Casefile True Crime - Case 300: Tegan Lane (Part 2)
Episode Date: October 19, 2024*** Content Warning: Child victim *** [Part 2 of 2] When Keli Lane is charged with the murder of her newborn baby Tegan in 2009, the circumstantial case sparks debate around the country. Was this star... athlete a cold blooded killer or a woman unfairly judged on her poor decision making? --- Narration – Anonymous Host Research & writing – Elsha McGill Creative direction – Milly Raso Production and music – Mike Migas Music – Andrew D.B. Joslyn Sign up for Casefile Premium: Apple Premium Spotify Premium Patreon For all credits and sources, please visit https://casefilepodcast.com/case-300-tegan-lane-part-2
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It's been four years since I first learned about the disappearance of Neyam May, an 18-year-old
who went missing from the small New South Wales town of Batlow back in 2002.
I don't know if it's because Neyam and I finished high school in the same year or we shared
a similar taste in music, but I felt instinctively drawn to her story.
As I learned more about Neyam's story, the revelations that unfolded left me in
shock. The result is Missing Neyem, the latest 12-part series from Casefile Presents. Researched
and hosted by me, the series features exclusive interviews with key players who help us dive
into the details of Neyem's case as we go back to Batlo to try and make sense of
what really happened. The entire 12-part series is available now. Stay tuned to the end of today's
episode to hear the trailer. Our episodes deal with serious and often distressing incidents.
If you feel at any time you need support, please contact your local
crisis centre. For suggested phone numbers for confidential support and for a more detailed list
of content warnings, please see the show notes for this episode on your app or on our website.
This episode involves crimes against children and won't be suitable for all listeners. Spirits were high for the Balmain Women's Water Polo team on the night of Saturday March
18, 1995.
Despite losing against their rival team during the club's grand final a few hours earlier,
the players and their supporters
were celebrating the end of an otherwise successful season with drinks at a Balmain pub.
19-year-old Kelly Lane was among them, having played a solid game.
Her parents had watched the match, but they couldn't stick around for drinks.
Instead, Kelly was joined by her boyfriend Duncan Gillies and his mother
Julie, who had also attended the game. At around 9pm, a few of Kelly's teammates noticed that Kelly
had left without saying a word. Duncan and Julie were still there, so her teammates didn't give it
too much thought and continued on with their night.
Little did any of them know, while playing an impressive grand final in front of a crowd
filled with her loved ones, Kelly had been keeping a huge secret. She was nine months pregnant.
The reason she'd left the pub was because she'd gone into labour.
she'd left the pub, was because she'd gone into labour. Kelly took a taxi alone to the Balmain Hospital about a kilometre away and was subsequently
transferred to King George V Memorial Hospital where she gave birth to her first child, Kayla,
the following morning.
Staff took pity on the polite and warm-natured 19-year-old. Not only was it incredibly rare for
a young woman to give birth alone and without a single visitor, in the hours following the
delivery it was clear that Kelly was incredibly upset. A social worker was assigned to make sure
she was okay. Kelly explained that she and the baby's father, Duncan Gillies,
had only recently moved to Sydney from their hometown of Perth, which was why she had no
support. Duncan was furthering his rugby career while Kelly was training to play water polo for
Australia at the 2000 Olympics. It was the first time that women's water polo would feature at the 2000 Olympics. It was the first time that Women's Water Polo would feature at the event
and she hoped to make the team. Unable to care for a child and not wanting to have an abortion,
Kelly said the couple had agreed to place Kayla for adoption.
On the evening of Tuesday, March 21, 1995, Kelly requested a pass out so she could discuss the
adoption with Duncan in private. Hospital staff granted the request, taking care of baby Kayla
so Kelly could get her affairs in order. Kelly returned in the early morning hours,
saying Duncan didn't want to be involved in the adoption process. As per protocol,
the adoption agency still tried multiple times to contact Duncan using the details Kelly provided.
All attempts were unsuccessful. Kelly explained that Duncan was purposely avoiding them because
Sheet promised him he didn't need to be involved.
Besides, he was about to go overseas to play rugby and would be unreachable for the next two weeks.
Eventually, after weeks of trying to contact the Duncan Gillies without success,
the adoption agency had Kelly sign an affidavit confirming Duncan was Kayla's father and had consented
to the adoption.
She signed a second affidavit a few weeks later saying Duncan had ended their relationship
and wanted nothing to do with their child or the adoption.
Just months after giving birth, Kelly went on to represent Australia at a water polo
tournament in Canada.
Six months later, while Kayla's adoption was still being finalised, Kelly was pregnant again. This time with Tegan. After the 2006 coronial inquest into Teakin Lane's whereabouts, her case was officially handed over to the New
South Wales Homicide Squad to be re-investigated from scratch. Detectives reviewed all the evidence
uncovered so far and undertook their own searches for Teagan Lane and Andrew Norris.
They double-checked nationwide records from registry officers, the immigration department, Australia Post, Missing Persons
reports and utility companies. Every possible spelling variation of Teagan was considered.
Checks were made for any Teagans born in 1996 with a connection to a woman named Mel
or any variation of that, such as Melanie or Melissa.
or any variation of that, such as Melanie or Melissa.
But after two years of intense scrutiny, detectives uncovered nothing.
Although Kelly had been caught in countless lies when it came to Teigen's birth, there was one detail in her story that remained unchanged. In each version, she maintained that after being discharged from Auburn Hospital on
Saturday September 14 1996, she went back to Duncan Gilley's house in Gladesville.
Although detectives conducted a cursory search of the property during the missing person
investigation in 2003, the homicide squad decided it was worth taking a closer look.
2003, the Homicide Squad decided it was worth taking a closer look. In early August 2008, Duncan's former property was cordoned off as an extensive search commenced.
The Weather Board home had undergone significant renovations a couple of years prior, yet police
remained hopeful they might uncover something of interest.
Over five days, they scoured the property with cadaver dogs, checking the yard, the roof, and inside the walls, while a forensic anthropologist sifted through the soil
underneath the house. They identified several small bone fragments which were sent away for
further testing. Results concluded that they weren't human.
By this point, Teagan Lane's case had been in the hands of police for more than eight and a half
years, and in the public spotlight for three. In all that time, investigators failed to uncover
a single piece of evidence indicating what had happened to
Teigen. Police had been keeping a close eye on Kelly with another covert tap placed on her phone.
1200 phone calls were recorded in 2008 in addition to the 700 intercepted in 2004.
While Kelly said nothing incriminating during any of these calls, there was something
about them that investigators found significant. At no point did Kelly Lane make her own attempts
to find her missing daughter. It was something they denoted early in the investigation.
If Kelly's story about giving Tegan to Andrew Norris was true,
and she'd so desperately wanted to keep the whole ordeal a secret from her family and friends,
then why hadn't she tried to find the pair herself? Kelly initially claimed to have old diaries that
might have outdated contact details for Andrew and some mutual friends, yet she never
attempted to track these down. One journalist discovered that in 2003, Kelly visited a website
that aimed to reconnect long-lost school friends. She posted a brief message which read,
Looking for Andrew Norris, aged approx 38, went to school, possibly Western Sydney,
went on to university, then entered stockbroking slash money markets.
She shared a similar message shortly after, adding that the Andrew Norris she was looking
for had a partner named Melanie and they might now be married. No one responded and Kelly didn't
appear to make any attempts beyond that. While this wasn't an indicator of guilt, it led some
to believe that Kelly wasn't trying to track Teagan down because she already knew Teagan was dead.
