Missing Niamh - 8: Episode 8: Tracing Jack’s movements
Episode Date: September 23, 2024After Niamh disappears, Jack and Garth head south and connect with friends. Jack puzzles his friends by behaving oddly. Jack heads north to a town in Queensland where he lands himself in more trouble ...before fleeing to Brisbane. https://missingniamh.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Get ready for Las Vegas-style action at BetMGM, the king of online casinos.
Enjoy casino games at your fingertips with the same Vegas-drift excitement MGM is famous for when you play classics like MGM Grand Millions.
Or popular games like Blackjack, Baccarat, and Roulette.
Download the BetMGM Casino app today.
BetMGM and GameSense remind you to play responsibly.
BetMGM.com for T's and C's.
90 plus to wager.
Ontario only.
Please play responsibly.
If you have questions or concerns about gambling or someone close to you, please contact Connex Ontario at 1-866-531-2600 to speak to an advisor free of charge.
BidMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with iGaming Ontario.
Please note that some names in this episode have been changed.
Additionally, some audio clips are voiced by actors reading from statements or transcripts. With the disappearance of 18-year-old Nehemiah,
the search focused on Gokup Road. Jack Nicholson, a 31-year-old itinerant labourer who drove an old
Holden hearse, had taken Nehemiah from a campground in Gingellic on Easter Saturday,
promising to drop her off in Batlow so she could catch a bus
the following day. He'd returned to Gingellic hours overdue, saying he'd driven past Batlow
and dropped her off on Gokap Road so she could hitchhike instead of using her prepaid bus ticket.
His story never made sense, but it gained traction when a couple of locals claimed they saw a woman hitchhiking on Gokup Road over Easter.
An extensive land and air search of the 30km stretch found nothing to indicate Neem had ever been there.
Garth and Jack weren't in Batlow long, but to this day the locals still remember the hearse.
When you talk to people in town today who were around in 2002, the recognition is instant.
The time the hearse came to town is something they've never forgotten, especially not Michelle.
Michelle is a Batlow local and was 16 years old in March 2002.
I was just, you know, doing what 16-year-olds do,
hanging around town, having fun.
It was the end of summer,
so everyone was still out and about before winter hit
and everyone would hibernate.
In the lead-up to Easter 2002,
Michelle remembers seeing the black hearse driving around Batlow.
Yeah, yeah.
So you'd see it driving around all the time.
Batlow's literally got...
Back then it had one main street
because no-one used the other top side of the street much.
So you'd always see it hanging around because it was a hearse.
It was quite obvious in such a small town.
When Michelle finished school one day, she crossed paths with the black hearse.
There was one afternoon my best friend and I had got out of school
and usually when you finish school back then, you'd walk up to the local cafe,
which was, I don't know, like 200 metres away,
and then you'd usually just hang around the streets or the bike jumps
or somewhere for the afternoon.
So we'd been at the cafe and we were standing out on the footpath
and this guy pulls up and literally stops right in front of us,
puts his window down and says, do you girls want a lift?
And we're like, no, mate, it's about low, you know,
you can walk everywhere in town. Come on, just get in the car. And we're like, nah, we're good. And he's like, come on,
just let me give you the lift. And I said, you drive a hearse. That's kind of warning signs
we're not going to get in the car with you. And he's like, oh, well, there's this really cool
party at the caravan park. You should come down. And we're like, nah. And that's all that was left at.
He kind of was like, had a bit of attitude about it,
like he sounded like a little bit pissed off and just drove off.
That was it.
Jack was 31 years old when he asked 16-year-old Michelle
and her friend to get into his car.
The two teenage girls were wearing the white T-shirt and black pants that made up the school uniform.
Both were carrying school bags.
Come across rough pickers over the years, but he just had this like creepy vibe. And like, as I've said, I've met so many pickers
before and I'm still friends with some of them now. And you could tell the rough ones and the
nice ones and whatever, but he just had this creep vibe, like he was up to no good. He didn't smile
or anything. He just kind of looked empty and just like get
in the car. And we were like, nah. We knew that we were all right. Like there was people in the
cafe and there was always people around then, but he was just, it was just kind of like aggressively
like get in the car. So it was more a demand than a request? Yeah, yeah. So the first time he asked, he's like, oh, I can give you the lift,
but it wasn't nice.
It was him just, you know, kind of saying to get in the car
and then it just got like more aggressive as he went on, I think.
The description Michelle gave matched Jack, not Garth.
There was no confusing the two.
He had a lot of confidence to pull up to two 16-year-old girls
and ask them to get in the car by himself.
That's what I couldn't believe.
Like, usually you'd see, like, groups of boys doing that
or, you know, at least two.
But it was always in, like, a joking manner
or they were just trying to be funny
or something, but he was more like, like a creeper.
Michelle told her friends about the incident and everyone was aware about the creep in
the hearse who tried to get the schoolgirls in the car.
In early April, when news broke about Niamh's disappearance and pictures of Jack's hearse were on the front page of the paper
along with a picture of Niamh, the encounter suddenly felt sinister.
Michelle thought she had better let the police know.
So it wasn't, like, officially reported,
but I remember seeing the local policeman at the time
and I just remember saying, oh..., like after, it was after the disappearance
that I remember saying to the police, oh, well, this is what happened
when I saw him and, you know, he's asked me and my best
friend to get in his car and it was just kind of brushed off like it was
irrelevant. So that was it. A schoolgirl's
report of predatory behaviour from a man who was the last one to see a missing teenager should have been a red flag.
But a statement was never taken and the information doesn't appear anywhere in the police brief that was compiled for the coroner.
Sure, Michelle's story wasn't going to help find Niamh, but it did paint a picture of how Jack behaved towards teenage girls.
Jack and Garth left Gingellic on Easter Sunday and travelled back to Batlow to collect the rest of their gear.
They told the caravan park operator Penny that they were headed to Queensland.
But of course, they weren't.
Jack and Garth actually drove in the complete opposite direction of Queensland. But of course, they weren't. Jack and Garth actually drove in the complete
opposite direction of Queensland. They headed southwest to Cobram in Victoria,
just over a three-hour drive from Batlow. They camped Sunday night on the Murray River at a
spot known as Twin Knobs. It was busy with holidaymakers on the Easter long weekend On Easter Sunday night, Jack had a 36-minute conversation on the phone with his ex-girlfriend, Belinda
They had recently broken up and Jack was trying to patch things up
Monday night, April 1, they spent the night at one of their friends in Cobram, Lena
Lena had known both
Jack and Garth from the fruit picking scene for years. They'd picked the same seasons together
and hang out in the same circle of friends during the picking season in Cobram.
