Casefile True Crime - Case 323: The GPO Girl
Episode Date: August 2, 2025*** Content warnings: Sexual assault, child abuse, child sexual abuse ***On Thursday, October 10 2013, passersby noticed a distraught-looking teenage girl, crying and shivering outside of Du...blin’s General Post Office building. When police officers approached the girl, she either couldn’t, or wouldn’t, talk. The mystery teenager – soon dubbed the GPO girl – was taken into care, and experts suspected that she was a victim of sex trafficking.When attempts to identify the GPO girl failed, Irish investigators went public with the case, not realising they were just dealing with just the tip of the iceberg in a crime spree that spanned continents.---Narration – Anonymous HostResearch & writing – Erin MunroCreative direction – Milly RasoProduction & music – Mike MigasAudio editing – Anthony TelferSign up for Casefile Premium:Apple PremiumSpotify PremiumPatreonFor all credits and sources, please visit https://casefilepodcast.com/case-323-the-gpo-girl Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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If you're enjoying Case File and looking for your next true crime story, check out the newest
Case File present series, Julie's Gone. Julie's Gone investigates the disappearance of 19,
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Please note that the names of several witnesses in this episode have been changed.
The main thoroughfare of O'Connell Street in the heart of Dublin
was bustling with foot traffic on the afternoon of Thursday, October 10, 2013.
Even though it was a cold day, tourists were ambling along the wide footpaths, taking in the city's sights and sounds while office workers hurried by them.
Everything about the scene was entirely typical for the setting, with one exception.
A young girl who was all alone appeared to be in a distressed state.
She looked to be a teenager and was dressed in dark jeans, a purple hoodie with a grey woolen jumper,
over the top and flat black shoes. She stood at about five foot six and had a slim
build and long blonde hair as well as braces on her teeth. Most notably, she was obviously
shivering and seemed to be crying. As she gazed around with fearful, timid eyes, her skin had
a washed out pallor. The girl wandered along O'Connell Street, coming to a stop outside of the
central post office, an imposing Greek revival-style building that is the principal post office of
Dublin. Built in 1814, it features six fluted ionic columns along the front and three ornamental
statues on top of its roof. Its striking appearance has made the GPO building a landmark for
Dubliners and tourists alike. The teenage girl stood between the building's columns, looking to
Passers-by were beginning to notice her, including two uniformed officers of the Garda-Shikana,
island's national police, who were patrolling the area.
The officers approached the young girl and asked her what was wrong.
The girl either couldn't or wouldn't reply.
The officers asked if she needed help.
Again, she said nothing.
Using hand gestures, she indicated that she was experiencing pain in her abdomen.
She also held up her fingers to explain that she was 14 years old.
The officers wondered if perhaps the girl was from overseas and couldn't speak English.
She didn't have any luggage on her nor any identification.
The officers decided that the best thing to do was to take her into custody.
for her own safety as she was clearly vulnerable and distraught.
The girl was taken to the nearby children's hospital on Temple Street
just a short distance from the GPO building.
She was ushered into a cubicle in the emergency department
with the curtain pulled around for privacy.
Physicians examined her while the detective arrived to speak to the girl as well.
She appeared to be in good health aside from being somewhat emaciated.
What was more concerning was her behaviour.
Although she was polite, she was clearly uncomfortable.
She hid her face behind the long strands of her blonde hair and averted her gaze whenever
anyone tried to make eye contact.
The girl also remained entirely non-verbal, no matter who spoke to her.
She was questioned for hours, but never said a word.
Nurses who spoke languages other than English were brought in to try talking with her, to no avail.
Eventually, she found a way to communicate.
The girl began drawing pictures on a piece of paper.
They were rudimentary illustrations with stick figures representing people.
First, she drew herself on an aeroplane, suggesting she had flown to Ireland.
She also sketched an image of a gun and another of a crucifix.
When she drew a bed with a girl on top of it, surrounded by men standing all around her,
one of the nurses began to cry.
Over the next few days, the GPO girl, as she came to be known, was moved from her cubicle
to a private room elsewhere in the hospital. Whenever anyone attempted to touch her,
she would physically recoil from the contact. Doctors and the police alike suspected that she had been
sexually abused, perhaps even exploited. Certainly her drawings seemed to suggest she had been
trafficked to Ireland for sexual exploitation purposes. Her clothing was forensically examined for
signs of sexual assault, and although these tests returned negative, this did little to allay
concerns. While physicians did their best not to exacerbate the girl's trauma, the story of the mystery girl
found in central Dublin made headlines, and the subject of human trafficking became a national
talking point. The GPO girl's identity was a total mystery. She still wasn't speaking, but she did
appear to at least understand some English. It was speculated that she may have been flown from Eastern
Europe to Ireland by an organised crime gang, or at least one criminal who held her under total control.
A police guard was maintained outside of her hospital room at all times, and a female liaison officer was appointed to handle the delicate nature of the GPO girl's case.
The girl was also given a guardian named Aula Ryan who shared that she was extremely concerned about the welfare circumstances of this young person.
The Garda launched Operation Shepard, their name for the investigation into the case.
Missing person reports were examined, but none matched the GPO goal.
People who had been in the vicinity of the GPO building on Thursday, October 10, 2013, were tracked down and interviewed,
while CCTV footage from nearby cameras was reviewed.
Homelessness services, child protection agencies, and juvenile liaison officers all over Ireland
were checked to see if they had any record of the girl, as were hotels and hostels,
along with lockers at public transit stations and lost luggage facilities.
Detectives reviewed plane manifests from countless flights to see if any passengers matched the description of the GPO girl
and spoke extensively with airport police.
But none of these inquiries led anywhere.
In an attempt to find some record of the girl's family,
garter officers meticulously searched through recent death notices
in case her parents had recently passed, leaving her all alone.
Noticing that the girl had had orthodontic work,
they also reached out to dentists to check their records.
Despite their efforts, no clues emerged that would help them identify the girl.
As the days turned into weeks and almost a month went by, the GPO girl remained in her hospital room.
She passed the time watching television or sometimes painting her nails, still staying silent at all times.
Although she was pleasant towards hospital staff and members of the guarder,
she was also unmistakably cagey.
When officers requested to take her fingerprints in the hopes of identifying her,
she refused, nor would she let them take her photo.
Detectives began to resort to clandestine methods to obtain the information they needed.
First, they recovered her fingerprints after clearing a used
plate from her room. However, the prince matched nothing in their systems. Next, a scheme was
concocted to allow them to take a photo of the girl. She was told she would be moved to a new
room, and as she was escorted from one room to another, a nearby officer managed to surreptitiously
snap her picture. The photo was grainy in quality and only captured the girl in profile.
Her long hair was scraped into a messy bun on top of her head
as she looked straight ahead with eyes that appeared tired with heavy bags.
Her right hand was raised to her mouth
and she was sucking on her index finger in a childlike way
as though self-soothing.
It wasn't a perfect photograph,
but it captured enough of the girl's appearance
that someone who knew her might be able to recognise her.
detectives sent the picture to Winterpole, an international organisation that facilitates police cooperation
in the hopes they might be able to identify the girl.
But they couldn't.
Irish detectives were growing desperate.
Four weeks had now passed since the girl was found and all of their leads had dried up.
