Casefile True Crime - The Frankston Murders - Episode 1
Episode Date: June 28, 2025With Casefile on a short break, we thought this would be a great time to shine a light on some of the shows that may have flown under the radar for many of you. These are shows we've put our hearts in...to and are really proud of.Today, we’re showcasing The Frankston Murders. When Vikki Petraitis and I found out that Paul Denyer, the man convicted of the Frankston serial murders, had applied for parole, we strongly felt that the Frankston case deserved a more in-depth series, something that went beyond the headlines to explore the full impact of Denyer’s crimes. The series details the lead-up to the crimes as well as the aftermath, the families, the survivors and the many women who were targeted in the lead-up to the murders, but whose stories hadn’t yet been told. The series went to number one and has been downloaded more than three million times to date.I hope you enjoy the series. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Calgary, also known as the blue sky city. We get more sunny days than anywhere in
the country, but more importantly we're the Canadian capital of blue sky
thinking. This is where bold ideas meet big opportunity, where dreams become
reality. Whether you're building your career or scaling your business, Calgary
is where what-if turns into what's next. It's possible here in Calgary, the blue
sky city. Learn more at
calgaryeconomicdevelopment.com
A desolate island, a grand hotel long out of service, and a case that raises more
questions than answers. Oracle 3, Murder at the Grandview, is the latest installment of the hit series,
available now exclusively on Audible. Joshua Jackson delivers a gripping solo performance as
Agent Nate Russo, called in to investigate a deadly mystery in a place time forgot.
The hotel is eerie, the island isolated, and nothing is quite what it seems.
If you enjoy a story questioning what's real and who to trust, this one's for you. Start listening
to Oracle 3 now, only on Audible. Hello, it's Casey here. Over the past couple of weeks you might have noticed something a little different here
on the Casefile feed.
I recently had the chance to meet some of our listeners at the Casefile live shows and
something kept coming up in conversations that really surprised me.
A lot of people don't know what Casefile Presents is, or that we produce other podcasts in addition
to Casefile. It occurred to me that if someone is a big enough supporter of the show to come to a
live event but hasn't heard of Casefile Presents, then clearly we need to do a better job of
highlighting the other stories we've put so much work and care into.
For those who don't know, Casefile Presents is our broader production platform.
While Casefile is our flagship show, we've also created a number of other podcasts under the Casefile Presents banner. Our level of involvement differs from project to project, but we've played
a direct role in all of them, whether that's
financing, research, editing, music or production. I even narrate a few myself. With Casefile currently
on a short break, we felt this was the perfect opportunity to bring some of those other stories
into the spotlight. Series that may have slipped under the radar for many of you, but that we've
poured a great deal of time, care and energy into. We started with Missing Neum, followed by the
Bakersfield 3, and now we're turning our attention to the Frankston murders. You might remember this
case from episode 23 of Case Fileile, which we released way back
in June 2016.
It ran for just over an hour and was split across two parts.
Those were very early days for the show, when our episodes were shorter, the production
was much more basic and our format was still evolving.
A few years after that original episode aired, I met Vicky Petratus. Vicky is an
author who had written a book on the Frankston murders and was living in the area as the crimes
were happening. Over time, she came to know many of the victims' loved ones personally.
Vicky is one of the hardest working people I know. She somehow manages to juggle multiple
in-depth projects while balancing everything else life throws her way. She has spent decades
giving voices to victims and their families and she brings both compassion and commitment to
honouring victims through detailed, respectful storytelling. I knew right away that she was exactly the type of person I wanted to
collaborate with on Casefile Presents projects. We first worked together on other podcast series,
but then we found out that Paul Danier, the man convicted for the Frankston serial murders,
had applied for parole. While I was mind-bgled to know that a serial killer could apply for parole, this news triggered
many unwelcome feelings for the victims' families.
In addition to fear, it placed a huge emotional burden on them.
There were submissions, paperwork, legal processes, having to relive the worst days of their lives
just to keep a serial killer from
being released. Vicki and I both strongly felt that the Frankston case deserved a more in-depth
series, something that went beyond the headlines to explore the full impact of Danya's crimes.
In March 2023, we released a brand new 11-part series titled The Frankston Murders.
The series details the lead-up to the crimes as well as the aftermath, the families, the
survivors, and the many women who were targeted in the lead-up to the murders but whose stories
hadn't yet been told.
The response was incredible. The series went to number one and has
been downloaded more than 3 million times to date. If you missed it the first time round, now is the
perfect time to give it a listen. We're releasing episode 1 here on the Casefile feed. If you like
what you hear, you can find the rest of the series
by searching The Frankston Murders wherever you get your podcasts.
Now here is Episode 1.
My podcast Casefile True Crime covered the Frankston serial murders in a two-part episode on case 23 back in 2016.
When we asked true crime author Vicky Petratus to make a case file present series on the
disappearance of Sarah McDermott from the Canon or Grawe station in 1990, it was a natural
progression for her to move on to the Frankston murders of 1993 for her next podcast series.
the Frankston murders of 1993 for her next podcast series. It was especially timely since serial killer Paul Denier's 30-year non-parole period on his life sentence was up in mid-2023 and there was
a likelihood he would apply for parole. Vicki wrote the book on the Frankston murders and the
case has remained close to her heart. On Friday the 11th of June 1993, 18 year old
Elizabeth Stevens caught a bus from Frankston to the home she shared with her aunt and uncle
in Langwarren. She never made it home. Her body was discovered the following day in Lloyd Park.
On Thursday the 8th of July, 22 year old Debbie Freem, the mother of a baby boy just 12
days old, was abducted during a trip to her local milk bar to buy milk. And finally, on Friday the
30th of July, 17-year-old Natalie Russell didn't make it home from school. She was taken in broad daylight by an increasingly reckless killer.
Her parents were able to take a small comfort from the fact that evidence found at her crime scene
ensured the serial killer was taken into custody the following day.
An important note, in the past the Frankston serial killer has identified as female.
We have it from several sources that this is no longer the case, so we'll use the male name and
pronoun. We hope that the Frankston Murders podcast will do its bit to bring public awareness to the
case, especially as the 30-year non-parole part of Danya's sentence ends in 2023.
He has already applied for parole. In telling this story, we want to keep a serial killer
in jail for life. He should never be allowed to do to anyone else what he did to people in this podcast.