She knew Garth better than Jack, but was familiar with both of them.
Lena remembers thinking how strange it was that
Jack was selling the hearse because she knew how happy he'd been when he bought it only a month
earlier. Records show that Jack had purchased the hearse from a car dealership in Cobram on
February 15 2002, only one month prior to arriving in Batlow. The purchase price was $1,800.
A lot of people had noticed how obsessed he was with his car, yet now he was selling it.
Jack also made a strange comment to Lena that she considered unusual for him.
She would later tell police,
You wanted to sell the car, the hearse. You wanted to sell it, you wanted to go away and
never come back. That's what he said to me.
On Tuesday April 2nd, Jack and Garth left Lena's house in Cobram and drove to Shepparton,
a 50-minute drive south. Jack had arranged to catch up with his ex-girlfriend Belinda. Belinda and Jack booked
into room 21 of the Settlers Hotel. Garth booked into a different hotel to give Jack a chance to
patch things up with Belinda. When Belinda later spoke to police about Jack, she said he would
pressure her into sex when she didn't want to and wanted sex
constantly throughout their relationship. She described being with someone whose sexual
appetite seemed insatiable and how he responded when she said no. He used to get quite upset with
me sometimes and try and force me, well not so much force me, but verbally force me into, like, saying,
yeah, I know you want it, and I'd tell him to piss off,
I didn't want it.
Yeah, he used to, he never, like, physically forced me into doing it.
He'd just get quiet.
Yeah, like, he'd sulk.
He'd sulk if I wouldn't do anything with him.
So given their past history, when Belinda met Jack at the hotel,
there was something very different about his behaviour.
I spent the night with him in Shepparton, which we did have a sexual relationship that night and he was very standoffish. It was like he was not himself.
It's like he didn't really want to touch me or anything like that. I thought it was quite strange.
Yeah, he wasn't himself. I know that much because I thought he was being rather cold.
He wasn't talking to me a lot.
He was sort of walking backwards and forwards around the room
and he wasn't settled.
And that wasn't the only thing odd about Jack's behaviour.
When we arrived at the motel, he backed the hearse up to the motel room and he
brought everything in and went through all his clothes. Said he had to wash a whole heap of
clothes, went through, cleaned all of his CDs with methylated spirits. He'd had a shower and
chucked all his clothes in a pile
and said he had to do a whole heap of washing.
Yeah, went through and cleaned every single CD.
In the two years you've known Jack,
how often did you see him clean all his CDs with methylated spirits?
Never.
How often did you see Jack wash all his clothes in one go?
Well, just like living with him,
we used to do the laundry as you would, like every week sort of thing, probably twice a week.
But I just naturally thought, here he was traveling on the road, like him and Garth had
been here, there and everywhere. And I just thought, well, he's got all this dirty washing, he needs to do his laundry, so.
On Wednesday April 3rd, Belinda left Shepparton to go to her next picking job and Jack and Garth were back on the road in the hearse.
They called in to visit a friend, Shane, in Melbourne to show him the hearse.
Shane said there was nothing unusual about Jack or Garth's behaviour that night.
After that, they made their way to Port Ferry,
about three and a half hours drive south-west of Melbourne,
to see more picking friends, Holly and Marcus.
Holly was heavily pregnant at the time.
I thought Jack was, Jack was quiet, Jack was calm.
Jack was always up for like, you know,
he was a bit less of a rowdy, drunken dickhead
than all the other guys were in that scene.
You know, I'd sit down and talk to him about furniture restoration
and travelling and things because, you know,
I was pregnant or whatever and wasn't drinking
and everyone else was really drunk and he was there just...
He was always drinking.
I think he was always drinking, but he just never seemed as drunk
and he was always just really good to chat to.
He was interesting.
Listening to Holly talk about Jack,
it's easy to see how Nahh was interested in talking to him.
Someone really good to chat to. Interesting.
This was not a one-off description.
Others who knew Jack in the picking circles had told us much the same.
Do you remember the night when him and Garth came to your house?
Yeah, I remember the night him and Garth came to your house? Yeah, I remember the night Eamon Garth came to my house. Only vaguely though now, he was probably pretty quiet, but I wouldn't have known him well enough to really evaluate his
mental state. And also, I was so young. At 25, I was so young, my ability to be able to
evaluate things and people's behavior was so much less developed than it is now.
Do you know what I mean? Yeah. And plus I was about to have a baby like any moment.
Holly and Marcus spoke to the police during the course of the investigation when the visit was
much fresher in their mind and they both had a similar account. There was nothing unusual about the visit.
Everything was normal.
They had known Jack for about three years at the time and he had always been nice, a gentleman.
Holly had been alone with Jack numerous times and there had never been any issues.
Jack and Garth spent the night at Holly and Marcus' house in Port Ferry. The next morning, April 4th, Jack and Garth spent the night at Holly and Marcus' house in Port Ferry.
The next morning, April 4th, Jack and Garth hit the road again.
They had made a decision to drive across to the other side of the country, to Western Australia, to check out the citrus fruit season.
They stayed that night in Gawler, South Australia, around a seven hour drive west from Port Ferry, and it's at this point Jack decides he doesn't want to go to Western Australia.
He suggests to Garth that they head up to Queensland instead.
Garth agrees.
On Friday April 5, they drive over seven hours back east and stay the night in Bendigo, Victoria.
It's on this day that Kieran first calls Garth's mobile phone. Kieran by this stage was in Batlow making inquiries about his missing sister and got Garth's phone number from a fellow picker.
There was no answer and Kieran left a voicemail for Garth. At 6.46pm, Garth called Kieran back.
Again, they missed each other due to the spotty reception issues.
Garth left Kieran the following voicemail message.
Hey Kieran, yeah it's Garth here.
Yeah, I'm just returning your call.
Um, yeah, Jack dropped Naomi off at Schumet.
She was supposed to be catching the bus down to Sydney to stay with her sister. At 10.10 the next morning, Saturday April 6, Garth sent Kieran a text message,
call Jack's phone, with the number.