They began to wonder whether going public was the key to solving.
the mystery. They weren't permitted to do this due to the girl's status as a minor and likely
victim of crime, but perhaps the courts would grant them an exception due to the extraordinary
circumstances. When detectives told the GPO girl of their plan, she became visibly distraught,
shaking her head no at the prospect of her photo being shared. But Ireland's high court gave
permission for the picture to be published, and on Tuesday, November 5, the police held a press
conference at Garda headquarters. As the GPO girl's photograph was held up, a Garda spokesperson
besieged the public. Do you recognise this girl? Did you pass her in a distressed state in the
city centre? Any information is vital to this investigation. A special phone, a special phone
line were set up for the public to call with tip-offs.
After the press conference wrapped, the calls started coming in.
People rang from all over Ireland, sharing their theories and possible leads.
With the press conference making international news, calls were also made from locations
as far away as Cyprus and Canada.
Yet, none of these were helpful in identifying the GPO girl either.
It was the middle of the night in Australia when the Garda held their press conference,
but within a few hours of its broadcast, Australians were waking up to start another day.
One police officer in the Western Australian capital of Perth saw the report about the GPO girl in Ireland,
along with the photo of her that the Garter had shared.
He thought it sounded remarkably similar to another case from two years old.
and much closer to home.
Two years prior in 2011,
a 15-year-old girl named Hope moved from New Zealand to Perth
with her parents and three brothers.
The international move was a big adjustment for Hope
who had grown up in a small town
and now found herself living in a capital city.
Moreover, she found out that her home school credits from New York,
New Zealand were not recognised by the Australian authorities, so she would have to find a way
to complete her education. Hope enrolled at a TAFE, a kind of vocational education and training
provider in Australia. Unlike universities which focus on academic study, TAFE suffer courses
that focus on more practical job-specific skills. It is also possible to complete senior secondary
studies at TAFE instead of enrolling in a high school.
Hope found it difficult to make friends in this new environment as she was shy and somewhat sheltered.
Everything changed, however, when she met Emily Scebaris in July 2011.
Emily was completing the same course as Hope and was warm and friendly.
She also had a remarkable background.
Emily was only 15, like Hope, but she was already a champion gymnast who ranked number one in the
world for her age group. She shared her online Facebook page for her gymnastics with Hope,
who saw that more than 3,500 people were following it. There were lots of photos of Emily
performing in competitions, many of which had numerous likes and comments.
Despite Emily's incredible achievements, she was down to earth and easy to talk to.
She told Hope about her family who were of Russian heritage and didn't live in Perth.
Emily's parents had separated and her mother had moved to France to be close to her own parents
who lived there.
Emily's twin sister Chloe had gone with her.
Meanwhile, Emily's father was in Sydney where he was.
worked as an Interpol agent.
One day, Hope invited Emily to visit her home, where she met Hope's family.
After that, Emily began visiting frequently and sometimes stayed the night.
Hope's parents were happy to have her there, feeling sorry for the young teenager whose own relatives
were far away.
Emily became like another member of the family and felt like the sister Hope had always wanted.
In December 2011, Emily told Hope that she was going to France for Christmas.
Her parents had decided they should all spend the holidays together despite their separation.
On Friday, December 16, Emily flew to Paris.
A couple of weeks later, Hope was scrolling through Facebook when she noticed a troubling
post someone had shared on Emily's page. It was a link to a news article about Emily's
family. According to the article, Emily's father had killed his ex-wife and daughter Chloe
before taking his own life. Emily had been spared from the murder-suicide, but had been the one
who discovered the grisly crime scene. Hope and her family were horrified by this news.
They wanted to help Emily, but didn't know how.
Hope's mother, Belinda, sent Emily a message to check in with her.
Emily explained that she was staying with a family friend, who was a judge in Florida,
until the police wrapped up their investigation and she figured out what to do next.
Stunned and all alone, she didn't know what her next steps should be.
Belinda invited Emily to come stay with their family.
She and her husband were even open to adopting the orphaned teenager if that was what she wanted.
Emily gratefully accepted the offer.
As it happened, the judge she was staying with was an expert in adoption cases, so he helped
organize the papers and sent over Emily's official documents.
Then Emily flew back to Perth.
She was no longer taking her TAFE course, and it was decided she should go back to school.
So, in February 2012, just as the school year was beginning, Belinda took Emily's birth certificate
to Girroene Senior High School and enrolled Emily.
Later on, however, the family received a call from the school with a concerning update.
They said that the birth certificate looked forged.
Belinda's husband decided to call the judge in Florida, whom they had only previously had email contact with.
He spoke to the judge's receptionist, who said that the judge had not dealt with any Australian adoption cases
or had contact with anyone in Australia for several years.
At around the same time, Emily told Hope that her father who had died wasn't her biological father.
she had actually been conceived via sperm donation
and the donor was a lawyer based right there in Perth.
Emily planned to contact him.
Hope found this story very strange,
and now the bizarre circumstances were piling up.
The revelation finally came when Hope's family received a phone call
from a private investigator who had been hired by the lawyer Emily said
was her real father.
Concerned by this false claim, the lawyer had asked the investigator to find out whatever he could
about Emily Scabaris.
As it turned out, Emily wasn't her real name.
She wasn't a Russian gymnast, and nor was she even a teenager.
Her real name was Samantha as a party, and she was a 23-year-old woman from Sydney with a history of
fraud. Samantha had first come to police attention four years earlier in November 2007 when she
was 19 years old. She had been in the central Queensland city of Rockhampton at the time,
posing as an individual named Lindsay Lana John Bonnet Coglin. Authorities found she had done so
with intent to defraud. Three years later, she came to attention for a similar scheme.
633 kilometres south in the Queensland capital of Brisbane. There, she had tried to enrol at two
schools using the name Dakota Johnson, the same name as a Hollywood movie star. Samantha faced a string
of charges related to using a false identity to claim welfare benefits, receiving a $500 fine
and a suspended sentence in September 2010.
After that, Samantha Azapardi had returned to her home state of New South Wales for a time,
briefly joining a small Christian community in the Blue Mountains and convincing their pastor to take her in.
Somehow she'd ended up in Perth by mid-2011, fatefully crossing paths with hope and her family.
By March 2012, her story finally unraveled, and she was arrested and charged with defrauding social security by Western Australia Police's major fraud squad.
Samantha was also admitted to Greylands Hospital, the state's largest mental health inpatient facility, and was kept there for six weeks.
Almost two years later in November 2013, a police officer in Perth who was familiar with the case
saw the story about an unidentified sex trafficking victim discovered in Dublin.
Although Ireland was halfway across the world from Perth, the girl in question looked remarkably
similar to Samantha as a party, even in profile.
The police officer contacted his counterpart in Dublin and alerted them to the girl's possible identity.
At around the same time, the Garda Sheikana received another call from someone closer to home who had recognised the GPO girl as well.
It turned out that Samantha as a party had some family members in Ireland.
After her parents split up when she was young, Samantha's mother began to be.
a relationship with a man named Joe who became a stepfather to Samantha. The couple had two
sons together, Samantha's half-brothers. After the relationship broke down, Joe moved back to his
native island but maintained a relationship with Samantha. She had flown over more than a month
earlier to visit him and her half-brothers in the town of Clonmel, about a two-hour drive southwest of
Dublin. Samantha had stayed with her extended family for some time before abruptly leaving.
Joe hadn't worried when she did so. Samantha could sometimes be a bit erratic and an abrupt departure
wasn't necessarily unusual for her. Strangely though, she'd left her belongings and identification
behind. She had travelled to Ireland using a fraudulently obtained Australian public. She had travelled to Ireland using a fraudulently obtained
Australian passport issued in the name of Georgia McAuliffe.
