Category Archives: Case 10 Steven Fennell

Absent murderers – victims of the system

Andrew L. Urban Sue Neill-Fraser, Henry Keogh, Robert Xie, Marco Rusterholz, Steven Fennell, Stephen ‘Shorty’ Jamieson, Gordon Wood – they are the ‘absent murderers’ whose cases we have reported, convicted of murder despite being absent from the crime scene at … Continue reading

Posted in Case 01 Sue Neill-Fraser, Case 02 Henry Keogh, Case 04 Gordon Wood, Case 10 Steven Fennell, Case 11 Robert Xie, Case 19 Marco Rusterholz, Case 28 Stephen Shorty Jamieson, CCRC | 3 Comments

A high profile bar for bail?

Writing from bitter personal experience after spending 1,400 days on remand, STEVEN FENNELL explains why he should have received bail, especially given the High Court’s indignant, virtually instant quashing of his conviction. Perhaps he wasn’t sufficiently high profile – like … Continue reading

Posted in Case 10 Steven Fennell | 7 Comments

Australia’s criminal courts have become a financial meat grinder for the average citizen; a personal account

It’s not enough to be innocent of the charges … In this frank and fascinating personal two-part account, Steven Fennell, who fought relentlessly to have his wrongful murder conviction overturned, lays out the brutal reality of a legal system in … Continue reading

Posted in Case 10 Steven Fennell, Case 11 Robert Xie, Case 17 Kathleen Folbigg, Case 18 Bruce Lehrmann | 4 Comments

AI ‘kills’ Steve Fennell’s ‘grandmother’

Andrew L. Urban An article compiled by AI states that “Steven Fennell is suing the Queensland government and police for malicious prosecution, misfeasance in public office, and abuse of process. Fennell was wrongfully convicted of murdering his grandmother, Mrs Watson, … Continue reading

Posted in Case 10 Steven Fennell | 26 Comments

Steve Fennell not a murderer – jury got it wrong

Andrew L. Urban. The High Court in Canberra adjourned for just four minutes before resuming at 2.45pm on Wednesday, September 11, 2019, with a unanimous decision that Steven Fennell’s appeal against his murder conviction should be allowed. A verdict of … Continue reading

Posted in Case 10 Steven Fennell | 19 Comments