But like everything else in the case, this was just an
unsubstantiated theory. After two years of investigations, the homicide squad still had
no concrete evidence tying Kelly to Teagan's death, but they remained convinced she had killed the
newborn. The fact of the matter was, there was nothing to suggest anyone
had ever seen Teagan Lane after she and Kelly were discharged from Auburn Hospital at around midday
on Saturday September 14 1996. By 3pm, Kelly was at her parents' house in Fairlight with no baby in sight. If it took around an hour to make the drive,
then what was Kelly doing during the unaccounted for two-hour window?
Based on the evidence at hand, investigators started to piece together what they believed to be a likely scenario.
By the time 21-year-old Kelly was nearing the end of her pregnancy with Teigen, she was no longer
the naive first-time mother she'd been when Kayla was born almost 18 months earlier.
As she'd learned from her experience at the Balmain Pub, labour could occur at any time.
Knowing she was expected to attend the wedding of Duncan's family friends on Saturday September
14 1996, she couldn't risk going into labour in front of the other guests or at any other
awkward moment. Time was of the essence. In early September, Duncan was out of town on a rugby trip,
giving Kelly an ample window of opportunity to give birth without those close to her finding out.
Medical records showed she visited Wright Hospital on Saturday September 7, Monday September 9, and then again on Tuesday September 10. Each time she claimed her
baby was overdue, which had derailed her plan of a home birth with her private midwife. And each time
she sought to have an induction. Without any antenatal records to prove the baby's gestation, hospital staff denied each of her requests.
On Wednesday, September 11, 1996, Kelly went to Auburn Hospital on the other side of town,
giving the same story she'd given at Ryde. There, her request to be induced was granted.
Her request to be induced was granted. Teigen was born on Thursday September 12.
Investigators believed it was at this point that Kelly started to panic.
The unexpected complications with her retained placenta meant she required post-op care, and she'd be pushing it to be discharged in time to attend the wedding on Saturday.
and she'd be pushing it to be discharged in time to attend the wedding on Saturday.
Knowing she couldn't take Teigen home, but unwilling to go through what she now knew to be a lengthy, complicated and emotionally gruelling adoption process, Kelly lied to hospital staff and said
she'd be receiving at-home care from her private midwife. On Saturday September 14, she was granted permission to leave
as long as she completed some paperwork, including the Guthrie Test consent form and the registration
form to submit to the Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages. An appointment was also made for
a midwife to visit her at home in a few days' time. With just hours to spare before the
wedding, Kelly left at around midday without completing any of the paperwork or signing the
discharge papers. No hospital staff or the other patient Kelly was sharing a room with recalled
seeing Kelly and Teagan leave that day. However, there was an unalarmed
fire escape directly opposite their room which Kelly could have exited from without passing the
nurses station. There was no CCTV footage to prove what happened after Kelly left the hospital,
but she claimed that was when she met up with Andrew Norris, Andrew's mother,
and his partner Mel, to hand Teagan over. Kelly initially claimed to have taken a taxi home,
but later said she'd driven herself. Homicide detectives ran checks with every taxi company
in Sydney and found no records of any passengers being picked up from Auburn Hospital on Saturday,
September 14, 1996. They therefore believed that Kelly had driven herself home, and at some point
during that journey, she killed her two-day-old baby and disposed of her body. She then went
about life as though nothing had happened, attending the wedding that evening
where she was observed socialising, drinking and dancing.
On Monday September 16, Kelly called the midwife program and cancelled the appointment they'd
made for her, saying her private midwife had everything under control.
In the following days and weeks, there was nothing to
suggest Kelly was suffering from postnatal depression or any other mental disturbance.
Therefore, investigators believed Teagan's murder was motivated by Kelly's desire to move on
without anyone discovering she'd given birth. Getting rid of Teagan would not only conceal her infidelity and remove the responsibility
of parenthood, it would enable her to pursue her dream of playing water polo in the upcoming
Sydney 2000 Olympics.
In late 1997, Kelly asked the Australian College of Physical Education if she could defer her tertiary
studies to concentrate on making the Australian Olympic team.
For three years she successfully lived her life as though Teagan had never existed, and
those close to her were none the wiser.
It was only when Teagan's birth was exposed through the adoption of baby Jacob in 1999
that Kelly's guilt became obvious due to her multitude of lies.
Not only had she told eight different stories to hospital staff,
adoption agencies, social workers and police, there were other inconsistencies that also
raised suspicion. Namely, why had Kelly initially said she wouldn't
be able to find Andrew Norris' apartment, then located it with ease when police drove her through
his neighbourhood? Why did she tell detectives she'd gone to Duncan's old house to search for
Andrew's phone number when she hadn't? Kelly also said her circle of friends had changed since 1996 and she no longer knew
people from back then, when in reality she'd maintained close friendships from childhood
and beyond.
There were holes in her claims about Teigen's father too.
If Kelly really did arrange for Andrew to take Teegan, then why register her on her own Medicare
card rather than his?
And if Andrew was willing to raise Tegan, why didn't he do something as simple as register
her birth with the registry office?
As far as investigators were concerned, the only explanation for these inconsistencies
was that the hospital staff had urged Kelly to fill out the Medicare form and she couldn't
see a way around it.
Andrew never registered Teagan's birth or sought a separate Medicare card, because Andrew
never existed in the first place. The problem for the homicide squad was that it didn't matter how
convinced they were of this scenario, they had no physical evidence to prove it. They presented
their case to the director of public prosecutions who reviewed the case for 12 months while the
investigation continued. During that time, no sign of Teagan or Andrew surfaced, adding weight to
the theory that Teagan was dead and Andrew was a fictional character created by Kelly.
In November 2009, the DPP made their decision. Kelly Lane was charged with Teagan's murder.
While the prosecution felt they had a strong case, they were fully aware of the challenges
they faced by going to court with only circumstantial evidence. Without Teagan's
body, they couldn't be certain that a murder had even occurred.
Even if the jury believed Kelly was lying about giving Teigen to her biological father, it still didn't prove that she'd done anything to harm the child, or that the child was even dead.
While Kelly's history of secret pregnancies, adoptions and lies was certainly compelling. From a legal standpoint,
these details had no relevance to Teagan's case and would therefore likely be deemed inadmissible
in court. However, when Kelly's other children, Kayla and Jacob, were born and adopted, Kelly had
signed affidavits that featured various false statements, including that Duncan Gillies
was the father of both babies. In Jacob's case, Kelly later signed another affidavit claiming
the father was really a man named Aaron Williams whom she'd met in London. DNA tests conducted as
part of the homicide investigation confirmed that Duncan wasn't
the father of either child, while Aaron Williams was deemed to be a product of Kelly's imagination.
The other false statements related to addresses Kelly had given
and the father's knowledge of the adoptions. But the lies didn't stop there.
of the adoptions. But the lies didn't stop there. It turned out that when Kelly requested a pass out from the hospital after Kayla's birth, she wasn't going to speak to Kayla's father as she
told the staff. That day had been Kelly's 20th birthday. She had gone out to celebrate with friends.
She had gone out to celebrate with Franz.
Based on the lies on these sworn affidavits, the DPP made the decision to charge Kelly with three counts of perjury to be tried at the same time as the murder charge.
This was viewed in legal circles as an incredibly clever move. Not only did it mean the prosecution
could strengthen their case by using Kelly's
history of secret pregnancies and adoptions, it would also cast doubt on her credibility before
a jury. But selecting an unbiased jury was proving to be a challenge in and of itself.
