Crime Investigation Australia: The Janine Balding Murder
Crime Investigation Australia: The Janine Balding Murder
watch Crime Investigation Australia: The Janine Balding Murder
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The ProMaker SmartSock offers a full suite of advanced features which compliment the revolutionary ProMaker ‘Build Your Own Sock’ System. Please subscribe and share The murder of Janine Balding was the killing of a woman in New South Wales, Australia by multiple perpetrators. 20-year-old Janine Balding was raped and murdered by a gang of five youths on 8 September 1988. Balding’s murder is often compared to the 1986 murder of Sydney nurse Anita Cobby. Janine Balding was born on 6 October 1967 and lived in Wagga Wagga, New South Wales before moving to Sydney and gaining employment as a bank teller at a branch of the State Bank on George Street. She was due to marry boyfriend Steven Moran in March 1989. The couple had purchased a house in Berkeley Vale and were letting that house to help finance their wedding arrangements. Balding was abducted from Sutherland railway station by a group of homeless youths, consisting of four males, and one female. She was repeatedly raped by three of the male offenders, then hog-tied and drowned in a dam at Minchinbury. Matthew James Elliott, aged 16 at the time of the murder Bronson Matthew Blessington, aged 14 at the time of the murder Stephen Wayne ‘Shorty’ Jamieson, aged 22 at the time of the murder Wayne Lindsay Wilmot, aged 15 at the time of the murder Carol Ann Arrow, aged 15 at the time of the murder In 2003, the NSW Innocence Project (a joint project by the NSW Police, the Director of Public Prosecutions and the Privacy Commissioner) used the latest DNA techniques to review the DNA evidence of the crime. This was done because Stephen ‘Shorty’ Jamieson denied taking part in the murder, and one of the murderers had claimed that it was ‘Shorty’ Wells (rather than ‘Shorty’ Jamieson) who had committed the murder. The DNA results demonstrated that Stephen Jamieson’s DNA was not found in a rectal swab of the victim, and neither was the DNA of ‘Shorty’ Wells. Police Minister John Watkins announced that the NSW Innocence Project would be suspended. Subsequently, accomplice Carol Arrow stated that ‘Shorty’ Jamieson was one of the murderers.
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