This was when Kieran went to Tumut Police Station
and local police officer Stan Wall got in touch with Jack. Jack and Garth had just left Bendigo
to begin their journey to Queensland, which is about a 20 hour drive north.
They were racking up serious kilometres in that hearse, but that wasn't unusual, it's what they did.
Travelled a lot and picked fruit.
On the phone, Jack told Stan Wall they were close enough to Deniliquin Police Station and the border in New South Wales, the jurisdiction responsible for Nahum's case and where Jack happened to have four outstanding arrest warrants.
Jack and Garth arrived at Deniliquin Police Station in the early afternoon.
Deniliquin is a New South Wales town close to the border of Victoria, a four-hour drive west of Batlow. After visiting the Daniloquan
police station, Jack is arrested and taken into police custody on the outstanding warrants,
three for assault occasioning actual bodily harm and one for failing to appear at court.
The assault charges were related to an incident that occurred on New Year's Eve 1994.
When Jack failed to attend court a few weeks later to answer to those charges,
the arrest warrants were issued and had been in place in the state of New South Wales for over seven years.
Jack's interview was recorded by local Deniliquin detectives.
He provided his version of the events around Neham's disappearance, including a timeline, the one with a few hours unaccounted for.
The recorded interview commenced at 2.43pm April 6th.
When asked how he came to learn Neham was missing and how he ended up at Deniliquin Police Station, Jack said,
What happened was, yesterday I believe it was, Neham's brother, he rang up my friend Garth in regards to Neham being missing and I just heard a little rumour like he's sort of, you know, like, how could you put it, he's very upset and I don't blame him you know like I'd be pretty stressed
too if my sister was missing and and he's rang Garth yesterday and sort of said what happened
and Garth told him I dropped her in Tumut and I don't know he sort of suggested that we were
semi-responsible or something so I thought I'd call him and you know tell him exactly what happened
so you know he'd know so he passed the phone number on to the detective, I'd say,
and it's pretty sort of concerning, you know,
that somebody would think, you know,
that it had anything to do with either of us.
When asked about his connection to Garth,
Jack explained that he met Garth fruit-picking years earlier
in the country New South Wales town of Orange,
the same town where Jack's warrants were
issued after he was charged with assault there and then failed to attend court.
Jack said he didn't really like Garth when they first met, but their friendship had strengthened
in more recent times when they connected through mutual friends. That's how they had come to be
travelling together for the 2002 fruit-picking season.
Niamh, how do you know her?
We met her on the Friday after we got to Batlow's,
just like a conversation at the end of the night, you know,
and that was it.
Probably wouldn't have seen her until, I'd say,
it would have been maybe Tuesday the 26th of March
or Wednesday the 27th at the hotel, Batlow Hotel.
She told me she, like, got kicked out of the caravan park.
She actually wanted to leave Batlow on Wednesday or something like that.
Right.
I don't know.
What went wrong?
Her tickets just didn't come through or she didn't have money or something?
She was intending to travel somewhere.
To see her sister, yeah, in Sydney.
She was going to live with her sister in Sydney. She was intending to travel from that area,
Batlow, to Sydney. How? Via a bus, I think, to Cootamundra because that's where the train arrives.
What seems ominous is that during his interview, Jack referred to Niamh in the past tense a number of times.
She wanted to work in a production film. She knew a lot about some pretty good movies, you know,
old actors and all that sort of thing. I enjoyed her company all the time. She was a nice person.
Jack goes on to describe how he, Niamh and Garth arrived in Gingellic.
They had liked the vibe of the place and decided to camp the night.
But because of their last minute decision, they needed to drive back to Batlow to get their camping gear.
Neem collected her tent, backpack and all of her gear from the Ardrossan Orchard where she was staying.
Garth grabbed his swag from the Batlow Caravan Park
where he and Jack were still staying. Jack planned to sleep in the hearse.
They returned to Gingellic, then went to the pub.
Jack was asked about March 30th, Easter Saturday, the day Neam was last seen.
When did you leave Gingellic?
After ten-ish.
In the morning?
Yeah, yeah.
Who did you leave with?
Niamh.
Right.
So where were you going with Niamh?
Taking her back.
To where?
To Batlow.
It is interesting that Jack says he was taking Niamh back to Batlow before correcting himself in the very next question.
You did that? Took her to Batlow?
No, no, I dropped her in Tumut.
Jack said Niamh had discussed hitchhiking with him.
The night before, she had some dramas trying to get money out
and I offered her like 20 bucks just to get through and shit
and she refused it basically
and sort of suggested that she might try and cash her ticket in she was going to try and hitch to
Kootamundra to save money so she could get that back I said oh you know like you go well on the
weekend hitching there's heaps of cars and you should be right and everything and if she wasn't
to get a lift then she'd still have that ticket she had.
And she was pretty keen, really keen to go up to Armidale.
When did Miss May discuss with you her thoughts about cashing in a ticket?
When she found out she was broke, she wanted to try and get to Cootamundra
so she could get refunded for the bus money,
because there was a bus from Batlow to Cootamundra, I think, the country link.
Where did you drop Miss May off at?
On the road from Tumut to Gundagai.
The road from Tumut to Gundagai is Gokap Road.
Yes, did you have to go through Batlow to the point where you dropped her off?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, there was no other way around, I don't think.
So why didn't you drop her off at Batlow?
Well, she didn't want to. She'd had enough of it. So when
did she decide not to stop at Batlow?
Probably on Saturday, I guess, or maybe Friday. She made her mind up, but
she was having a pretty good time Friday, so, you know, like...
How did you know to take her past Batlow and to the point where you
dropped her off at?
Because I'd already been to Tumut a few days before and... Yes, but I'm not asking you how did you know how to get there.
I'm asking you how did you know that she wanted to get to the point where you dropped her off.
When did she tell you that?
Whilst we were driving.
Jack said he dropped Niamh off a couple of kilometres out of town.
I see.
How far from Tumut was the point where you dropped Miss May off at?
A click and a half, two maybe.
This would have put them right at the roadworks.
But in his interview, Jack never mentioned seeing any roadworks.
What time of day did you drop her off?
One, two in the afternoon. I didn't get back to
Gingellic till a little bit after four or something like that. So it would have had to
been two o'clock, 1.30 ish. That's the only way I can sort of estimate it because the only watch
I've got timepiece is in my phone and there's no mobile reception, so... She was heading towards where, did you say?
