Jessica GAUDIE

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Image result for jessica gaudie
No body, no parole laws give hope to family of slain girl | The Courier Mail

The area where police took Derek Sam is only accessible by four-wheel-drive. Picture: Megan Slade

Age when missing:16 years
Height (cm):
Hair Colour:Red/Ginger
Eye Colour: Brown
Build:Medium
Date of Disappearance:1999
Town/City:Nambour
State:Qld
Country:Australia

Jessica Gaudie was never seen again after she left home on August 28 1999 to babysit three young children, for Derek Sam's estranged de facto, Mia Summers, who lived a short distance away in Ridgewood Street, Burnside, QLD and wanted to go to a birthday party that evening.

That night, Sam turned up at the same party and was involved in an argument with another man over Mia. He told police he went back to Mia Summers' house and picked up Jessica to ask her to go into the party and get Mia to come home.

He claimed he had dropped Jessica off at the intersection of Bonney and Elizabeth streets, Nambour. Derek Sam has been convicted of Jessica's murder however Jessica is still missing.

If you have any information please contact Crimestoppers on 1800 333 000.

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DEREK Sam sat staring at the ground, then at the ceiling before he said what three desperate families were begging not to hear.
Asked the direct question _ what had he done with the body of Jessica Gaudie _ Sam remained silent in the witness box for 30 long seconds.
It was a moment of extreme intensity. It was as if no one in the room was able to take a breath.
Finally, Sam's gaze turned to the police and the families sitting behind them in the Maroochydore court gallery.
He raised his shoulders slightly into a resigned shrug.
"What can I say?''
The words came out softly after a deep breath, dashing the hopes of three families who had come to the inquiry hoping to learn the ultimate fate of their loved ones.
"If that's how it's going to be, I'll die in jail. I cannot put my hand up for a crime I didn't commit,'' he said.
"I don't care what you people think. My kids are gone. My family's gone. I'm a puppet on a string. The day I walk out of jail I'm dead. It doesn't matter to me.''
The man who has been sentenced to life for the killing of the Nambour teenager, and tops the list of suspects for the disappearance of British backpacker Celena Bridge and Kenilworth teacher-aid Ann Glassop in 1998 and 1999, said there was nothing more he could tell.
The response followed a last bid to coax information from the convicted killer.
"I know you want to go up north. You can't get visitors now,'' Shane Panoho, the police officer assisting the coroner, said.
"I'm sure applications can be made if you help this family (the Gaudies),'' Sgt Panoho offered. "I don't mind if you consider this an inducement or not.''

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Behind one of the Coast's biggest mysteries
28.04.2007
BACKGROUNDER by Janine Hill Ballina Shire Advocate


WHEN British backpacker Celena Bridge began a hike in the Sunshine Coast hinterland on a winter's day in 1998, she walked into a mystery that would envelope two more women and intrigue Australia for the next seven years.

Ms Bridge was the first of three women to go missing on the Coast in a 16 month period. All of them are now assumed to be dead.

Each was linked in some way to a man named Derek Bellington Sam, although he has only ever been charged and convicted of one murder, that of teenager Jessica Gaudie - the last of the three to disappear.


Finding the missing women, or their bodies, has been like looking for a needle in a haystack for police - without knowing exactly where to find even the haystack.

In all three cases detectives have been frustrated tracing the women's final hours, with either no, or hazy, reported sightings to follow up to help pinpoint a location.
Extensive searches in the Kenilworth area, which involved police camping out overnight in rough terrain and climbing into ravines, failed to turn up anything.

Detective Superintendent Mike Condon, of the Brisbane Homicide Squad, said there were many deep mine shafts in the area that were too dangerous to be searched.

Ms Bridge could have met her fate up to 25 days before anyone realised something was wrong.

The 28-year-old environmental science graduate was in Australia on a backpacking trip to study ecosystems and birdlife when she disappeared.

