Robert Farquharson

Last updated

Robert Farquharson
Born
Robert Donald William Farquharson

1969 (age 5455)
Australia
Criminal statusFound guilty
SpouseCindy Gambino (divorced) (deceased)
Children3 (deceased; victims)
Criminal chargeThree counts of murder
PenaltySentenced to life imprisonment with a 33-year minimum [1]
Details
Victims3
CountryAustralia
State(s) Victoria
Killed3
WeaponCar, dam
Date apprehended
14 December 2005

Robert Donald William Farquharson (born 1969) is an Australian man convicted of murdering his three sons on 4 September 2005, by deliberately driving his car into a farm dam. [2]

Contents

Farquharson was convicted in an earlier trial and was sentenced to life imprisonment with no minimum term. However, he maintained his innocence and appealed his sentence. [3] On 17 December 2009, he won the right to a retrial, due in part to the key witness for the prosecution, Greg King, facing potential criminal charges himself at the time of the original trial. [4] He was released on bail on 21 December, but was again convicted of murder on 22 July 2010.

Helen Garner published This House of Grief (2014) as a response to the crime and the ensuing trials, in which Farquharson is heavily depicted.

Early life

The deceased Farquharson children, Jai, 10, Bailey, 2, Tyler, 7 Farquharson-children-dad-guilty.jpg
The deceased Farquharson children, Jai, 10, Bailey, 2, Tyler, 7

Farquharson met Cindy Gambino in February 1990 and the two began a relationship. Gambino had previously been in a relationship with a man who was killed in a car accident. In October 1994, their first son Jai was born. In 1996, Farquharson took a redundancy package from his employer and bought a lawn-mowing franchise servicing his local area, a venture which lost him A$40,000. [5]

In July 1998, their second son, Tyler, was born and in 2000, Farquharson married Gambino. [5] They then had another son, Bailey, in December 2002 before the pair separated amicably in 2004. [6] Farquharson had avoidant personality disorder and bouts of depression, and sought the assistance of a psychologist and later a psychiatrist to deal with the separation. He was prescribed the antidepressants sertraline and later mirtazapine. [5] [7]

Drownings

About 7 pm on 4 September 2005, as Farquharson was returning his children to their mother after a Father's Day access visit, his white 1989 VN Commodore vehicle veered across the Princes Highway between Winchelsea and Geelong, in Victoria, crashed through a fence and came to rest in a 7.4 meter deep disused former quarry turned farm dam [8] where it filled with water and submerged. His three sons were unable to free themselves and drowned. Farquharson managed to escape and alerted another driver who took him to nearby Winchelsea. [9] Police divers recovered the boys' bodies about 2 am the next day. They were still inside the vehicle and were not restrained by seatbelts.

After a three-month investigation, police prepared murder charges against Farquharson and went to his Winchelsea home on 14 December 2005. He was not there at the time but presented himself at the Geelong police station in the presence of his lawyer. He was arrested and charged with three counts of murder. He had previously requested and undertook a lie detector test, the results of which are inadmissible in court. [10] He later appeared in the Geelong Magistrates Court, where he was remanded in custody and ordered to appear before the court on 7 April 2006. [9]

Trial

Police alleged that Farquharson was in control of the vehicle in the moments before it crashed into the dam and that he earlier told a friend, Greg King, that he had intended to kill his children to get back at his wife. [11] He was later granted bail and released from custody.

Farquharson's trial for the murder of his sons began in the Supreme Court of Victoria, before Justice Philip Cummins, on 21 August 2007. [12] A total of 49 witnesses appeared during the six-week trial. [13]

Gambino told the court that she did not believe Farquharson intended to kill their children deliberately, saying "I believe with all my heart that this was just an accident and that he would not have hurt a hair on their heads. I don't believe this is murder." [14]

Prosecution

Sergeant Glen Urquhart gave evidence that the steering wheel of Farquharson's vehicle would require a 220-degree turn to veer as it did on the highway to leave the road. There was no evidence of braking before the car entered the dam. [15] The vehicle's headlights, heater and ignition system were all in the off position. [5]

The body of the oldest child, Jai, was found protruding halfway out of the vehicle's front door. The other boys were discovered in the back seat.

Police video re-enactments of the crime scene played before the court showed the car veering left, instead of right, towards the dam at the exact position on the highway the accident happened. Farquharson's car was found to pull slightly to the right, though not to the degree that would counteract the left-veering force according to Urquhart.

