Allison Baden-Clay was murdered by her husband Gerard at their Queensland home in 2012.
In the months and years since Gerard’s arrest and 2014 murder conviction, Allison’s parents Geoff and Priscilla Dickie, and her sister Vanessa Fowler, have reflected on the signs her husband was abusive that they noticed, and regret not acting on.
Now, they’re sharing these signs as part of a Griffith University program designed to educate people on how best to talk to a loved one they suspect is in an abusive relationship.
The first warning sign: Allison’s decision to leave her job
By the end of her 15-year marriage, Allison had been isolated from her family and prevented from accessing her own money. But her family said the first sign they recollect is their career-driven loved one’s decision to become a stay-at-home mother.
“For me, (the first sign) was that she agreed to give up a highly successful career to have children when I knew and she knew that she could handle both,” Vanessa told The Courier-Mail at a Brisbane press conference on Sunday.