Alan Jones is the latest unlikely campaigner making a bid to free Kathleen Folbigg, the woman convicted of killing her four babies between 1991-99. He’s not the only one who believes the evidence against Kathleen is shaky at best. Former ivillage editor Alana House has been visiting Kathleen for years, and firmly agrees it’s time for review of her controversial case.
After a decade of bone-crushing isolation and fear inside her cell at Silverwater Jail, there have finally been tantalizing glimmers of hope for my former school friend Kathleen Folbigg … and those who feel she didn’t receive a fail trial when she was convicted of murdering three of her children and the manslaughter of a fourth. Among them is the decision by The University of Newcastle Legal Centre to work on a submission seeking a judicial inquiry into her case.
Another recent development was the surprise appearance in the prison visitors’ room one afternoon of radio host Alan Jones that was revealed in yesterday’s Sunday Telegraph.
Folbigg's was jailed for 40 years, reduced to 30 after an appeal. Jones' support follows the discrediting of evidence against her which was circumstantial and mostly focused on the struggles she revealed in her personal diaries.
Kathy told me during my last visit to the jail that knew something was afoot when a buzz of excitement swept through the prison guards and an unusually large number of them suddenly decided they were needed in the visitors’ area.
She sat on her usual pink metal stool, bolted to the floor. To her surprise, Alan walked into the room and sat opposite her on one of the visitors’ blue metal stools, also bolted down.