12. When Samantha Clark, not her real name, heard about the investigation into Teagan Lane, she recognised Kelly Lane. Samantha worked at a
clinic in Queensland that specialised in late-term abortions. In February 1999, Kelly contacted the
clinic seeking determination of what she claimed
to be her 24-week pregnancy with Jacob.
The latest the clinic would perform a termination was 25 weeks.
With the clock ticking, Kelly travelled to Brisbane alone to have the procedure.
When she arrived at the clinic, an examination revealed she was already beyond the cutoff point
at around six and a half months pregnant. The doctor was therefore unable to proceed,
and Kelly returned to Sydney, where she gave birth to Jacob two and a half months later.
After seeing Tegan's case on the news, Samantha remembered Kelly's visit and called the homicide
squad to report it. After all, one of the resounding questions raised by the inquest was why Kelly had
gone to such great lengths to conceal her pregnancies instead of having them terminated.
Kelly's mother Sandra had testified at the inquest that she didn't particularly believe
in abortion and said it was possible that Kelly knew of her view.
Kelly's father, Robert, testified that he'd asked Kelly why she didn't terminate the
pregnancies and she said something along the lines of, I couldn't hurt a baby.
But the truth was, Kelly's visit to Queensland in 1999 was actually the
third time she'd been inside an abortion clinic. Through the course of the investigation,
it was revealed that Kayla wasn't Kelly's first pregnancy. She became pregnant for the first time at age 17. It was 1992 and the father was her first
boyfriend, a surf lifesaver named Aaron Tyak. Kelly told Aaron about the pregnancy but kept it
a secret from everyone else. The couple ultimately decided to terminate the pregnancy.
Kelly chose to go to the appointment alone and when she met
up with Aaron afterwards, she was devastated. He described her to the ABC as being a shattered girl.
What Aaron didn't know was that Kelly became pregnant again the following year in November 1993 as their relationship was coming to an end.
This time she didn't tell anybody. She went to a clinic by herself at five months pregnant
and had an abortion. Kelly had been pregnant five times between the ages of 17 and 24,
despite being on the contraceptive pill, and not a single friend or family member
ever knew about it. Prosecutors knew that Kelly's history of terminating pregnancies and placing
babies for adoption would elicit a strong response from some prospective jury members.
They'd have to take extra caution to ensure that Kelly was being tried for Teigen's
murder and not for her sexuality or her perceived morals.
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The news that Kelly Lane had been charged with Teegans murder propelled the case back
into the headlines, with the rumour mill swinging into overdrive.
With Kelly's private life exposed, the public had their own salacious questions about her
string of pregnancies.
The results of Kayla and Jacob's DNA tests hadn't yet been made public, leading some
to wonder if Kelly had lied about their paternity
to cover up the fact that she was being sexually abused. There were whispers that she might have
been impregnated by her tormentor and had kept the pregnancy secret because she was so deeply in denial
about them herself. Others gossiped about Kelly's perceived promiscuity, with some speculating that her
children were all the result of random, anonymous sexual encounters. Police obtained DNA from the
man Kelly was known to have had sexual relations with during the 1990s. It turned out that Kayla's
father was a rugby player she'd been seeing around the time she
started dating Duncan. Jacob's father was a friend of her brother's whom she'd dated casually after
her relationship with Duncan ended. Neither of the men had any idea that Kelly had been pregnant
and were completely shocked to learn that they had fathered her children.
While their identities were withheld from the public to protect Kayla and Jacob's privacy, completely shocked to learn that they had fathered her children.
While their identities were withheld from the public to protect Kayla and Jacob's privacy,
word got out amongst the manly community.
Close friends of Kelly started to distance themselves from her, unable to comprehend
just how much she had kept from them over the years.
The rumours took their toll, and by the time Kelly was charged with
Teigen's murder, her life looked markedly different than it did at the time of the inquest.
She'd lost the job she loved at Ravenswood School for Girls and was working as a receptionist at a
physiotherapist office. Her marriage had disintegrated and ended in divorce.
But there was one thing that remained unchanged.
Kelly's staunch insistence that she was innocent.
As far as Kelly's defence team was concerned, the chances of their client being convicted were relatively slim. After all,
there wasn't any concrete evidence that Teagan was dead, let alone how she died or that Kelly
had harmed her. Kelly had absolutely no history of violence and had character references from
more than 40 people who knew her well, all attesting she would never hurt a child.
By all accounts, Kelly was a wonderful mother and teacher who had a special rapport with young
children. Many spoke of the deep loving bond she shared with her daughter, Emily. They commended
Kelly's strength and courage as she was vilified by the media
and the details of her private life were splashed across the news.
If anything, the defence believed that Kelly placing her other two children for adoption
proved she was a responsible young woman. She'd gone through with the process twice,
despite the emotional toll which showed how much she cared
about the wellbeing of her babies. Handing Tegan over to her biological father was just another
act of kindness. Yes, Kelly had told many lies and wasted the efforts of people like adoption agent
Virginia Fung, but that didn't make her a murderer. At the time of her secret
pregnancies, she was simply a young person who didn't have the maturity or experience to deal
with the difficult and emotional events, especially without support from her loved ones. Kelly's
defence team also believed that investigators had failed to establish a convincing motive.
There had been lots of talk about Kelly's Olympic ambitions and her desire to make the team at any
cost. As far as the defence was concerned, Kelly had never even been a serious contender for the
Olympic team. None of Kelly's friends or former coaches record her
ever speaking about wanting to compete at the Olympics, and the coach didn't think she had what
it took to make the team anyway. Even if that had been her goal and Andrew wasn't able to take the
baby, then it made sense to assume she would have proceeded with adoption, just as she had with Kayla and Jacob. Kelly's lawyers also scoffed at the suggestion that Kelly was motivated to
kill Teigen so she could attend the wedding later that day. Kelly barely knew the couple
who were getting married. She was only there as Duncan Gilley' guest and he wasn't particularly close to them either.
And if Kelly really did want to attend the wedding, then why wouldn't she just request a
hospital pass out for the night and leave Teagan in the staff's care, as she'd have done when Kayla
was born the year before? As far as Kelly's defence team was concerned, she wasn't someone who would even think of murdering
a baby, let alone go through with it. Along with the question of motive was the question
of whether Kelly was suffering from any form of mental illness that could have contributed to her
actions. Throughout the investigation into Teegigen's whereabouts, Kelly had refused to attend
counselling or undergo a psychological evaluation. The closest she came was during the 2004 coronial
inquest when her parents summoned a general practitioner to their home because Kelly was
in a state of distress. Kelly told the doctor that she was confused and scared and didn't know how to handle the
situation she was in.
She regretted not telling her parents about the pregnancies, but there had been a lot
of expectations on her in regards to her sporting career.
Kelly said she'd gotten caught up in the expectations when deep down she wasn't happy
and wanted something different from her life. The GP formed the view that Kelly's pregnancies were
a cry for love. Instead of talking about how she was feeling, he thought the pregnancies were a
dysfunctional way of trying to manage the situation. The doctor stated,
I think she was just scared, and it was a nebulous kind of fear.
Keen to further understand Kelly's motivations, prosecutors hired a renowned psychiatrist to
review Kelly's entire file, including her medical records and police interviews. While he never interviewed
Kelly himself, based on the information at hand, the psychiatrist concluded that there was nothing
in Kelly's behaviour that indicated any kind of psychiatric or mental illness. She was well aware
of her actions and knew the difference between right and wrong.
However, he believed that Kelly likely did have some kind of personality disorder.
