Unseen - The Family Court Murders: The Terrifying Case of Andrea Blanchard & Trudi | UNSEEN
Episode Date: October 20, 2023“We were next on his hit list” -- On July 21st 1985 , single mom Andrea Blanchard lives in fear, hiding with her daughter Trudi. Whenever the phone rings, she knows bad news will follow: another... bomb exploded, and this time, hundreds of people are severely injured. For years, cops are afraid of him and can’t stop him, but Andrea knows she’s the only one who can put an end to all the killings, because she knows what the Family Court Bomber wants: 7 year old Trudi. External footage from: "The Family Court Murders" TV Series (ABC TV Australia), "Leonard Warwick's Timeline of Crimes" (ABC TV Australia), "Catching a Mad Man: Tracking Down Sydney's Family Court Bomber" (7 News), "Family Court Bomber Leonard Warwick Sentenced to Life in Prison" (ABC News Australia), "Ex-wife Leaves Sydney Court After Testifying at Bombings Trial" (The Courier Mail). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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Look at the girl in the right in this picture.
Her name is Trudy Warwick.
She looks happy and safe in her mother's arms.
But this picture hides a disturbing secret.
Wherever Trudy and her mom go, violent bombings follow,
and the truth behind the attacks will uncover one of Australia's most notorious serial killers.
Justice Opess was shot in front of his Wilhara home.
For a bomb blast which ripped through a crowded Jehovah's Witness Church Hall in...
Shards of glass impacted into the body of a 12-year-old girl.
Sydney's 10,000 witnesses must be wondering what they've done to draw such violence upon them.
The attacker known as the family court bomber terrorizes Sydney for years,
and the entire community lives in fear, not knowing when or where they will strike next.
Even the police can't keep Little Trudy safe, because one man is willing to burn down Australia to get to her.
He stopped at nothing in his quest to keep custody of his daughter.
He took it personally, because everybody that stood in his way,
He went after all of them.
Everyone was scared of him.
Everyone who confronted him, their lives were in danger.
The police told me your next one is hit list.
I had to do something to stop all those killings.
What choice did I have?
It's June 1978.
Andrea Warwick and her husband Leonard have just welcomed their first child, Trudy.
They live in Kasula, a suburb of Sydney, Australia.
Leonard is a firefighter.
While he spends his time at work rescuing people, at home,
He's controlling and violent to his wife.
He quickly becomes possessive of their newborn daughter.
He doesn't let anyone enter the house or see her, even Andrea's friends and family.
On Andrea's birthday, her sisters and their children try to visit, enraging Leonard.
And they knocked on the door and he wasn't going to allow them to come in.
So I just pushed past him and I said they're coming in.
After they left, he got a violet and he had his fireman boots on and he stood on my leg and just thrashed into my head.
my arm ran in to try and pick up Trudia.
I couldn't pick her up.
My arm was bunged.
Couldn't move it.
I thought, this is it.
She's going to kill me.
After years of enduring an abusive relationship,
Andrea finds a strength to get out and tell her family.
She runs to safety at her sister Judy's house, pleading for help.
Judy is shocked to hear about Leonard's violence.
That was the first I knew.
And I said to Andrea, why didn't you tell me?
She said I was too ashamed and, you know, I had no idea.
Because of how badly Leonard hurt her, Andrea couldn't get Trudy out of the house,
but she won't give up her fight to get her back.
She turns to the family law court to start the divorce process,
hoping they can help keep her daughter safe.
She gets full custody of Trudy, and they move in with Andrea's dad, Leslie, and her brother, Stephen.
Leonard gets visiting rights, but it's not enough for him.
He keeps their daughter longer than he's supposed to, completely ignoring the visitation schedule.
Leonard doesn't care about the court's orders,
and Andrea decides to confront him to get Trudy back.
Worried that Leonard might hurt her again,
Andrea asks her brother Stephen to go with her
and they approach Leonard together.
Stephen took Andrea up,
knocked on the door and said,
Len, look, we don't want any trouble.
Because Stephen was very softly spoken.
I don't think I ever heard him raise his voice.
Stephen calmly asks Leonard for Trudy,
but Leonard slams the door closed,
refusing to give her up.
Andrea has to go back to court
for help getting Trudy back,
but they have no idea how far her father will go to keep her.
It's February 22nd, 1980.