We are grateful to the Victoria Police for granting us access to two
serving members, leading Senior Constable Angela Bartz and Senior Sergeant Steve Lewis. All other
police members interviewed for this podcast are no longer employed by Victoria Police.
We will hand it over to Vicky Petratus to tell the story. Music My name is Vicky Petratus and as a true crime author I found myself right in the heart of
Frankston doing will never forget.
Elizabeth Stevens, Debbie Friem and Natalie Russell all lost their lives at the hand of
a serial killer, and Rosa Toth came close but luckily escaped. The trail of damage caused by Paul Denier casts
a wide net. While his victim tally that we know of is three, the ripple effect of what he did
is never ending. When I wrote the Frankston Murders book back in 1995, I wanted it to be about the girls
as much as it was about the killer.
To understand the extent of his crimes, we need to know what he took from us.
And make no mistake about it, Paul Denier ruined more lives than what he took.
His trail of destruction is wide. When he set out to act on the desires to kill
that he'd had since he turned 14, there's no evidence he gave any thought to the heartbreak
he would cause. It seemed nothing mattered to him more than his bloodlust. I always knew the case would draw me in to revisit it again in podcast form.
But perhaps the thing that tipped the scale was a Facebook message I got from a woman called
Gloria Vains. It was her daughter whose cats were killed by Denia. Four months before the
murders began, Denia broke into Donna Vane's house
in Claude Street in Seaford and killed her cat and its two kittens. Gloria told me that
Donna never got over it. I put out a call on social media wondering
how many other victims were out there. It wasn't long before a disturbing picture of stalking
and attacks on property emerged. Some stories I'd heard before and others I hadn't. These stories
gave me something else to consider. There are a lot of women out there who live in fear that Paul Denier might one day be released from jail.
They're worried he might come after them again.
In adding these stories to the narrative, the picture that emerges of the warning signs
should serve to educate us all.
We don't re-examine this case just to retell the story.
We do it so that we can be reminded
of just how dangerous Denya was back then
and remains so to this day.
And we tell the story so that around the world
people can join in the bid to keep him in prison.
world, people can join in the bid to keep him in prison. So many people were affected by the things Paul Denier did. I wanted to begin with a
man called Todd who grew up in Langwarren. I spoke to Todd at a cafe that he runs a couple
of kilometres north of the Melbourne CBD. Back in 1992, his family lived in Moat Street,
just around the corner from the Denyer family,
who then lived in Long Street,
a couple of houses down from Todd's kindergarten.
Our kindergarten had a couple of rabbits in a hutch
that was like all the kinder kids looked after, I guess.
It was in 1992, earlier in 1992, we all came into the kindergarten in the morning. The
rabbits were well and truly dead. They'd been cut up and some of their insides were sort
of next to them. And it was just sort of left
there for all the kindy kids. And obviously the teachers that came in in the morning had
all seen it, the kids that had been there had seen it and it spread quite quickly that
something pretty awful had happened.
Even though Todd was only a child, he never forgot the killing of the pet rabbits. But
it wasn't just the killing of them that rabbits. But it wasn't just the killing
of them that was disturbing, it was the fact that whoever did it left them for all the
children to see.
If you're doing that sort of thing and leaving it at a kindergarten, you're doing it to cause
a reaction. It's not out in the paddock or out in the bush where no one's going to see
it. That is prime, where everyone's going to see it. And it's not out in a paddock, something you're out in the bush where no one's going to see it.
That is prime, where everyone's going to see it.
And it's probably going to affect people more so.
And I think it was for a shock factor.
It was to scare people.
Todd doesn't know for sure whether the police were called to investigate the rabbit killings
at the kindergarten.
He doesn't remember any police visiting while the children were in
attendance.
The kinder teachers, from what I remember, they took care of it and look, whether they
came after we'd all gone for the day, I'm not sure, but from my knowledge, no.
We were fortunate to get well-known forensic psychologist Tim Watson Munro to offer insights into Dania's behaviour.
While Tim didn't assess Dania,
he has over 40 years experience
of assessing tens of thousands of criminals.
We will call on Tim's expertise throughout this podcast.
Where's the empathy?
Where's the remorse?
Much the contrary, they're getting a thrill out of it.
Maybe even watching it from a distance
to see what the reaction is.
And it's all about power, control, creating fear.
And there are a few more effective ways to create fear
than killing animals at a kindergarten and leaving them
out for the kids to see.
Two other things stand out in Todd's mind.
First, there was an incident one night in his street with a local woman who lived on
her own.
There is no evidence what Todd is about to tell us was Paul Denier, but a woman was terrorised
in her house at night, getting all of the neighbours out of their homes to come to her
aid, creating fear. His involvement can't be discounted.
There was a neighbour of ours that had someone banging on their doors and windows late at night trying
to get in and was making a concerted effort to get in. So he's banging on doors, windows,
making a scene, getting in somewhere. Well, that was certainly to make an impact, certainly
so people would know, but certainly to get something out of it.
And the other thing that stands out to Todd was that his parents were quite strict about
not letting their kids leave Moat Street on their bikes.
Pushing at this boundary, Todd used to ride his bike across the road at the end of his
street and go to the service station on Long Street.
He and his brothers figured it was safe.
The owners were hardworking people.
It seemed like a mistake when they employed a young man called Paul to work there.
Unlike the industrious owners, Paul seemed to stand around and not do much.
From what I recall, he was a very nondescript person.
There was nothing that stood out about him.
If you passed him on the street, you wouldn't remember him five minutes later.
Look, given he didn't seem to hold down a job very long,
the guys that owned that service station, they worked in it seven days a week,
knew everyone's names, and back then it was driveway services to fill your car back then.
I don't think that someone that didn't really do much and just sort of stood around was
really going to last very long with these people.
The day that Todd has never forgotten, his mum pulled into the service station to get
petrol. The owner filled up her tank, she paid him and Paul looked at her car and said she was good to go.
The guy that owned it had filled the car
and he'd gone in to do the payment
and mum was in the car, yep, we're good to go.
And Paul was actually the one that was like,
yeah, yeah, yeah, good to go.
The petrol bowser was still attached.
So he just drove out with it still attached.
And I mean, look,
whether it was an honest mistake, don't know. But mum was pretty upset and everyone was
at the service station.
Looking back on it now, you have to wonder if Paul's actions on the day were deliberate.
Did he look at her car, see the nozzle still attached and tell her
to go? Or is it possible the owner replaced the nozzle back on the bowser when he finished
filling her car and then Paul put it back in the car just to cause mischief or worse. Luckily no petrol was spilled and no stray spark turned an embarrassing inconvenience
into chaos.