The psychiatrist suspected the two abortions Kelly had as a teenager were formative.
He believed that after terminating those pregnancies, Kelly developed a desire to be pregnant in order to have the baby she could not have. Each of the babies she subsequently carried to full term
were the result of what the psychiatrist labelled a repetition compulsion. He believed that by
putting herself back in an unresolved state of conflict, Kelly hoped to correct the
previous emotionally distressing experience by managing each subsequent pregnancy more successfully.
While he acknowledged that such behaviour defied rational explanation and was extremely
destructive, he said the compulsion to repeat behaviour was powerful.
he said the compulsion to repeat behaviour was powerful.
Kelly Lane's trial for the murder of her newborn baby Tegan Lane commenced in August 2010.
By this point, Kelly was 35 years old and her daughter Emily was nine. If convicted, Kelly faced a minimum of 10 years in prison, meaning that in the best case scenario,
Emily would be 19 by the time she got out. Worst case scenario, Kelly faced life behind bars.
To safeguard against any possible delays, the potential jury pool was four times the usual amount, with each prospective member
carefully hand-picked to ensure they held no moral opinions about abortion or adoption that could
impact Kelly's right to a fair trial. The judge firmly told the prospective jurors,
the fact that this trial will raise highly emotional issues relating to a mother's dealing
with newborn children must not interfere with the presumption of innocence, to which Kelly
Lane is emphatically entitled.
People of all ages, genders and backgrounds asked to be excused until there were just
12 individuals left, with two serving as backup.
The prosecution was led by Mark Tedeschi, a formidable senior-crown prosecutor who'd
secured convictions in some of the nation's most high-profile trials, including the Belanglo
backpacker murders as covered in episode 109 of Casefile, and the Gonzales family murders
as covered in episode 103 of Casefile. Over three days, Tedeschi presented a highly detailed account
of Kelly Lane's secret pregnancies and the subsequent lies she told. As for how she managed
to become pregnant so many times while taking the contraceptive pill,
Tedeschi theorised that the pill had been rendered ineffective because of Kelly's frequent
binge drinking in her younger years which often resulted in her vomiting.
She would regularly go out to the pub and she used to keep up with the boys in her drinking,
he explained.
Tedeschi submitted to the jury that it was clear from the get-go that Kelly never had any intention of bringing Teigen home. The jury could therefore rule out any other possible
reasons for the newborn's death, such as accident or misadventure. Instead, Tedeschi presented that Kelly didn't want to go through with the
emotionally gruelling and time-consuming adoption process again, so either shortly before or after
leaving the hospital with Teigen, she formed the intention to kill her. Tedeschi told the jury,
Tedeschi told the jury,
We don't know how or where the accused killed Teigen or how she disposed of the body.
However, the Auburn Hospital was just a couple of kilometres away from what was then the Homebush Olympics site, which at that time in 1996 was surrounded by vast swathes of vacant land,
a few building sites and deserted roads, particularly at the weekend.
So there was an opportunity nearby for the accused to find somewhere that was entirely private,
which would have given her an opportunity to kill Teigen and dispose of the body.
He said the fact that Kelly attended a wedding straight after and was able to move on
like nothing ever happened showed, quote, either a callous disregard for human life or a complete
ability to block out the terrible act she had just committed. However, the prosecution did think that Kelly's actions took an emotional toll.
Tedeschi told the jury that when Kelly gave birth to Jacob the following year, quote,
"...the experience of killing Tegan had been so awful that even the practical difficulties
involved in an adoption were preferable to killing another child.
The defence objected to Tadeski's scenario involving the Homebush Olympic site. At no point was this location ever searched by police and there was nothing to suggest Kelly had gone there after
leaving Auburn Hospital. The judge agreed to the objection and Tedeschi was ordered
to withdraw this remark. He told the jury to disregard that specific scenario, stating,
There is no evidence at all as to what happened to Tegan or the accused during those three plus
hours between when she left the hospital before midday, to use her own words, and when she arrived
at her parents' house at Fairlight at 3pm. I think it is fair to say, ladies and gentlemen,
that it would not be appropriate for you to speculate about what might have happened during
that time. Kelly's defence lawyer reminded the jury that there was nothing out of the ordinary about
Kelly's sexual behaviour during her youth.
He said the only difference between her and the young men she slept with was her ability
to become pregnant.
The defence maintained that it wasn't up to them to prove that Teigen was still alive.
Instead, their argument was that the prosecution had failed to provide any evidence
to confirm that Teagan was even dead, let alone how she died. And even if Teagan was dead, there
was no evidence to suggest that Kelly had killed her. If Teagan had indeed died while under Kelly's
care, there was nothing to prove that Kelly had
committed any act that demonstrated an intention to seriously harm her.
It was entirely possible that Tegan had died by accident.
The defense acknowledged it was possible that Kelly was lying about giving Tegan to a man named
Andrew Norris or Morris, but even if she was, that didn't
mean she had murdered the child. Perhaps she was lying to protect the real identity of the person
or people she'd given Tegan to. It was possible the only reason those people hadn't come forward
was due to shame. The trial dragged on for three months, during which the prosecution called
75 witnesses, including former friends of Kelly's, her parents, two ex-boyfriends, hospital staff,
social workers, and employees from the adoption agencies Kelly had worked with. Despite all the lies she'd told,
witnesses described her as a well-raised, polite and upstanding member of the community.
Those who knew her, including those who'd since distanced themselves from her,
were adamant that she would never hurt a child. While Kelly's conduct during her younger years certainly raised eyebrows amongst some in
the courtroom, it was also observed that many seemed to take pity on her and the way in which
her private life was being so openly discussed. As time went by, media interest began to dwindle,
as many journalists formed the opinion that a murder conviction was unlikely.
Meanwhile, birth certificates continued to trickle in as a result of the nationwide school
inquiries, prompting criticism from the judge about the prosecution's handling.
Multiple times the trial was put on hold while leads were followed up and evidence was debated
for admissibility.
The defence called no witnesses and Kelly didn't take the stand.
By the time closing arguments commenced, the defence had argued that the case should be thrown out completely. Mark Tedeschi for the prosecution told the jury,
Mark Tedeschi for the prosecution told the jury,
There is only one person in the world who really knows what happened to baby Tegan, and that is Kelly Lane. She has given many different versions to the authorities, and all of them can be shown
to be lies. There is only one reason why she has told all those lies and that is because she was responsible for Tegan's
death and she had no other information that could result in Tegan being found alive.
The truth was, and still is, dreadful.
The jury was dismissed to begin deliberations on Monday December 6 2010.
dismissed to begin deliberations on Monday December 6 2010. As days passed by with no verdict reached, Kelly's legal team felt optimistic. This meant the jury was still
deliberating, which could be favourable for Kelly. It was a whole week before the court was
reassembled. For the three perjury charges, they had no doubt
Kelly was guilty. However, when it came to the murder charge, the jury was unable to
reach a unanimous decision. Kelly wept as the judge told the jury that if they were
willing he would accept a majority verdict. Again, the jury was dismissed for further deliberation.
Tension was high in the packed courtroom when they reassembled two hours later,
with many wondering if there would be a hung jury and therefore a possible retrial.
The visibly nervous foreman stood and quietly delivered the verdict. Guilty.
The courtroom's silence was shattered by the screams of Kelly's mother, Sandra,
while Kelly herself let out a low moan before collapsing hard onto the floor, banging her head on the way down.
It took paramedics 15 minutes to get her back into her seat, at which point the judge denied bail.