Gundagai.
Gundagai.
How far from where you dropped her off is Gundagai?
Jeez, 50-odd kilometres, I reckon, something like that.
It's not very far at all.
Jack's story changed here.
He was now saying Niamh was headed to Gundagai, not Kutamundra. Why didn't you take her to Gundagai? Because I had to, I'd already gone out of my way enough. It's something we are
left to wonder about. If Jack was worried about mileage and had already gone out of his way enough,
why didn't he just drop Niamh in Batlow? So how far did you travel from Gingellic to Tumut?
How far is that?
It'd be 80-odd to Batlow.
Jack is correct.
Google Maps confirms that the trip is 79.8 kilometres
from Gingellic to Batlow
and Tumut is 33.3 kilometres further on.
And another, I don't know, how many to Tumut?
40-odd? All right, so about
120 all up? 120, 130, something like that. So another 50k was just a bit excessive? Yeah, well
it put me out, you know. I'm not overly rich and that and I had to actually pick Garth's passport
up because he didn't like, we'd already made the decision to stay there at Gengelic,
and he's left his passport in the tent at Batlow,
and he wanted me to pick it up because he didn't think it'd be safe there, you know?
Like, it was bad enough leaving it there one day, let alone another,
and it'd be 140 bucks to replace it.
Despite the urgency about Garth's passport,
Jack did not pick it up, because he did not
stop in Batlow.
So once you've dropped her off Miss May, what have you done?
I pretty much drove straight back to Gingellic and completely forgot all the other stuff
because I'd just been having conversations with my girlfriend like,
Yes, alright, so you dropped her off?
Yeah.
You've turned back? Yeah.
Did you travel straight back to Gingellic?
Yeah, pretty much.
Pretty much, yes?
Yeah, I didn't even refuel or anything.
What happened when you got to Gingellic?
Oh, the guys were there, beers and whatnot,
and we just sort of, like, had a few more beers and got on it,
and the barmaid, she's asked me like, you know,
if I'm going to keep serving you, you've got to tell me your name
and I told her and I think the reason why is she wanted a friend of hers
to introduce a friend of hers to me and that lady's name was Jesus Simone.
That's it.
I went home with Simone that night.
Did you talk to anyone about Miss May when you returned to Gingellic on that afternoon?
Yeah, yeah.
Who did you talk to?
Garth. Garth said, you know, like, oh yeah, you know, did you leave her in Batlow?
And I said, no, I took her up to Tumut. She wanted to hitch out.
I see.
The next line of questioning and Jack's answers are also interesting.
He denies a sexual interest in Nahum.
What was the nature of your relationship with Miss May?
Completely friendly.
She, I don't know, like I said before,
I enjoyed having a conversation more with her
than what I did with some of these other people.
Was your relationship with Miss May sexual?
No, God no.
So you never had sex with Ms May?
No, no.
Not at all?
Nope.
Did you want to have sex with Ms May?
No, she's too young.
We will be back after a short break.
Get ready for Las Vegas-style action at Ben MGM,
the king of online casinos. Enjoy casino games at your fingertips with the same Vegas-drift excitement break. Whether he had a sexual interest or not is one thing,
but he certainly made a sexualized comment about Niamh,
one for which another friend had to step in.
This is what Niamh's friend Jess said earlier in the series.
All I know is that I remember Joel once saying that he was at the pub with Niamh
and one of those guys from the Blackhurst, you know, saying to him,
yeah, making a sexual remark about Niam me and Joel getting really upset and saying,
why the hell are you saying that? Like, that's my friend, fuck off.
And here is another witness, Carly. The same Carly you heard about earlier in the series,
who, along with her friend Laura, were picking up Jack and Garth's pay that they had left behind
at the Vanzella's Orchard. There is no official statement from Carly, however, a police officer did speak to her over the phone
and typed up the following summary of their conversation.
Carly stated she briefly met and knew Jack prior to Easter 2002,
stated that a day or so before Jack and Garth left Batlow to travel to Gingellic,
Carly looked at Jack who was seated in his car at about 6.30am one morning.
When she looked at him, Jack mouthed the word fuck and looked angrily at Carly.
When Carly questioned Garth as to why Jack would do that, he replied,
Carly stated that Garth gave a few indications to her that Jack was interested in Neom May.
Unfortunately, this was yet another piece of information that Garth didn't share with the police.
When Garth was interviewed at Deniliquin Station later that same day, this is what he said.
What was Jack's reaction to Niamh when they first met?
Just friends, yeah.
Did he show any interest in her?
Nah, not really. Friendship interest.
Friendship?
Not like in a sexual way or anything.
Didn't show any sexual interest at all?
No.
Did he show any sexual interest towards any person whilst in the Batlow area?
No.
And in his interview, Jack denied any knowledge of what happened to Niamh.
What happened to Miss May?
I've no idea. That's
why I'm here, to help. Have you harmed Miss May in any way? No, I haven't. I wouldn't. You can
ask anyone that knows me. I don't, I'm not into any form of violence or retaliation or weird shit.
I'm just a fucking straight person, eh? What do you mean by weird shit? Well, whatever. Mistreat women, you know.
At the end of the interview, Jack was informed that his hearse would be seized for forensic examination.
Is that going to take long? Because...
I'm not sure how long it will take. I'm not sure. It'll probably be a day or so.
It's my house.
Yes, I understand that. But you understand understand that's what we're going to do.
We're going to take your car.
Fair enough.
He is also informed that police will be taking a DNA sample from him.
He doesn't object.
Jack is then held at Deniliquin Police Station overnight
on the outstanding warrants for the assaults that he committed on New Year's Eve back in 1994. Garth booked a motel room in Deniliquin to sleep the
night. The next morning, Sunday April 7th, Jack franced Deniliquin bail court. And despite the
seven-year outstanding warrant having no fixed address and his history of failing to show up for court, he is granted bail.
Jack's bail conditions required him to report to the Deniliquin Police Station between the hours of 8am and 8pm every day.
He also had to pay a $500 bail surety himself and have one acceptable person also lodge a $500 bail surety.
Jack listed his address for the purpose of bail as Room 16 at the Centerpoint Motel in Deniliquin,
but he had no intention of staying there.
The acceptable person for Jack's bail who agreed agreed to pay the surety, was Garth.
After being bailed, Jack and Garth returned to the Deniliquin Police Station to check on the status of the hearse.