After more than 2,000 police hours and a cost of around a quarter of a million euros,
the GPO girl had finally been identified.
The public was outraged.
There had been genuine concern and an outpouring of support for Samantha Azapati
when she was believed to have been an underage human trafficking victim.
Now it turned out that she was a 25-year-old con artist who had inexplicably pretended to be
in a vulnerable situation, the sympathy was instantly revoked.
Samantha's state-appointed guardian, Ola Ryan, requested to be withdrawn from the case.
Ola explained that while she remained concerned about Samantha's welfare, she was a child
protection specialist, and Samantha was clearly not a child.
There was debate as to whether the Irish authorities should charge Samantha with a crime.
Some members of the public were in favour of this due to the waste of police time and resources.
But she couldn't be charged with making a false report, as she had never made any report at all.
She had stayed silent the whole time.
People speculated as to whether her ruse had been a spontaneous,
action on Thursday, October 10, or whether she had planned it in advance.
When the guarder searched the mobile phone she had left at her family's house, it revealed
she had researched children's hospitals in Ireland and the UK.
This appeared to hint at a plan.
But what her end goal had been was a mystery.
Samantha hadn't made any financial gain or obtained any benefits due to her.
her actions. Instead, she'd just spent four weeks in a hospital bed.
As Operation Shepard's lead detective Dave Gallowher remarked in the documentary series,
Kong Girl, for some people a month in hospital would be a kind of hell.
Ultimately, the Irish police decided not to charge Samantha as a party with anything,
determining that it wasn't a criminal matter.
They also had sympathy for the fact that the young woman clearly had some mental health issues,
even though a psychiatric report decreed that she had no condition that would allow authorities to detain her.
When detectives asked Samantha if she would be willing to return home to Australia,
she nodded without saying a word.
She still hadn't spoken since being identified.
Two guarder officers escorted Samantha home on her flight to Sydney, which was being paid by Irish taxpayers.
She didn't speak once during the almost 24-hour journey.
But Samantha didn't stay in Australia for long.
Years later, it would emerge that she somehow travelled back to Ireland just six months after being returned to Australia in April.
2014. Going by the name Indio Shea, she moved to County Leitram and took a job as a no-pair.
She claimed to be the unacknowledged, illegitimate daughter of Princess Madeline of Sweden.
The family she worked for didn't recognise her as the GPO girl and had no idea anything was amiss
until Samantha abruptly abandoned the job, leaving behind a large amount of cash in her.
her wardrobe, along with multiple papers that had the name Samantha Azapardi on them.
She had stayed only a few months, departing in the summer to whereabouts unknown.
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In mid-2014, California native Emily Bamberger was having the adventure of a lifetime.
Emily had been just 17 when she graduated high school and started college with ambitions of one day
becoming a writer. When one of Emily's professors heard about her dream, they encouraged her to go out and see the
world so she would gain experiences she could later write about. Emily had taken this advice
to heart, travelling across the Pacific Ocean and halfway around the world to go backpacking in
Australia. So far, the trip was proving to be worth it and Emily was having a blast. While staying at a
hostel in Sydney, she befriended some of the other guests there. One day, a group of them went out to
visit the renowned Sydney Opera House, a striking architectural landmark nestled against a scenic
backdrop at the city's harbour. Afterwards, the group planned to go have dinner together,
but Emily declined. She was a vegetarian and wasn't going to be able to eat at their chosen
restaurant. Another girl in the group offered to leave with Emily, explaining that she was a
vegetarian too.
Emily agreed.
That was how she met
Annika Decker.
Annika was a tourist from Sweden
who was polite but quiet and reserved.
Other people in the group had thought she seemed strange
but Emily hit it off with her right away.
The two became close in the days and weeks that followed.
Anika began to share details about her
life with her new American friend, explaining that she was the heiress to a European airline.
Later, she reneged on this story and admitted that the truth was even more amazing.
She was actually Swedish royalty and had been briefly kidnapped when she was a child.
Although she'd been rescued from her kidnaers, Annika remained in serious danger from people
who wished her harm and her family had taken extreme measures to protect.
her safety. She was regularly moved around the world to keep her whereabouts unknown,
and there were two Interpol agents, who she described as her keepers, dedicated to her protection.
Emily found all of this a bit hard to swallow, but never voiced her skepticism to Anika.
Her mind changed abruptly one day when she received an email from a man identifying himself as one of
Anika's keepers.
His email address was linked to the domain interpol.com.
This indicator of legitimacy finally had Emily convinced.
She believed that her new friend was who she said she was.
The content of the email itself, however, was concerning.
Anika's keeper informed Emily that she and Anika were both in danger and would have to be.
to leave Sydney immediately. This was consistent with an email sent to Annika that she showed to
Emily. The email indicated that the nefarious individuals who'd been stalking Anika since childhood
were now aware of Emily's existence and knew everything about her too. The email included page
after page of private details about Emily and her family, including addresses where they lived.
It even mentioned a secret phrase Emily and her mother had come up with in case they ever needed a
code word, blue bananas. Emily had never shared any of this information with Annika.
The two young women fled to Brisbane and Annika provided the terrified Emily with a crash course
in living on the run.
She taught Emily how to look for exits wherever they went
and to be aware of her surroundings at all times.
Once they caught a bus together and when they disembarked,
Annika asked Emily how many people had been on the bus.
Emily said she didn't know.
Annika told her there had been 28 people, including 13 Caucasians.
She warned that Emily needed to stay.
paying closer attention. She also advised Emily on how to lie if she needed to. The trick was
to always sprinkle some truth in with the lies. Annika also told Emily that they both needed new
identities. Her keepers had mailed them the relevant documents and the two went to a local licensing
authority together. Emily felt uneasy about the process, but a
being convinced that if she didn't obtain a new identity, then she and everyone she loved
was in danger. The scheme worked and Emily walked away with new identification naming her as
Amy Fisher. Emily had always been under the impression that Annika was around her age, 18 years old.
That changed when Annika received an email with some medical information attached.
that indicated she was actually 14.
Annika was shocked by the news, prompting Emily to ask if she thought she was 14.
All Anika said in response was that she couldn't remember the last time she'd had a birthday.
One night, while the two were in Brisbane, Annika woke in the middle of the night complaining
about terrible head pain. Emily called for an ambulance and when the paramedics arrived,
arrived, Annika told them that she was 14 and Emily was her older sister.
Not knowing what to say, Emily just went along with this story.
The young women were taken to a local hospital where a doctor treated Annika.
He appeared suspicious of Emily and soon two police officers arrived to question her.
They questioned Emily for hours, eventually accusing her of kids.
kidnapping Anika, who they said was an unknown minor, and of giving her drugs.
Emily repeatedly denied this, but was detained in jail for two days.
When she was searched, police recovered the fake ID she had in her possession.
Emily was ultimately charged with fraud and released after paying a hefty fine.
When she left jail, scared and confused.
used in a foreign country, somehow Annika managed to find her.
She'd fled the hospital and still had an IV drip in her arm.
Annika told Emily that because they'd been discovered, they'd have to go back to Sydney.
She knew a safe house where they could lie low for a while.
It was located about 45 minutes outside of the CBD and was a converted shipping container behind a
house in a suburban backyard. The two girls remained there for eight days.
Emily was terrified. She believed that her life was in so much danger that she had no choice
but to do exactly as Annika said and hired out. She was not permitted in the main house on the
property and had no phone or access to the internet, meaning she had no way of contacting her family
to let them know she was okay.