Andrea wakes up, expecting to say good morning to Stephen,
but he's not in his room.
At first, she doesn't think much of it,
figuring he must be visiting his girlfriend
or out surfing with his friends,
but as hours pass without hearing from him,
she starts to panic.
The Thursday night was the last time I saw Stephen.
He was on the phone talking to mum.
The following morning, and I noticed his bedding was gone,
and his pillow was gone.
Andrea makes phone calls, but no one has seen Stephen since the night of February 21st.
Something is horribly wrong.
Police come to investigate the house, and they find specks of blood in his bedroom.
Six days later, a group of friends are outboating at Cowan Creek
and the Cooring Guide Chase National Park in northern Sydney.
Suddenly, they see something floating in the water.
They call the police who take over and start their investigation.
Andrea says, we found Stephen.
and I just automatically said, oh, is he all right?
He says, we've got some bad news.
It's when they told me.
Police find that Stephen Blanchard was shot and killed at home in the middle of the night.
The attacker likely used a silencer to avoid waking up the rest of the family.
Then they drove to Cowan Creek and used a boat so they could drop his body in the middle of the water.
His body was weighed down with bricks,
and investigators find they were tied with the fireman's pocket line.
but they don't discover any other evidence to help them catch the killer.
The Blanchard family now has to face life without Stephen.
I was expecting to walk home.
I didn't expect that.
He had his whole life.
He was 25 years old.
He never heard anyone.
While grieving the loss of her brother, Andrea also has to continue her custody battle.
Leonard keeps ignoring the court's orders, repeatedly keeping Trudy longer than he's supposed to.
April, 1980.
Because of Leonard's constant disrespect of the family court,
Justice David Obis says he can't see his daughter for a month.
Leonard is furious.
When he sees Andrea at the court building,
he gives her an ominous message.
He said to me, he says, oh, you don't have to worry about Judge Obis at all.
Is he going away on holidays?
And he said, oh, no, you just don't have to worry about him.
June 23, 1980, 7.10 p.m.
Four months after Stephen Blanchard's murder, Justice David Opus is having dinner with his wife, Kristen, and his kids, Josh and Persia, when the doorbell rings, his son Josh tells him to stay at the table and not answer it.
But he does, and when he goes to greet the person at the door, he is shot with a 22-caliber rifle.
A man runs away from the scene, and Justice Opus's family rushes to his side, but it's too late.
After the phone call from the police and told me that Judge Apis was murdered, when I put the research,
see her down, I thought something's going on here. There's got to be as a connection.
Andrea is already suspicious because Leonard was angry at Justice Opus for restricting his access
to Trudy. Andrea tells police she thinks Leonard is involved. Investigators search his locker
at the fire station where he works. They find newspapers with headlines about the murder,
but no physical evidence that can link him to the scene. Leonard also refuses to answer any questions
from the police. As a family court justice, David Opus dealt with many people who could want revenge
for his orders. 30 detectives work on the case. They interview over 500 people who appeared
in front of Justice Opus in court, along with 2,500 people who bought rifles in the last six
months. They can't find any clues or get closer to an arrest, and a killer is on the loose.
The people of Sydney worried that the whole family court system is the target. Another family
court justice, Richard G, takes over Justice Opus'
his cases after his murder, and his family fears they could be next.
Well, I knew that Justice Opess had been shot dead, and then Dad said they've offered me
the job to replace him, and I just had this, well, I don't know, call it six cents, that
something was going to happen to us.
But years pass without any other attacks, and the paranoia begins to fade.
Andrea tries to give Trudy a happy childhood, but the nightmare is far from over.
March 6, 1984.
Almost four years after Justice Opus' murder,
Justice Richard G. is at home with his children, Allison and Stephen.
It's around 1.45 a.m., and they're all asleep.
Suddenly, a bomb goes off, destroying most of the home.
I just had a really loud clap of thunder, the hardest I'd ever heard.
I just saw debris all in my room, and it was just like I'd broken up in a movie or a nightmare.
Allison finds her brother
and they frantically tried to get out of the house
desperately hoping their dad
also made it out. They make it out safely
through a window. They find their dad
around the back of the house, injured
but alive. He was covered
in debris dust
over his whole body looked like a ghost
except that he had blood pouring
down his legs from his thighs.
I just cried
and just felt really sad.
It just looks like a war zone.