When Paul stopped working at the service station, he got a job at Safeway Karingal Hub. A story
that I heard back when I was writing the book was that Paul Dania had been fired from a
supermarket for ramming
a woman with some shopping trolleys. I didn't know any more details than that. A woman called
Kate got in touch with me. It was her mother Denier rammed, and she was there and saw it
happen. While her mother has since passed away, Kate never forgot the incident.
I was five at the time and my brother, he would have been three and my mum at the time
was pregnant with my second brother and we used to always shop at Kringle Hub and on
this particular day my mum had packed my brother and I in the car. We had gone shopping and we were getting out of the car and I could see,
because we got told to stand at the boot and wait for mum,
there was a guy in the distance collecting trolleys.
As my mum, my brother and I started to walk towards the entrance to the supermarket,
we could see a guy hurrying with the trolleys
and he collided with my mum.
Kate remembers a slight incline in the car park,
but if the man had of accidentally lost control
of the trolleys, he made no attempt to warn them.
He didn't say anything.
I don't recall him saying it out of the way
or excuse me or anything like that.
It was just push. There was no one else around and the collision was
deliberate. Kate remembers her pregnant mother being pushed roughly forward with the impact.
The trolleys hit her from behind so she didn't actually see anything but she did actually
turn around when the hit happened. it hit her in the back.
And so we did quickly move.
Kate remembers her mum telling off the man with the trolleys for ramming her. I asked
her whether the man said anything back.
It was just a death stare. He didn't say anything, but he sort of just looked in disgust, really. Just a look of disgust and that icy cold death stare.
It was just a look of hatred.
And I haven't really seen that in people ever, like, since then,
but, yeah, it's a look I've never forgotten.
What I'm always interested in is the effect on women
of their encounters with Dania.
She was very shaken up. I remember she just was rattled from the whole experience because
I don't think many of us have had that type of experience and if we have, we may have
felt a bit of resolve because the person may be a bit remorseful and really apologetic.
Most people are if they've run into someone by accident. But this was different. This
was sort of a situation that she'd never encountered before. I haven't to this day ever encountered
something like that since. And it did rattle her. She changed the way we used to shop.
We used to shop Karingal, then she used to shop elsewhere because of that whole entire
experience. And in this brief but significant encounter,
what does Kate feel about the violence
and the hatred emanating from the man
in the Safeway car park?
When you're not happy with someone,
you might see someone with a death stare
and they don't blink.
They just stare straight through you
as if you're a pane of glass. And so I do
remember the piercing eyes that were glaring at my brother, my mum and I, but it was just
this look of hatred at my mum for some reason. And like we never knew this person, I'd never
seen this person in my life.
And if Kate's story wasn't bad enough, I found out that Danya rammed another woman with the supermarket trolleys.
Davin was the assistant manager at the time. Paul had been at Safeway for around six months and had not even tried to impress his employers.
Paul worked under me. I really didn't think much of him at all. He wasn't a very good worker. He had a very short temper. He would be constantly having to go and get a mop and
bucket because he was putting me in the drink aisle and he'd be breaking stuff and dropping
stuff and you hear him cursing and swearing. He was a really short fuse. I think he was
only there about six months working there part- time. I really didn't think much of him at all as an employee.
This time when Daniel rammed another woman, there was a baby in her trolley.
On the day that he rammed the woman and the child with the rail shopping trials, I was
actually standing there when he did it. I actually saw him do it. He just, the look on his face just went straight into him.
And then all of a sudden, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, and started apologising.
I don't know whether he intended to hit him as hard as he did, but he did knock the woman
over, the trolley over, the baby out of the trolley.
So we ended up taking him down to the doctors across the road, the medical centre.
The woman and the baby were taken to the hospital for observation. For the managers at Safeway,
it was the last straw as far as Paul Denier was concerned.
Manager called me in and because I'd told him what I'd seen, he goes, right, we're
going to sack him, you're with me, you're going to back me. I'm like, yep, no worries
at all. So we got him in. He seemed to be quite calm.
We just explained the situation.
This woman's had to be taken to the doctors and the baby's taken to the doctors.
It looks like the baby's going to end up in hospital for observation.
And yeah, we sacked him.
We were happy to get rid of him, I think, because he was such a bad employee.
Some things just take too long.
A meeting that could have been an email,
someone explaining crypto, or switching mobile providers.
Except with Fizz.
Switching to Fizz is quick and easy.
Mobile plans start at $17 a month.
Certain conditions apply.
Details at fizz.ca.
When does fast grocery delivery
through Instacart matter most?
When your famous grainy mustard potato salad
isn't so famous without the grainy mustard potato salad isn't so famous
without the grainy mustard. When the barbecue's lit but there's nothing to grill. When the in-laws
decide that actually they will stay for dinner. Instacart has all your groceries covered this
summer. So download the app and get delivery in as fast as 60 minutes. Plus enjoy zero dollar
delivery fees on your first three orders. Service fees exclusions and terms apply.
Instacart. Groceries that over-deliver. Looking for a better place to call home?
Discover Watercolor Westport by Landark Homes. Nestled in eastern Ontario cottage country,
live connected to nature, neighbors, and the necessities with high-speed connectivity.
This walkable, vibrant waterfront village offers shops,
dining, scenic trails, a winery, and the harbor front.
Just steps from your door.
Escape the city to a net-zero ready bungalow
at Watercolor Westport.
You're only 75 minutes from Ottawa
and a short drive to Toronto or Montreal.
With new homes starting from the 600s,
you can live better in Watercolor Westport.
To find out more, visit watercolourwestport.com.
It was at the Karingal Hub Safeway that Paul met Sharon Johnson and the two began dating.
She was 17 at the time and he was 19. Five months later, Paul moved into Sharon's mother's house.
A month later, Paul and Sharon moved into a unit on the Frankston-Danny Nong Road.
In the same block of units lived a woman called Julia.
She'd lived there for about a year when Paul Denier and his girlfriend Sharon moved into
the unit next door in September 1992.
I moved into the second unit.
There were four units and they numbered one to four
from the road backwards.
And I moved in the end of 1990, just before I went to uni.
And about a year later, Paul and Sharon moved in next door
into unit 1.
Trisha lived in Unit 3 and there were other people in Unit 4, but I don't recall their
names.
It wasn't long before Paul began calling into Julia's for coffee.
