Lucille Butterworth | Australian Crime Stories | S3E01

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i want to see that man in jail i want to see him spend the last little bits of his life with no freedom lucille has had her life stolen by that man what's wrong with our law system when somebody admits to killing somebody and they can still walk free [Music] disgusting the story we're about to tell could be one of the greatest miscarriages of justice in australian criminal history what is this some kind of conspiracy did one man get away with murder you meant to tell me that you're going 40 plus years to sit me here why didn't you do it in we had jeffrey wish we had leaving a family's faith shaken to the call he's just confessed you've got to do something about it i can categorically prove he's a liar but i cannot prove him to be a murderer for investigative crime reporter adam shan this case is personal we're doing this story in order to right or wrong with your help we can bring a killer to justice you'll be a hero an absolute hero to me [Music] [Music] i came across the story of paul lucille butterworth about two years ago that was after the tasmanian coroner declared it was likely that she was strangled to death and her body disposed of on the banks of the derwent river if the coroner is to be believed there's no reason why we shouldn't believe him her killer has gotten away scot-free we're doing this story in order to right or wrong to finally bring her killer to justice i've lived and read this story for a very long time and it's time to share it with you [Music] most people after talk with her just for a minute or two they liked her it was she just had that attitude uh radiant you know had a little um playhouse up the back it was actually the old truck house and it was all cleaned out and made it nice and she'd want me to go up and have cups of tea and it was good yeah it was fun when lucille finished school she started modeling and took a job at the tv station in hobart she had an orangey colored uniform that was the office uniform [Music] and the coat that black coat with the white she modeled that coat and she walked around then she came over to where i was sitting and she said i love this mum can i have it i said yes you can have it lucille fell in love with a young man by the name of john fitzgerald he lived in the town of new norfolk a half hour's drive north west of hobart she used to go out there and stay with him often on the day she went missing lucia was making the journey to stay overnight with john after attending a miss tasmania fundraiser she planned to drive there in her little austin a40 my father thought that it was too dangerous driving at the dark lonely road uh but it was for her safety for her care parents that's what they do so she took the bus yeah and well we know what happened after that [Music] lucille got a lift to this spot in claremont where there used to be a bus stop in 1969 all the buses to new norfolk had to stop here but on august 25 police believed there was a problem the bus she wanted to catch was late she thought she'd missed it a car pulled up and she accepted a ride and that was the last time anyone saw lucille [Music] butterworth was the one that took the phone call on the tuesday morning from john fitz um i was probably ready to go to school not probably i know it was i was in my school uniform because i used to walk to school what did john fitzgerald say is lucille there quote unquote and i said no so i just called out to mummy i think you'd better come here and have a chat to john fitz and i think she might have said something like we'll know where she's supposed to be up with you and i'd assume john said well no he's she didn't come up last night and that was when mum sort of started to collapse so i grabbed hold of her otherwise she'd have ended up on the floor and i think i might have said something like it'll be all right mum you know we'll be right we'll we'll find her the butterworths immediately reported lucille's disappearance what do you recall the police did in those early days nothing so this was just so out of character for her they're absolutely out of character and the general consensus in the police force was that she was a runaway lucille wouldn't do a thing like that she'd she you know she loved us all her family knew lucille would not have run away she had a good job she was in love and she'd only taken enough clothes for an overnight stay something awful had happened to lucille and it came to her father in a terrifying dream he said he woke up one night he was choking um there was a white light a red one outside the window he said to me quote lucille has been murdered that's what he said [Music] crucial investigating time had been lost but the message finally got out this is where the trail of lucille's known movements ends what happened from here on no one knows oh i'm nearly at them in mind i feel as though i've had a limb torn away from me it's a terrible feeling [Music] the police soon turned their attention to new norfolk the town where lucille was headed they formed a view about a former policeman turned taxi driver john gannon lonegan he had a history of picking up women in bus stops and sexually assaulting them the chief investigating officer inspector orb canning was so convinced that lonnigan had murdered lucille he refused to investigate any other leads canning was he was fixated with lonegan there was no doubt about that well for one thing lucy wouldn't have got in the car with him because he didn't know him why didn't inspector canning have enough understanding of lucille to realise that they needed to find other suspects canning's tunnel vision proved disastrous the case against lonergan stalled when police investigators were unable to place the rapist near the clermont bus stop where lucille went