She had stayed two nights at a "commune'' in the Sunshine Coast hinterland, the Crystal Waters permaculture village at Conondale, before she set off on July 16 to walk to the Little Yabba Creek camping ground at Kenilworth for a bird- watching meeting the following weekend.

She never arrived.

However, it was not until August 10, when she failed to meet her boyfriend, Johnathon Webb, when he flew over from England to join her that anyone realised she was missing.

Searches of the area failed to find any trace of Ms Bridge or her backpack.

Ms Bridge was seen about 3.30pm on July 16 by a resident of Booloumba Creek Road, and also that afternoon by two men who worked with Derek Sam at Piabun, a centre for troubled Aboriginal youths, on the same road.

However, unlike his boss Mark Johnson and workmates John Poole and Geoff Turner, who identified the person they saw as Ms Bridge, Sam told a 2002 coronial inquest he could not identify the person he saw as male or female, let alone as Celena Bridge.

That same inquiry also looked into the disappearances of Sabrina Ann Glassop and Jessica Gaudie. Ms Glassop was known to Sam and the two were rumoured by some to have been having an affair.

The 47-year-old teacher aid, who lived on the same road as Ms Bridge was last seen, and the same road as the Piabun centre where Derek Sam worked, disappeared on May 29, 1999.

Her car was found at the Little Yabba Creek rest area, just a few hundred metres from her home, where she is believed to have taken her poodle, Poppy, for a walk.

She had dined with her husband, Eric, the night before. He lived in the Kenilworth Forestry office and they made arrangements that he would return the next morning with newspapers and fresh bread for breakfast.

The next morning, Ms Glassop's mother, Joan Worsley, who lived with her husband in a caravan behind her daughter's house, heard her car leave about 6am or 6.30am.

Mrs Worsley became concerned when her daughter failed to return, leaving the animals unfed and the gate open. Eric was also concerned when he arrived for breakfast.

On his way back to the office, he spotted her car. He stopped and noticed it was locked and the bonnet slightly warm.

As with Ms Bridge, searches for Ann Glassop turned up nothing.

Sam's Piabun colleague, John Poole, later told an inquest that Sam had made lewd comments about Ms Glassop and boasted of doing some work at a teacher's house and having a date with one.

Mr Poole told the inquest that a few days after Ms Glassop's disappearance, Sam had acted strangely during a horse ride, taking different routes through the bush, and avoiding an area known as Spike's Hut.

Jessica Gaudie went missing almost three months to the day after Ms Glassop disappeared. However, she was almost instantly linked with Derek Sam, who was later convicted of her murder.

Jessica was never seen by her family after she left home on August 28 to babysit three young children, for Derek Sam's estranged de facto, Mia Summers, who lived a short distance away in Ridgewood Street, Burnside, and wanted to go to a birthday party that evening.

That night, Sam turned up at the same party and was involved in an argument with another man over Mia. He told police he went back to Mia Summers' house and picked up Jessica to ask her to go into the party and get Mia to come home.

He claimed he had dropped Jessica off at the intersection of Bonney and Elizabeth streets, Nambour.

 

Missing women mystery revived

DETECTIVES are preparing to put the disappearance of three women on the Sunshine Coast in the late 1990s back on the agenda.

British backpacker Celena Bridge, 28, was the first of the three to go missing in a 16-month period. Sabrina Ann Glassop, 46, was the second and Jessica Gaudie, 16, the third.

Their bodies have never been found but police have long believed all three disappeared at the hands of Kenilworth-based indigenous tracker Derek Bellington Sam, 38.

The three women were all linked in some way to Sam, who is serving jail time for the murder of Jessica.

Sunshine Coast detective Daren Edwards, a cold case specialist who became the Criminal Investigation Bureau chief earlier this year, had promised to pursue the disappearances to give the women's families answers.

But the Daniel Morcombe investigation took precedence after an arrest in August and resources were allocated to an extensive search near the Glasshouse Mountains.

