The case of the missing gold prospector

Andrew L. Urban

The conviction of Stephen Struber and Dianne Wilson-Struber for the 2012 murder of gold prospector Bruce Schuler in remote Queensland carries a high risk of wrongful conviction when assessed against established international miscarriage-of-justice indicators. Former detective and author Graeme Crowley identifies 140 inconsistencies in the evidence. LIA questions the verdict.  Continue reading

Posted in Stephen & Dianne Struber | 2 Comments

When Murphy’s law was right

The late jurist Lionel Murphy (1922 – 1986) wrote a prescient dissenting view when the High Court rejected Lindy Chamberlain’s 1984 appeal, where Murphy was outvoted 3-2. It is essential reading even now. Murphy’s summary turned out to be 100% right.  Continue reading

Posted in Lindy Chamberlain | 6 Comments

Coming soon: true crime movies inspired by real events

Andrew L. Urban 

Another title could be “You can’t make this stuff up!” And we didn’t. Or you could file it under ‘Truth is stranger than fiction’. We have been inspired by real events to draft these story lines. Sadly, there are no happy endings … yet. Continue reading

Posted in General articles | 4 Comments

A-G Rowland says ‘no’ to CCRC – much needed law reform

Not for the first time, a Federal Attorney-General has shrugged off a proposal to consider the establishment of a Criminal Cases Review Commission. The public should know this. The legal profession should know this – especially the few who have shown support for such a body. The A-G’s department has again turned away from the proposal in the same language as its predecessors. But none have given a reason.  Continue reading

Posted in CCRC | 2 Comments

Juries and the GIGO principle

Andrew L. Urban

In a Sydney murder trial, Juror John was so disturbed by what he saw as the Crown’s unethical behaviour, unrestrained by the judge, he barely could restrain himself from jumping out of his seat and shouting his objections to the prosecutor and the judge. He was recalling this a few years after the trial. He is still outraged. Juror John (not his real name) spent many weeks in the jury room for that trial. He was pretty disgusted by the ignorance and or carelessness of some of his fellow jurors, too. And in the end, the jury could not agree on a verdict.  Continue reading

Posted in General articles | 6 Comments

Lehrmann’s hell in legal purgatory

Andrew L. Urban

 Now that Bruce Lehrmann’s appeal against the negative result in his defamation case against TEN and Lisa Wilkinson has been dismissed in the Federal Court, the legal quagmire has deepened. He is living in the hell of legal purgatory. This is not a victory for the rule of law. Continue reading

Posted in Case 18 Bruce Lehrmann | 6 Comments

Tasmanian Legislative Council urged on “a wide-ranging powerful commission of inquiry” into Sue Neill-Fraser case

Andrew L. Urban

You won’t be surprised that the Tasmanian Government is continuing to stonewall on the calls for an inquiry into the Sue Neill-Fraser case, firmly keeping a blind eye on the mountain of reasons in favour of one. The latest exhibition of this happened in the Legislative Council in the evening of Tuesday, December 2, 2025, when the latest Etter Selby report was tabled by Michael Gaffney (Ind, Mersey). And then that mysterious phone call …  Continue reading

Posted in Case 01 Sue Neill-Fraser | 12 Comments

Is Sue Neill-Fraser’s murder conviction built on fraud? LIA says yes.

LIA, the new Legal Intel AI, has identified at least four issues as potential grounds that might be framed as a ‘fraud on the court’ in the case of Sue Neill-Fraser. One would be enough. Given the shameful history of the case at the hands of Tasmania’s legal system, nobody should be surprised. But why now?  Continue reading

Posted in Case 01 Sue Neill-Fraser | 4 Comments

Is Marco Rusterholz really the murderer? A private investigation

JAKE HOLLAND

 A friend of Marco’s asked me to look at the case a couple of years ago but I originally shrugged it off as a typical “I didn’t do it story” and then some time later in a moment of boredom, I had a look at it and was shocked that the evidence seemed to point to a man named Matthew  Coventry. The more I researched about him, the more it seemed like he was indeed involved.  Continue reading

Posted in Case 19 Marco Rusterholz | 2 Comments

Misplaced morality in our criminal justice system

One could argue that juries these days are more likely to be sympathetic to the ruling orthodoxies; hence the George Pell and Noel Greenaway* convictions, to cite two examples. It’s no surprise, since juries are chosen from the general population, subject to the same jostling forces that produce ruling orthodoxies. That includes the ethos of the #MeToo movement and ‘believe all women.’ Judges may be just as likely to base their decisions on the same orthodoxy, if the case of Frank Valentine* is any guide. The late KEITH WINDSHUTTLE published this prescient article in March 2019; it is totally relevant today, confirming how misplaced morality has corrupted the rule of law.  Continue reading

Posted in Case 07 George Pell, Case 22 Noel Greenaway, Case 26 Frank Valentine | 1 Comment