Miraculously,
The whole family survives, but it's clear someone is still out for revenge.
Right away, police warn other judges to check their homes and cars,
and they search family courts across Australia.
Investigators also look into all the cases that Justice Richard G. oversaw.
Andrea again tells them that Leonard is the culprit.
Justice G had further restricted Leonard's access to Trudy,
and he even issued an arrest warrant when he failed to return her.
This was an attack on the administration of justice in Australia.
Judges would make a ruling against him, and he responded with lethal force.
We wanted justice served.
It's Leonard John Warwick.
I said, he is the only person.
Every time I spoke to him, it's him.
Andrea knows that her ex's violence is getting closer and closer to her,
and she has to continuously face the man hunting her in court.
Their next court appearance was scheduled for April 16, 1984, just over a month after
the bomb at Justice G's house. But in the middle of the night before Leonard was supposed to appear,
the family law court building itself is largely destroyed as another bomb detonates. Fear and panic
is spreading throughout Sydney. Again, Andrea alerts investigators about Leonard's connection
to the attacks, but still, he continues to walk free. It becomes clear to Andrea that no one can
keep her and Trudy safe from him, not even the police. He doesn't leave evidence behind,
and unless someone can get him to stop,
anyone with connections to the family court is in danger.
We did know that the offender was Warwick.
Everything was done that could be done at the time.
We couldn't gather enough evidence to charge him then.
As Justice Richard G. recovers from his injuries after the bombing at his house,
Ray Watson takes over his cases, including Leonard and Andreas,
even with fear and suspicion growing.
Andrea still respects the visitation rights set by the court.
Trudy loves her father and is happy to see him, but Andrea has to keep returning to court because Leonard still ignores the court's orders.
One time I didn't see Trudy for six weeks. Didn't even know where she was.
Like the other judges, Justice Watson punishes Leonard by restricting his access to Trudy even more.
It's July 4, 1984, 8.10 a.m. almost three months after the family court bombing, Justice Watson gets ready to leave for work.
His wife Pearl opens the door of their house,
unknowingly triggering a bomb that was fixed to their front door.
Ray Watson survives, but Pearl is killed instantly.
The people of Sydney, stunned and heartbroken, demand answers.
After Pearl Watson's murder, investigators ramp up their efforts.
A joint federal state police task force is established,
and a half a million dollar reward is offered.
All family court judges, their courts and their families,
who will have a 24-hour surveillance.
until this met its result.
We had federal surveillance officers and state surveillance officers.
We used up virtually every surveillance officer
in New South Wales in Australia.
Surveillance officers follow the prime suspect, Leonard Warwick,
desperate to find something they can use to catch him
and put a stop to all the attacks.
In the middle of the night, they follow him to a national park.
He kept going back to the national park
on a total of 11 occasions.
We went in with police dogs after he left,
when he was way out of the area.
It was never really ironed out as to what he was doing there.
I put it down to the fact that he was playing games
with the surveillance officers.
February 10, 1985, police tell Andrea
there was an attempt on her lawyer's life with another bomb.
Fortunately, it was found before it could detonate
and no one was hurt.
But shortly after, she gets a call from her lawyer, Gary Watts.
And he said, I would be able to act on your behalf.
And that was it.
He was scared.
He was frightened.
And I don't blame him.
I've never met a person as dangerous as what Leonard Warwick is.
He stopped at nothing in his quest to keep custody of his daughter.
He took it personally because everybody that stood in his way, he went after all of them.
Fear is spreading throughout Australia.
Anyone could be a target and no one can help Andrea.
Even police are scared about their involvement in the investigation.
One of the surveillance officers said, look, I think we've got a worry because Warwick sitting in the park watching police headquarters.
A witness that I interviewed said he was looking for my address.
The wife and the kids, I had his photo, his police photo on the fridge, that if he was ever sited in the neighbourhood, they would notify us immediately.
As Leonard intimidates the police with his own surveillance, the attacks keep getting closer to home for Andrea.
All the while, she tries to shield Trudy from the violence that haunts them, and it's taking a moment.
massive toll. Leonard already has his eyes on his next target as he makes phone calls to Andrea's
sister, Judy, threatening to kill her and her children. The police told me you're next on his hit list.
Every noise I'd wake up. We were looking over our shoulder all that time. We were going to be next.