They were told the hearse was going to be towed to Warbury for examination.
Garth was allowed to retrieve his Ventolin inhaler from it.
Realising it would be a few days at least until the hearse was released back to them, they were left without transport.
Jack and Garth called their friend Lena from Cobram, the woman they'd stayed with in the days
after leaving Batlow. Lena agreed to drive to Deniliquin to pick them up and take them back to Cobram. Deniliquin is just over an
hour's drive from Cobram. She must have picked them up the following day, Monday April 8th,
because Jack reported to Deniliquin Police Station at 8am to sign his bail card that morning,
as per his bail conditions. It was the first and last time he did that. Here is what Lena recalls of that car trip
with the Jack and Garth on the way to her house in Cobram. Any conversation take place on the way
back? Well, I talked with Garth later because I don't trust Jack. I talked with Garth all by
myself. Okay, but I'm talking on the way down, Lena, in the car.
Oh, in the car?
You and Garth and Jack, all in the car,
on your way down from Deniliquin back here to Cobham.
It's a pretty quiet trip, really.
Was it?
Yeah.
Did you ask why the police have got his car and this girl's gone missing?
Did you ask that question?
Well, they just told me
everything. They said that they'd confiscated everything for forensic testing and that's why
they had no shoes and jackets and whatnot. And they didn't know when the car was getting released
or whatever. The girl had gone missing, last seen the hearse. They were in Gingerlic with her and
Jack took her to Tumut to drop her off or go home or something by bus or hitchhike or something or
other. Okay. Garth told you that? Yeah. Was that in Jack's presence? Was Jack there when he said
that? Yeah, yeah. And was there much, is there any more conversation in relation to that? Nah.
Jack just looked out the window.
Garth was beside me and Jack was in the back and every now and again I'd look in the mirror
and he'd just be looking out the window, not saying anything.
Jack remained quiet when they arrived back at Lena's place at Cobram.
Okay.
Once you got back here, what happened then?
Did Jack make any comment at all?
Nah. He was very quiet. Very quiet. Didn't say, didn't let on about much at all.
So later on, I was with Garth by himself and I said, well, how long was Jack gone by himself
with her? And he said, maybe four hours. And I said, well, that's a long time, isn't it?
Because it made me wonder.
What did Garth say to that, the fact it was a long time?
Yeah, yeah, he agreed.
Garth didn't share his concerns in his police interview.
Lena, why didn't you ring the police at that point when you had suspicion?
I don't know. I didn't know what to make of it all. I really didn't. Lena could tell
that Jack was down, depressed and stressed. So she decided to pull out her oracle cards to try
and cheer him up. You gave him a deck of oracle cards or a bunch of oracle cards. Is that right?
Yeah. And he selected the card himself? They're love cards.
They're supposed to make you feel better.
And he's pulled out the only two bad cards in the deck.
Which were?
Fear and retreat.
What was his reaction to both the cards?
He looked down at the floor, didn't say a word, didn't say anything.
After the oracle cards, discussions turned to dinner. Garth, Jack Jack and Lena were in the kitchen when they decided to order pizzas
Lena and Garth walked to the lounge room to make the call to the pizza place
When you came out of the lounge room, what did you notice?
Jack gone
Yeah, and what did you make of that?
Didn't really take any notice of it at the time,
but when the pizzas came, I thought he might have gone for a walk around the orchard.
I was out the door yelling for him and he couldn't, well, he couldn't hear me.
He wasn't anywhere around. Assuming Jack had just ducked out for a quick walk,
Lena and Garth didn't give it much thought initially.
But when the pizzas arrived and after they had long gone cold and there was still no sign of Jack, they began to wonder.
Jack didn't reappear that evening.
The following day, Lena bumped into a mutual acquaintance in town called Troy.
Lena asked him if he'd seen Jack anywhere. Troy said he had just driven Jack to
Shepperton, a one hour drive south of Cobram. With the passing of time prior to her eventual
police interview, Lena couldn't recall if Troy had dropped Jack to Shepperton the night before
when he took off from her house, or that morning. When Troy dropped Jack to Shepparton,
it was right when police officially formed Strike Force Eola to investigate Neame's disappearance.
It's also the time that witness Robin contacted police with the sighting of the woman on Gokup
Road on Easter Thursday. Forensic testing had commenced on the hearse too at Albury Police Station.
Tests were conducted on its interior and exterior and on a number of items and articles of clothing
found inside. The tests found no indications of blood and no items of Neam's missing belongings.
Three rolls of film were located with the hearse. These were developed
and sent to detectives in Tumid. There were photos of Niamh on the film, sitting in the hearse and
driving the hearse. As Niamh's mum, Anne, points out, just because forensics found nothing doesn't
mean there was nothing there. And then when they got the hearse, the forensics
had gone over it. And the comment about that, just one comment, it was clean, too clean.
To Detective Steve Rose, did it look like the car had been actually detailed or just cleaned
thoroughly? Not detailed. He made a concerted effort to clean his car.
He spent most of the day cleaning his car,
including cleaning his compact disc.
So he did go through a fairly concerted effort to clean his car
and that was before it was forensically examined.
So, you know, that's another piece that sort of puts him into,
you know, the fact that he did that.
It's easy to imagine Niamh, a keen music lover,
going through Jack's CD collection
and leaving her prints over the shiny surface of the discs.
Yeah, yeah.
You can imagine if you're in a car
and the girl's sitting beside you going through your compact discs.
But as it turned out, even if we found her fingerprints in the car, yeah, that's about as bad as I've ever seen her in the car.
It's an interesting point.
It was no secret Neham had been in Jack's car.
Jack had admitted as much himself.
Why go to the effort of wiping clean his CDs? While the forensic examination was occurring and the strike force was being formed and media releases were going out,
once Jack took off from his friends without warning, he was essentially on the run.
Garth tried to contact Jack on his phone without success.
Calls went unanswered, text messages went unreturned.
Days passed with no word from Jack.
In the meantime, police had finished their forensic examination of the hearse
and had advised the Garth that the hearse had been fully processed and was now ready for collection.
But Garth couldn't collect
it. Jack had agreed to sell the hearse to Garth and money had actually changed hands between them
by now. However, no paperwork had been completed for the sale, so the hearse was still in Jack's
name. This made Jack's sudden disappearance even more concerning for Garth. Garth needed
Jack to collect the hearse, and Jack was nowhere to be found.
