Tracey Wigginton

Last updated

Tracey Perm Wigginton
BornAugust 1965 (age 58)
Other namesLesbian Vampire Killer
Criminal statusParoled
Conviction(s) Murder
Criminal chargeMurder
Penalty Life imprisonment

Tracey Avril Wigginton (born 4 August 1965), known as the "Lesbian Vampire Killer", is an Australian murderer who achieved notoriety for killing Edward Baldock in 1989, supposedly to drink his blood. [1] This was described as "one of the most brutal and bizarre crimes Australia has ever seen." [2] Wigginton was sentenced to life imprisonment in 1991, and was paroled in 2012. [1]

Contents

Early life

Wigginton grew up in the northern Australian coastal city of Rockhampton. She was adopted at the age of three by her wealthy maternal grandparents, George and Avril Wigginton, after her mother could no longer care for her following a divorce. [1] Wigginton claims that her grandparents were controlling, and had physically and sexually abused her. [1] [3]

In 1981, Wigginton's grandparents died and left 15 year-old Wigginton $75,000 ($310,640 in 2022 dollars). [1] Wigginton briefly moved back in with her mother, who was not accepting of her lesbianism, and then moved in with a family friend who described her as "a loving girl, gifted artist and devout Catholic." [1]

Following a miscarriage, Wigginton stopped attending Mass, and started communicating with a white witch in Adelaide. Following a move to Brisbane, Wigginton began to immerse herself in the occult: keeping black magic items on her person, and using blood from animals to draw occult symbols. [1]

Murder

Wigginton, who allegedly killed and drank the blood of animals, had been planning for some time to escalate to murdering a man so that she could "feed" on him. [4] On the night of the murder, Wigginton (then aged 24), Lisa Ptaschinski (aged 24), Kim Jervis (aged 23) and Tracy Waugh (aged 23) had been out drinking and then drove around in Wigginton's Holden Commodore in search of a victim. At the time, Wigginton stood 183cm (6 feet) tall and weighed 95kg (209 pounds).[ citation needed ]

Edward Baldock (47), a council worker and father of four, was waiting for a taxi after drinking heavily and playing darts with friends. [3] Jervis persuaded him into their car and they drove him to a park on the banks of the Brisbane River.[ clarification needed ] It is disputed whether Wigginton got Baldock in the car by offering him a lift or by pretending to be a sex worker. [1] There, he undressed while Wigginton returned to the car to retrieve a knife. [3] She then stabbed him 27 times, nearly severing his head before drinking his blood. [5]

When police arrived at the scene, they located Wigginton's bank card in one of Baldock's shoes among his neatly folded pile of clothes. [3] The four women were then quickly arrested. A few days after the murder, Wigginton told police that she ‘felt nothing’ while stabbing Baldock and that she sat down to smoke a cigarette while she watched him die. [6]

Trial

Wigginton was the only one of the four co-accused who pleaded guilty to the charge of murder. Therefore, there was no trial for her and few details were disclosed to the court as to why this incident occurred by Wigginton; Ptaschinski, Jervis, and Waugh stated that Wigginton had claimed to have vampiric tendencies. They said that the reason for the murder was to enable the drinking of the man's blood. [7] During the trial, Wigginton said to the media "‘It's hard to be famous, isn't it? A legend in my own mind’." [1]

In 1991, a jury convicted Wigginton of murder and she was sentenced to life imprisonment by the Supreme Court of Queensland with a minimum of 13 years. Ptaschinski was also convicted of murder, and Jervis of manslaughter. Waugh was acquitted. [8]

Aftermath

In 2006, Wigginton assaulted a fellow inmate and a prison guard. [9]

The case still commands strong media interest and public reaction. In April 2008, it was reported that Wigginton was being released. [10] However, it was actually Ptaschinski who was being released under the resettlement leave program, given a maximum of 12 hours leave every two months for six months. [11]

Wigginton made four unsuccessful parole applications until 2011 when the parole board granted her application. [12] Wigginton was released from prison on 11 January 2012 despite lying to the parole board. [13]

In 2021, interest in Wigginton was revived when it was revealed that she was posting images on Facebook of vampires, witches, and a pile of skull and bones. [1] Following this, the officers who investigated the case said that Wigginton's parole should be revoked. [14]

Related Research Articles

A thrill killing is premeditated or random murder that is motivated by the sheer excitement of the act. While there have been attempts to categorize multiple murders, such as identifying "thrill killing" as a type of "hedonistic mass killing", actual details of events frequently overlap category definitions making attempts at such distinctions problematic.