King, a bus driver, testified that he recalled a conversation with Farquharson two months before the incident outside a fish and chip shop. He said his friend spoke of seeking revenge on his former wife and of wanting to "take away the things that mean the most to her",[ citation needed ] meaning the children. King recalled Farquharson complaining how his wife had taken the newer of the two cars. But King's wife could not recall her husband relaying this conversation to her that day.

Another witness, Shane Atkinson, who discovered Farquharson on the side of the road, said Farquharson twice refused to call the 000 emergency number, preferring instead to travel to Winchelsea to tell his wife of his children's fate. [15] The court transcript reveals Atkinson had to borrow a mobile phone to call police from the Winchelsea police station, which was closed for the night. This backs up the evidence given originally at the committal hearing that no mobile phone was available.

Matthew Naughton, an associate professor and specialist in sleep and respiratory medicine, told the jury that it was highly unlikely Farquharson had had a coughing fit in the moments before the accident. [16] He further testified that coughing to the point of blacking out is an extremely rare condition, known as cough syncope, and that Farquharson was unlikely to have had such an attack while driving given the warmth of his vehicle. [17] He later conceded, however, that he had never seen cough syncope, would not know how to take a history to determine it and was skeptical even of its existence, a consideration not backed up by others in the same sphere of medicine.

Defence

Farquharson relied upon the defence of losing consciousness due to a coughing fit and told police that he woke up in the dam. He said that the car had begun to submerge when his son Jai tried to free himself by opening the passenger door. [18]

Cam Everett, the owner of the property where the dam was located, told the court that a total of seven vehicles had crashed through his farm fence in eight years. No vehicles other than Farquharson's had ended up in the dam in that time. [5]

Former police superintendent David Axup, who had been in the police force for over 20 years, contradicted the prosecution's arguments about the path and steering of the car as it left the road, believing it had probably travelled on a 53-degree arc. He said this could be explained by the right camber of the road towards the dam as well as the fact that the car had poor wheel alignment, meaning it would move uncontrolled to the right. [19]

Farquharson's thoracic medicine specialist, Chris Steinfort, also concluded it was "highly likely" that his patient had cough syncope on the night. Steinfort has seen cases of cough syncope and believed the symptoms experienced by Farquharson were a "classic" example. [20]

Verdict

The day before the verdict came in, Farquharson arranged for flowers (three red tulips) to be laid at the grave of his children. Attached was a card reading "Dear Jai, Thinking of you on your birthday. Love you, Dad." Jai would have turned 13 that day. [21]

After three days of deliberations, the jury found Farquharson guilty on 5 October 2007. [2] Gambino broke down in court when the verdict was announced; her mother collapsed and was taken to hospital by ambulance. [17] Justice Cummins allowed a recess of 15 minutes for the court to compose itself before proceedings resumed. [22]

On 16 November 2007, Farquharson was sentenced to three terms of life imprisonment without parole. He then announced that he intended to appeal his convictions. [3]

Appeal, bail and retrial

On 17 December 2009, Farquharson's conviction was unanimously overturned by the three appeal judges. They were critical of the trial judge, the prosecution and the evidence of key prosecution witness Greg King. [23] On 21 December, he was granted bail and released into the care of one of his sisters with AU$200,000 surety. [24]

The retrial commenced on 4 May 2010 before Justice Lex Lasry QC. The jury retired to consider their verdict on 19 July after hearing 11 weeks of evidence and argument. [25] On 22 July, after three days of deliberation, the second jury again found Farquharson guilty of murder. On 15 October 2010, he was sentenced to life imprisonment with a 33-year minimum. [1]

Media

Gambino told her story to Australian magazine Woman's Day , saying that she did not believe Farquharson had killed their children, [26] but later changed her mind. [27] Harpo Productions, the company of American talk show host Oprah Winfrey, was reported to have offered Gambino $1 million to appear on the programme and tell her story. [5] Cindy Gambino-Moules, as she was known after her remarriage, passed away at age 50 in May 2022. [28]

Three books have also been written on the case, which contrast sharply in their perspectives and conclusions.

The case was also covered in detail by Casefile True Crime Podcast in Case 167 released on 6 March 2021, and in True Crime Conversations later in the same year, with the two podcasts presenting contrasting perspectives.

In 2024, two new programmes were released seriously challenging the evidence presented for conviction, suggesting that the second conviction was also based upon a thorough mistreatment of the evidence.