Garth contacted all their mutual friends to see if anyone had been in contact with him.
One of those friends was a fruit picker named Clint. Here is Garth's account of Jack's sudden disappearance
in a second police interview he participated in
a couple of months after his first.
I just sat around and pulled my hair out.
There's nothing else I could do.
But I also started to think, shit, what's going on?
Has Jack...
You know, Jack's panicked and run kind of thing
and I was on the phone to a couple of friends.
Clint was the main one. Clint, what do you reckon? You know, he's panicked and run kind of thing and I was on the phone to a couple of friends. Clint was the main one.
Clint, what do you reckon?
You know, he's fucked off and this chick's missing?
And Clint's going, don't be stupid, you know, this is Jack, you know,
he wouldn't do something like that, you know.
What are you talking about kind of thing?
It sort of settled me down a bit but, you know,
it didn't settle me down a lot.
After the conversation with Garth,
Clint made contact with the Jack's ex-girlfriend, Belinda.
It was now Thursday, April 11, four days after Jack's sudden, unexplained departure from Lena's house.
Here is Belinda.
I got the phone call from Clint saying, you have to ring Garth, he's in hysterics.
And I said to Clinton, why are you ringing?
And he said, I really don't know what
it's about, but Garth's really upset. So I rang Garth and that's when he started saying to me,
do you think he murdered her? And I said, well, I wouldn't know, to be honest with you.
He used to threaten me all the time, but I thought that was him being over-possessive and jealous.
Here is Garth's recollection of that phone call with Belinda.
Pretty much ass-s straight. I said, look, Belinda, do you think he could have had anything to do with
it? And she said, Garth, with Jack, from what I've seen in the last 12 months or something like that,
nothing would surprise me. And that didn't make me feel any better at all. And then it was like,
I was leaving messages on his phone, sort of like, what the fuck are you doing, you know?
I want to get my stuff back, it's stuck in the police station.
Like, where the hell are you and what are you doing?
Answer your fucking phone.
As it turned out, by pure coincidence,
shortly after Belinda and Garth spoke, Jack phoned Belinda.
Belinda told him that Garth was worried
and she suggested that he had better call him straight away. Jack said he would but waited until the next day, Friday April 12th, to call Garth back.
Jack was apologetic to Garth, saying he had to leave suddenly due to something that had come up.
But he told him not to worry, it had nothing to do with Niamh.
Here is Garth again.
And he said, look, I'm real sorry I fucked up.
And I'm like, well, what's going on, mate?
You know, what the fuck have you done or something?
He said something like, I know what you're thinking,
but it's something separate.
It's got nothing to do with that.
I was pretty all right by then.
I was like, what the fuck's going on?
I want to get my car.
He already knew that because that's what my text messages contained.
And he was all apologetic.
Look, I'm sorry.
I fucked up.
I freaked out.
I said, look, the car's ready to go, ready to pick up.
I just can't pick it up because it's in your name.
And he was surprised at that.
And he goes, oh, shit, I just spun out about something. And I said, look, what's going on kind of thing?
He said something like, I know what you're thinking,
it's nothing to do with that, it's something totally separate,
I can't pick up the car yet.
So he faxed a declaration to say he was releasing the car into my custody
or whatever, from wherever he was.
Jack sent the fax to Cobram Post Office for Garth to pick up.
The fax gave Garth authorisation to collect the hearse
from Deniliquin Police Station.
The fax was sent from Rundle Mall in Adelaide, which meant Jack was on the move.
His last known stop was Cobram. Adelaide is a good eight-hour drive west.
Little is known about Jack's movements during this time.
Exactly where he was, who he was with or what he was doing on the way to Adelaide and in Adelaide, no one knows.
If Jack was responsible for harming Niamh, could he have returned to the location where he left her during those missing days?
Detective Steve Rose thinks it's possible.
That's a real possibility,
and I've always believed that as being a real possible.
That was always a mystery to the investigation.
It was that day or two that he went missing from that household.
Never gave anyone a reason why he was going.
In fact, I'm not even sure if he told anyone that he was going.
I just realised that he'd gone.
So my suspicion was that he travelled back to an area and concealed evidence.
I think, you know, it's only a thought.
No proof of that.
Was there an attempt to triangulate Jack's phone to track his location?
I think we did that, but, yeah but it didn't really take us anywhere.
Especially if you're talking about an area that's got no reception.
If I remember right, there wasn't a great deal of activity on his phone.
He was one of those sort of blokes to be ringing people all the time.
Not only was he not one of those blokes to be ringing people all the time,
he also didn't answer the phone much, as Garth discovered.
But Jack did make one call during this time, one that was very much out of the blue for him.
It was during the time where no one knew where Jack was that he did something unexpected.
He phoned home. Jack had left his family home in Tasmania in his early
twenties and never looked back. He had never returned and very rarely called home.
Jack's brother Nigel had not seen Jack since he left Tasmania just after the Christmas of 1992.
Nigel had only ever had two phone calls from Jack in the ten years since. The first call
was in 1996 when Jack phoned to let Nigel know he was living in Adelaide with a girl.
The second call in April 2002 was inadvertent. Jack called his sister Melissa, and Nigel was staying with Melissa at the time, and he answered
the phone. Jack said he wanted to come home for Melissa's birthday, which was the day after his.
Jack told Nigel he was in Adelaide and in a bit of trouble, but didn't elaborate. Nigel didn't ask,
but because he had just seen a news story about the unrelated
murder of a young woman called Caroline Studdle, who, like Niamh, was on a gap year, he said
flippantly, you didn't have anything to do with throwing that girl off a bridge in Bundaberg,
did you? In trying to piece together Jack's movements during this time, we know the murder of Caroline
Studdle was on the 10th of April 2002, so we extrapolate Jack's call to his brother was either
that day or the day after. We also know that during this time that Jack was not reporting
to Deniliquin Police Station, so he was in breach of his bail conditions.
Meanwhile, back in Deniliquin, Garth took the fax from Jack to the police station on Friday April 12th and collected the hearse.
Garth dropped Jack's clothing and possessions off at a friend's house in Cobram
and sent Jack a message telling him he could collect his things from there. Garth decided he would drive to Queensland to continue with the picking season,
just as he and Jack had originally planned. The following day, Saturday April 13th,
Jack returned to Shepparton. We don't know how he made the eight hour drive from Adelaide or if he was with anyone.