Eventually, Emily and Annika left the safe house.
By this time, Emily had spent about four months of her trip with Annika.
She was visiting Australia on a tourist visa, which had almost expired,
so she flew to the neighbouring country of New Zealand to apply for a new one.
Customs officials in both countries questioned Emily extended.
about her movements, clearly aware of her recent fraud charge.
When she landed back in Australia, she was informed that she was being deported back to the United States
and would never be permitted to return to Australia. The first available flight was to Hawaii,
and she would have to board a connecting flight to California from there. Emily had no option
but to do as she was told.
All of her belongings were still with Annika in Sydney.
Emily's dream holiday had ended abruptly after months of stress and uncertainty.
During the long flight to Hawaii, she had no access to Wi-Fi,
so she had to wait until she landed to check messages and make contact with loved ones.
When Emily logged on to the internet, she saw that Annika had messaged her during the flight.
She warned Emily that she was in grave danger.
Somebody in the United States wanted to kill her,
and Emily should do her best to return to Australia if she could.
Emily had thought she was finally done with Annika and her associated dramas,
but clearly not.
She caught her next flight to San Francisco, only to discover another message from Annika when
she arrived. This one warned that Interpol had issued an alert that an attack was going to
take place in California. Emily's life was at risk. Annika had bought her a ticket to Vancouver,
Canada, and would meet her there. Believing Annika was telling the truth, Emily did as she
she said. When she landed in Canada, she received an email from the Interpol agent who had
been communicating with her for months now. It informed her that he had met with Anika and
given her a package of items that would assist in keeping them safe. Anika would also have
further instructions for the both of them. Sure enough, when Emily met with Anika, she had
some things for her. One was an electronic card that Emily was to keep on her person at all
times. The other was a pair of earrings equipped with tracking devices so that Interpol could
keep track of her. The two girls then checked into a hostel. Not long into their stay in Vancouver,
they were approached by two other young women who were staying there. They were Swedish and had
noticed from Annika's entry in the hostile guest book that she was too. The young women spoke to
Anika in Swedish who said nothing in reply. Her expression was almost scared. After a long pause,
she said in English, it's been a long time since I've spoken Swedish. Emily was baffled. She'd asked
Anika to speak Swedish on previous occasions and Anika had always done so.
Not knowing Swedish herself, Emily had always assumed that Anika was speaking the language.
Now she realised that Anika had been pretending the entire time and couldn't fake it when confronted
by actual Swedish people. In an instant, the spell was broken. Emily knew that something was wrong.
and she had to get away.
Anika could clearly tell that Emily was no longer willing to go along with her,
so she proposed a plan.
They would hitchhike to another region of Canada so no one would know where they were.
Then Anika would pretend to be an abuse victim
so that social services would take her into the Canadian system
and Interpol could extract her from there.
Meanwhile, Emily could fly back to the US.
Exhausted and desperate to go home, Emily went along with the plan.
After landing back in San Francisco, she told no one of the roller coaster she had been through.
At 4pm on Tuesday, September 16, 2014, a girl calling herself Aurora Hepburn,
walked into the Alexandra Community Health Center in Calgary,
a large city in Alberta, Canada, about a 10-hour drive east from Vancouver.
Aurora said that she was 14 and a victim of sex trafficking.
Covered in bruises, she said she'd escaped from a cult and had suffered a head injury
resulting in nausea and vomiting.
Concerned by this alarming report, authorities took Aurora.
Aurora into care and had her interviewed by specialists.
It was important they uncover as much information as possible,
as there may have been other miners out there being victimised by the same individuals.
Aurora explained that she was originally from Denmark and said she'd experienced a childhood
of neglect and physical violence.
She and her older sister Daisy had eventually run away from home and had been living on the
streets. The mention of a sister named Daisy gave police their first clue. One week earlier and
700 kilometres away in Fort McMurray, a missing person's report had been filed by a woman named
Daisy Hepburn. She was reporting the disappearance of her sister, Aurora. Aurora spent two
weeks in the hospital while detectives looked into her case. As part of their investigation,
they took Aurora's fingerprints and ran them through an international database to see if they
could be matched to anyone. Meanwhile, healthcare workers tried to establish the extent of
Aurora's abuse and provided her with services to aid in her recovery. Eventually, on Thursday
October 2, the police received a call from their counterparts in Ireland regarding the
girl's prints. They informed the Canadian investigators that, according to her fingerprints,
Aurora Hepburn, wasn't a 14-year-old victim of trafficking. She was actually 26-year-old
Australian con artist Samantha Azapati, who had pulled a similar stunt in Dublin less than a year
earlier. And just as they had in Ireland, Samantha's false claims had accrued a significant cost
in Canada, estimated at around $150,000 US dollars. When confronted by officers from the Canadian
Border Security Agency, Samantha as a party refused to answer questions about how she had
obtained the necessary travel documents to enter Canada. She was charged with her. She was charged with
public mischief, which could see her serve up to five years in prison.
Samantha appeared in court wearing a purple prison track suit and looked to be smirking as an officer
from Canada's border security detailed how she was known to have at least 40 different
aliases. She pleaded guilty and was sentenced to just two months. After completing her
sentence, she was deported to Australia on Tuesday, December 9, escorted by a Canadian border
security agent. Once back in Australia, Samantha Azapardi was charged with fraudulently obtaining an
Australian passport, another charge she pleaded guilty to. At her sentencing, prosecutors indicated
they didn't hold high hopes for her rehabilitation. Nevertheless, the judge opted to place Samantha
her as a party on a good behaviour bond, warning that if she broke the bond by assuming further
false identities, she would face imprisonment.
The Good Shepherd Wauronara School in the West Sydney suburb of Marrickville is a special
assistant school for students needing extra support.
It is a small institution only taking about 60 students through high school and first opened its
doors in 2015. Late in 2016, the second year that the school was open, a new student
named Harper Hart was enrolled. Harper was a vulnerable 13-year-old living with the foster
family who had particular difficulties with reading and writing. Her enrollment was somewhat
rocky as initially she'd failed to provide the necessary documents. When the school
last for identification, Harper explained that she didn't have any as she was in the United
States Witness Protection Program. She stopped attending the school for a little while,
only to return with a doctor's certificate to explain her absence and a birth certificate
issued in the US state of California. Strangely, the birth certificate named the foster
family she was staying with as her biological parents.
This wasn't the only odd thing about Harper.
Some members of the school staff thought she looked at least several years older than she claimed to be.
When they spoke to her foster parents, the couple informed them that Harper was indeed 13 and was a victim of sex trafficking.
She had also alleged that she'd been raped by a New South Wales police officer.
Harper's foster parents believed their foster daughter wholeheartedly.
They'd first met her randomly on the street, where she'd told them her story.
Moved by all that she'd been through, the couple had invited her to live with them and offered her a safe haven.
Because the foster placement hadn't gone through any official channels, there was no documentation available.
The school still had concerns about Harper's allegations and the legitimacy of her birth certificate.
After they started questioning Harper's story, they'd received an odd call from a doctor
confirming that Harper was indeed 13 years old, as they had the medical records to prove it.
Despite this, the school reported their concerns to the authorities,
which ultimately led to New South Wales Police commencing an investigation.
Inquiries with an FBI liaison at the U.S. Consul General in Sydney confirmed that Harper's supposed California birth certificate was a forgery.
The medical certificate she'd submitted was also fake, and the doctor named on it wasn't even an employee of the hospital listed.