During these visits, he would pour his heart out.
He was grappling with aspects of his religion. When he began dating
Sharon he started going with her to the Christian Church on the corner of Madden
Street and Frankston-Dannionong Road. Paul told Julia the church didn't approve
of he and Sharon living together and that angered him. Julia listened to his
concerns and offered advice where she could. and that angered him. Julia listened to his concerns
and offered advice where she could.
Certainly he was a man with issues
and certainly he was upset and asking some big questions
and just trying to wrestle through,
I guess a fight with what he wanted,
what he felt other people approved of
or didn't approve of
and feeling unhappy about the interactions
that he'd had with the church that they had been going to.
And I think he was just processing that
and trying to move through it.
And certainly, I just put that all down
to his bucket of issues.
Because Paul's partner, Sharon, was working two jobs,
Julia only really saw her in passing.
It was just very neighbourly, waving hello, maybe a quick chat on the front doorstep.
I can't recall her ever coming in for coffee, but she would have been very welcome to do so.
I tended to see her when she was on her way to work or just coming back home from work.
When Paul spoke about attending services at the Christian Centre in Madden Street,
which was about a two minute drive away
from their block of units,
Julia remembers a family connection to the church.
So I believe her uncle was the pastor there
and they had been going there for a while
and they had decided to move in together and I think the church had said to them, look,
you know, that's probably not the greatest idea.
How about you get married or don't live together?
Paul had taken that quite poorly and that had resulted in a lot of questioning and some
anger that perhaps he felt like they ought to have approved and
they ought to have been okay with his decision.
I asked Julia if this caused a division between Paul and Sharon. I wondered if her uncle was
the pastor, then could the rejection of their living arrangements have been doubly difficult?
It didn't seem to come up that that was a dividing point between him and Sharon. I think
they were quite cohesive in their decision making and wanting to be together and live
next door. And I don't think the church was coming in between them, but I think that perhaps
there was a loss of community for him that he had been part of and he felt a bit ousted, which
I think would be painful for many people.
Julia was a person of faith herself and she was happy to discuss these things with Paul.
He would appear at her door, she would make coffee and then they would talk at length.
Sometimes they played the guitar. And even though it was the time
when Paul was stalking women and making weapons, Julia didn't see that side of
him. I never saw that in the time that we had coffee. He would come over, we would
make coffee, we'd sit down on the, had a couple of sofas. He would grab the guitar and play the guitar
and just kind of mess around with chords and chat.
I felt like he thought it was a safe space
to just kind of talk about where he was at
and what he was feeling.
Given that she was doing coffee with a man
who was months away from becoming a serial killer,
did Julia notice any signs?
I think what's weirdest is that nothing stood out.
There wasn't a sense.
I didn't get any spidey sense or my goodness, you're weird.
I think it certainly had a lot of issues,
but I think everybody has their issues.
And I think when we find what we think is a safe space
to talk about those, that we do talk about them.
But there wasn't anything where I thought,
wow, you scare me.
And certainly I've met many people over the years,
particularly my role as a nurse.
I've met a few scary characters.
And yet I think probably one of the scariest people
I've ever met is someone I didn't notice
was scary at the time.
I just thought they were issue filled.
I've spoken to a lot of people who've known predators and didn't pick it before they
knew.
There's often a sense of, why didn't I know?
How could I not have picked it?
But the thing is, predators are wolves in sheep's clothing. They are very good at hiding their true nature and fooling the people around them.
During this time, Julia had a couple of houseguests, so hers was a place where people were coming
and going.
When she began noticing things disturbed around her unit, she put it down to careless houseguests.
I would walk into the house and I would find that things had been slightly moved,
also that I had a series of like a jug and a number of mugs on the kitchen window sill,
and one of them had been knocked into the sink and had broken and there had
been leaves and dirt on the floor. And given that I never used our back door, there would
not have been any of the leaves and dirt from the backyard in the unit because we just never
used the door. And I found them there and because I had people staying with me, I wasn't particularly concerned.
I just figured these things that happened by accident,
clean them up and just put it down to having guests.
Although I was a little bit surprised that they didn't say,
you know, we're sorry for breaking that coffee cup or whatever.
But that's OK.
That's just the nature of having guests sometimes.
And so I put it all down to it being visitors rather than
it being an unwelcome visitor.
But if it had never occurred to Julia that someone had been coming into her unit when
she wasn't there, her thinking changed dramatically when she arrived home after a trip to face
a disturbing home invasion.
I'd been away interstate and had come home quite late of an evening and
I had had some people staying at my unit. So there were about three people staying at the unit and
when I got back I couldn't get inside the unit
because they had the chain across the door.
So I ended up going back to my then fiance's family
and staying the night with them
and coming back the next day.
When we entered, I realised that things had been moved.
And when I asked the people who were there,
why are the things moved or did you move that thing?
They said, oh no, it was there when we had been coming in and out.
It was just different bits and pieces around.
The unit had just changed position.
And then I started to look at various photos that I had around the unit.
And in all of the photos, there had been a slash in a cross shape across my neck.
There was a message carved into my piano and there were slash marks across a tall boy.
And the more I looked, the more things I found.
I found that my doona had been shredded, that my mattress had been stabbed,
that the dress that I had worn to my engagement
was slashed through.
And even later going into different drawers in that tall boy,
finding passport photos and things stabbed and shredded.
So it just seemed to be this voyage of discovery
and then I would find another thing
that had been knocked over or smashed or
cut through. The more Julia discovered the more bizarre the break-in seemed.
It was incredibly bizarre and just that I would keep discovering new things and think oh well that's another thing and I was fairly young at the time, I would have been 19 or 20.
So I was fairly naive and there was a sense of unreality about I guess the viciousness and the
anti-woman kind of message that it was sending, the slicing through the neck and the
kind of message that it was sending, the slicing through the neck
and the shredding of the bedding.
And I mean, that's all very personal
and it's all very, it's really violent.
But I wasn't used to that kind of, you know,
that was not a characteristic of anything
that I'd had experience with before.
So it was very new and it was very unsettling,
deeply unsettling.
Once she had found out how the intruder had gained access, the point of entry only served
to make the break-in more frightening.
Whoever had entered her unit had been coming in and out for a while.
And it wasn't until later when I discovered that the flywire in the kitchen
had been sliced at the bottom and along each side so that you could just roll the flywire
up and come into the kitchen through the window that it all started to make sense. And then
I realised that probably he had been coming in and out of the unit for a while.