In Shepparton, Jack called Belinda, who agreed to pick him up and drive him to the
friend's place in Cobram to collect his gear that Garth had dropped off there.
It had now been six days since Jack left without warning,
telling no one where he was or what he was up to.
When Belinda saw Jack on Saturday, April 13th, he had changed his appearance.
That's when he'd done his hair and I kind of got a fright also. I thought he might have
been running from something then. When you say he'd done his hair, what had he done to it?
I think he'd put bleach in it or maybe blonde, a blonde colour or something,
but it had turned like a red from his natural black.
Yeah.
He'd actually done his eyebrows too, which I laughed at.
I thought it was stupid.
Did you question him about it?
Yeah.
I said, what did you do that for?
And he's like, just something different.
And I said, yeah, all right.
Are you running from something?
Like I used to always say that to him because if he ever had a problem,
he'd always run away from it.
He could never face it basically.
He used to just run.
And he's like,
I'll deal with it another time. I used to always tell him that he was always running and he'd never get that far because he can't run away from everything all your life. So, yeah.
Have you known him to bleach his hair or colour his hair at any other time during your relationship?
Never. Never.
Jack's behaviour at this time is certainly suspicious.
Disappearing without word, jumping bail, changing his appearance.
Jack stayed with Belinda that night and then asked her to drive him to Myrtleford
to meet back up with Garth the following day, Sunday, April 14th.
Belinda agreed.
He stayed the night with me there.
There was no sexual contact at all.
He was quite standoffish still.
He was actually going through his pot that he had.
I don't know how much it was, but he was actually going through it.
He started rolling a joint, smoked it,
and then basically we fell asleep after talking for a bit about nothing really.
Yeah, I thought he was rather cold to me,
and then in the morning we got up pretty much,
jumped straight in the car and I drove him to Myrtleford.
Garth was full of questions when he met back up with the Jack in Myrtleford.
I'm like, well, what are you doing here? What the fuck's been going on? And he's just saying
pretty much, I don't know, mate. I don't know. I'm spinning out. I don't know. And I think
once again, I'm like, what's going on? This girl's missing. You're the last person to
see her. What sort of happened? And he's like, once again, you know, like, it's not about that. It's about some other
shit I've done or something like that. What did you notice about Jack that day?
He dyed his hair. He bleached his hair. It just looks stupid. He just looks like he's trying not
to look the way he looks. And I think I commented on him about that, you know? He's like, what,
this? You know, and he just laughed, I think.
You've known him for seven years.
Have you ever known him to bleach his hair before?
No, no.
No, he hasn't before, but at the time it didn't surprise me because, well, it did surprise me, yeah.
Yeah, it did surprise me, okay.
Like, I was definitely, definitely concerned that he disappeared
for one thing and left all my stuff in the car.
Yeah, I was worried.
I was worried.
And you were beginning to bring Neem's disappearance into the picture as well yeah yeah by this time i was definitely
thinking that half me was thinking this is not sienna right the other half was thinking you know
don't be stupid you know i guess i was suspicious but at the time i really didn't want to believe
didn't want to think that you know i didn't i didn't i had this thing in my head but you know
at the same time i was kind of thinking no don't think like that he's supposed that, you know. I didn't. I didn't. I had this thing in my head, but, you know, at the same time,
I was kind of thinking, no, don't think like that.
He's supposed to be, you know, he's supposed to be your friend.
You know what I mean?
Nahum's family later became aware about Jack's sudden change of appearance.
And we do know that at one stage into the investigation,
he had turned up back south of the Victorian border
where some of them were camped and, I think, picking vegetables.
And he had changed his hair, he'd changed his clothes,
and he looked as if he was disguising himself.
Nothing illegal about that, but they were just a bit suspicious.
Jack and Garth headed to Gander in Queensland.
A 16-hour drive meant a lot of time alone in the car together.
Garth was asked if there was any conversation about Niamh during their trip.
There would have been, but see, the reason, like, there was all this stuff, like, Jack had dyed his hair
and he'd gone missing and everything.
But at the start, like, all the way through,
he was just so natural, you know, about talking to the police.
He was like, fuck, we'd better go talk to the police now.
And I'm like, shit, let's just do it in Queensland, mate.
Holy fuck.
But he said, we haven't got anything to hide.
Let's go tell them what we know.
I want to help out, kind of thing.
And he was just perfectly natural to me about it.
And, you know, when we were talking to the police about it, he seemed eager to help me out.
So I've taken his story like, shit, Jack's done something not too bloody good. And I
thought it was something other than him, you know? And he was sort of spinning out about
that. You know, forensics had gone over the car, they'd cleared it, they'd given it back.
So I was, I pretty much thought I was riding up in the car with Jack. Jack's gone and done something bad. I don't know what it is. I don't fucking want to
know what it is. He can pay for half the petrol, go up to Gander. In Gander, they stayed the night
in the caravan park. The next day, after Garth had dropped Jack off at Mundabra caravan park,
about 30 minutes drive from Gander, they went their separate ways.
At the Mundabra Caravan Park, Jack ran into a familiar face from the Batlow Caravan Park.
The fruit-picking community, although transient, is also just that, a community. And in Mandabra, almost 1400 kilometres
north of Batlow, Jack ran into fruit picker Johnny Major, the man whose caravan Nahum, Brodie and
Jess stayed in, and the man who helped Kieran when he arrived in Batlow to search for his sister.
John was blunt when they spoke. quite cagey and then he saw me so I approached him and said oh you're the last person to see me and
because from what I could gather he did talk to the police and that about it and um he just he
just caged up quite badly and swore black and blue you know that he had dropped her in Tumor. I hadn't seen or heard from her since then,
but he just got really cagey when I brought the subject up.
It is worth noting here that in the short conversation
there was no regret or, gee, what a tragedy for Niamh,
just denials.
Well, he just sort of planned up for Nahum, just the Niles. And then I think he might have walked off. It wasn't a very pleasant chat, it wasn't a long chat.
He just kind of swore black and blue that he didn't have anything to do with it
and then ended the conversation.
And then I think he left town not long after that.
Not surprisingly, Jack didn't stay in Mundabra for very long before heading further north to another small Queensland town.