This week Snr Sgt Edwards said he would pursue the investigation with renewed vigour in the new year.

"We're in the process of getting all the original files from Homicide to have a proper read," he said.

"We want to refresh our minds, do a review of everything and find out where everyone is.

"But right now we're trying to tidy up the Major Incident Room here (which has been the heart of the Morcombe investigation) to make it more user friendly. Our aim is to take a new direction on this investigation with fresh eyes."

Missing Women

Police push for coronial inquest into Coast murders

POLICE hope a new coronial inquest could help crack two of the Sunshine Coast's longest running murder mysteries - and find the body of murdered babysitter Jessica Gaudie.

Police are re-examining the disappearance of English backpacker Celena Bridge, 28, and Kenilworth teacher's aide Sabrina Ann Glassop, 46.

ABC reported on on Wednesday that two officers had been assigned to the case.

Detectives believes Derek Bellington Sam, who is serving a life sentence for murdering teenage babysitter Jessica Gaudie on the Coast in 1999 - is the only person of interest in the other two deaths.

The older women both disappeared on the Sunshine Coast around the same time as Jessica was killed.

Ms Bridge was last seen near Booloumba Creek Rd in Kenilworth on Thursday, July 16, 1998, and Ms Glassop was last seen at her home on the corner of Booloumba Creek Rd and Maleny-Kenilworth Rd on Friday, May 28, 1999.

The bodies of all three victims - including Jessica Gaudie - have never been found.

Detective Senior Sergeant Darren Edwards told the ABC  police had uncovered new leads.

"We may seek the assistance of a coroner for a possible further inquest to explore that new information," he said.

He said he hoped some witnesses may now be more willing to speak up.

"They had some fears at that time that made them hesitant to provide information. Those fears may be removed now."

Coast detectives reopened the cold case in July last year, appealing for information.

Mr Edwards said officers had been speaking to people from North Queensland, who had links to Sam.

"It is still a priority for us to get some disclosures by Sam as to the whereabouts of Gaudie's remains," Detective Senior Sergeant Edwards said at the time.

"Some people have been able to provide police with some new information, which will assist us with these inquiries."

Ms Bridge was last seen near Booloumba Creek Rd in Kenilworth on Thursday, July 16, 1998, and Ms Glassop was last seen at her home on the corner of Booloumba Creek Rd and Maleny-Kenilworth Rd on Friday, May 28, 1999.

Miss Gaudie went missing just three months later on August 28, 1999, from Burnside.

Anyone with information should phone the Sunshine Coast Criminal Investigation Branch on 5475 2444.

 

Families of Jessica Gaudie, Celena Bridge, Sabrina Glassop appeal for new focus on unsolved cases after Morcombe investigation ends

By Kristina Harazim - ABC

Updated Fri 21 Mar 2014, 9:15pm AEDT

The families of three murder victims on Queensland's Sunshine Coast hope the unsolved cases will get more focus now Daniel Morcombe's killer has been jailed.

Before the Queensland teenager's abduction and murder in 2003, two women and another teenager disappeared from the Sunshine Coast.

Brett Peter Cowan was jailed for Daniel's murder after detectives spent a decade on the investigation.

Five years before Daniel was abducted, the first of two women, Celena Bridge, and teenager Jessica Gaudie vanished without a trace.

Derek Sam is behind bars for killing 15-year-old Jessica, but her body has never been found.

If people keep saying her name then police might try harder ... it just worked for the Morcombes so I thought it might work for me.
Sister Tammy Gaudie

 

Kenilworth teacher's aide Sabrina Glassop, better known as Anne, disappeared in 1999.

Police have always suspected their bodies are in the forest around the hinterland town of Kenilworth, but searches have turned up nothing.

Sam is also a person of interest in the disappearance and suspected murders of the two women.