Because when I realised that the photos had been slashed and all of those things had occurred,
then we started looking more closely at how might someone have gotten in, what was going
on.
And because it was only really a three or two bedrooms and a living area in a kitchen,
they were tiny units, there wasn't much to look at.
And then all of a sudden it occurred to me,
well, hang on a minute, the fly wire's cut,
that's how someone's been getting in and out.
And then that forced me to look back and say,
well, okay, that's where the mud on the floor came from
and the leaves on the floor and how the cup got broken
and why things have been moving around my house.
And I haven't really been paying enough attention
with that front part of your mind
that actually has a good hard look at things
instead of just brushing it aside
and attributing it to something else.
Julia reported the break-in to the police.
They sent out someone some time later to do fingerprints,
but I'm not sure that that netted any great result for them.
As Julia continued to sort through her unit
to assess the extent of the damage the intruder had caused,
she found a knife in its box up the top of her wardrobe.
It was one of the engagement gifts she had set aside for when she got married.
Julia realised this was what the intruder had used to slash her clothes and her bedding.
You know, the Wiltshire stay sharp kind of knives, the really long ones.
We had got one as an engagement present and I realised later
that's what he had used. He'd been up in the wardrobe, pulled out the knife and then slashed
everything. So I went back to the police station and said, I think here's your
weapon of opportunity if you like. And the response was, well, yeah, okay.
if you like, and the response was, well, yeah, okay. So they added a little bit to the police report and that was that.
Julia told the police she thought it was her neighbour, Paul, who had broken in.
There were a couple of really good reasons for this.
Her friendship with him had cooled when he began avoiding her.
And because the intruder had come in through the kitchen window,
which was at the back of the units, it meant that access was limited
to those living in the block of units.
Just a feeling that it was Paul next door.
And I think part of that was because of the access through the back courtyard
in that he would be able to gain access. There wasn't a fence between each unit as such.
And I think because he was probably one of the few people who would have had access to
the rear areas of the units to be able to come in through the window. I think at the
original report I was a bit concerned that it may have been Paul,
but then when I took the knife into the police station to get them to add it to the report
and I said I really think it's my neighbour and this is why he was just really unusual when I
was leaving and it seemed to be suspicious his his behaviour, and very different to the way
that he'd behaved to me before then.
Despite the violence of what had happened in her unit,
Julia felt that for the police,
it was just another break-in.
It just seemed to be another break-in report.
I guess at the time I thought,
well, yeah, there's probably a lot of break-ins that happen and this is probably very run-of-the-mill for police to be processing this kind of complaint.
But of course, it wasn't run-of-the-mill.
When someone's house is broken into, it's usually for the purpose of robbery.
But nothing had been stolen.
This was an attack.
I think now it might be seen in a different light.
We know much more about these kinds of things.
I guess even now you're just bringing that up.
I never thought of it as anything but a break in.
Isn't that unusual, I suppose,
because actually he didn't take anything as far as I know,
just damaged a lot of things maliciously and personally
never took a thing, not really a break in. With the damage that was done in her unit,
Julia could tell it was a personal attack against her, but as a young woman couldn't imagine how or
why anyone could hold such a grudge that they would do this to her.
It was a very personal thing and then it was like who hates me? Not that I was not,
you know, not unlovable because I think horses for courses there are people who will love you and
there were people who won't love you. It wasn't that I was special, but there was a sense of this very personal thing happening
and that it was very personally directed at me. And I couldn't work out why anyone would
put themselves out so much to be so vicious. Julia made immediate plans to leave the unit.
After the break-in that was so personal and so inherently violent, it was impossible to
stay.
I remember calling the landlady and just saying, look, this thing's happened and I need to
move out.
And I'm a bit concerned that it may be Paul.
Paul continued to act oddly right up to the day Julia was packing to leave.
When I was cleaning out my unit, I had had my aunt there to give me some assistance and
she'd left. And so it was just me taking out the last few boxes and doing a bit of
cleaning. And he arrived home and normally I'd get a wave and a hello and all of those things but he actually
almost raced inside and shut all of the shutters, the front blinds and everything so that you
couldn't see in or out and that was unusual and that just seemed to be confirming my thoughts that it was him that had done those things.
Despite her suspicions, Julia was at a loss
as to why her neighbour would have broken into her house
and taken a knife to her things.
Hadn't done anything,
I'd been only ever hospitable and welcoming.
It is an odd thing for any person to have done,
to have behaved in that way.
I don't think there's a thing that I did
that could have caused it or have changed it.
While the uniform members that Julia reported to
at the Frankston police didn't seem to focus on Danya
as a suspect in her break-in,
he had certainly come onto the radar with the local CIB detectives.
Veteran Detective Cole Clark had an encounter with Denia he never forgot.
Maybe 12 months, two years prior to him committing these murders.
I remember I was working afternoon shift in Frankston
and I was called to Langwarne, the shopping centre,
and where the uniform blokes had been called
by one of the shopkeepers that someone had been seen
bleeding outside one of the shops and had taken off.
I attended and we found a blood trail that led from the shops
down a couple of streets and along the footpaths,
but it then disappeared.
I remember that we then got a phone call while we were investigating this
that a male person had been admitted to Frankston Hospital, I think it was,
with a stab wound to his leg,
upper leg, I think from memory.
We went to the hospital,
tried to speak to the person that was involved,
and it turns out that it was Paul Denier at the time
had suffered a leg wound
and was being stitched up in hospital.
We tried to speak to him.
He remained mute at the time
and wouldn't tell us how he got the wound
or where he got the wound
or the circumstances and how it happened.
In hindsight, years later, when he started killing people
and he admitted that he was running around
cutting the throats of animals around Langwarren at the time,
I surmised later on that while he was trying to kill an animal,
he'd actually stabbed himself in the leg.
And of course he wouldn't assist us in any way as to what had happened.
So we couldn't take the matter any further.
He signed a statement.
He wanted no further action involving the police in most of this matter.
So we made inquiries the next day around the area if anybody had lost animals or had anything
killed.
