Mentally ill man found not guilty of murder and torture charges” The Sydney Morning Herald 5 November 1996 A man charged with killing a woman during a dispute outside a Sydney nightclub was cleared of killing the woman with a knife

Mentally ill man found not guilty of murder and torture charges” The Sydney Morning Herald 5 November 1996 A man charged with killing a woman during a dispute outside a Sydney nightclub was cleared of killing the woman with a knife. The Melbourne Age 6 November 1996 A murder conviction has been overturned in an aggravated murder trial, with a magistrate dismissing the case against Daniel O’Brien. The woman’s body has yet to be identified. The ABC News 7 November 1996 The man who confessed to murdering a 17-year-old has been found not guilty of her murder. Daniel O’Brien, 25, was found not guilty of first-degree murder afte우리카지노r jurors convicted him of the murder of 17-year-old Katerina “Lina” Naim in May 1997 at a Sydney nightclub called the White Lion. Mr Justice Denniss wrote that a post-mortem examination showed there were no marks on the victim’s body which suggested sexual assault. He said Mr O’Brien killed the teen outside the White Lion, an intimate venue about 12 km from her home on the western outskirts of Sydney.

After the man was convicted of murdering Ms Naim and her friend Jennifer D’Arcy, a 24-year-old married school teacher who disappeared in March 2003 after an argument outside a club on Darlinghurst Road, he was sentenced to 22 years in prison. “There is a fair balance,” Justice Denniss said.

“I do not think that the evidence that Mr O’Brien gave at the trial on February 26 was sufficient to sustain an inference that he was guilty of first-degree murder… However, the evidence we have at that time does tend to suggest Mr O’Brien is at fault, particularly in light of the manner in which he engaged in the killing.” Although the murder conviction has now been overturned, the man could still be tried again as a young offender for sexual assault. Justice Denniss also referred to the case of an 18-year-old girl killed by an elderly man in the suburb of Lidcombe who was found guilty of murder in February 1997 at an early stage of the trial. Justice Denniss said she had not been proved to be guilty on any point in the sexual assault case before the sexual assault conviction on September 8, 1997, but “given the similarities in event더킹카지노s between the two events, a바카라사이트 finding of criminal responsibility, the potential for recrimination and the impact of such a finding on that young woman, and her family, I think it would be inappropriate to reopen those proceedings”.

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