Kelly was taken into custody to await sentencing, which was scheduled to take place in three months'
time. The unexpected guilty verdict propelled the case back into the headlines.
After years of avoiding interviews and declining to testify in both the coronial inquest and
the trial, Kelly went to the media to share her story once and for all.
Kelly's new boyfriend Patrick began recording the couple's phone calls with her permission
and handed the audio over to Channel 7's Sunday Night program.
Kelly said she felt like she was being punished for being pregnant or placing babies for adoption,
telling Patrick,
It's hard to understand why I'm still being raked over the coals for it.
It's hard to understand why I'm still being raked over the coals for it."
As for the prosecution's case that Andrew Norris never existed, Kelly scoffed,
well I don't know how Tegan came about if he didn't exist. I didn't make her by myself.
She criticised the police investigation, saying not enough was done to find Andrew or Tegan, and was scathing about the fact that searches were still being held during her trial.
To put Kelly's word to the test, Sunday Night announced they would fund a $500,000
reward for information leading to the whereabouts of Tegan Lane or Andrew Norris.
Kelly was hopeful that this would provide the breakthrough she needed, telling Patrick. Someone might ring in
now that hasn't seen the news before or didn't put two and two together and have some information
that either leads straight to Andrew or to Tegan now that she's old enough to have her own connections to people.
It wasn't just Kelly who was critical of the investigation.
Prominent criminal defence lawyer Chris Murphy told Sunday Night that prosecutor Mark Tedeschi
poisoned the case when he wrongly speculated to the jury that Kelly killed Teigen and dumped her body at the Homebush Olympic site.
Even though this statement was withdrawn, Chris Murphy said it planted an idea in the minds of
the jury that the prosecution knew more than they were letting on.
I find the Kelly Lane case the most disturbing case I've ever come across, Chris said.
This woman has no history of violence. There's
absolutely no evidence whatsoever that she killed that baby, or that that baby died.
I could not in a million years under any circumstance safely conclude that she
killed the baby deliberately to the high degree of proof required for murder.
to the high degree of proof required for murder. Kelly hasn't wanted to say what has happened to the baby. That doesn't mean she is guilty of murder. Nothing came of the reward offer and
Kelly's sentencing went ahead in April 2011. While the judge didn't believe Kelly's actions were the highest or lowest form of criminal
culpability, he acknowledged there were two serious aggravating factors to take into consideration.
Namely, the life taken was that of a defenceless baby, and that baby met her end at the hands of
her mother. Quote, "...a person from whom she could ordinarily expect
protection, sustenance, and care. He stated that even without knowing how Tegan met her
death, he was, quote, satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that some time after Kelly left the
hospital she formed the intention to take the child's life,
and did so very soon after forming that intention. The judge clarified,
it suggests a relatively, although not completely, spontaneous act. Putting it bluntly,
Kelly must have found herself in a desperate situation and could see no way out.
From her perspective, irrational though it was, there was simply no way out.
I find that the offence was premeditated, but only for a short time. It was committed in a situation
of desperation arising from a sense of entrapment and isolation
and a perceived inability to communicate with the very people who would have eased her burden
and helped her out of the desperate situation in which she found herself.
Irrational though these feelings were, I accept that they were likely to have been experienced by Kelly.
New laws introduced in 2003 put the standard non-parole period for murder at 25 years if
the victim was under 18.
Taking into account Kelly's immaturity at the time of the killing, the unlikeliness
that she'd ever re-offend, and the law that applied when the
offence occurred in 1996, the judge stated, "...I am satisfied that Kelly Lane is now a very different
person to the troubled personage that lay beneath the Golden Girl exterior."
The maturity has probably been cemented, ironically enough, because of the love and
devotion that has grown between her and her daughter, Emily. It is a further tragic irony that,
despite Kelly's maturity, her rehabilitation and the apparent resolution of the difficulties that
beset her in her youth, she must now face a lengthy period in prison. With that, he sentenced Kelly Lane to 18 years.
As Kelly was led from the court, a man's voice rang out from amongst the spectators.
I'll help you, he called.
court. Days after Kelly's sentencing, Chris Murphy, the criminal lawyer who appeared on Channel 7's Sunday Night Program to discuss Teigen's
case, was contacted by a man named Maurice who claimed to have some important information.
According to Maurice, in 1996, he was working in Sydney as a taxi driver.
On Saturday September 14, he picked Kelly and her newborn baby up from Auburn Hospital
and began driving them to Manly.
As they headed down River Road in Lane Cove, a somewhat isolated stretch of bushland, Kelly
asked Maurice to pull over.
She got out, bringing the baby
with her. When she returned a few minutes later, she was alone.
Kelly allegedly told Maurice she'd given the newborn to a babysitter. Not thinking much
of it, Maurice continued the drive to Manly. When Kelly got out of the car, he noticed
that she'd left a baby bag full of nappies on the back seat. Maurice called out to Kelly,
but she responded, I don't need it. Suspicious about this comment, Maurice claimed he returned
to the spot on River Road where Kelly exited with the baby.
In a patch of nearby bushland he found the baby and a bottle wrapped up in a blanket next to a tree.
A woman passed by and Maurice spoke to her. He said he was going to contact the police,
but the woman offered to take care of it. Maurice handed the baby over
and didn't give it much more thought. It was only when he saw Kelly Lane's murder trial in the news
that he recognised her face and realised the significance of this moment. Chris Murphy
encouraged Maurice to go to the police with this information and then went
public with the claims. Kelly's legal team rejected this scenario, saying,
We are aware of the taxi driver's claims but have no interest in pursuing that line of inquiry.
The police warned that if Maurice was lying, he'd be charged with creating public mischief.
Maurice's background was looked into. Not only did he admit to having mental health issues,
it turned out that in 1996 he was banned from driving and couldn't possibly have been working
as a taxi driver. While Maurice's claims were ruled out, Kelly appealed her conviction on eight grounds.
Although she maintained her innocence, she argued that the judge had erred by failing to leave an
alternative count of manslaughter or infanticide to the jury. She also argued that a new jury
should have been sworn in after Mark Tedeschi's prejudicial
comments and that her lawyer should have applied for a separate trial in respect to her perjury
charges. Overall, Kelly said the verdict was unreasonable and couldn't be supported by the
evidence. The Court of Appeal rejected the application on all eight grounds, with the panel of judges
concluding they were satisfied that the evidence established Kelly's guilt beyond reasonable doubt.
Kelly sought special leave to appeal to the High Court of Australia.
Her request was denied, meaning she'd officially exhausted all her avenues of appeal.
meaning she'd officially exhausted all her revenues of appeal. The only option she had left was to apply to the New South Wales Governor for a pardon, and the only way that could happen was if fresh
and compelling evidence was presented. As one specialist in wrongful convictions told the
Australian Women's Weekly, in Kelly's case, that means either Andrew Norris coming
forward or Teagan suddenly appearing. Or if Kelly changes her story.
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In 2016, award-winning investigative journalist Caro Meldrum-Hanna opened a letter addressed to her
at the Australian Broadcasting Commission offices in Sydney.
Dear Ms Meldrum-Hanna, the letter read. My name is Kelly Lane and I have been wrongfully convicted
of murdering my baby in 1996. I believe if the public knew the real facts, had all the information and saw the errors
and questions that still remain in my case, they may be able to help, perhaps come forward
with where Andrew Norris, our child, or his family are.
Ultimately, we are trying to locate Andrew, our daughter, or a family member.