missing on august 25 lonnigan was a prime suspect but nothing happened what toll did that take on your parents ah well well it it took a huge toll on both mum and dad dad i'm sure dad died of a broken heart and having a daughter of my own i can understand that now and for mum she didn't want to leave the house that we were in because she thought lucy was going to walk up the driveway when lucille's parents died they left instructions for their ashes to be scattered in a rose garden across the road from the bus stop in clermont they lived in hope until the very end someone may talk and we'll have something to put it to rest a little bit of peace peace of mind instead of the one dream for 41 years nothing had been achieved by the police then detective inspector david plumpton arrived at the glenorchy cib in the 60s and 70s most everybody was aware of lucille butterworth the missing person why did you take it on yeah because you could that's the difference people say things because it mattered i don't know does that make sense because it mattered but what might it really matter was when i meet jimmy butterworth and john butterworth oh the face of someone who's suffering from that immense personal loss and you've got control over something that can help them or maybe lessen the pain so it becomes a bit of a focus for me at glenorchy cib so having a look at the file in 2010 what conclusion could you draw from the file that loneigan was the number one person of interest and more than likely the offender but there was another name in the file just to mention what was that name jeffrey charles hunt next police finally make a breakthrough we put him into the police vehicle and he was quite calm and without hesitation he confessed when detective plumpton dusted off the file on the disappearance of lucille butterworth he found an unfamiliar name jeffrey charles hunt geoffrey charles hunt had murdered a lady by the name of susan knight car saleswoman in 1976. [Music] miss knight's body was found yesterday afternoon by police acting on public information it was found buried underneath a pile of heavy logs some light timber and some rocks he had using a false name arranged for her to bring a car a volkswagen two dromedary where they meet he takes her into the bush and rapes and batters it to death and just leaves her there he's caught interviewed admits it all the man arrived at the spot where miss knight's body was found about 30 meters away he walked into the thick bush with two detectives and two police photographers july 7 1976 uh murder of a young car sales woman susan knight can you remember the circumstances of that call-out yes i can yeah [Music] it was horrific really she had horrendous injuries and she was naked and she had a nasty wound to the head obviously bashed to death with a stone after the body was discovered up at mount dromedary a person that knew hunt had seen his vehicle being driven in the general area where the used car was found abandoned and as a result of that we decided that he was a person of interest and we would pick him up and interview him in relation to it the man accompanied detectives back to the car and drove off towards hobart we put him into the police vehicle and he was quite uh calm and with our hesitation he confessed to murdering the girl night in the vehicle in the vehicle on the way to the runway police station yes so you get there and the formal interview yeah we get there and we do the formal interview which was in the form of a typewritten record of interview and that was done by me in the presence of detective dylan remember this is 1976 police didn't use videos and computers it was all typed or hand barry dillon had worked on lucille's disappearance seven years prior and something in geoffrey charles hunt took him back to 1969 so he asked hunt could he help with lucille as well what happened next was extraordinary at the conclusion of the interview he suggests i know all about that and he went on to say that he'd picked her up from the bus stop he knew her of course so she accepted the lift and uh on the way to new norfolk on the other side of the place called known as the lime kilns he stopped the car you know cutting further past the lime kilns and when he stopped the car something come over him that was the words he used and uh he grabbed him tried to kiss him and she struggled next thing he knew he said his hands were he had her hands his hands around her throat strangling her in fact he said he did strangle her and and she died [Music] he said and then he got out of the car and put her in a fireman's lift carried her out there some distance towards the deward river and dumped her dump the body there this is without us questioning he just freely said this straight off did he explain to you why he was telling you this no he didn't i think when it was put to him seemed to me that he was just so relieved to get it off his chest that's the impression that i got ogari and dylan had hunt confessing to the murder of lucille butterworth they were related and so they should have been they still needed their boss to sign off on the confession so who did they call detective inspector orb canning who'd been in charge of the original investigation back in 1969 canning who'd been fixated on john gannon lodigan and refused to let go even when he couldn't charge lonergan and now he was still fixated on lonnigan when he had hunts confession this was about to set in train one of the great failures of justice in australian criminal history detective inspector canning uh he went into the interview room and he was in there quite some time i'm not sure how long and and i said well what's what is going on you know why is he in there so long and shortly after he came out and he said you've got it all wrong he's not talking about uh butterworth because i told him that