadnt referenced a date.Boliver is in Adelaide, they spent the night of the 12th July in Alice Springs which is about a 15 hour drive from Boliver.
They were intercepted the evening of the 14th July.
Yeah, I know, until you posted the timeline I hadnt referenced a date.
It was in Adelaide, so before the 12/7.
Its conveniently downplayed as part of the 'made their way from Sydney to AS' where the official story picks up.