Two brothers of serial killer Ivan Milat maintain he is innocent of murdering the seven backpackers he was serving life sentences for at the time of his death.
Bill Milat said he saw his brother for the last time on Friday in Long Bay prison hospital and was given a one page letter sealed in an envelope, which he has yet to open.
He said Milat did not discuss the murders he was convicted of but spoke about how two female detectives from Newcastle had questioned him about unsolved murders in the state’s Hunter region.
Bill Milat also said his brother was happy to die and spoke of how it would be a "relief".
"(Ivan) said it would be a relief as his sentence would be over. He said it would be a relief," he told Nine News.
Speaking outside his Bargo home, he said the family planned to have Milat’s body cremated and there would not be a funeral.
"Mac didn’t want a funeral, he said he knew it would be a circus," he said.
"He requested to be cremated but the decision was up to me."
Richard Milat said his brother was "a great fella".
"I always thought he was a great fella,” he told Nine News on Monday at his Hill Top home, an hour south of Sydney.
When asked what life had been like being a brother of Australia’s worst serial killer he said, "I never thought I was the brother of a serial killer so I was laughin'".
Richard Milat also said he did not believe his brother was guilty of the murders adding, "I don't think anything of the police force, I don't think you can trust them".
Ivan Milat, who had been in prison since 1994, was diagnosed with oesophageal cancer in May.
The former road worker was sentenced in 1996 to seven consecutive life sentences for murdering seven backpackers whose bodies were found in makeshift graves in NSW's Belanglo State Forest in the 1990s.