60 Minutes Australia, in an episode hosted by Nick McKenzie, spoke to numerous experts, most prominently Anna-Maria Arabia, chief executive of the Australian Academy of Science, while questioning much of the evidence presented by the prosecution. [29] [30]

Some of the new evidence presented by 60 Minutes, in particular the computer modelling of the crash, was done after the road involved had been considerably altered by upgrades made to it in the intervening period.

The 60 Minutes piece was prompted by a joint investigation done by The Age and the Sydney Morning Herald, whose five part podcast, Trial By Water, also questions whether or not Farquharson was unfairly convicted. [31] [32] [33]

No firm conclusions regarding the events of 4 September 2005 were reached by either of the 2024 reviews; rather, questions were raised as to whether or not Farquharson had received a fair trial, or if in fact the conviction should again be revisited. [34] [35] [36]

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Squizzy Taylor</span> Australian gangster

Joseph Theodore Leslie "Squizzy" Taylor was an Australian gangster from Melbourne. He appeared repeatedly and sometimes prominently in Melbourne news media because of suspicions, formal accusations and some convictions related to a 1919 gang war, to his absconding from bail and hiding from the police in 1921–22, and to his involvement in a robbery where a bank manager was murdered in 1923.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Death of Azaria Chamberlain</span> Australian victim of animal attack

Azaria Chantel Loren Chamberlain was a two-month-old Australian baby girl who was killed by a dingo on the night of 17 August 1980 during a family camping trip to Uluru in the Northern Territory. Her body was never found. Her parents, Lindy and Michael Chamberlain, reported that she had been taken from their tent by a dingo. However, Lindy was tried for murder and spent more than three years in prison. Michael received a suspended sentence. Lindy was released only after Azaria's jacket was found near a dingo lair and new inquests were opened. In 2012, 32 years after Azaria's death, the Chamberlains' version of events was officially supported by a coroner.

Peter Falconio was a British tourist who disappeared in a remote part of the Stuart Highway near Barrow Creek in the Northern Territory of Australia on the evening of 14 July 2001, while travelling with his girlfriend Joanne Lees.

Sef Gonzales is a Filipino Australian man who was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment for the July 2001 murders of his father Teodoro "Teddy" Gonzales (46), his mother Mary Loiva Gonzales (43), and his sister Clodine Gonzales (18), in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. As a result of notoriety surrounding the sale of the house where the crimes occurred, the New South Wales government made it illegal to not disclose information related to the history of a property.

This is a timeline of major crimes in Australia.

David Harold Eastman is a former public servant from Canberra, Australia. In 1995, he was wrongfully convicted of the murder of Australian Federal Police Assistant Commissioner Colin Winchester and was sentenced to life imprisonment without parole. A 2014 judicial inquiry recommended the sentence be quashed and he should be pardoned. On 22 August of the same year, the Supreme Court of the Australian Capital Territory quashed the conviction, released Eastman from prison, and ordered a retrial.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Carl Williams (criminal)</span> Australian murderer and drug trafficker

Carl Anthony Williams was an Australian convicted murderer and drug trafficker from Melbourne, Victoria. He was a central figure in the Melbourne gangland killings as well as their final victim.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Peter Dupas</span> Australian serial killer and rapist

Peter Norris Dupas is an Australian convicted serial killer, currently serving three life sentences without parole for murder and primarily for being a serious habitual offender. He has a very significant criminal history involving serious sexual and violent offences, with his violent criminal history spanning more than three decades, and with every release from prison has been known to commit further crimes against women with increasing levels of violence. His criminal signature is to remove the breasts of his female victims.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tony Mokbel</span> Australian criminal (born 1965)

Antonios Sajih Mokbel is an Australian criminal who has been convicted of a number of offences, most prominently commercial drug trafficking. He has spent most of his life in Melbourne, Australia. Operation Purana alleged that he is the mastermind behind the Melbourne amphetamine trade. He has been linked to Carl Williams, and charged but not convicted of two murders in the Melbourne gangland war. He disappeared from Melbourne while on trial in March 2006, and was arrested by Greek police in Athens on 5 June 2007. Since being brought back to Australia he has remained incarcerated.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Death of Caroline Byrne</span> 1995 unsolved death

Caroline Byrne, an Australian model, was found at the bottom of a cliff at The Gap in Sydney in the early hours of 8 June 1995. Her then boyfriend Gordon Eric Wood, who at the time of her death was a chauffeur and personal assistant to businessman Rene Rivkin, was convicted of her murder on 21 November 2008 and spent three years in Goulburn Correctional Centre. He was acquitted of the conviction in February 2012.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of Janine Balding</span> Australian murder case

