
Jean Lee deteriorated as she waited to die. She threw food, staged hunger strikes and screamed at guards.
The single mother had been condemned to hang at the gallows in D Division at Melbourne's Pentridge Prison, and as the date drew closer, she grew more and more unpredictable.
She was found guilty of murdering 73-year-old bookmaker William 'Pop' Kent alongside two co-accused; her lover and his friend.
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Kent was found bound to a chair, beaten, stabbed and strangled inside his apartment in November 1949.
Lee was witnessed escorting him home from the pub at about 6:15pm after buying him drinks. Police believed it was Jean's lover, Robert 'Bobby' Clayton, and Norman Andrews who actually did the attacking in a robbery-turned-murder. The coroner said the cause of death was strangulation by hand and insisted that only a man would have had the strength.
But during police questioning that continued long into the early hours of the morning, Lee confessed to the murder.
In his new book Australia's Most Infamous Prison, author James Phelps outlined the incredible circumstances that led to her confession.
After refusing to tell the detectives anything for hours, Lee was presented with a signed statement from Clayton incriminating both her and Andrews. Her lover was then pulled into her interview room where, sobbing, he admitted to writing it.