you know it confessed and he said you've got it all wrong that's not what he's saying now and uh with that detective dylan said i'll go back in he went back in to see him and dylan came back out and he said well he's still saying the same as he told us so kenny went back in again to do another interview and it was completely against proper practices and he came out to me and he said he's unable to assist and when i had to fill the interrogation register out and detail what he did and i put that down because he said he didn't want any complications so the confession was never recorded and would have gone unnoticed to this day if it weren't for detective plumpton who met with ogari and dylan in 2010. and that is when they say to me hun confessed what oh so hunt's confessed but he hasn't confessed the only contemporaneous note of that occasion is that registrar of persons interviewed signed by hunt saying when spoken to in relation to lucille butterworth but is unable to assist make efficient where is there a confession here would it be fair to say over the years this confession assumed the proportions of an open secret within tasmania police that a lot of people knew about it absolutely absolutely word travels fast in the police you know on the grapevine or whatever travels very fast and there was a lot of people to detectives a lot of people would know about the confession one of the most remarkable aspects about hunt's confession that night was that there were five more detectives outside the interrogation room when it was made when gary and dylan came out and told canning about the confession they all heard it yet for nearly 40 years no one said a single word there were five of them why didn't they all go in there and say hang on orb you know you can't go doing this he's just confessed you've got to do something about it what is this some kind of conspiracy my mother and father died because of the stupidity of the place next plumpton rebuilds the case against hunt brick by brick we've got hunt driving a family car that a witness describes it being present and stopping the bus stop once plumpton discovered the botched confession from 1976 he needed to prove that hunt killed lucille butterworth so much time had passed her body had never been found and hunt was back in the community he'd been released from jail after serving 24 years for the murder of suzanne knight plumpton convinced the tasmanian coroner to hold an inquest into lucille's disappearance but he needed a brief of evidence [Music] i'm in station street new norfolk this was one of the key locations of david plumpton's investigation because it was here that lucille was headed to the night she disappeared her boyfriend john fitzgerald lived here on top of the general store it's a residence now but back in 1969 it was a store that john ran with his father but who else lived in this street just down the road that would be bill and mavis hunt and their six kids what set the family apart was that five of the six children including geoffrey were albinos in a small country town they really stood out maybe fellows are ready how tough do you think it might have been for those hunt children growing up in a place like new norfolk i think jenny probably caught the worst of it um being female the most the others are pretty well accepted what about jeffrey always strange even just passed him in the street you'd feel uncomfortable initially and then if you got close to him your hair in the backy neck would go up you just didn't feel safe around him at that time jeffrey hunt was working in the fitzgerald store he would be stocking shelves or working at the back you'd see him driving the delivery van between the two stores and yet later he denied completely working there now he's definitely there hunt would also deny that he knew lucille didn't know her lived at nearly opposite perved on her over the fence she was sun breaking on the fitzgerald's lawn and she got up and went inside and told john oh what he's been looking at me and john said oh don't call him what he doesn't like that you know so [Music] it mattered to police that jeffrey hunt knew lucille it gave her a reason to accept the lift from him at the bus stop in clermont albeit reluctantly police had another very good reason to investigate hunt back in 1969 it was well known in new norfolk that as a 16 year old jeffrey hunt had been accused of molesting a girl at the train station correct now you heard your parents talk or relatives talking about it and as far as i understood it was true but why wasn't he taken off the boy's home or anything like that i think he had or his father had friends who protected him or protected the family [Music] plumpton's team had a lot of work to do around this bus stop here in claremont they have to prove that jeffrey charles hunt could have driven past here on his way home about the same time as lucille butterworth disappeared if they could do that they could put a strong circumstantial case before the coroner and detective carrie milhouse a key member of plumpton's team did just that he is meticulously going after bits and pieces pulling things back from the 1960s the 1970s highlighting things and all of a sudden we've got hunt driving a car we've got hunt driving a family car in and out of work we've got hunt driving a car that a witness describes as being present and stop him at the bus stop no one had this in the past but we now have so we're not relying on an apparent confession we've now got jeffrey charles hunter known murderer driving by stopping at the bus stop sealed butterworth there prior to this car stopping lucille butterworth not there after the car leaves with this new information plumpton and his team believed they had all the evidence they needed so in 2014 they made their move so we arrested him on suspicion of murder brought him to