Nothing came forward and I remember speaking to one of the brothers that night trying to
get the brother to find out what had happened from him and the brother said he wouldn't
even talk to me about it. So yeah, you look back in reality on that and
you say well he obviously had problems in those times and this was early in the piece and which
he admitted to later on that he'd been doing it. Gee, you sit there and think well maybe if we
had pressed it further or whatever and got into his mind we may have stopped
these murders but I seriously doubt it but it's sort of things run through your
mind. These encounters with Paul Denier certainly left their mark on police and
civilians alike. Once Julia moved out Paul Denier took his coffee visits down to the next unit,
where Tricia Vains lived and her sister Donna occasionally stayed. Sadly, Donna passed away
in 2018, but her mother Gloria Vains wanted to tell Donna's story.
She moved into Franks and Dandy Long Road, yes, into a big block of units and he was in the front one with his fiance.
Very nice guy actually, very nice guy, very neighbourly, would do anything for you.
Always said hello when he saw me when I went to visit Patricia.
He had been in at Tricia's for a coffee, I think mainly after Donna moved in there.
She went to stay with
her sister for a while and he did go there for coffee.
I asked Gloria for her impressions of Paul Denia.
He always said hi to me in the driveway, a big smile. He just seemed one of the big,
chubby, happy-go-lucky bloke. Never would have picked otherwise for, you know, just a nice neighbor.
Calgary, also known as the blue sky city. We get more sunny days than anywhere in the country,
but more importantly, we're the Canadian capital of blue sky thinking. This is where bold ideas
meet big opportunity, where dreams become reality. Whether you're building your career or scaling your business, Calgary is where what-if turns
into what's next.
It's possible here, in Calgary, the blue sky city.
Learn more at calgaryeconomicdevelopment.com.
What's better than a well marbled ribeye sizzling on the barbecue?
A well marbled ribeye sizzling on the barbecue that was carefully selected by an Instacart shopper and delivered to your door. A well marbled
rib-eye you ordered without even leaving the kiddie pool. Whatever groceries your summer
calls for, Instacart has you covered. Download the Instacart app and enjoy $0 delivery fees
on your first three orders. Service fees, exclusions, and terms apply. Instacart. Groceries
that over-deliver. In late January 1993, Donna and her partner, Les, rented their own place in Claude Street,
not far from her sister's unit.
Then she moved into the street behind Trisha. It was roughly behind the next street down
or something, into a unit with her partner Les at the time.
Donna, Les and their baby daughter had lived in the unit in Claude Street for just three
weeks when Paul Denier broke in and changed the course of Donna's life.
In what was always regarded from a distance as a lucky break,
on the night Denia broke in, Donna wasn't home.
Les worked during the day at his regular job,
and at night he would supplement the family income by delivering pizzas.
Donna often went out with Les on his pizza delivery, But on the night of Friday the 19th of February,
she said she would just stay home and bath the baby.
Donna got bored very, very easily.
Always bored.
And she always went with him.
She used to go everywhere.
And he was surprised that night.
She said, not any kid.
Are you sure?
You'll be bored.
She said, no, I can't be bothered.
She'll just bath the baby.
Donna bathed the baby and left the water in the tub.
The night dragged on and she was pleased when Les dropped back home
in the middle of his shift.
Anyway, she must have been thinking, I wish they'd gone.
He came back, he was on the way to deliver a pizza and he called in
and they said,
are you bored yet? Do you want to come? She said, oh yes. So she drive the baby, put her
in the car and off they went. I think it was about 8.30 or something. And then I think
when they got back, I think it was 11.30 for some, around then.
What Donna and Les found when they returned home
was something so cruel and violent,
it was beyond belief.
At first she didn't go into the unit
because she was getting the baby out the capsule in the car
and Les went to open the front door.
And he had called her.
I think she said she heard him saying,
oh my God, or something like that,
a bit of a shock response. And he said to
her, Donna, don't come in.
The reason Les didn't want Donna to come in was because he'd seen the place had been
broken into. Like Julia's break-in months earlier, nothing had been taken. The intruder
had just left carnage in their wake. When Les opened the front door, there was an overwhelming smell and he discovered their
cat horribly slaughtered on the floor in the kitchen.
Someone had written Donna you're dead and the name Robin on the wall in what looked
like cat's blood.
The names in blood meant it wasn't a random break-in. Donna
assumed the reference was to her dad, who was Rob, but sometimes called Robin. After
calling the police, Gloria was the next to get a call.
Donna rang and I was shocked, but I'd been more shocked if I knew the reason her place had been broken into.
Because then it was just her place had been broken into, we didn't know who it was.
And the cats, and I thought, God, who would do that?
So we were a bit sort of, why? Who would do that?
And all of a sudden it knew them because the names were on the wall.
So they knew who lived there.
But well, Donna did, and her dad was Rob.
Robin, whichever.
I said, well, look, do you was Rob, Robin, whichever. I said well look do you want
to come here grab some clothes and that she said no not at the moment the police are here.
One of the police called to the breaking at Donna's flat was Chris McCann from the newly
formed police special response squad. The squad was a brand new iteration of the Major Crime Squad and had been very busy in their first two months of operation.
Chris himself had arrested nearly 50 people in that time.
So our squad was the Special Response Squad, which had been formed as a result of the disbanding of what was called the major crime squad in those days.
Primarily we were established to investigate aggravated burglaries, robberies on homes.
Any break-in where there was any suggestion or evidence of a weapon being used, we would be called out to that job.
And I think at the time we'd only been operating for,
I'm going to say, two months.
In the early hours of the morning of Saturday the 20th of February,
Chris McCann arrived at Donner's Place in Claude Street.
We were called out early in the morning
and I went there with my crew
and we met up with the Frankston detectives
and it was just a brown brick unit in the middle of Frankston and when we went to the
scene I do recall that there was like a bucket that was underneath the rear window. When
we called the crime scene, forensics out and photographs. There was blood marks or blood stains from gloves that you
could clearly see on the rolled down blinds. And afterwards when the forensic guys used
their inhydrin and the ultraviolet light, they picked up one stone boot impressions
all across the kitchen floor and in the laundry.
Even though 30 years have gone by since the job in Claude Street,
Chris has never forgotten the site that he was met with
when he walked into the flat.
One of the Frankston detectives pre-warned him before he went inside.
Here's what the scene looked like.
And be aware, this is distressing.
After you were told that somebody had been in there
and had gone on a rampage with a knife,
he said you need to be prepared
because it's a mess in there.
He's killed some cats and some kittens.
And so as you walk through the front door, you're immediately hit with this horrible stench.
And then really the horrible image of seeing a female cat that had been completely gutted.
And at that time, on the walls, as you walk in through the door, there were death threats written on the wall,
using the intestines of the cat.
