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‘Not doing well’: Chris Dawson guilty of wife Lynette’s murder as family plead for body

Chris Dawson is “not doing well” after he was found guilty of murdering his wife Lynette 40 years ago.

Chris Dawson found guilty of murdering Lynette Dawson

Chris Dawson is “very upset” and “not doing well” after he was found guilty of murdering his first wife Lynette 40 years ago, as his lawyer revealed plans to appeal the verdict.

After a marathon 4.5 hour judgment in the NSW Supreme Court on Tuesday, Justice Ian Harrison found Dawson spun a web of lies that demonstrated a consciousness of guilt and said he had “resolved to kill his wife”.

Dawson pleaded not guilty to the murder of Lynette, who disappeared from their Bayview home on Sydney’s northern beaches in the summer of 1982, and fought the allegations during his 10-week trial earlier this year.

Defence barrister Greg Walsh told media outside court that Dawson was “not doing well” and was very upset by the verdict.

“He’s upset, he wanted me to ring his wife Sue and talk to her … we don’t know where he’s going to go (to prison),” Mr Walsh said.

Dawson’s third wife Susan did not join him in court on Tuesday and it is understood she remained at their Sunshine Coast home.

Mr Walsh revealed Dawson would appeal the verdict.

“Mr Dawson has always asserted, and he still does, his absolute innocence … and he will continue to assert that innocence and he will certainly appeal,” he said.

Chris Dawson has been found guilty of murdering his wife 40 years ago. Picture NCA Newswire/ Gaye Gerard.
Chris Dawson has been found guilty of murdering his wife 40 years ago. Picture NCA Newswire/ Gaye Gerard.

Mr Walsh also said Dawson had cognitive and physical problems, and it would be improper to send him to jail.

“He’s been diagnosed with dementia,” Mr Walsh said.

“Jail will be much harder for him … he’s got problems with his hips and knees too.”

Meanwhile, Lynette’s family say Australia’s most famous cold case cannot reach its conclusion until her body is found.

Justice Harrison found Dawson guilty after accepting the Crown prosecution’s argument he killed his wife and disposed of her body so he could be with the family’s teenage babysitter.

“The only rational inference that the circumstances enable me to draw is that Lynette Dawson died on or about 8 January 1982, as the result of a conscious and voluntary act committed by Mr Dawson with the intention of causing her death,” Justice Harrison said.

Dramatic scenes played out in court as the judge read out his verdict.

There were gasps in the courtroom, and Dawson shook his head very slightly as his twin brother Paul muttered “bulls**t”.

Hundreds of people had arrived at the court building to watch on, with many forced to watch proceedings in an adjoining courtroom where a video feed was set up.

In the adjoining courtroom, applause rang out as two corrective services officers handcuffed Dawson before leading him away.

He will make a bail application on Thursday to be released while he awaits sentencing proceedings.

Ms Dawson’s brother Greg Simms told media outside court “Lyn’s journey is not complete”.
Ms Dawson’s brother Greg Simms told media outside court “Lyn’s journey is not complete”.

Outside court, Ms Dawson’s brother Greg Simms hugged NewsCorp journalist Hedley Thomas and the former lead detective Damian Loone.

“This verdict is for Lyn,” an emotional Mr Simms said.

“Today her name has been cleared. She loved her family and never left them of her own accord.

Mr Simms read a statement in which he called on Dawson to reveal where Lynette’s body was buried.

“Lyn’s journey is not complete. She’s still missing,” Mr Simms said.

“We need to bring her home. We would ask Chris also to find it in himself to allow us to bring her home for a peaceful rest. Finally show her the dignity she deserves.”

The family thanked Mr Thomas, creator of the Teacher’s Pet podcast, from “the bottom of their hearts” for bringing evidence to light.

Mr Simms also said: “We have always said that she would not have left her two children. She would have contacted her mother first.”

Chris Dawson met his wife Lynette when they were just teenagers.
Chris Dawson met his wife Lynette when they were just teenagers.

Twin Paul and wife Marilyn were greeted by an intense media pack as they left the courthouse on Tuesday.

There was a scuffle as the couple made their way through Hyde Park in Sydney.

Police had to intervene but no arrests were made.

Dawson, 74, was found to have killed his wife in January 1982, just weeks after he had unsuccessfully attempted to run off with his former student to start a new life in Queensland.

The former teacher and rugby league player’s defence had argued he had neither the opportunity nor the motive to kill the mother of his two children.

Chris Dawson found guilty of murdering Lynette Dawson

Ms Dawson disappeared in January 1982 — her body has never been found and she never contacted her friends or family, including her two children.

The 33-year-old nurse was last seen on Friday, January 8, 1982 when she spoke to her mother Helena Simms on the phone.

The Crown prosecution alleged she was killed either Friday evening or early the following morning.