the denver port police station where we conducted a lengthy interview and put everything to him next we've obtained exclusive access to the police interview with jeffrey charles hunt i've never met her i've never seen her and i don't know okay recording all right the time now is 10 18 am 45 years after lucille butterworth vanished detectives plumpton and middle house sat down to formally interview their chief suspect mr hunt could you please give us your full name age and date of birth jeffrey charles hunt born on what you see in this police interview is a torturous process unfolding it's a marathon goes for more than four hours depending on the question hunt will either answer truthfully lie be evasive or go off on long rambling monologues plumpton and milhouse set out to establish a pattern of lies and a good place to start is the fitzgerald's shop and residence in station street new norfolk yeah john fitzgerald you know john fitzgerald i do know i think he never saw him much people have told me jeff that you actually worked at the fitzgerald store well i'm not wrong they're wrong lucille butterburst you know who she is only what you read in the media over the years are you saying you didn't know her i know i don't know do you recall looking over the shells back fence on a beautiful sunny day lucille was in sunbathing i've never done it before enough about what you're talking about will she pass that information on to joan shane butterworth her sister-in-law did she should that man that i call whitey he was looking at me over the fence that made her go inside i do not know the lady never said eyes on the ladder if she knew you well enough to give you the car with you i'm afraid when this lady disappeared where'd she go missing from claremont 50 clean waters bus stop you drove home past every night i didn't drive home in that area of course to catch the bus until 71 that's when i went before i bought my first car hunt's story was that he was on the bus that day in august 1969 he said he didn't get his driver's license until december of that year but the police knew that was a lie where'd you get your driver's license thank you nothing and who took you for your license kicked out of a buddy police force john john woodhouse yeah that was in right and for your information jeff he left the police department 1967. no i've got my license all those other motors and 66 but i wasn't old enough for the license 67. no his name was john i'm pretty sure it was later that he left he's confirmed with woodhouse you've already said that he was the man i knew his name was it might have been johnny young he was about killed in the chainsaw kevin ballen said jeff because your people backwards very quickly i just kind of know his first name was john hunt's rightly sensed here that the cops have boxed him in it didn't take him long to change his story about when he got his driver's license right that was april 12 1969 so you were driving by that time agreed not december 69 as a legion a vehicle like that yeah what's that vehicle that's a 61 fb home okay do you recognize the coloring on it it's actually a blue roof or white roof that's a white roof one i have this two-tone blue light blue and just a dark blue fins now the car that milhouse has shown hunt is very similar to the family car that jeffrey's father bought back in the 60s hunts senior didn't drive so jeffrey was the only one who drove this car the witness across the road from the bus stop in claremont reported that the car he saw that stopped and picked up lucille was a beaten up old holden just like this one what the police had to prove now was that jeffrey was driving that car on 25th of august 1969. well this is a continuation of an interview with the jeffrey charles hunt at the devonport police station where we finished off jeff we were talking about the fb august 25 1969 you drove past the clan one buster no i knew three days after lucille went missing or two days after there was publicity in the paper missing girl lucille butterworth have you seen her blah blah blah malcolm bond said to you jeff you drive past that way did you see her and you said no didn't say it chief malcolm remembers it clearly why can't he have a good memory people seem to have a bit of confusion here we've got people who will put you there your vehicle there all we want from you is the honesty about that look i'm being honest with you in respect i know nothing about this lady has disappeared how many years ago it was i've never met her i've never seen her and i don't know says i saw him driving the effort at times and pretty sure he parked it up near melville street where i did halfway through the interview i think he realized that you weren't absolutely that's on the table that was going to convict absolutely there wasn't his attitude he's far more confident and he became uh assertive yeah did you pick up lucille butterworth no on the 25th of all was only 69. no did you drive her to a part on the hobo we sexually assaulted and murdered her did you know that no we went there to obtain a confession from mr hunt we didn't obtain that confession now you've got buddy evans to say that i'm involved with the disappearance of this lady you presented now and that's good come on because you're not going to admit it i'm using nothing i told you if we'd have been good enough where to go to confession at the end of the day let's be clear oh i can't put up all these um excuses there is no excuse you meant to tell me that you've gone 40 plus years to sit me here for a couple hours asking those buddy questions why didn't you do it in the past well i was at prison for 26 years you never come anywhere near me between when the lady first disappeared until i was sentenced into the prison in 1970 wish we had we shall have been done i can categorically prove he's a liar but i cannot prove