And then in the bathroom, there was kittens that had had their throats cut, and that had been thrown into the bath.
And then as you move through the unit, I remember seeing a half-naked picture of a woman attached to the cat
with stab marks that had gone through the picture into the cat.
And then there was a bassinet in the main bedroom, and in the bassinet there were more pictures of half-dressed women
with stab marks through the pictures into the
bassinet and then behind one of the cupboard doors there was there had obviously been some pictures
there and there had been slash marks from a knife obviously where then you had slashed through the
photographs and the pictures on the on the back of the door.
In the lounge room was an orange baby bouncer sitting in the middle of the floor on a pink
and blue chequered rug. Next to it lay a baby's rattle and a disposable nappy. On the white
wall of the lounge room next to the television, the intruder had written what looked like dead Don in a red substance that looked like blood.
In the kitchen, written in blood above the stove, were the words, Donner your dead, printed in block letters.
Next to the words was a bloodied outline to suggest that the cat had either been held or flung against the wall.
Among the wall writings was the name Robin. In the bathroom were the two kittens,
floating one at each end of a half-filled bath. They had turned the water rust-coloured with their
blood. The attack on the kittens had occurred in
the laundry over a plastic laundry basket of baby clothes. Blood had splashed everywhere,
spraying high up the walls and around a packet of kitty litter. In the cat's blood on the
floor was a distinct shoe impression.
In the main bedroom, the intruder had ransacked the cupboards and drawers and sprayed a can
of shaving cream all over Donna's mirror and through the creamy swirls, the detectives
could make out the words Donna and Robin.
One of the cupboard doors had been covered in pictures of swimsuit models. These
had been slashed and only a few jagged corners of the pictures remained. The intruder had
also slashed the cupboard door, leaving deep gouges in the wood. Oddly, the door had swirls
of dirty, dried watermarks, as if the attacker had wanted to clean the surface for
some reason. Had he written another message on it, then changed his mind? Outside, the point of
entry was clear. The intruder had climbed onto a nappy bucket around the back, forced a window open and climbed through. Left behind on the blind
was a gloved hand impression in blood. For Detective Chris McCann, the scene was like
nothing he'd ever seen before. Police officers see the worst of the worst, but there was
something about the break-in at Donna's
house that stood out for Chris.
I'd been to numerous homicides and I'd been to numerous violent crimes. But this was particularly
different because of the violent nature in which he had just slaughtered the defenseless animals.
And you wouldn't see that normally unless it was a frenzied attack by an ex-boyfriend
on a girlfriend perhaps.
But when you saw it, it seemed to be completely out of place with a normal break-in at a house.
If they were breaking in to steal something, you would normally then go on a rampage and
kill the animals in the house and then write death threats.
So no, I'd never seen anything like that before.
Forensic psychologist Tim Watson Munro offers his insights. The way you describe that crime scene,
the disemboweling of the cats, naked women,
now some would say perhaps this is the indicators
of a person with a psychotic mind,
somebody that's out of touch with the reality.
Because I think probably the lay person,
that's crazy behaviour and it is,
but it's not medically defined or legally defined insanity.
He clearly knew what he was doing.
His focus was really to not only act out on that fantasy,
but create fear, vicarious power, vicarious control,
and it's all planned and premeditated.
It's not shambolic thinking in the way
that you normally get with psychotic people.
One of the reasons Chris still remembers the case, aside from the violence, is perhaps
because Donna and Les had a newborn baby. Gloria Veins remembers Donna and Les taking
the baby and leaving the scene to the police.
I went to stay with Les's mum, she lived in Prankston as well. Donna needed Gloria's help.
Once the crime scene was processed,
the cats needed to be transported for post-mortem examination
and the police apparently didn't do the transportation.
When I got there it was just a madhouse
of police vehicles and lights.
Gloria brought a friend with her.
Gloria's friend Sandy was a vet nurse,
and on the way, the two had stopped off at a local vet
to try and procure body bags for the cats,
which were essentially black plastic garbage bags. When Gloria began telling me about collecting the cats, which were essentially black plastic garbage bags.
When Gloria began telling me about collecting the cats, her own cat came into the room and
started meowing.
It was a bit haunting to be honest.
We got to the house and the police, she said, don't you come in, I said, I'm not coming
in, I stayed in the car.
Oh, there was reporters and God knows what went on.
She went in, she came out with them in the bag,
put them in the boot.
She said, they're hopeless.
The police are hopeless.
She said, they had them in a clear plastic bag.
She said, it was horrible.
She said, they could have put them in something else.
So she put that into the black bag.
And we had to go all the way to Surry Hills.
Apparently that's where the police had taken it there.
That's the veterinary pathologist.
And they can tell what the blade size or whatever,
the type of knife that may have been used or whatever.
So we trotted off to Surry Hills that night.
Leaving Donna's flat with the murdered cats in her boot,
Gloria and her friend ran the gauntlet of the press.
When we left with my friend and I to take the cats' bodies to the pathologist,
so we came out the drive, you know, they're up against a car with their cameras and the reporters.
After Chris McCann and his crew had finished examining the scene, they went around to Les's
mum to interview the young couple. It's hard to imagine anyone hating a young woman with a baby
so much they would commit such a violent act on her cat and kittens. The detectives were in no doubt that had Donna and her baby been home when the
intruder broke in, they too would have been murdered.
Because it was so unusual what had happened, we had asked them, because generally with
something like this, this is almost like a crime of hate that you either hate the actual human or you hate animals
or both.
And so we wanted to get an understanding about who they thought may have had some sort of
indetter against them.
But these are young kids without any history of criminal involvement.
So it wasn't something that they were unable to come up with names.
And they eventually gave us a list of about 10 people in there.
I'm not sure if in that list Paul Dena's name had been mentioned.
I remember afterwards she said that there was somebody strange at a place that she had
visited that was either her sister or a friend lived in
Frankston and that turned out to be Paul Daniel.
The problem for Chris in investigating the Claude Street break-in was that while they
spent a week on it, they were inundated with other jobs. There was no opportunity to focus
purely on the crime that targeted Donna
Vains and her cats. We investigated it, I'm going to say for a week, maybe a week
and a bit off and on, but at that time we were having jobs every single night so
even on that day when we attended that particular job, I was meant to be on a
rest day the following day, I was called out at one o'clock in the morning
for a particularly serious and violent home invasion again.
