By Jessica Kidd.
The case of the three young children murdered in the northern NSW town of Bowraville is long and complex. It is a story of political inertia, racism and fierce debate over the state’s double jeopardy laws.
These laws have long been blamed as the reason why the three murders have never been heard together in a single trial.
But the legislative changes needed to re-try the key suspect were passed in NSW more than a decade ago.
Broadly, double jeopardy refers to laws that prevent someone being charged with the same crime twice. It is not unique to NSW — in fact, all Australian states have similar legal protections.
So why has it taken so long for this case to return to court?
First, some background
Bowraville first appeared on the national map in the early 1990s when three Aboriginal children disappeared in the space of five months from the town in the state’s north.
Two of the bodies — Evelyn Greenup, 4, and Clinton Speedy-Deroux, 16, were found, separately, in bushland near the town.
The third child — 16-year-old Colleen Walker — has never been found and she was later ruled dead by a coroner.
A man stood trial for Clinton’s murder in 1994 and Evelyn’s murder in 2006 but was acquitted both times.
Before 2006, double jeopardy meant you could not be charged with the same crime twice.