Caro wasn't sure what to make of the letter. She was well known for her work on the ABC's popular current affairs program, Four Corners, but she'd never covered Tegan Lane's case before,
so her first thought was that the letter must be a prank.
Caro contacted Kelly in prison and confirmed the letter was legitimate.
When asked if there was any way she could have harmed Tegan, Kelly responded firmly,
There is no way.
There is no way.
If Andrew didn't turn up, I would have just left her there, or I would have gone down
the exact same path as before. I would have just left her there, or I would have gone down the exact same path as before,
I would have asked for some help, I would have asked to see an adoption agency,
and I would have done the exact same thing I did 18 months earlier.
I remember that day clear as. I know a lot of people think I'm cold and callous,
but those children were very important to me and I loved them.
I thought I was doing the right thing by them."
Caro agreed to make a documentary about the case which would be titled Exposed! The Case of Kelly
Lane, but only under the condition that no topic was off limits and she would follow the truth wherever it led.
Kelly agreed, and in turn, she handed over her entire case file and court records,
including private correspondence sent between herself and her defence team.
Caro and a small team fully immersed themselves in the case. They tracked down and interviewed anyone and
everyone from Kelly's past who was willing to speak with them, including former water polo coaches,
teammates, boyfriends, and even her parents. They spoke to the coroner, prosecutors, and homicide
squad detectives who worked on Kelly's case, and were handed a USB containing exclusive confidential police files
from a secret informant. After nine months of intense research, the exposed team identified
several holes in the investigation as well as questionable legal tactics that had them asking, was Kelly Lane wrongfully convicted?
During Kelly's trial, police claimed that exhaustive efforts had been made to interview all the former tenants of the apartment building on Whisbeard Street where Kelly said Andrew Norris
had lived. None of the tenants recalled ever seeing Kelly there, nor did they have any knowledge of a
resident called Andrew Norris. One former tenant did testify to seeing mail addressed to Andrew
Norris as well as Andrew Morris, but his claims were discounted as he'd given various inconsistent
statements over the years. However, the exposed team discovered that there was at least
one tenant who had never been questioned, a man named Darryl Hanson.
The team tracked Darryl down on Facebook and organised a video meeting.
When Caro Meldrum-Hanna showed Darryl a photo of Kelly Lane taken in about 1996. He claimed he remembered
seeing her around the building. Darryl said he used to spend a lot of time in the downstairs
car park working on his car late at night. He remembered seeing Kelly exit the building through
the car park several times, sometimes as late as 1am. Darryl claimed he saw Kelly so many times that
he thought she must have lived in the building. When pressed by Caro as to whether he could be
misremembering in hindsight, Darryl insisted Kelly Lane was the person he had seen. He was so sure
that he said he'd happily testify that in a court of law.
The exposed team also interviewed a childhood friend of Kelly's named Natalie McCauley, who had recently appeared on 60 Minutes in Kelly's defense. Natalie claimed that she remembered the
summer of 1996 very clearly, as it was the year that she and all her friends had turned 21. Early in the year,
Kelly allegedly confided in Natalie that she was having a fling with another man.
She mentioned it at least three times over a one-month period. Natalie said she remembered
the name of Kelly's secret lover clearly, as he had the same first name as Natalie's
brother, Andrew. Natalie claimed that she'd provided police with this information during
the investigation and she'd also been willing to testify in Kelly's defence at trial. However,
she believed the police weren't interested because they were already convinced of Kelly's
guilt. Addament that she wouldn't lie about such a thing, especially given her profession in child
protection, Natalie told Exposed, "...I am passionate about children's rights. I love children.
Every day my waking hour is about protecting kids. I'm not about to let my friend
get off easy if she's hurt a child." During the search for Teagan's father, police had also spoken
to a man named Andrew Morris who recalled visiting Sydney's northern beaches for a surf life saving
competition in the mid-1990s. When shown a photo line up of several
young women, Andrew Morris recognised Kelly Lane but couldn't be sure how or why. He told the exposed
team that the police then began drip feeding him information about Kelly until he put two and two
together and realised that they once had a random one-off
sexual encounter at the North Narebeen Surf Club.
It had happened around the same time that Teigen would have been conceived.
Andrew had been scheduled to testify for the prosecution at Kelly's trial, not to suggest
he was Teigen's father, but to explain how Kelly came up with the Andrew
Morris or Norris persona in the first place. Then at the last minute, a deal was made between
both legal teams. Andrew wouldn't testify, and neither would Natalie McCauley.
This was just one of several factors that led Kelly's case to being taken on by the
Bridge of Hope Innocence Initiative, an organisation dedicated to examining possible wrongful
convictions.
A spokesperson for the initiative told Exposed about the deal relating to Natalie McCauley
and Andrew Morris.
For Kelly's supporters, these allegations of
witness coaching, witness swapping and deals struck between the prosecution and defence
were further evidence that Kelly hadn't received a fair trial. Exposed also unearthed records from
Auburn Hospital that cast doubt on the timing of Kelly's departure with baby Teagan.
Notes made by a registered nurse had Kelly leaving at 2pm. That same nurse later provided a statement saying Kelly was discharged between 11am and 12 midday. If the hospital records were
correct and Kelly really had left the hospital at 2pm and was home
in Fairlight by 3pm, then exposed posited that Kelly wouldn't have had time to kill Teagan and
dispose of her body. Even investigators who worked on the case were critical of the way things were
handled. Various individuals involved expressed their discomfort with Kelly's conviction.
The detective who led the investigation into Teigen's murder had since retired from the force.
She told Exposed that police had no evidence against Kelly and weren't ready when the DPP
decided to proceed with the murder charge. I used every trick in the book, the former detective explained. An undercover strategy,
covert DNA samples, every resource that was available. There was nothing. Absolutely nothing.
We didn't have anything. The exposed team also highlighted the fact that for all the digging police did to find
Teegans biological father, they never organised for a composite sketch to be made.
They questioned why such an image wasn't broadcast around Australia,
asking anyone who had seen such a man to come forward.
The exposed team organised for a former police officer turned forensic artist to visit Kelly
in prison.
Kelly recalled Andrew's physical features in detail and a clear composite sketch of
Andrew Norris was created for the first time.
The forensic artist, who had 18 years experience creating sketches, believed Kelly was truthful
in her description.
She was consistent throughout, he said. She didn't sway at all.
In a phone call from prison, Kelly told Caro Meldrum-Hanna that from a very young age her
athletic training taught her to hide her emotions. She was excellent at filing feelings
away and being a different person for different people. She also revealed that her first sexual
experience was being date raped while intoxicated at the age of 15. Kelly explained,
I don't think I valued my body and my choices and my boundaries because everybody just seemed to be
so frivolous with it." She struggled upon learning that several people in her life had indeed
suspected she was pregnant at times but never reached out. While Kelly made it clear she didn't
want to shift the responsibility onto others,
she asked Caro,
Wasn't I worth asking? Why were people afraid, or why did they not want to ask me?
It's kind of sad to think that no one reached out and said
you seem different, or you look different, or are you okay?
or are you okay? As part of the documentary, Kelly agreed to meet face to face with Dr. Ann Buist, a forensic psychiatrist who specialises in women's mental health and the relationship
between mother and babies. Throughout her career, Dr. Buist had worked with hundreds of women who'd
been accused of abusing their children, but she said that Kelly was her hardest, most difficult case.
Dr Buist told Exposed that she didn't find Kelly to be a pathological liar, a narcissist,
or mentally ill.