Investigators scrutinized the school's phone records in an attempt to pinpoint the number responsible for the doctor's call,
supposedly confirming Harper's age.
They honed in on one number in particular, which belonged to a 24-year-old French backpacker named Lucy.
Lucy met with the detective and admitted she'd made the call posing as a doctor at the request
of an acquaintance of hers named Layla Evans. Layla had said it was part of a prank.
Lucy had met Layla in a Facebook group and had a photo of her, which she showed to the detective.
The photo revealed that Laylor Evans and Harper Hart were one and the same.
Back at the station, the detective chatted to a colleague about the twist in the case,
prompting his colleague to remark that it sounded similar to the GPO Girl case in Dublin
three years earlier. The pair googled that case together just in case. There were some
differences. Harper Hart wore her hair in braids and had noticeable freckles, but overall,
she and the GPO girl looked remarkably similar. Now they had a link to infamous con artist
Samantha Azapardi. They just needed to prove it. Detectives obtained some copies of Harper's
homework from the Good Shepherd School. It was covered in Samantha Asaparte's fingerprints.
She had struck again.
It was now May of 2017.
Teachers and other staff at the Good Shepherd School were stunned to learn Harper's true identity.
Although they had believed she was older than her claimed age of 13,
the revelation that she was a 28-year-old woman was shocking.
Samantha had deliberately dressed in childlike clothing and had used a man.
makeup pencil to draw freckles across her nose in an attempt to look younger.
She had also feigned difficulties with literacy for almost a year, while teachers worked hard to
improve her reading and writing skills. Her foster parents had had no idea of her true identity
and had stood firmly behind her throughout the police investigation. They maintained their
support even after Samantha was arrested for her latest scam.
When detectives took Samantha Azapati down to the police station to be formally charged,
she turned her back on the room's cameras, pulled her hoodie up over her head, and covered her face with her hands.
Two months later, in July 2017, Samantha faced court, charged this time with four counts of
dishonestly obtaining financial advantage by deception, for education, counseling, food, accommodation,
and electronic devices she was given
while pretending to be Harper Hart.
A not-for-profit had gifted Harper with an iPad,
a mobile phone and an Opal smart card
used to travel on public transport throughout Sydney.
The total cost of her fraud
had amounted to $155,000,
including counselling costs and staff wages.
Samantha as a party once again,
pleaded guilty. This time she was sentenced to a year in jail and would be eligible for parole
in six months. During sentencing, the judge noted that Samantha suffered from significant mental
health issues, adding, one might wonder as to the likelihood of improvement down the track.
Case file will be back shortly.
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One day, two years later, in mid-2019, 13-year-old Georgia Beavage received a private message on her Instagram account.
When she read it, her excitement quickly grew.
Georgia lived with her family in Sydney.
An aspiring model, Georgia was signed with an agency
and had already worked on a few modelling campaigns.
But work from the agency was slow to trickle in,
so Georgia also used social media to promote her modelling,
sharing previous projects and noting in her Instagram bio
that she was available for work.
The message that Georgia received was from
someone who'd seen these photos and was keen to hire her.
22-year-old Cocoa Palmer was a talent scout for elite model management,
a famed modeling agency with offices all over the world, including New York, Paris, and London.
Coco was based in Melbourne and had discovered George's pictures online.
She loved George's style and thought she would be perfect for an anti-bullying campaign
Coco was working on.
Georgia was thrilled and shared the exciting news with her mother, Mel.
Mel was pleased for her daughter, but cautious.
She told Georgia to have Coco call her so she could vet her.
Coco did so, and the conversation went well.
Mel later Googled everything Coco had told her and her story seemed to check out.
The next step was to have an in-person interview.
Cocoa travelled up to Sydney to meet Georgia and Mel.
They met her in the lobby of the Hilton Hotel, then walked across the road to a cafe where Coco ordered hot chocolates for everyone.
Coco explained that she wanted to cast Georgia in a short film campaign, and they'd complete a photo shoot by the end of the week.
Coco came across as warm and professional, putting Mel's mind at ease.
After they finished chatting, Coco said she wanted to take Georgia shopping for a blazer to wear in the campaign.
She and Georgia walked ahead to a department store while Mel tried to follow but got stuck behind some construction work.
Georgia and Coco returned after a short period and Mel later asked Georgia,
how the shopping had gone.
Georgia said it had been a little strange.
While they were in a shop,
Coco had told her she needed to practice her acting
in anticipation of the upcoming film.
She told Georgia to call Lifeline,
a crisis support service for individuals experiencing mental health issues
and say her name was River.
Posing as River, Georgia should tell Lifeline
that she was a victim of abuse and to share a really sad life story.
Georgia did as she was told.
Soon, the Lifeline staff member who'd answered her call was pressing for more information,
clearly concerned about the minor on the other end.
Coco told Georgia to hang up, so she did.
Mel thought this sounded like a very strange task,
but wondered if perhaps it was concerned.
considered normal in the acting world. It wasn't an industry she knew much about. Not wanting her
daughter to miss out on a great opportunity, she decided they should keep moving ahead. The next step was
for Georgia and her family to spend a week in Melbourne where Coco was based and where Georgia
would be working on her campaigns. Coco arranged flights for Georgia and Mel as well as Georgia's
older sister, Tiana, and her infant son. The family was excited. It was their first time on an
airplane. When they arrived in Melbourne on Monday, July 1, 2019, they met up with Coco, who was
putting them all up in a hotel in South Bank, a popular tourist destination in Melbourne's CBD.
The group quickly bonded with Coco, who was kind and engaging.
They also discovered that they shared similar sorrows when Cocoa revealed that she'd had
leukemia as a child.
As it happened, George's father was currently in remission from leukemia.
Coco admired how tight-knit the beverages were and said she envied their family.
She had grown up in a series of foster homes.
Mel was touched by this and invited Coco to spend Christmas with her.
them. But Georgia wasn't always comfortable with the things Coco asked her to do as part of
their work together. Sometimes Coco would apply makeup to make Georgia look beaten up, then instruct
her to go into an office for child services and claim to have been abused. This made Georgia
upset and she feigned illness to get out of it. Coco's lack of familiarity with Melbourne,
also seemed strange, given she claimed to live there.
She didn't seem to know her way around the city streets
or know which tram to catch to go somewhere.
On one occasion, Georgia cried to her mother in the hotel bathroom,
sharing that something felt wrong.
Mel reassured Georgia that it was okay
and she just needed to adjust to being out of her comfort zone.
On Thursday, July 4, towards the end of their week in Melbourne, the group had to relocate from the hotel where they'd been staying to a hostel because Coco had only booked the hotel for a certain number of nights.
While Coco and Georgia were out working, one of the hostel staff at reception asked Mel which member of their party would be providing identification to confirm their booking with the front desk.
Mel replied that Coco would
The staff member appeared confused and asked who Coco was
Mel said she was the woman they were staying with
Oh you mean jazz Jervis the staff member replied
Then showed them a copy of a bank card emblazoned with the totally unfamiliar name
Mel and her elder daughter Tiana
had no idea who Jazz Jervis was, or why Cocoa Palmer would be using her bank card.
They googled Jazz Jervis' name and quickly found social media accounts for her.
She wasn't Cocoa Palmer, she was a young mother living in Melbourne with her husband and daughter.
Her husband, Tom Jervis, was a professional basketballer who'd played for the Perth Wildcats in Australia's
National Basketball League. Tiana sent Jazz a message on Facebook and told her what had happened.