Justice Harrison described it as “ludicrous” that she would spontaneously walk away from her life and children with only her clothes on her back.

He found there was scant evidence she had money of her own to “fund her new life”

He also said the evidence of her strong bond with her children was “completely at odds with the proposition” that she voluntarily left her home.

Justice Harrison said she did not take clothes, personal items or jewellery and it was unlikely she would have left without “even a change of underwear”

“I do not accept as reliable that she voluntarily abandoned her home.”

Chris Dawson did not leave the court on Tuesday after he was found guilty of killing his wife. Picture NCA Newswire/ Gaye Gerard.
Chris Dawson did not leave the court on Tuesday after he was found guilty of killing his wife. Picture NCA Newswire/ Gaye Gerard.

Dawson told detectives during a police interview in 1991 that he had dropped off his wife at a Mona Vale bus stop and it had been planned she would meet him later that afternoon.

However she did not arrive at the Northbridge Baths, where Dawson worked as a part-time lifeguard.

He had claimed Ms Dawson phoned him at the baths to say she needed time away before ultimately telling him during another call that she would not be returning.

However Justice Harrison said that Mr Dawson’s report of receiving a phone call at the Northbridge Baths on the afternoon of January 9, 1982 was a “lie”.

Chris Dawson has been found guilty of killing his wife Lynette. Picture: Supplied.
Chris Dawson has been found guilty of killing his wife Lynette. Picture: Supplied.
Chris Dawson and JC is on their wedding day in 1984
Chris Dawson and JC is on their wedding day in 1984

Central to the case was JC, one of Dawson’s former students who became the couple’s live-in babysitter in 1981.

JC told the court that during this time she would have sex with Dawson while his wife was asleep.

The Crown prosecution argued Dawson killed his wife because he was “besotted” with JC and wanted “unfettered access” to her.

In late 1981, Dawson and JC packed his car full of their clothes and belongings and set out for Queensland to start a new life.

The court heard he left a note for his wife saying: “Don’t paint too dark a picture of me to the girls.”

But JC forced Dawson to turn the car around before the border after she grew ill and told him that she missed her family.

In early 1982, she travelled to South West Rocks to holiday with her friends and family.

She said during her stay she received a phone call from Dawson who told her: “Lyn’s gone, she’s not coming back.”

JC was the prosecution’s star witness during the trial. Picture: NCA NewsWire/Damian Shaw.
JC was the prosecution’s star witness during the trial. Picture: NCA NewsWire/Damian Shaw.

JC and Dawson went on to marry in January 1984 before separating in acrimonious circumstances a little over six years later.

In 1990, she made several damaging allegations against Dawson, including claims of domestic violence and that he had once contemplated hiring a hitman to kill his wife.

JC told the court of one occasion in 1981 during which she alleged Dawson drove her to a building somewhere south of the Harbour Bridge.

“He said ‘I went inside to get a hitman to kill Lyn, but then I decided I couldn’t do it because innocent people would be killed, could be hurt’,” JC said during her testimony.

Justice Harrison said it was “unlikely” that Mr Dawson would have divulged to JC such a plot.

“I am not satisfied that he ever said to (JC) that he contemplated hiring a hitman to kill Lynette Dawson but he changed his mind.”

Chris Dawson's police interview

Dawson’s defence had relied on five claimed sightings of Lynette in the two years following her disappearance.

The Dawsons’ former Bayview neighbours, Peter and Jill Breese, both claimed they had independently seen Lynette working a Curl Curl hospital in June 1984 – more than two years after she disappeared.

Ray Butlin, a Dawson family friend, said before her death, his wife Sue had told him of seeing Lynette at a Central Coast roadside fruit barn where she worked.

JC told the court she wore Lynette Dawson’s clothes and moved into the marital home in the years after she went missing.
JC told the court she wore Lynette Dawson’s clothes and moved into the marital home in the years after she went missing.

Dawson’s brother-in-law Ross Hutcheon told the court he saw her while driving along Victoria Road in Gladesville about three to six months after she disappeared.

Elva McBay said she attended a parade for Prince Charles and Princess Diana on March 28, 1983, when she saw a woman who looked like Ms Dawson run dangerously in front of a motorcade.

The defence’s star witness, Paul Cooper, said he had a chance meeting with her at a pub at Warners Bay, in the Lake Macquarie region, in early 1982.

However, Justice Harrison described Mr Hutcheon’s sighting as a “fabrication” and said it “flies in the face of human experience” that he would not have told his brother-in-law of the sighting earlier than 2018.

He said all the other claimed sightings were “not genuine” or unreliable.

“I am satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that Lynette Dawson is dead,” Justice Harrison said.

Read related topics:Chris Dawson

Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/breaking-news/chris-dawson-found-guilty-of-murdering-his-wife-lynette-40-years-ago/news-story/63a7e2123a0d682278d39dc308c41b96