Even though Andrea and the police believe Leonard is responsible for all the attacks, they still haven't
been able to find anything they can use to arrest him. They've tried surveillance, offering
reward money and putting numerous detectives and resources into their efforts, but nothing is working.
Andrea is terrified. Leonard stalks her, often parking in front of the house and watching her every move.
One day, he shows up at the house and yells at Andrea, demanding to see Trudy for an unscheduled visit.
When she says no, he grabs Trudy anyway and starts to run.
But Andrea chases him, refusing to let him take her away.
In response, he punches Andrea in the face, shocked.
She quickly gets Trudy and runs back inside, locking the doors behind them.
Andrea is desperate to get herself and her family away from him and his violence.
Even with the threat to her life, Andrea's sister Judy steps in.
A devout Jehovah's Witness, Judy turns to her congregation for help.
They need to escape in secret to stay safe from Leonard.
Her congregation steps up, helping them move away so they could hide.
We didn't tell anyone why we were moving.
Even the drivers of the truck didn't know where we were heading until an hour before we got to foster.
No one knew.
We sort of made it a fun game for the kids, a drill that if ever Lynn found us, we had an escape plan to get out.
Andrea does all she can to protect her daughter from Leonard and the destruction that follows them.
Leonard doesn't know where Andrea and Trudy went, but he won't give up his search.
He makes multiple phone calls to members of Judy's congregation demanding to know where they are.
There was a third call. He was very upset. He again said, you must know where she's gone.
Listen, mate, I said, we don't know where she's gone. Do not call here again.
July, 1985, five months after Andrea and Trudy made their escape, Leonard hasn't found them,
and there haven't been any more attacks. But there are two break-ins at the Jehovah's Witness Kingdom
Hall in Kasula, southwest of Sydney. During one of the break-ins, a window shatters and cuts the
intruder. They leave blood on the carpet, but with the limited capabilities of the time,
investigators can only determine that it's O-positive, and they can't use it to charge anyone.
They don't find that anything was stolen, and no one knows why the intruder broke in or what they
did. It's Sunday, July 21st, 1985. The congregation starts their service like usual. There are
over 100 members in the building, including Joy Weikes and her husband Graham.
We were holding hands and I thought, oh, his hand would be really cold.
So we had a small rug over our knee and I'd pulled it up over our hands.
And he turned to me and whispered, I love you.
And that was the last thing I remember.
My first memories was really in ICU.
I had already been into surgery.
I recall asking, where's my husband?
Where's my husband all afternoon?
A doctor came and told me, we do have bad news for you.
And I've been asking and asking, and I must have already realized that he wasn't going to be there.
A bomb was placed under the stage at the Kingdom Hall, time to go off during the service.
Graham Wykes is killed, and dozens more have life-threatening injuries, including little children.
The Blanchard family is devastated to hear the news.
I just burst out crying.
I could not speak for a long time.
They announced that the hall had been bombed.
My daughter and Natasha was standing next to me,
and she said, Mom, that was Len.
My whole body was shaking.
And I rang down the bomb squad.
They had their suspicions.
And I said, that's my congregation.
And I said, oh, that's what the connection is.
Joy Wanks had helped the Blanchards pack for their escape.
And Andrea blames herself for Graham's death
and all the injuries at the Kingdom Hall, police take a search warrant to Leonard's house,
and they find handwritten notes with phone numbers of Jehovah's Witness members.
But he refuses to answer any questions or give a blood sample.
Their attempts to catch him are still hopeless.
Everyone was scared of him.
Everyone who confronted him.
Their lives were in danger.
The attacks continue to follow Andrea everywhere she goes,
even when she escapes Leonard's stalking.
She is overwhelmed with sadness, fear,
and guilt. She knows what Leonard wants and that people throughout Australia will continue to die
unless he gets it. Andrea makes a heartbreaking choice in a desperate attempt to end his reign of terror.
She gives him full custody of their daughter Trudy.
I had to do something to stop all these killings. It was heartbreaking saying goodbye to while,
but I had to. What choice did I have?
Over the course of nearly 10 years, Andrea has suffered immensely. She was in a physically and
emotionally abusive relationship. She made the brave choice to get out, but her fight never stopped.