Jazz saw the message quickly and knew exactly who Tiana was talking about. She sent back her own
story. In June 2018, Jazz and Tom had been living in Brisbane and needed an opair for their
two-year-old daughter Clementine.
Jazz turned to a popular opair group on Facebook to find someone
and was soon contacted by another host family with a recommendation.
They had a 17-year-old opair named Harper Hernandez, who was amazing,
but they were moving overseas so didn't need her services anymore.
Harper needed a new job, and the host family recommended her wholeheartedly.
Delighted to have received a referral,
Jazz met with Harper and liked her right away.
Clementine adored her and it seemed like a perfect fit.
Harper moved in with them and was as good as the host family had promised.
She helped out around the house, was excellent with Clementine
and got along well with the Jervis family and friends.
When the Jervisers relocated to Melbourne, Harper came with them.
For about a year, all had gone well, but things eventually took a turn.
Jazz and Tom noticed that Harper was very cagey about her background,
and she had a tendency to lie about random things.
When they googled her name, nothing at all came up, which seemed strange.
Eventually, they decided to let Harper go, telling her it was no longer the right fit.
She told them she intended to travel west to Perth, and Tom gave her a lift to Melbourne Airport on Wednesday, June 19, 2019.
It wasn't until after she'd left that they discovered she'd stolen Jazz's driver's license and the family iPad.
Harper had left some things behind as well, including several.
several passports in different names.
Just over two weeks later, Jazz received the message from Tiana Beavage
informing her that a supposed Talent Scout they were working with had a bank card in her name.
Tiana and Mel were horrified to learn Jazz's story, realizing they had no idea who Cocoa Palmer
really was.
They called the police to report her, only to receive her.
little assistance. Then they called Georgia on her mobile phone. As Georgia was currently out alone
with Coco, they had to tread carefully. They told Georgia that Coco wasn't a safe person, that she should
pretend to feel sick and say she had to leave. Georgia did as she was told, and when she and Coco returned to
the hostel, Mel and Tiana confronted the supposed talent scout with what they knew.
Tiana secretly recorded the confrontation on her phone, managing to capture some surreptitious
footage of Coco. Cajy and nervous, Coco repeatedly refused to show the family her ID, but
reassured them that she had tickets for them all to fly home. She wouldn't show them or send
them the tickets then and there, and when Mel began shouting at her to share her real name,
Coco suddenly fled. By the time police arrived, she was long gone. The family flew home
the next day after paying almost $1,000 for tickets out of their own pocket. When they were
safely at home, Mel shared a post about the ordeal to her Facebook page.
She attached a photo she'd taken of Coco as well as a screenshot from their secretly recorded confrontation.
To say I'm shattered and disappointed in myself is an understatement.
How could I be so blind to be had like that? Mel wrote.
Please share this woman's face.
Police were no help, but I'm taking it further as she's dangerous.
An acquaintance of Mel soon saw the post and sent her a message.
Mel, I know this woman.
Google GPO Girl and you'll know what I'm talking about.
Mel did so and as soon as she saw the infamous photograph of Samantha Azapardi taken by Dublin Police,
she knew that she and Cocoa Palmer were one and the same.
Jazz Jervis also shared Mel's post
and other revelations quickly came to light as the story spread.
A total stranger reached out to the Jervis family
to tell them Samantha, posing as Harper Hernandez,
had once left their daughter Clementine in the stranger's care
for several hours.
Another Melbourne family had also fallen victim to the same scheme
as Mel and a Georgia Beavage earlier that year, when Samantha posed as a talent scout named
Marley. She wanted to hire their 12-year-old daughter Emma to do voiceover work in a cartoon.
After charming the family, she began to meet with Emma every Tuesday and asked her to do
strange things. She had to go into shops, a hospital, and the office of a statutory authority
responsible for providing Australians with social security payments,
claiming to be adopted and in need of help.
Marley instructed Emma not to tell her parents about any of these tasks.
On one occasion, she had to report that she was seeing ghosts.
Things came to a terrifying head when Marley took Emma on a paid trip to Sydney,
promising her an audition in the Australian version of the prank-focused.
television program punked.
They stayed together at a ranch.
Emma noticed that the other people there called Marley Samantha, but when she asked her
about that, Marley refused to answer.
After two days, Marley sent Emma home on a train to Melbourne, an 11-hour journey that
the 12-year-old had to make alone.
When the family subsequently confronted Marley, she did.
disappeared. They could find no trace of her online. As word got out on social media that
infamous con artist Samantha Azapati was at it again, while she was supposed to still be on a
good behaviour bond, traditional media picked up the story. Victoria Police commented that they
were investigating reports of her alleged deception in the state. What was most concerning was that
Samantha was no longer the centre of her own scams. While before, she had posed as a child
herself in repeated stories of abuse and suffering, now she appeared to be enlisting actual children
to live out that same fantasy. Four months later, on Friday, November 1, 2019, a teenage girl
wearing a blue school uniform with a blue felt hat
walked into Headspace offices in the regional Victorian city of Bendigo
about a two-hour drive north from Melbourne.
Headspace is a youth mental health foundation
with centres all over Australia.
The girl wasn't alone.
Standing next to her was a four-year-old girl
and strapped to the teenager's chest was a 10-month-old baby.
The girl told Headspace.
space staff that she was 14 years old and pregnant. The pregnancy was the result of her
abusive uncle having raped her. But one staff member at the centre had seen the recent social media
posts about Samantha Azapardi's latest deceptions, and they recognised the person in front of them
as the now 31-year-old con artist. The staff member took a photo of Samantha and called the police.
Although detectives were quickly dispatched, Samantha was still wanted by Victoria Police
for her use of Jazz Jervis's stolen driver's license.
By the time they arrived, Samantha had fled with the children in tow.
Undeterred, the detectives headed to Bendigo's main shopping district located on a busy
thoroughfare called Pal-Mal.
They located Samantha as a party and the two children were.
wandering along the street, and she spotted them too.
Samantha fled inside a department store, and the detectives followed.
She ducked and weaved around racks and counters as the police closed in.
She'd made it to a cosmetics counter and was unbuckling the harness that kept the baby
strapped to her chest when one of the detectives called out, Samantha.
She stopped and stared back at him,
before asking,
Who? Me.
Samantha as a party was arrested and taken into custody, along with the two small children.
They appeared to speak little English, making it difficult for police to communicate with them and find out their names.
Meanwhile, Samantha sat in a cell, turning to face a corner and hugging her knees to her chest.
The detectives tried to question.
question her, but she refused to be formally interviewed, speaking only in strange riddles.
She began providing cryptic clues as to the children's identity, indicating she'd met their
parents via a work-wanted ad.
Eventually, detectives were able to identify the children as two sisters, the daughters of
French nationals who had recently moved to Melbourne.
The couple had hired Samantha as an op-pest.
one month earlier in October, and she had been living with the family.
They believed her name was Sakaa, that she was 18, and a qualified childcare worker with
the documents to prove it.
Earlier that morning, Samantha had told the couple she was taking the girls on a picnic in
the Yu Yangs, a mountain range and regional park about an hour southwest of the family's home
in Melbourne.
Instead, she'd taken them to Bendigo in a completely different part of the state.
The children were unharmed and reunited with their parents.
Samantha Azapati was charged with two counts of child stealing and with stating a false name.
She was also charged with handling stolen goods for the theft of Jazz Jervis' driver's license
and obtaining property by deception for the wages she was.
she'd been paid by the Jervis family.