<i>The Courier-Mail</i> Daily tabloid newspaper in Brisbane, Australia

The Courier-Mail is an Australian newspaper published in Brisbane. Owned by News Corp Australia, it is published daily from Monday to Saturday in tabloid format. Its editorial offices are located at Bowen Hills, in Brisbane's inner northern suburbs, and it is printed at Murarrie, in Brisbane's eastern suburbs. It is available for purchase both online and in paper form throughout Queensland, most regions of Northern New South Wales and parts of the Northern Territory.

This is a timeline of major crimes in Australia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lesbian vampire</span> Literary trope

Lesbian vampirism is a trope in early gothic horror and 20th century exploitation film. The archetype of a lesbian vampire used the fantasy genre to circumvent the heavy censorship of lesbian characters in the realm of social realism.

William MacDonald was an English serial killer responsible for the deaths of five people in the Australian states of Queensland and New South Wales between 1961 and 1962.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of Daniel Morcombe</span> Murder of an Australian boy

Daniel James Morcombe was an Australian boy who was abducted from the Sunshine Coast, Queensland, on 7 December 2003 when he was 13 years old. Eight years later, Brett Peter Cowan, a former Sunshine Coast resident, was charged with Morcombe's murder. In the same month, DNA tests confirmed bones in the Glass House Mountains were Morcombe's. On 13 March 2014, Cowan was found guilty of the murder, and was sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder, indecently dealing with a child, and interference with a corpse.

Leanne Sarah Holland was an Australian girl from Goodna, Queensland, who was murdered in September 1991, when she was 12 years old. Her mutilated body was found in nearby Redbank Plains, three days after she was reported missing. Graham Stafford, her sister's live-in boyfriend, was convicted of her murder. Stafford's conviction was quashed as a miscarriage of justice after he had served 14 years in prison.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Brennan Crutchley</span> American rapist and kidnapper

John Brennan Crutchley was an American convicted kidnapper, rapist, and possible serial killer who was suspected of murdering up to thirty women but was never tried for nor convicted of murder. He was called the Vampire Rapist because he drained the blood of his one confirmed victim almost to the point of death while he repeatedly raped her.

In Her Skin is a 2009 Australian drama movie written and directed by Simone North. The film is based on the true story of the murder of 15-year-old Rachel Barber, Ivan Southall's granddaughter, who went missing on March, 1, 1999. It was later discovered that Barber was murdered by a former neighbour and family babysitter, Caroline Reed Robertson.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of Sian Kingi</span> 1987 abduction and murder in Noosa, Australia

Sian Kingi was a 12-year-old New Zealand-Australian girl of Maori descent who was abducted, raped and murdered in Noosa, Queensland in November 1987. Barrie John Watts and Valmae Faye Beck, a married couple, were convicted in 1988 of the much-publicised crime. Watts was sentenced to life imprisonment without parole. Beck would have been eligible for parole after 14.5 years, but died while she was still incarcerated.

Magdalena Solís, known as The High Priestess of Blood, allegedly was a Mexican serial killer and cult leader responsible for orchestrating several murders which involved the drinking of the victims' blood. The murders were committed in Yerba Buena, San Luis Potosí, during the early 1960s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Richard Chase</span> American serial killer and cannibal

Richard Trenton Chase was an American serial killer, cannibal, and necrophile who killed six people in Sacramento, California, from December 1977 to January 1978. He was nicknamed The Vampire of Sacramento because he drank his victims' blood and cannibalized their remains.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ernest Austin (murderer)</span> Australian murderer

Ernest Austin was an Australian criminal, notable for being the last person to receive capital punishment in Queensland.