Janine Kerrie Balding was a homicide victim who was abducted, raped and murdered by a homeless gang of five on the 8th of September 1988, in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Balding's murder is often compared to the 1986 murder of Sydney nurse Anita Cobby.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Xue family murder and abandonment</span> Murder and abandonment in New Zealand

The Xue family murder and abandonment case involves the murder by New Zealand man Nai Yin Xue of his wife Anan (Annie) Liu (劉安安), in Mt Roskill, Auckland, on 11 September 2007, and his subsequent abandonment of their three-year-old daughter, Qian Xun Xue also known as Clare Xue and nicknamed "Pumpkin" by the police and media, at Southern Cross station in Melbourne, Australia. Nai Yin then fled to the United States, settling undercover across the southern states, before being captured by members of the ethnic Chinese community of Chamblee, Georgia and handed over to police. He was deported to New Zealand, and convicted of the murder of his wife in June 2009. He refused to confess to the murder until a parole hearing in 2020, when he finally expressed remorse.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Evangelos Goussis</span> Australian boxer, kickboxer and murderer

Evangelos "Ange" Goussis is an Australian former boxer and kickboxer from Geelong, Victoria, and is a multiple murderer, guilty of the murders of two victims of the Melbourne gangland killings.

Michael Kanaan is an Australian gangster and triple murderer from Sydney, currently serving three sentences of life imprisonment plus 50 years and 4 months without the possibility of parole, for the murder of three people and other offences, all committed in Sydney between 17 July 1998 and 22 December 1998. In the drama series Underbelly: The Golden Mile, he was portrayed by actor Ryan Corr.

The Darwiche–Razzak–Fahda family conflict was a series of murders and assaults among three Australian families of Lebanese descent in south-west Sydney, New South Wales between February 2001 and March 2009. Some family members were part of rival cannabis operations. Marital breakdowns were also reportedly a factor in the crimes.

Keith William Allan was an Australian solicitor, murdered in a contract killing. He was educated at Northcote High School and the University of Melbourne, where he completed the degree Bachelor of Laws. He practised as a solicitor at Avondale Heights, a western suburb of Melbourne located in the City of Moonee Valley. He was a cousin of Jacinta Allan, the Victorian premier since 2023. He was also a cousin of former test cricketer Graham Yallop and former Australian rules footballers Ken Turner (Collingwood), Jamie Turner (Collingwood) and Max Oppy (Richmond).

Keli Lane, an Australian former water polo player and teacher, was convicted of the 1996 murder of her newborn baby, Tegan, and of three counts of making a false declaration. Her final application for appeal was rejected by the High Court of Australia in August 2014.

<i>This House of Grief</i> 2014 non-fiction book by Helen Garner

This House of Grief is a 2014 non-fiction book by Helen Garner. Subtitled "The story of a murder trial", its subject matter is the murder conviction of a man accused of driving his car into a dam resulting in the deaths of his three children in rural Victoria, Australia, and the ensuing trials. The book has been critically lauded, with The Australian declaring it a "literary masterpiece".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Norman Bruhn</span>

Norman Bruhn was a notorious and violent Australian dockworker, armed robber and standover man with links to the criminal underworld in both Melbourne and Sydney. In September 1926 Bruhn relocated with his family from Melbourne to Sydney, where he attained a brief ascendancy by targeting the underworld vice trade, using violence and intimidation against cocaine traffickers, prostitutes and thieves. Bruhn's criminal gang used the straight razor as a weapon of terror and are attributed as Australia's first 'razor gang', at the beginning of a period of gang violence in Sydney in the late-1920s known as the 'razor gang wars'. His period of domination of the inner-city vice economy was opposed by the more established criminal networks in Sydney. In June 1927 Bruhn was shot twice in the abdomen in an inner-city laneway in Darlinghurst. He died in Sydney Hospital the following morning, refusing to name his assailant.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">December 2017 Melbourne car attack</span> Incident in December 2017 in Melbourne, Australia

On 21 December 2017, at 4:41 pm AEDT, a driver rammed pedestrians with his car at the corner of Flinders Street and Elizabeth Street in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, killing one person and injuring seventeen others, including himself. The sole fatality, an elderly man, died eight days after the attack.