When the COVID-19 pandemic hit Australia the following year,
court cases faced delays due to restrictions put in place to prevent the spread of the virus.
Samantha as a party spent a year and a half in jail before her case was finally heard in Melbourne
Magistrate's Court in May 2021.
She appeared via video link where,
a blue face mask and her hair up in a bun.
Once again, Samantha Azapardi pleaded guilty to all charges.
She was sentenced to two years incarceration with a one-year non-parole period.
Given the time she'd served on remand, she was free to go, though she would have to receive
mandatory treatment and therapy.
Despite the more serious charges and mandatory charges and mandate,
therapy, Samantha as a party continued to offend. In November 2021, she approached a youth worker
at the not-for-profit organisation Youth Off the Streets in Sydney. She claimed to be 16 years old
and a member of a cult whose parents had sent her to Sydney from Brisbane to live with a man
who sexually assaulted her, took photographs of her, and held her captive. Samantha said she'd been
sleeping in Sydney's Hyde Park to escape the abuse.
The youth worker reported the case to the Child Protection Helpline, who referred it to police,
and an investigation was launched.
Samantha had an appointment to speak with officers, but avoided doing so at the last minute.
When the police followed up at the address where she was living, they found no trace of the
abusive man she'd described.
Samantha went to a hospital one week later and reported a similar story, this time adding that
she'd been injected with a fertility drug against her will. She ran away before hospital staff
could examine her. The following month, she was finally arrested and charged after once again
reaching out to a youth worker. When subsequently speaking to a psychiatrist about the incident,
she claimed to have no memory of it, stating,
Holy crap, it's as if my day was wiped out when the police said I did something and that I could go to jail again.
It's all very hard to believe.
When she appeared in court on Wednesday, May 18, 2022, Samantha was emotional, shaking and hyperventilating
as a magistrate described her crimes as serious and a drain on resources.
She was ordered to serve a three-year community corrections order
and undergo mental health treatment.
Just seven months later, she was back in court
after pretending to be a 14-year-old abuse survivor from France.
She was initially sentenced to 17 months' jail,
but the sentence was reduced on appeal and she was released in December.
Two months later, in February 23, a young Danish woman called Sophie
travelled to Australia on a working holiday visa and began living in regional New South Wales.
Sophie soon met an 18-year-old Norwegian backpacker named Astor Hansen,
who was also travelling through New South Wales.
Astor Hansen, who in reality was 35-year-old Samantha,
said she had been hired by entertainment agencies
Village Roadshow to create video diaries of her travels.
As part of the project, she would have to stay in low-budget accommodation.
She invited Sophie to work alongside her and also posed as a Village Roadshow employee,
sending Sophie a non-disclosure agreement to sign.
The job paid well at $2,800 per week.
When the two women arrived at $1,800 a week,
one of the low-budget hotels, Sophie discovered it was actually a women's refuge. She was told
that she would have to pretend to be Samantha's sister as a condition of her employment. Sophie
objected to staying at an accommodation for women fleeing violence, but was told she had to. Over the
following weeks, Sophie and Samantha travelled north to Queensland, staying at refuges on the Gold Coast
and Mackay using fake names.
Sophie was incredibly upset about this arrangement and tried to quit her job,
but Samantha manipulated her by claiming the police were after her.
She convinced Sophie to go to Melbourne with her and hired out
while she contacted her Danish grandfather, who was a lawyer, for help.
As Sophie's phone and passport had somehow gone missing during the course of their travels,
she was even more dependent on Samantha.
The two arrived in Melbourne in August, 23,
and Samantha adopted a new identity.
Now she was Ocean Jones.
She set about trying to alter her physical appearance,
using a credit card in another woman's name
to pay for freckles to be cosmetically tattooed
onto her face at a salon.
Then she contacted family violence support support.
and claimed that she and her sister were living rough after running away from their
abusive stepfather. She spoke in broken English, pretended to be a Belgian teenager, and said
she was a victim of sex trafficking. This led to the pair being housed in women's shelters
and emergency accommodations designated for those fleeing family violence. Police soon
cottoned on to the scam and contacted a support worker who had been handling Samantha's case
to tell her they believed that one of the victims she was supporting was actually a con artist.
Staff who had gone out of their way to assist Samantha were devastated by the revelation.
A senior manager at one of the shelters told the Sydney Morning Herald that they were traumatised
and riddled with self-doubt following the ruse.
Moreover, the scam had undoubtedly deprived women who were genuinely in need of help.
Quote,
Family violence is currently at epidemic levels.
There's simply not enough funding or resources available to keep victim survivors safe,
resulting in one woman being killed every four days.
The critical impact of this abhorrent manipulation is in so many ways immeasurable for the victim survivors,
survivors denied support during this period.
Samantha Azapardi's false claims led to her receiving more than $20,000 from funds designated to family violence victims.
In October 24, she pleaded guilty to six charges, including obtaining financial advantage by deception.
Samantha was again sentenced to two years jail.
At the time of this episode's recording, she remains incarcerated at the Dame Phyllis Frost Centre in Melbourne.
However, she will be released at some point in the near future, and it appears inevitable that she will commit further offences once freed.
Although Samantha Asa Party has created elaborate backstories and histories for the more than 75 aliens,
she's used over the past two decades, not much about the real Samantha is known.
She was born in August to 1988 into a middle-class family who resided in Campbelltown,
a suburb on the outskirts of Sydney. Her parents separated when Samantha was young
and both her and her brother remained with their mother.
Samantha later attended Mountaine and High School where she was a conscientious student,
and had a small group of friends.
But she was known for seeking attention by sometimes walking out of class without explanation.
She was also known for stretching the truth.
She used to tell her friends that her real name was Lindsay Lowen, like the American actress.
When the movie Freaky Friday was released starring the real Lindsay Lowen,
Samantha dyed her hair red to match the film stars.
After graduating from school, she found a job at a pancake restaurant in Campbelltown.
When journalists later spoke to her former boss immediately following the GPO girl incident,
she described her as a lovely girl who had issues.
Samantha's mother has also spoken to the media, though has requested that she not be identified by name.
She described Samantha as having been a sweet,
adventurous and independent child, and said that the way her daughter's life had unfolded was
heartbreaking. Samantha has said very little to anyone about her background, and court records have
noted that what she has said cannot necessarily be believed due to her being an unreliable historian.
She has claimed that when she was a child, her mother had her admitted to a psychiatric unit for a year
due to being a pathological liar, but this has never been verified.
At one point, Samantha also admitted herself to Campbelltown Hospital in the suburb where she grew up
due to self-harming behaviour, memory loss, confusion, and suicide attempts.
In 2023, a four-part documentary series about Samantha as a party was released under the title Kong Girl.
In it, News Corp journalist Rowan Smith described how he was contacted by a member of Samantha's family while covering the case.
They told Rowan that Samantha was sexually abused when she was growing up
and had subsequently spent some time living with another family member who was very religious.
This family member had told Samantha that she needed to recreate herself following the abuse
and that she would go to hell unless she built her whole new life.
Rowan Smith asked this individual for proof of their claims,
including verification of their identity and how they were related to Samantha.
He never heard from them again.
A 2015 report by forensic psychologist Dr Susan Pullman noted that Samantha had been sexually abused by two separate males as a child.
Numerous mental health experts who have looked into her case say that there are indicators
she has been abused at some point.