Brett Peter Cowan is an Australian murderer and serial child rapist. He was convicted of the murder of Daniel Morcombe, a 13-year-old boy who disappeared from the Sunshine Coast on 7 December 2003. His abduction led to an eight-year investigation involving various suspects. As a result of these investigations, Cowan led undercover police to a potential burial site. He was charged with the murder that same month, and Morcombe's remains were discovered days later on 17 August. Cowan was sentenced to life imprisonment, on 13 March 2014 in a trial that attracted worldwide attention. Cowan had two previous convictions for sexually abusing children, the earliest dating back to 1987.

Massimo 'Max' Sica is a convicted triple murderer, having been found guilty of killing his former girlfriend Neelma Singh, and her siblings Kunal and Sidhi in April 2003. Sica is from an Italian family. Prior to the murders, he had numerous criminal convictions, including unlawful possession of a firearm and arson.

Stacey Mitchell was a British-born girl living in Australia who was murdered at the age of 16, on 18 December 2006, by couple Jessica Stasinowsky and Valerie Parashumti. She was bludgeoned with a concrete block and strangled with a chain. Her corpse was found in a wheelie bin shortly afterwards. Stasinowsky and Parashumti had known Mitchell for three days, and claimed they murdered her because they found her irritating.

On 23 August 2016, Smail Ayad, a 29-year-old French national, carried out a stabbing attack at a backpackers' hostel in Home Hill, Queensland, Australia. The attack caused the death of two people and a dog, and left one person injured.

The McCulkin murders were the murders of Barbara McCulkin (34) and her two daughters, Vicki (13) and Leanne (11), in Queensland in 1974.

On 27 March 2014, 21-year-old French student Sophie Collombet was raped and bludgeoned to death in Kurilpa Point Park in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. She had been on her way home from a three-hour lecture at Griffith University where she was studying her Masters of Business. On 7 April Australian citizen Benjamin James Milward from Ipswich, Queensland was arrested and charged with her murder and rape. He was given a life sentence for the murder and rape on 25 October 2016 at the Supreme Court of Queensland in Brisbane. He had been using the illegal drug "ice" at the time of her murder.

Lloyd Clark Fletcher is an Australian convicted rapist and murderer whose most well known crime was the sexual assault and murder of 15 year old Janet Phillips in Wynnum, Queensland on 19 July 1987. He is currently serving an indefinite life sentence without possibility of parole in Queensland.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Sutton, Candace (10 August 2021). "Lesbian vampire killer drank victim's blood". news.com.au. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  2. "The Dark Secrets of Queensland's Lesbian Vampire Killer". The Courier Mail . 11 November 2015. Retrieved 6 February 2017.
  3. 1 2 3 4 "Felon - S2E4 - Tracey Wigginton from Felon True Crime". www.stitcher.com. Retrieved 26 March 2020.
  4. Brown, Anna-Louise (30 April 2005). "Vampire killer 'felt nothing' during murder". news.com.au. News Corp Australia. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
  5. ""'Lesbian vampire killer' in minimum security prison" - AAP General News".[ dead link ]
  6. "The dark secrets of Queensland's lesbian vampire killer" - Courier Mail
  7. "Heraldsun.com.au - Subscribe to the Herald Sun for exclusive stories". www.heraldsun.com.au.
  8. Los Angeles Times (15 February 1991). "A Vampire, a Lesbian Lover and a Tale of Murder". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  9. ""'Vampire killer' Tracey Wigginton loses bid to get out of jail" - Herald Sun".
  10. ""Brisbane's 'Vampire Killer' to be freed from jail" - Courier Mail".
  11. "Vampire killer release 'not approved'". The Sydney Morning Herald. 14 April 2008.
  12. ""Lesbian Vampire killer Tracey Wigginton wins parole, expected to be free in weeks" - Courier Mail".
  13. "'Lesbian vampire killer' will get away with lies".
  14. "'I'm back f---ers': Satanist Vampire Killer's disturbing new messages". www.9news.com.au. Retrieved 19 November 2021.