him to be a murderer the time now is 12 minutes past three really and we'll conclude the interview we dropped him back at home and we came back to hobart we still haven't found lucille butterworth and he hasn't been charged with murder next there are new hopes of a breakthrough in one of tasmania's oldest suspected murder cases police are set to find the remains of lucille butterworth despite an epic four-hour interview the police had failed to extract a murder confession from hunt they didn't have a body either so they ordered a dig there are new hopes of a breakthrough in one of tasmania's oldest suspected murder cases police are set to start digging up an area north of hobart in an attempt to find the remains of lucille butterworth so david why did you come and dig here at this location you're about at now that road is not where the road is of the day the lay by has changed but we determine this is the location that hunt strangled lucille took a body from a car parked here out into the bush and dumped a body so we dug it up obviously we had here forensic experts who are internationally and nationally recognised for their skills in this type of thing we had assistance at the university of tasmania and putting probes in looking for something metallic uh teeth or the remains of somebody and when they first start finding bones in this area you think yeah yeah yeah and we found a lot of bones animal bones having said all of that though we obviously didn't find anything to indicate that hunt was telling the truth or that lucille was an actual fact here in your heart of hearts though yep did you think you were going to find something here yeah absolutely it's a big disappointment [Music] one of the issues of course is where the water is oh yeah and the critics say well he must have put her in the river yes and we all speculate and guess about the fact that he's a local where would he have gone as a local to do this if it hadn't been pre-meditated and he thought right i'm going to pick this girl up or he's decided i'm going to murder her he would have gone to a far more secluded spot but he's not looking to hide all he wants to do maybe is to kiss her and so he hasn't chosen a spot out of the view of everybody he's chosen a spot where he thinks he can do something the end result has been an absolute unmitigated tragedy there was no body and the clock was ticking the coroner's inquest was coming up fast but then inspector plumpton received a phone call from an inmate who served time with hunt in risdon prison so speak to him what hunts confessed to him shortly thereafter two other prisoners come forward and say hunt confess the interesting thing is these three prisoners didn't know one another and they were in jail with hunt at the time one of those inmates philip roger harris spoke to adam for his podcast about an encounter with hunt in prison it was a bloke that you knew as hunt do you remember when you first saw him yes a lb no white hair with pink eyes and rolling around his head all the bloody time i said to him what are you in for alrighty you know and he said murder and he got talking about murder and this and that and the next day he told me about uh lucille butterworth that uh he murdered before and i said when do you come up on that and he said well i don't they haven't found the body yet yeah he told me that he knew her and blah blah blah and known her for a while and he said he picked her up and we was going back home to new norfolk and she uh got panicky and wanted to get out of the car so we stopped the car and he reached over and strangled her and then he he pulled her out of the car and he was bloody he said there was mud god's truth he said i couldn't drag her any further he said the mud was over me bloating boats he said so i just left her there i thought myself well it must be near the river somewhere that's what i thought i asked him would he ever do it again he said yeah sure he said i loved it did you think about telling the police what hunt had told you no because i just thought he was bloody like me you know just be noting himself like everyone does in jail you only believe after [ __ ] they tell you he's a very clever man don't get me wrong he's i tell you what he's got astronomical brain that man but he's psycho the inquest into the 1969 disappearance of model lucille butterworth began in hobart today i'm full of confidence because mr hunt is not only going to have to give evidence but he's going to have to answer the questions very rarely does that happen jeffrey charles hunt has made his first appearance at the lucille butterworth inquest isn't it time that you told them what happened you're sitting in the court there yep and you see hunt in the witness box can you describe your feelings hmm i'd have shot him sorry i probably shouldn't say that i'm not a violent person but yeah it was it was pretty hard and how did you regard the evidence he was giving um okay do you want to politically correct i'd rather the truth the truth it was lies he lied he could describe in intimate detail the number five cylinder on the fb holden that didn't work but as soon as simon nicholson said but you knew lucille have a look at that photo there you knew lucille no i did not know that lady that's just about a quote of his words and during the course of that inquest we had to listen to witnesses who were autonomous to one another but were in prison at one stage with hunt and one of them had said mrs hunt saying you know pick up a sheila at the bus stop and and then to dispose of the body um you cut them open and put a brick in it and they sink in the water so we had to sit there and listen to that it was too much for ms butterworth's fiance john fitzgerald who was wheeled out of the courtroom sobbing i just hope in the next couple of days something comes up out of us we we deserve to