She thought the secret pregnancies could be explained by Kelly's upbringing, during which
she'd received the message that her family didn't like dealing with negative emotions. Dr Buist couldn't find a
coherent narrative that Kelly could have killed Tegan, aside from the fact that she had demonstrated
the capacity to detach from her other children. For Dr Buist, one thing in particular stood out during her interviews with Kelly.
When Kelly started talking about Andrew Norris, her body language changed.
The way she spoke about him seemed superficial.
Dr Buist told Exposed,
"...there was something there that didn't ring true.
Exposed was released by the ABC in 2018 to rave reviews, propelling Kelly's case back into the spotlight. Members of the public hotly debated Kelly's guilty verdict and shared outrage over
what many now viewed as a wrongful conviction.
Thousands turned to social media to accuse the prosecution of misconduct and Kelly's defence
team of negligence. Calls were made for Kelly to be exonerated or at the very least retried.
But the documentary wasn't without its critics. Many were quick to point out that crucial
information was withheld from the viewers, with some accusing the ABC of provoking public excitement
at the expense of accurate reporting. Retired Australian barrister Simon Davis was one such
critic. Simon hadn't been involved in Kelly's trial in any capacity, but after
watching Exposed, he was shocked by the trial's flaws and felt compelled to look into the case
in detail. Simon essentially fact-checked the claims made by Exposed, then published a book
titled On Trial, The Case of Kelly Lane and the ABC, in which he debunked each one.
Casting doubt on the claims made by former Whisbeach Street tenant Darryl Henson, Simon
said it was hard to believe a witness could so confidently recognise a stranger two decades
after the fact, especially when the alleged interactions occurred in the dark of night. Furthermore,
while Darryl claimed Kelly usually left in the middle of the night, Kelly had told police that
when she'd stayed at Andrew Norris' place she left in the morning and went straight to water polo
training. Simon Davis concluded,
Ultimately, Henson's evidence was of such low probative value that it is questionable
whether it would even be admissible at a trial. Simon Davis rejected the claims about witness
swapping and game playing between the opposing legal teams. He pointed out that Exposed had
failed to tell their audience several important details regarding Natalie McAuley's
claims. Firstly, in Natalie's original police statement she made no mention of Andrew,
despite later stating Kelly told her about Andrew at the time of their affair. Secondly,
Natalie was cross-examined by the prosecution at Kelly's pre-trial hearing before the jury was sworn in.
Some of the responses she gave led to doubts about her credibility.
She was therefore deemed unreliable and not called to testify during the trial.
Thirdly, and to Simon Davis most importantly, police had asked Kelly if any of her friends
knew about her affair with Andrew.
At no point did she mention Natalie's name.
Fourthly, if Kelly really did think Natalie's testimony would have been crucial,
then why did she make no mention of it when appealing her conviction?
According to Simon Davis' research, the Andrew Morris who appeared on Exposed wasn't prevented
from giving evidence due to some kind of witness swapping deal.
He was stopped because shortly before the trial commenced, it emerged that the random
sexual encounter Andrew had at the beach couldn't possibly have been with Kelly.
Thus, his testimony was irrelevant.
As for the claim that Kelly left Auburn Hospital with Teigen at 2pm,
Kelly herself told the police she'd left the hospital, quote, before 12 o'clock sometime.
The patient sharing her room also testified that Kelly and Tegan left by 11am.
The nurse had listed eight other matters on Kelly's file at 2pm, not just Kelly's departure.
Simon Davis pointed out that all these matters hadn't taken place simultaneously.
Many likely occurred before 2pm, and the nurse simply recorded the time
she was making the notes. Taking these factors and several others into account, Simon Davis
concluded that exposed was inaccurate and misleading. He stated,
"...legitimate questioning of a jury's verdict is one thing, however, questioning of a verdict which
has twice been the subject of appellate review without real reference to the appealed judgments
and by apparently suppressing many of the relevant facts is quite another. Ultimately,
exposed was little more than a recycling of old arguments, long since rejected by the courts
or disavowed by Kelly herself, and placing them in 2018 and presumably hoping no one noticed
their antiquity or knew they had been rejected. Regardless of its criticisms, Exposed raised
some thought-provoking questions and led many to wonder if the prosecution
really had met the standard of proof required to reach a conviction.
The Bridge of Hope Innocence Initiative petitioned the Attorney-General of New South Wales to
open a full inquiry into the investigation, prosecution and conviction of Kelly Lane.
They also called for an urgent review into the policing
and prosecutorial practices that led to Kelly being charged in the first place.
Dr Michelle Reuters, a lawyer and spokesperson for the group, told 60 Minutes,
"...one of the things I've found the most extraordinary about Kelly Lane's case is that
people find it easier to believe that a young mother would kill her child than they would
believe her father would accept responsibility for that child and to disappear. Forensic
criminologist Dr. Xanthi Mallett spent two years looking into Kelly's case and agreed that an urgent review
was needed. She believed that just because Kelly was a liar, it didn't make her a murderer.
Dr Mallett told 60 Minutes, I'm not saying Kelly is innocent. I'm not saying she is guilty.
All I'm saying is, if she is going to be in prison, let there be evidence for that,
or let her out." For the Australian public, one of the most scandalous details about the case was
the fact that Kelly had become pregnant five times in seven years despite being on the contraceptive
pill. The fact that she determined two pregnancies in the
past, one of which was considered a late term, left people wondering why she didn't just do so
again instead of proceeding with three secret pregnancies. Others questioned why Kelly didn't
abstain from sex entirely if she kept finding herself in an undesirable predicament.
entirely if she kept finding herself in an undesirable predicament. But the ongoing interest also prompted conversations about whether Kelly Lane was unfairly judged based on her sex
life, which ultimately had nothing to do with whether or not she was capable of murder. Many
argue that she was subject to trial by media and the prosecution used slut shaming as a
strategic device at her trial. Even the DPP who charged Kelly with murder admitted that her case
was prosecuted because it raised all sorts of values. The same DPP came under fire from the
public when he told ABC's Exposed that he didn't think Kelly
presented a risk to other people's babies, but quote, she seemed to be a bit of a risk to the
virile young male portion of the community. But the judge who oversaw the trial said it was
necessary to lay the facts of Kelly's personal life bare. While he acknowledged
this would have been a humiliating and intrusive experience for Kelly and her family, and that the
media excitement led to Kelly's life being examined at a prurient level, quote, the fact remains that
there is a need to gain insight into the offender's behaviour in an endeavour to gain an understanding
of the level of culpability involved in the murder itself. Some of these matters might,
at first blush, seem peripheral to the ascertainment of culpability and the assessment
of the objective criminality involved, but in truth, I think that the answers to these
troublesome questions are highly relevant
in that regard.
Dr. Zianthy Mallett is one of many who believe Kelly Lane was a victim of trial by media.
She has compared Kelly's situation to that of Lindy Chamberlain whose wrongful conviction
for the murder of her baby Azaria was covered in episode 136 of Casefile. Dr Mallet
believes that, like Lindy, Kelly was scrutinised for not being emotional enough or responding in
the way people thought a mother should. She told Women's Weekly, "... clearly Kelly was never in
line to win a Mother of the Year award, and she disgraced herself by
lying so often and so flagrantly. But it's still a big leap to say she killed her baby.
Caro Meldrum Hanna told Mamma Mia that judgment of Kelly's sex life remained one of the prominent
discussions when it came to this case. There was a lot of slut-shaming back then, she said, and
it's clear there's a lot of slut-shaming now. Nevertheless, Caro told the ABC,
I can understand why people are haunted by this case. There's a two-day-old baby at the centre of it. Where is Teigen and what happened to her?