Her own brother was murdered, and after four bombings, three more murders, and families ripped apart
by violence and destruction, Andrea knows she is the only one who can stop the family court
bomber. Trudy also wants to live with her father, exhausted from constantly moving around,
and being in the middle of the fighting between her parents. As Andrea predicted, the attacks
come to an abrupt end, but with a huge sacrifice. Leonard Warwick is still a completely free man,
and now he has their daughter too. It had a massive impact, and she never stopped fighting for justice.
How do you live with that, your daughter?
You think a better old time?
She's gone at school. How she got along with her father?
Trudy spends her childhood living with Leonard, who many think of as the family court bomber. At first,
she likes living with her father. He even buys horse.
for them to ride together, but as she gets older, she realizes how controlling he is.
He constantly tries to keep her in the house, away from friends and family.
And when he decides to remarry and start a new family, Trudy isn't happy.
At 16 years old, she leaves to move back in with her mom.
And shockingly, Leonard doesn't stop her.
He chose the wife over his daughter.
Yes.
This is the daughter he fought so hard for.
Yes.
I don't get that.
His daughter was just a possession.
After getting everything he wanted and all the destruction and suffering he caused, Leonard lets his target Trudy go easily.
Finally, Andrea is reunited with her daughter, but they still aren't truly free of Leonard.
As Trudy grows older, she gets a better understanding of what happened when she was little.
From the beginning, Trudy's mom has repeatedly told police that Leonard Warwick is the man who terrorized Sydney for years.
Despite her efforts, he thinks he will get away with everything.
and for decades, he does until one mistake will come back to haunt him.
It becomes one of the coldest cases in Australian history.
Andrea had no one to turn to, but in 2012, investigative crime journalists Debbie Marshall
and Ross Coltart hear of the case and decide to investigate.
But everywhere they turn for information, they're warned.
The prime suspect is still free, and pursuing the story could get them killed.
Debbie Marshall even tries to interview Leonard, and he threatens her.
But the journalists worked together with Andrea Blanchard to bring attention back to the case,
all of them refusing to back down in their fight for justice.
With the help of their work and the release of Debbie Marshall's book, investigators reopened the cold case.
Kevin Woods, the former lead investigator, never forgot about the family court bomber.
He remembers the bloodstain left on the carpet before the Jehovah's Witness Kingdom Hall bombing.
When an intruder was cut with the glass from a window, they didn't know it at the time,
but the attacker broke in to plant the bomb.
Kevin Woods tells the current investigators about the blood sample,
which could be the key to exposing the person behind all the attacks.
Detectives asked Trudy if she would give a DNA sample for them to compare it with.
At first, she hesitates.
She still loves her father, and she's worried about betraying him.
She knows it could send him to jail if it's a match,
but she wants the truth for herself and for all the other victim's families.
In an interview, she says, people need answers.
closure, innocent people were killed over me. If you commit something like these crimes,
you should be held accountable for it. I don't care who you are. With advancements in DNA technology,
they are able to match the blood with Trudies, removing any doubt that Leonard Warwick is the culprit
behind all the attacks. It's July 29, 2015. Over 35 years after he began terrorizing the people
of Sydney, Leonard Warwick's past finally catches up to him. Tonight, an arrest over one of Sydney's
biggest unsolved crimes, a man in custody over the family court bombings and murders in the 1980s.
The judge-only trial lasts almost two years. Warwick pleads not guilty to over 20 charges against
him, but with the overwhelming evidence and the help of Andrea's testimony, he's convicted
and he gets three life sentences without parole. Leonard Warwick is finally behind bars,
and he will never be able to hurt anyone again. After nearly 40 years of living in fear,
Andrea can truly begin to move on with her life.
She still has a very close relationship with Judy, and Trudy, and they continue to honor
Stephen's memory today.
Andrea hopes her story will bring awareness and support to survivors of domestic violence.
She encourages others in similar situations to get out of the relationship and seek help.
You've got to think of yourself, and if there's children involved, you've got to think of
the children's lives.
It's a hard battle to get back on your feet, but there's so much of it.
help out there today. I say to any woman, you don't have to stand for that. There is no need to
stand for that violence against you. Andrea stood up for herself to escape her abuser, and with the
help of others who never gave up, she brought justice for so many families throughout Australia
who were impacted by the attacks. You can't explain the feeling. It's not a good club to be in,
but yes, we're a family. I brought Andrea and I a ring, and I say every time we get down, we look
at that ring and we say we survive.
