“Women die doing everyday mundane things like walking home…” 24-year-old Toyah Cordingley shared to Facebook in June.
The news had broken that a Melbourne woman only two years younger than her, Eurydice Dixon, had been murdered on her way home from work.
Toyah was sharing the words of Kon Karapanagiotidis. “Stop blaming women,” it read. “Make men the issue.”
That was four months ago.
On Monday morning, her lifeless body was found at the beach.
It was Sunday at around 2pm when Toyah decided to take her dog, Indie, for a walk at Wangetti Beach, just north of Cairns.
Is there anything more ‘mundane’ than that? Taking your dog for a walk on a quiet Sunday afternoon?
When she wasn’t home by 11pm, her family reported her missing.
Once her body was found, police said they would be treating Toyah’s death as a homicide.
Toyah, who worked at an animal shelter called Paws and Claws, was most likely murdered walking her dog in broad daylight.
Where was the danger in that?
It was 8:30pm on a Tuesday night, just three weeks ago, when 46-year-old mother Gayle Potter was standing on her own property.
The mother of three was killed by a local man named Glenn Martyn who decided to run her over with his car.
Where was the danger in that?
Kristie Powell, 39, was inside her own home, metres away from her five-month-old baby boy when she was murdered.