With the Morcombe case closed, the affected families are appealing to police to make finding their relatives a priority.

Only one family knows for sure their loved one was murdered, but they are still waiting for closure.

7.30 Queensland has spoken exclusively with two of the families who are desperate for police to shine a light on their cases.

Families hope investigations will 'step up a little bit'

Kelly Dodd last saw her younger sister Jessica Gaudie in August 1999.

"I'm hoping that they will continue on and maybe step it up a little bit and do some searches," Ms Dodd said.

"She was just starting to do her own thing and have a boyfriend."

The 15-year-old was babysitting children in Nambour when she was murdered by the children's father.

Sam claims he picked her up from the house and dropped her at a party he had been to earlier that night. However, she never showed up.

A jury found him guilty of murder and he was jailed for life, but Jessica's body was never found.

Her sister, Tammy Gaudie, says it leaves an "empty, sick feeling".

"My sister's not the kind of girl to sit there and take something that's happening, and I think she tried to fight back and he took it out on her," she said.

Jessica's mother Pauline Gaudie says the family needs to know what happened.

"If I knew where she was, that would probably give us closure," she said.

Two women vanish on Sunshine Coast

British tourist Ms Bridge, 28, was the first of the three to vanish.

Ms Bridge was last seen walking along Booloumba Creek Road at Kenilworth in July 1998.

She was hiking to the nearby Little Yabba Creek camping ground.

Ms Glassop was the next to disappear. Her car was found parked at Little Yabba Creek, a short distance from her home, in May 1999.

Neither she nor her pet poodle were seen again.

Ms Glassop's son Jed Moore says she was an "incredibly loving, caring and giving person".

"Not having any closure, not having any idea of how, why or where she died - that's the hardest part," he said.

Police and State Emergency Service officers combed large areas of forestry for any evidence several times, with the last search in 2007.

The case was reopened in July 2012 when police received new information, but as yet no-one has been charged and the bodies are still missing.

Coronial inquest names Sam as person of interest

A coronial inquest named Sam as a person of interest in both women's disappearances.

The experienced horseman and tracker worked with troubled youth in the area of Kenilworth, but there was not enough evidence to charge him.

Mr Moore says he suspects Sam killed his mother, Anne Glassop.

His grandmother Joan Worsley, who kept the case in the public eye, died last year.

"One of the biggest regrets for her was to go without knowing what'd happened to mum," Mr Moore said.

Like Mr Moore, Tammy Gaudie has avoided the media spotlight, trusting that police would solve the mystery.

But she is worried her mother will also die not knowing where her daughter is.

"I have more time so I can keep fighting for them but she's not going to have much more time," she said.

Not having any closure, not having any you know idea of how, why or where she died - that's the hardest part.
Anne Glassop's son, Jed Moore

 

She recently created a Facebook page devoted to finding her sister's remains.

"If people keep saying her name then police might try harder - I'm not sure," she said.

"It just worked for the Morcombes so I thought it might work for me."

It is difficult for Pauline Gaudie to hear Daniel's name.

"It just makes me think that they were just focussed on just the one person all the time," she said.

Families want police to make cases a priority

With Sam eligible for parole next year and the Morcombe case closed, Pauline Gaudie and her family want police to make finding Jessica's body a priority.

"I know they've got a lot of cases out there but we've been shoved with the rest of them," she said.

Pauline Gaudie is urging people to come forward with information.

"You're not going to get in trouble over it," she said.

Kelly Dodd is hopeful more can be done now that Daniel's case is finished.

"That would be really, really great if they could do as much for our family as they've done for the Morcombe family," she said.

Like the Morcombe case, Mr Moore hopes police are doing more than he is aware of.

"There's hope that comes to me through understanding the way the police have handled that matter," he said.

"That a similar level of resources would be applied to mum's case, and also Celena and Jessica's."

The families all want, and need, the same thing - closure.

They all believe someone, somewhere, knows something that could bring the investigations to an end.