He got a lift to this new town with his friend Troy, the same friend who had driven him from Cobram to Shepparton after he took off from Lena's house unexpectedly.
By this time, Garth was making arrangements to travel overseas to Indonesia, a trip he had planned before Niamh went missing
Jack got back to work fruit picking and hung out with old friends and acquaintances in the fruit picking scene
But those who knew Jack noticed a change
One friend who had known Jack for over five years said,
He didn't appear as lively as he usually was and actually seemed a bit depressed and withdrawn.
Jack never seemed to pick up and remained quieter and depressed.
Another who had known Jack for the best part of a decade, said, I noticed a drastic change in Jack's demeanour and appearance.
Jack was moody and his physical appearance changed with his drug abuse.
Jack told me that he would use anything he could get his hands on,
heroin, speed, cocaine, ecstasy, anything.
He was thin and his face was gaunt.
He was shabbily dressed, lazy, and was drinking more
than he normally would. This was in contrast to the Jack that I knew, who was always dressed well,
loved working, and having money. Jack spent some time in the local caravan park in his new town,
and then, after a few weeks, he was invited to move into a house with a woman and her partner.
Jack had met the couple years earlier through the fruit-picking scene, and they had lived together briefly in previous years in another state.
They took pity on him when they saw the rough conditions of the campsite where Jack had been staying and decided to invite him into their home.
They considered Jack a straight up and genuine sort of person.
The couple, Michael and Michaela, struck an agreement with Jack.
The deal was Jack would mow the lawns, do some gardening and look after the house while Michael was away,
as he often was with his work. Jack kept up his end of the deal, he kept the yard neat and tidy,
never brought anyone home to the house, didn't cause any trouble at all.
But as time went on, things changed. It was early to mid-October 2002 at this point,
around six months after Niamh's disappearance.
Michaela noticed some strange behaviour.
Jack started doing strange things.
Like, I would sleep on a futon in the lounge room.
Jack would sit next to me and the next thing,
he would put his hand up the doona and touch my legs.
He would say he was sorry and wouldn't do it again.
Jack's behaviour grew worse.
When Michael was away for work,
Jack walked into Michaela's bedroom and propositioned her for sex.
I'd gone to bed.
Jack was still living with us and at some stage
during the night, Jack came into our bedroom. He must have been there for a little while
and I felt a hand touch me. I jumped up and screamed. I screamed and told him to get out.
Jack told Michaela he wanted her and didn't care
if Michael found out. Michaela screamed at him to pack his bags and get out of the house.
Jack walked out the front of the house and started crying.
He apologised, saying he didn't know what was going on in his head.
Jack did pack his bags and went back to the caravan park in town.
When Michael found out what happened,
he immediately drove to the caravan park and confronted Jack.
I took him on over what happened
and called him a cunt and a lot of other things.
I said, you're a prick, you come into my house and get looked after
and then you pull this shit.
He just sat there with his head bagged and wouldn't get up.
I gave him a couple of light hits with my fist about the face, probably under the eyes.
I verbally abused him for a while and then left.
But that wasn't the last of it.
When Michael woke up early the next morning for work, October 17th 2002,
he discovered nearly $2,000 cash missing
from around his house. From his wallet, Michaela's bag, and from the wallet of another person staying
with them. Michael immediately suspected Jack as the thief. The only question was, did he take the
money before he left for the caravan park, or did he return in the middle of the night, perhaps as revenge for Michael punching him?
Either way, Michael headed straight for the caravan park.
But Jack had gone.
He had packed up his campsite and was on the move.
According to the other campers, Jack was on his way to Airlie Beach.
Again, Jack had got a lift from his friend Troy. The two headed towards Airlie Beach,
a coastal town in Queensland. Jack wanted to make a stop along the way. He asked Troy to stop at a
cemetery. Jack explained he wanted to have a smoke, but before long he took a walk by himself.
Without saying a word to Troy, Jack started walking through the cemetery, staring at the headstones.
Troy assumed Jack was just having a look around, but what he didn't realise was that Jack was taking pictures of the headstones.
The photos Jack took were a photo of tombstones with the Troy's car in the background,
a photo of the graveyard showing palm trees, a photo of the top of a headstone which was a
statue of an angel standing upright with wings out the back, A photo of a gravestone with a statue of an angel above
and a photo of a young girl. And then a second photo of the same grave that shows the name of
the young girl. Janice. A name that would reverberate in the days to come.
Jack didn't make any comment to Troy when he returned to the car.
Before long, they were back on the road, headed for Airlie Beach.
Troy was later interviewed about this and said he thought Jack's behaviour was, quote,
definitely different.
Jack and Troy arrived in Airlie Beach later that day.
It was the 17th of October and before long, local police responded to an altercation that was taking place in a parking area on the Esplanade.
The altercation involved Jack.
Michael had managed to track Jack down in Airlie Beach and confronted him about the stolen money. So he began to chase him down.
I actually caught up with him at Airlie, Airlie Beach.
I can't remember the exact circumstances,
but he must have known what Jack was up to
and where he was going.
So caught up with him at Airlie Beach,
punched him in there a few times,
got some of the money back, but not all of it, and went back to his place and Jack continued his
travels. Jack was sitting in a car when Michael approached and demanded his money back. He
punched him through the open window before Jack threw some money back at him. Jack apologised. Michael might have thrown more punches if he'd
known Jack had also stolen a pair of underwear and two tops belonging to Michaela, but that would
come out later. When police from Airlie Beach arrived after the event, Jack refused to identify
Michael or make a complaint.
Police were suspicious about the whole incident and searched Troy's car,
but Jack was then free to go.
Later that day, Jack walked into an Airlie Beach travel agency and booked himself a one-way plane ticket from Brisbane to Darwin
that would leave the following night at 8.50pm. This meant he had
just over 24 hours to travel nearly 1100 kilometres down to Brisbane to catch his flight.
We don't know how he got to Brisbane. Jack would later say that he travelled by bus,
but there was no record of his name on any bus services. He may have used an alias or hitchhiked.
Nevertheless, Jack arrived in Brisbane the next morning at 6am on the 18th of October 2002,
six months after Neham was last seen. But Jack would never make his flight.
Within just a few hours, he would be back in police custody.
On the next episode of Missing Name...
He did follow her and she lived in a block of units.
It was a very violent assault.
You then get the two detectives over to interview him
and the smartest guy in the room was Jack.