References

  1. 1 2 "Robert Farquharson guilty of murdering sons". news.com.au. News Ltd. Australian Associated Press. 22 July 2010. Retrieved 22 July 2010.
  2. 1 2 Gregory, Peter (5 October 2007). "Dad guilty of killing sons". The Age . Melbourne, Australia . Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  3. 1 2 Rennie, Reko (5 October 2007). "Dad to appeal conviction". The Age . Melbourne, Australia . Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  4. Rout, Milanda (17 December 2009). "Robert Farquharson to face retrial over death of three sons". The Australian . Sydney, Australia . Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Kissane, Karen (6 October 2007). "In the name of the father, how could he?". The Sydney Morning Herald . Sydney, Australia . Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  6. Houlihan, Liam (7 October 2007). "Oprah $1m offer to 'dam' mum". The Daily Telegraph . Sydney, Australia . Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  7. Critchley, Cheryl; McGrath, Helen (8 August 2015). "What drives a dad to murder his sons?". News.com.au. Sydney, Australia . Retrieved 26 February 2017.
  8. natalieb@themonthly.com.au (1 September 2014). "End of the road". The Monthly. Retrieved 12 February 2024.
  9. 1 2 Silvester, John; Adams, David (15 December 2005). "'Dumbfounded' dad to fight murder charges". The Age . Melbourne, Australia . Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  10. Silvester, John (21 September 2005). "Drowned brothers' father takes lie detector test". The Age . Melbourne, Australia . Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  11. "Father was in control of car before dam plunge, court told". Australian Broadcasting Corporation . 16 August 2006. Archived from the original on 29 December 2022. Retrieved 29 December 2022.
  12. "Dad on trial over Father's Day drownings". Australian Broadcasting Corporation . 21 August 2007. Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  13. "Farquharson jury considers verdict". Australian Broadcasting Corporation . 2 October 2007. Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  14. Medew, Julia (15 August 2006). "Court told of plan to kill three sons". The Sydney Morning Herald . Sydney, Australia . Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  15. 1 2 Bice, Katie (6 October 2007). "Killer father's daze". Herald Sun . Melbourne, Australia . Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  16. Bice, Katie (13 September 2007). "Expert hits dam dad's blackout plea". Herald Sun . Melbourne, Australia . Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  17. 1 2 "Father found guilty of killing three sons". Australian Broadcasting Corporation . 5 October 2007. Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  18. Gregory, Peter (14 September 2007). "'Dad, we're in water'". The Age . Melbourne, Australia . Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  19. "Farqharson's guilty verdict shocks top lawyers". Geelong Advertiser . Geelong, Australia. 9 October 2007. Archived from the original on 2 August 2008. Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  20. "Blackout behind car wheel likely: doctor". The Sydney Morning Herald . Sydney, Australia. 20 September 2007. Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  21. Ryan, Kelly (8 October 2007). "Flowers from Robert Farquharson to his children victims". Herald Sun . Melbourne, Australia . Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  22. Sherborne, Craig (6 October 2007). "Mum in agony as day of judgment arrives". Herald Sun . Melbourne, Australia. Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  23. Devic, Aleks (18 December 2009). "Robert Farquharson's triple murder conviction in Winchelsea quashed". Geelong Advertiser . Geelong . Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  24. "Dam deaths father granted bail". Australian Broadcasting Corporation . 21 December 2009. Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  25. Petrie, Andrea (19 July 2010). "Farquharson jury retires to consider verdict". The Age. Melbourne: Fairfax Media. Retrieved 19 July 2010.
  26. Cooper, Mex (23 October 2007). "Farquharson internet campaign starts". Geelong Advertiser . Geelong, Australia . Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  27. Gough, Deborah (7 October 2013). "Cindy Gambino seeks to keep Robert Farquharson away from children after death". The Age . Melbourne, Australia . Retrieved 16 August 2014.
  28. "Mourners in purple remember 'beautiful soul' who suffered incomprehensible loss". 23 May 2022.
  29. "Serious questions raised about case of convicted triple murderer Robert Farquharson".
  30. "Landmark investigation by the Age, Herald and 60 MINUTES into evidence that locked up a man for murdering his three children".
  31. "Serious questions raised about case of convicted triple murderer Robert Farquharson".
  32. "Landmark investigation by the Age, Herald and 60 MINUTES into evidence that locked up a man for murdering his three children".
  33. "Trial by Water, Episode 1: Father's Day". 8 June 2024.
  34. "Serious questions raised about case of convicted triple murderer Robert Farquharson".
  35. "Landmark investigation by the Age, Herald and 60 MINUTES into evidence that locked up a man for murdering his three children".
  36. "Trial by Water, Episode 1: Father's Day". 8 June 2024.