The motive for her crimes does not appear to be financial, despite occasionally receiving some
financial benefit. Instead, Samantha appears to be motivated by receiving attention and affection.
In all of her ruses, there is a pattern of identifying as a victim of sex trafficking and abuse,
Initially, Samantha repeatedly posed as a young teenager, aged around 14 years, and in all of these
assumed identities she described being abused, usually at the hands of a male relative, such as an
uncle. As Samantha raged and it became more difficult for her to pass as a minor, she began
targeting young adolescent girls and had them lie about being abused to live the same story
through them.
Dr. Richard Fryerson, a professor of psychiatry at the University of South Carolina,
studied Samantha's crimes for the documentary series Kong Girl.
He believes Samantha's targeting of adolescent girls was a form of factitious disorder imposed on
another, previously known as Munchausen syndrome by proxy.
This is a serious mental health condition where an individual,
usually a parent, repeatedly lies about their child or a dependent being unwell in order to receive
attention from others. Dr. Fryerson suspected that Samantha as a party did a similar thing using young
girls who were in her care. The fact that all of her scenarios centred around early adolescence
led him to believe that something highly traumatic likely happened to her at that age and that she has a need to
relive that for some reason.
Either she got a lot of sympathy back then and it was rewarding and she wants to feel that love
and attention again, he said.
Or if she were abused at age 14 and her report of abuse was ignored or minimised or non-validated,
then she may have an inner need to get that validation and to get it repeatedly to sort
of undo the trauma of not being believed previously.
Samantha as a party has also been assessed by numerous court-appointed psychiatrists in Australia, Ireland and Canada.
In 2017, after Samantha posed as abused teenager Harper Hart,
one psychiatrist diagnosed her as having borderline personality disorder,
a mental health condition characterised by difficulties in regulating emotions and unstable interpersonal relationships.
They reported that Samantha had a remarkably unstable sense of identity with a tendency to disassociate.
In 2021, Australian forensic psychiatrist Jacqueline Rarkov also determined that Samantha had borderline personality disorder
and added a diagnosis of pseudoloja fantastica, a rarer condition characterized by compulsive lying.
It is the same condition attributed to Alicia Estever Head, who falsely claimed to be a survivor of the September 11, 2001 World Trade Center terror attacks, as featured in episode 286 of Case File.
Dr. Rakov found that Samantha had experienced a highly traumatic childhood, where she was emotionally neglected and physically abused.
notes from a 2006 psychologist's session between Samantha and her mother
revealed her mother had physically abused her.
Like Dr. Fryerson, Dr. Rakov believed Samantha's compulsive lies were motivated by a desire
to relive a certain period in her life and recreate a happier version.
Despite Samantha Azapardi's mental health issues, assessments have also indicated
that she is not mentally impaired, and has at times had full awareness that what she was doing
was wrong.
While experts have been called upon to explain Samantha Azapardi's actions, they have also been
asked how it was that she was able to dupe so many people with her seemingly outlandish stories.
Countless people have been lied to and manipulated by Samantha Azapardi, with her early
scams dating back to 2007, and resulting in more than 100 criminal charges and 55 convictions.
These crimes have had a significant impact on their victims.
13-year-old Georgia Beavage struggled for months after being manipulated by Samantha.
She was so scared at night that she had to sleep with her mother and found it difficult to trust people.
George's parents have grappled with terrible guilt and shame after trusting Samantha,
as have other parents who left children in her care, like Tom and Jazz Jervis.
Others who have encountered Samantha, such as American Emily Bamberger, have had traumatic experiences
as a result of befriending her.
Emily shared her story with journalist Rowan Smith, admitting that she asks herself every day,
why she fell for Samantha's lies. The best way I can describe it is I was wide-eyed, terrified,
and really thought I was helping another human being be safe. Since meeting Samantha,
Emily has lost trust in other people. She finds it hard to make new friends and believe the things
people tell her. Support workers who helped Samantha in her various guises have also spent
of experiencing a loss of trust in others, which has had an effect on the work they do.
Tiana Beavage, whose sister Georgia was targeted by Samantha, said in an interview for the
docu-series, Kong Girl.
Samantha is so believable because she just talks her way into it. She talks her way around
things and makes you say yes without saying yes. She just gets into your mind and is just so
convincing.
Experts in human behavior have said that Samantha follows a distinct pattern in order to win
people over.
Dr Vera Tobin, an associate professor of cognitive science, spoke in the docu-series Congirl
about how Samantha reels people in with narratives the human mind is drawn to.
Samantha begins by building a rapport with people, bonding over small things that.
have in common or a sympathetic story. As their connection grows, she starts to test them with
what Dr Tobin calls her world building by sharing larger fabrications. If they're susceptible to these,
then she introduces even bigger twists and turns. Dr Tobin likened Samantha to a human
page turner in the way she maintains a sense of action by introducing new developments or
the time. In her book The Confidence Game, author Maria Konnikova explained how Samantha
as a party has an ability to tell compelling and heartbreaking stories that cast those listening
in the role of Saviour. This was partly how she was able to convince people. Quote, stories
bring us together. We can talk about them and bond over them.
Stories are so natural that we don't notice how much they permeate our lives.
That's precisely why they can be such a powerful tool of deception.
When we're immersed in a story, we let down our guard.
We focus in a way we wouldn't if someone were just trying to catch us with a random phrase
or picture or interaction.
The more extreme the story, the more successful it becomes.
Emotions on high, empathy engaged, we become primed to help.
As a party may have been lying, but that isn't all she was doing.
She was also giving people the opportunity to shine in the humanitarian light that they always suspected lay within them.
50 years ago, on the first night in July, 1975,
Julian Garcia-Salé vanished.
Nine days shy of her 20th birthday,
the Californian teenager who'd been living with her sister in Melbourne was just gone.
She wasn't a kid that took off.
If she was going someplace she let you know.
And I thought, well, she's got to come back.
I never dreamed what parent dreams of anything like this.
On the evening Julie disappeared, three men shared pizza and beer with her
in her inner city apartment.
And for the past five decades,
there've been the only persons of interest in the case.
I just can't remember the details at all.
You know, it was all happy friendly.
There was no, you know.
We went over there for a drink and that was it.
She went away and we got tired of waiting and left.
In the days after Julie went missing,
police failed to canvass her neighbours
about what they saw that night she disappeared.
But Case File presents has spoken to witnesses
who say a young woman was dragged into a car that night
from a phone box that was apparently Julie's last known location.
Yet, at the time, these witnesses weren't interviewed by police.
Three men?
They came, they grabbed her.
grabbed her and put her into the car and she lost a shoe.
Yeah.
Was it Julie they witnessed being thrown into the car that night?
And what happened once the car sped off down the street?
They have fully fingerprinted the flat.
The chemist took samples of what appeared to be blood from the kitchen,
from a tea towel located on Julie's bed,
from the bathroom, from a stairwell,
and a telephone booth opposite the plat.
Julie's mother flew to Australia
a couple of times after her 19-year-old daughter
disappeared on the first night in July,
1975, imploring police to keep investigating.
I want the police
never to close the case, never.
I don't want this case
to be closed in the dead file.
No charges have ever been laid in this case.
In case file presents, Julie's gone,
we asked, is it too late for justice?
What happened to Julianne Garsie Salain?
And I asked him, what did you do?
Please tell me what you did with my daughter.
And that's when he took his finger
and he went across his neck
like you would cut into somebody's throat.
Case File Presents Julie's Gone
will be available on July 31st,
wherever you get your podcast.
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