Reviews

The Killing of Caroline Byrne: A Journey to Justice by Robert Wainwright

kcfromaustcrime's review

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3.0

Reading THE KILLING OF CAROLINE BYRNE you can't help but teeter between relief that the justice system may sometimes grind slowly to a just conclusion, but it does at least get there; and a strong feeling of dismay that a killer got so close to getting away with murder, maybe because of who he knew, perhaps more chillingly, because of lack of resources.

Either way this is a very interesting book about a very sad case. It took many many years for justice to be done for Caroline Byrne and her family. From the discovery of her body it seemed that there was something very wrong with the obvious conclusion of suicide. Just because her body was found at The Gap, a common location for suicides, her body was embedded head-first in a crevice, an inexplicably long way out from where you would think somebody could have jumped.

The book looks compassionately but truthfully at Caroline's family background, her mother's suicide and her father's quiet desperation for understanding of what happened to his beautiful daughter. It looks a Caroline's own life, her work and her relationship with Gordon Brown. It also looks at Gordon's own background, and his relationship with notorious Sydney identity Rene Rivkin. It follows the long, drawn out police investigation into the circumstances surrounding Caroline's death, and ultimately to the conviction of Gordon Brown for her murder.

Well written, this book avoids sensationalism and simply prevents the facts. There is an undoubted level of sympathy for Caroline's father, in particular, but it's careful, almost cautious and extremely respectful of a family, and a father, who has endured a lot.

tasmanian_bibliophile's review

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3.0

On the night of 7 June 1995, Sydney model Caroline Byrne died. Her body was found, embedded head-first into a crevice at the bottom of The Gap at the entrance to Sydney Harbour. Was her death suicide, or murder?

In this book, Mr Wainwright writes of how Tony Bryne, Caroline’s father, sought justice. He never believed that Caroline would have taken her own life.

In 2009, when this book was published, Gordon Wood had been found guilty of the murder of Caroline Byrne. In 2012, he was acquitted, serving just three years of a minimum 13-year sentence.

I read this book knowing that Gordon Wood had been acquitted. Three judges, in the Criminal Court of Appeal unanimously found that there was insufficient evidence to prove beyond reasonable doubt that Mr Wood killed Ms Byrne. Mr Wood then sued the state of New South Wales for millions of dollars claiming malicious prosecution and wrongful imprisonment. In 2018, a judge ruled that the prosecution was not malicious, and no compensation was payable.

Justice?

Jennifer Cameron-Smith
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