There's nothing more vulnerable than a newborn baby.
These factors aside, one of the biggest criticisms about Kelly Lane's case is the
police handling of the investigation and why it took them so long to commence a search for Teigen or question Kelly
in the first place. Those who believe Kelly was unfairly convicted don't think enough was done to
find Andrew Norris and are critical of the fact that investigators were still searching for Andrew
and Teigen while both the Coranule inquest and murder trial were underway.
But as the prosecution argued, Kelly essentially sent police on a wild goose chase when she told them Tegan was taken by her father,
and any delays were therefore Kelly's fault.
Others commended the police's intensive search efforts, attesting they did the most thorough job possible given they were searching
for a needle in a haystack. While Kelly's case is polarising, even many who believe in her
innocence have serious doubts that Andrew Norris ever existed. As Simon Davis stated in his book,
one is driven to conclude that if Andrew and his mum and Mel do exist,
they must be huddled together under a proverbial rock. Never in the annals of crime in Australia,
or perhaps anywhere, would there have been so much reaching out, searching for, or imploring of a
human being to come forward as there has been for Andrew Morris slash Norris.
The case would arguably be the most publicised murder conviction in Australian history,
and yet still no sign of Andrew Morris slash Norris.
In a phone call to Kelly in prison, Caro Meldrum Hanna said that something didn't add up about
the Andrew Norris story.
I'm not convinced on this name, Caro told Kelly, and I need you to help me.
Kelly became somewhat defensive, insisting that the name of Tegan's father was Andrew
Norris, emphasising it was spelt with an N.
Caro pressed on, asking if it was possible that Andrew Norris might not be his real name.
For the first time in over two decades, Kelly said,
Absolutely, absolutely. I don't know 100% if his name was Andrew Norris because I don't know if what he was telling me
at the time was the truth or if I've made a mistake. Of course that's a possibility.
If Teigen's biological father was really out there, he never came forward.
never came forward. By March 2024, Kelly Lane was 48 years old. She had served her minimum period of 13 and a half years and was eligible to apply for parole. But just two years earlier,
New South Wales passed the No Body No Parole legislation, which prevented any prisoners
convicted of murder from receiving parole if they hadn't cooperated by identifying their victims' location.
A statement released by Kelly's parole board read,
police investigations or other actions to identify the location of Teagan. With that, Kelly's bid for release was denied.
Public debate followed with one New South Wales politician describing Kelly Lane as
a political prisoner.
She told The Guardian,
The no-body, no-parole law undermines the fundamental objective of parole to support
community safety with a focus on the rehabilitation of the offender.
At their core, they further punish the person who has served their time.
The fact is, Kelly Lane has done her time and she has been an exemplary prisoner
and she should not remain in prison any longer.
Justice Anthony Wheely, the former Supreme Court judge who ever saw Kelly's trial, agreed. In the
years since Kelly's conviction, he'd publicly admitted that Kelly's case affected him emotionally.
While he accepted the jury's verdict, Justice Whealy said he wasn't
convinced that the Crown had proved its case, and he voiced his misgivings about aspects of how the
trial was conducted. Since the nobody no parole legislation was passed, Justice Whealy joined
many others in calling for changes to this new law.
After Kelly's parole was denied, Justice Wheely told a current affair that the law shouldn't
be applied to Kelly's case.
Not only did he call the case enigmatic and say there was a question mark surrounding
her guilt, he pointed out that the law wasn't intended to apply to people like her, stating,
"'Because of the way it was worded, it slammed her back inside for four more years.
I believe that had this law not been passed, then she would be back in the community where
she belongs.'"
He told the ABC that this law was particularly problematic in cases where the offender maintained
their innocence. What is the point of judges making the sentences if the legislation extends
the time they spend in prison, Justice Whealy asked. We shouldn't increase the time they spend
in jail if they're maintaining their innocence because if they didn't commit the
crime, they have no idea of where the body might be. One of Kelly's most vocal supporters, Dr.
Zanthi Mallett, told the ABC that the point of the nobody no parole law was to provide closure
for victims' families. Dr. Mallett said that didn't apply in Kelly's case because,
quote, "...the family of Tegan is also Kelly's family and they believe in her innocence.
You have to wonder if we keep Kelly in prison, who is that serving?"
Kelly Lane is due to be released in 2028. She continues to maintain her innocence.
While Kelly's critics often point out that she has never shown any remorse,
her supporters rebut that Kelly didn't kill Teigen so she has nothing to be remorseful about.
If Teigen Lane is still alive as Kelly claims, she would be 28 years old at the
time this episode goes to air. To this day, no evidence of Teagan's existence beyond the day
she left hospital with Kelly has ever surfaced. Over the years, many have discussed the significance of the mother-daughter relationships highlighted by this case. By Kelly keeping her pregnancy secret from her own mother,
she severed any potential relationship with Teigen, and the choices she made in that regard
then impacted her relationship with her daughter Emily.
During her incarceration, Kelly has only been allowed to speak to Emily
for 10 minutes a day. When Kelly was sentenced, Justice Whealy remarked,
it is a tragedy at three levels. This case reflects the most profound tragedy of the
relationship between mother and daughter. Kelly's parents continued to support her. When
asked by 60 Minutes if they believed Kelly's story about what happened to Tegan, her mother
Sandra responded, yes I do. It sounds improbable, but a lot of improbable things happen in life." Kelly's father Robert agreed, adding, When 18-year-old Nea May went missing in 2002, her family did everything they could to help
the police find her.
But, like so many missing persons cases,
there comes a time when the leads dry up
and there's nowhere left to look.
At no point have we just got on with our lives.
I heard something recently that really resonated.
It was a woman from America who said that
you never get over grief, you learn to move forward with it.
And I was like, that's the best anyone's ever described it. Niamh's sister, Fionnuala, realised that a podcast might help find the answers the
family was looking for. So for the past four years, I've been working with Niamh's family to take a
closer look at the case. And what we found took us to places we never anticipated. Here's everything
we've done.
We've obviously got serious concerns about her welfare.
I've just spoken to the last person to see her alive
that we knew about, and he's given me a bullshit story.
When I first started looking into this case in 2020,
it was originally intended to be a single case file episode.
But the more I looked, the more I found. So Steve, he's adamant that she never
made it to Go Cup Road. Stan, he's adamant that there's a credible sighting there.
Nehems set out for a gap year after finishing high school to test her independence,
but she never made it home. What happened in those final days? And when the Blackhurst arrived,
these two men got out and as soon as I saw them and
I saw that black hearse, I thought, their baddies stay away from them.
Mum called me and she said, look, the police are investigating now and somebody claims
that they dropped her off and she was hitchhiking.
What started out as a potential case fileile episode turned into a 12-part
series that took over four years to research. He didn't smile or anything, he just kind of
looked empty and just like get in the car. It was just kind of like aggressively like get in the car.
Join me as we uncover what happened in Missing Nehiem, the new 12-part podcast series from Casefile
Presents.
Something had obviously woken me suddenly because I was disorientated.
That's when I realised that there was just a cold, rough hand holding my hand because
I had my hand over the edge of the bed and I could see the outline of somebody leaning
over the bed.
Evil, I guess, has to be somewhat attractive, doesn't it?
Otherwise, I wouldn't be able to sneak into every corner.
So I whispered to my sister.
I asked her if she was awake and she said yes.
I said, there's someone in the room, and she said, I know.
Missing Nehiem is available now.
Be sure to download and follow Missing Nehiem
wherever you get your podcasts.