By Judy Adair
“I knew this guy was the devil.”
Colleen Gwynne, the current Northern Territory Children’s Commissioner, will never forget coming face to face with Bradley John Murdoch for the first time, while investigating the murder of Peter Falconio.
“I wanted to cry but I wasn’t going to let him beat me.”
Fifteen years ago during the initial stages of the Falconio case, Ms Gwynne first instinct was to distance herself.
“There was nothing about what the NT police were doing at the time that was actually very flattering or made us look like a group of people who knew what we were doing,” she says.
“So what I did was try to distance myself in a very small town as much as I could from anything to do with what is now known as the Falconio case.”
This all changed when she got a call one night from the police commissioner, who said, “the case is yours”.
From Ms Gwynne’s perspective that marked the beginning of the end of her police career.
She explains that while she realised what an opportunity the investigation presented, she was patently clear about the magnitude and complexity of the case and admits she was not feeling very confident.
The Investigation.
To deal with those anxieties, Ms Gwynne worked day and night and read everything about the case she possibly could. Then she started her planning.