know what happened to lucille [Music] lucille butterworth's family waited almost 50 years but it took coroner simon cooper less than 10 minutes to deliver his finding that jeffrey charles hunt had killed her the coroner accepted hunt's confession of 1976 almost word for word that being he picked her up at the bus stop stopped the car on the way to new norfolk strangled her and then disposed of her body on the banks of the river somewhere near here it was a stunning finding of guilt but that didn't mean he'd be charged and sent for trial automatically that decision rested with tasmania's director of public prosecutions it would be an anxious wait for john and jim butterworth the tasmanian coroner found the jeffrey charles hunt killed lucille butterworth in 1969 but the decision as to whether he would be prosecuted that rested with the dpp have you lied about this time and time again at that point were you confident there would be a prosecution yes absolutely and then the director of public prosecutions calls you in for a meeting yes what did he say to you uh when he first walked in the room i think he was a little uh nervous because i think he knew what he was the news that he was going to tell us was not the news that we wanted there were tears this morning as tasmania's director of public prosecutions broke the news to lacil butterworth's family that hunt would not be criminally charged over her suspected murder how do we feel devastated mr coates said i have also concluded on the relevant and admissible evidence there is no reasonable prospect of convicting anybody with miss butterworth's death how much evidence do you need how much does our law in australia need to hear things like this to be able to act can't believe it i do not believe that this sort of thing can happen now and what's faith in the system jimmy absolutely absolutely told them what happened as it stands now everyone thinks he's guilty you begin to realize no this is this is an injustice it's not justice we want him brought to justice we want him put behind bars that's what we want for lucille [Music] you've done hundreds probably thousands of interviews with suspects over the years do you have any doubt in your mind that he's the killer absolutely none at all you walk past the bus stop most mornings with your little dog yeah every morning i go that way yeah it does come back every now and again you know and i discuss it with dylan and we say what if what if and he always says if it hadn't been for that canning he said we'd have cleaned this up and put the girl to rest you know and the family would have had some closure at the moment there are two memorials that jimmy's put up one at claremont near the bus stop but one out where her remains we believe what he's based off is that enough today i'm too close to this story now i'll admit that i want a result for jimmy and the family who've been tortured by lucille's disappearance and time is running out you're now 82 years of age you've just got a pretty devastating diagnosis of your cancer it's terminal we're six to 15 months or something well that depends this is what the doctors say do you fear that due to the incompetence the arrogance the technicalities that you may not get an answer while you're still living well it's very possible very possible now that now that we've had that sort of answer you know from from the dpp [Music] lucille butterworth is dead and her alleged killer jeffrey charles hunt still lives in the small town in northwest tasmania i can't name that town for legal reasons but i reckon he'd be the loneliest man in this state it's hard to argue that he doesn't deserve to be so when i was making my podcast i decided i needed to see him to understand what his life was like so i staked out his house i followed him around for the best part of a day and i took this photograph of him i must say it was unnerving to be in his presence [Music] and i'm not the only one to seek him out in his hometown you're worried everybody jimmy i know but i only went to have a look i photographed the house with its sheets off a bed hanging those curtains and couldn't see him but i pulled the car forward a little to see the side windows and the curtains moved and then slowed down and didn't move anymore so i assumed that he did see me what would you have done if he'd come out well adam i'll ask you what would you do what would you think i know what i'd want to do right but i'm not you so i can't answer for you well the better part of that was i drove away [Music] [Music] [Music] i've been reporting crime now for about two decades and i can't think of a more obvious miscarriage of justice i saw an interview with david plumpton's successor at glenorchy police station and the police media unit told me there's no active investigation into lucille butterworth's murder if anybody in new norfolk has anything that they've seen heard or anything that's coming from hearsay please come forward tell what you know it's not going to hurt you nobody's going to hurt you you'll be you'll be a hero an absolute hero to me and those that are around lucille [Music] [Music] [Music] you
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Channel: Australian Crime
Views: 137,504
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: Australia, Australian Crime, Australian crime documentary, Australian crime series, Gangs & Mobs, Psychology of Crime, Stalkers, child crime, con artists, crime, crime documentary, crime series, disappearances, family crime, murder, police, serial killer, true crime, true crime documentary, true crime series, Lucille Butterworth, True crime, Dissapearence, Documentary, Crime series, Taken
Id: C1imLnC3q9A
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Length: 46min 12sec (2772 seconds)
Published: Tue Sep 27 2022
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