And so we'd basically gone from that job,
being there all day, finished at eight o'clock
on Saturday night, but by one o'clock in the morning,
I was already called out to another job on Sunday morning.
We didn't have enough resources,
so we were really spreading ourselves thin.
The police did the best they could with the resources they had,
but the investigation went nowhere.
During our talk, Gloria told me something that I hadn't heard before.
She remembers a neighbour seeing the intruder arrive.
I think it was a lady, I don't think it was in the units, I think it was a house opposite or
something that spotted a car. I don't know what time he turned up there, say nine, ten, it's sort
of late as you maybe have a look, well who's that, you know, I do it here. A lady, I'm sure they said
across the street had seen the car pull in. But it was a neighbour
anyway and close enough to describe what he was wearing and it was a big bloke. I don't
know how much she saw but she definitely said the checkered shirt and trackie pants and
he was quite a lot what she was, tall and big, solid. The description very much described Donna's sister Tricia's neighbour, Paul. Gloria remembers
Tricia seeing something the following day that made them all suspect that Paul was the
intruder. Gloria remembers that Tricia saw Paul removing blood-stained carpet from his
car.
Patricia called saying that she'd seen him in the driveway
ripping the thing out of his car
and obviously knew about what happened to Donna and her cats.
So she was sort of putting two and two together
and she was thinking, I wonder if it was him.
And she says, what should I do?
That's when we put the two and two together.
A bloodstained carpet in the car, plus a neighbour reporting someone that fits his description.
And Tricia said at me, she said,
that report the lady gave the neighbour fits him exactly.
Donna's home invasion happened 30 years ago,
and Gloria is vague on some of the exact details.
But she remembers the family told the police
about their suspicions about Paul Denier.
The police did get told, but I think it may have been her dad. I'm not sure. It was either
her or her dad, because the message I got back after that was the police said, oh, you
can't just go knocking on people's door and, you know, accusing them or wanting to search.
And I said, what?
I said, look, I'm no expert on police things.
With evidence like, if it was just a bloodstained carpet,
well, fair enough, could be anything.
You could have been hunting on rabbits or whatever,
I don't know.
But the fact that the bloodstained carpet
and the description that is pulled to a tee
is enough to look into, but they wouldn't, apparently, quite abruptly said,
we can't just go knocking on people's door.
I asked Chris McCann if he had any idea of the description of the man that Gloria had
told me about, the man in work boots, trackie pants, and a flannelette shirt.
No, I mean, the people that I worked with and myself,
like we were meticulous with our notes and our follow-up.
Had we had a witness that said that they had seen somebody
being dropped off there at those units,
it's something we would have followed
up.
Having said that, it's quite possible that if she did give that information, she could
have given it to somebody from the Frankston C.I.B. who would have also been heavily involved
in investigating that matter.
And Chris is right.
Often detectives coming in to do the detecting and the local uniform
or the local detectives are utilised to do the door knock. If one of the neighbours did
see a tall man wearing boots and tracky pants and a flannelette shirt, she may have told
it to the local police, not the members of Chris's squad. Nonetheless, Gloria is certain that her family knew at the time that
Paul Denier fit the description of the man the neighbour saw.
After that particular job, we were just going from one job to the next. It's quite possible
that the main contacts for that would have remained with the Frankston police and the
Frankston detectives.
So for now, that remains a bit of a mystery.
Because the Special Response Squad was inundated with jobs and clearly under-resourced, they
just didn't have time to stick with any one case, when the next one was only hours away.
And of course, it was the early days of computer usage
and programs that linked and connected information
was a while away.
You also have to remember, in those days,
the systems of connecting evidence between systems,
despite us going to one system, which
at that time was going to a system called LEAP, having the information reports all connecting
was still very early days.
It's a good point. We can't judge the information systems of three decades ago by what we take
for granted today.
Not being able to connect information electronically and saying, well, somebody had seen such and
such on this night, that's a similar description of the sort of person that we're looking for.
We have evidence of blunders and boots and there's a description of a person wearing
a flannel-like shirt etc. That type of stuff, there wouldn't have been the ability at that point just to connect dots like that. It would have been
pieces of information in different locations.
How was Donna in the aftermath of the break-in?
She just totally went downhill, totally went downhill.
Oh, she tried to be the star, sort of nonchalant
and normal Donna, but she just kept going on and on.
I used to say, oh, you were lucky, you had a guardian angel.
He's in jail, but she says, yeah, but when he gets out,
and it just seemed to be all she focused on.
When Gloria contacted me, she just wanted people to know what Donna's life was like
after the break-in.
The ongoing worry stayed with Donna until she died.
She's had a hard life.
Ever since this all happened, her life was consumed with what if, what if.
She kept saying to me, and she was just, for years, just worried, worried, worried.
When this happened at her unit where the animal's getting killed and that, she wouldn't even
go to the toilet in the house on her own.
Les had to walk through and wait at the toilet door and come back into the lounge with her.
She was just petrified.
I wanted you to hear the words straight from Dania. On the next episode of The Frankston Murders...
It was just this lack of understanding.
The only thing I noticed was the trolley boy.
There was a young man standing in the shrubbery in the bushes near the hall.
He said, I don't worry. He said, I won't let anything happen to you.
Often they have a certain type of female in mind.
Straight off, it wasn't. This wasn't right.
Thanks for listening. If you'd like to hear the rest of the Frankston murders,
just search for it wherever you get your podcasts. It's a Casefile Presents production created by
the same team behind Casefile with the same high
standards you expect from us.
When does fast grocery delivery through Instacart matter most?
When your famous grainy mustard potato salad isn't so famous without the grainy mustard.
When the barbecue's lit but there's nothing to grill. When the in-laws decide that actually
they will stay for dinner.
Instacart has all your groceries covered this summer.
So download the app and get delivery
in as fast as 60 minutes.
Plus enjoy $0 delivery fees on your first three orders.
Service fees, exclusions, and terms apply.
Instacart, groceries that over-deliver.
Audible invites you to listen for the thrill.
Escape the everyday with stories that leave you breathless.
Whether it's heart-pounding suspense
like the Audible Originals 10 Rules
for the Perfect Murder by James Patterson,
or the downloaded with Brendan Fraser,
or how about a fantasy adventure like Onyx Storm,
or Amelia Hart's The Sirens.
Audible has an incredible selection of audiobooks, podcasts, and originals all in one app.
Start listening and discover what's beyond the edge of your seat when you sign up for
a free 30-day trial at audible.ca.