In the next few days, seven men and five women will decide Gerard Baden-Clay’s fate.
Forty-three-year-old Gerard Baden-Clay has been charged with the murder of his wife, 43-year-old Allison. Mrs Baden-Clay’s body was found ten days after she went missing, beneath a bridge in Brisbane’s west on April 30, 2012.
The closing statements of both the defence and the prosecution have now been told to the court – and soon the jury will decide whether or not Gerard is guilty of his wife’s murder.
The prosecution
The prosecution argued that Mr Baden-Clay was facing pressure from both his wife and long-term mistress Tony McHugh at the time of his wife’s disappearance. It was also argued that Baden-Clay was under stress, due to financial difficulties brought on by his failing business.
Prosecutor Todd Fuller told the Supreme Court jury that Baden-Clay’s numerous infidelities and affairs prove that he had the “bravado and confidence” to believe he could get away with murder.
He said that the various infidelities “shows you the level of deception, it shows you what this man is capable of doing, his level of bravado and confidence in what he can carry out and carry off.”
The prosecutor also responded to the defence’s claims, who say that Allison Baden-Clay may have jumped or fell to her death after taking too many anti-depressants. He said it was unlikely that Allison had walked the 13 kilometres from her home, to where her body was found.