"Closure, the ability to say goodbye and to have somewhere that we can go and pay our respects and be in touch," Mr Moore said.

Kelly Dodd adds: "I don't like the idea of her being out somewhere alone - that is quite hard to deal with."

7.30 Queensland requested an interview with police or a statement about the cases, but the request was declined.

 

Bid to find location of Jessica Gaudie’s remains

SECRECY was paramount. Had the media got wind of the visit, the area would have been swarming with news crews, but the police car went unnoticed as it turned into Booloumba Creek Rd last October.

The thin gravel strip, about 12km south of Kenilworth in the Sunshine Coast hinterland, winds through a patchwork of farms before hitting an area accessible only by four-wheel-drive, beyond which lies lush rainforest and pristine mountain streams in the vast Conondale National Park and adjoining state forests.

Derek Sam, sitting in the back of the police car, was no stranger to the serene pocket of countryside — once he’d known every curve of the road, but it had been years since he’d been there.

Sam is a convicted killer serving a life sentence for the 1999 murder of Nambour schoolgirl Jessica Gaudie. ­Detectives had plucked him from his cell at Lotus Glen Correctional Centre, near Mareeba in far north Queensland, and brought him 1600km south to his old stomping ground ­because they suspected Sam was the rarest and most dang­erous breed of criminal: a serial killer.

Somewhere nearby, police believe, Sam may have hidden the bodies of three people: Gaudie, whose remains have never been found; British backpacker Celena Bridge, who was last seen on Booloumba Creek Rd in July 1998; and Kenilworth teacher’s aide and mother-of-two Sabrina Ann Glassop (commonly known as Ann), who vanished from the same road in May 1999.

Detec­tives accompanying Sam were looking for any crack in his ­facade, and for a brief period he became unsettled, even teary. Then the mental wall went up again and Sam shut down.

There have been many attempts to crack Sam over the years. All have been to no avail, but police may now have the best chance of solving the mystery.

Derek Sam was in a rage. A blind, clenched-fist, red-mist kind of rage. His former de facto, Mia Summers, was cosying up to a man right in front of him at a birthday party at a house in Bonney St, Nambour. Beautiful Mia, then 25, was finally free of Sam and daring to flaunt it, or that’s how Sam saw it.

It was the early hours of August 29, 1999. John Howard was prime minister and Bill Clinton the US president. Y2K computer bug fears gripped the world as the year 2000 loomed and the Sydney Olympic Games were more than a year away. Eight bodies had that year been discovered in barrels in a disused bank vault at Snowtown, 140km north of Adelaide, and two teenagers had gunned down teachers and students at Columbine High School, in the US state of Colorado. On the radio, grunge rockers Pearl Jam had been top of the Australian singles charts for four weeks with a cover of a 1964 song, Last Kiss. “Oh, where oh where can my baby be? / The Lord took her away from me”, went the opening lyric. By the end of that night, someone else’s baby would be taken from them.

Sam had never seen Mia with another man. They had been together since they were 14-year-old schoolkids in Bamaga, about 40km south of the northern tip of Cape York. Sam had been raised in a church-going Bamaga ­family and Mia’s family moved to the Cape for her father’s work. She was slightly built with fair skin and red hair. They had three kids and had moved around the state ­together, regularly breaking up but always reuniting. This time was different, and the more Sam drank, the more it ­became a problem that Mia was there with someone else.

Some people have issues with alcohol, but Sam had ­serious issues. Whenever he got on the booze, things ­tended to go horribly wrong.

The party was for one of Sam’s workmates and Sam was behaving so erratically that some of the guests — knowing him as generally quiet and reserved — thought he must have been stoned on marijuana.

He punched Mia’s new love interest, then stumbled out to his 4WD, a brown 14-year-old Toyota LandCruiser. Someone tried to grab his keys but Sam, 25, was fit and wiry and it was like trying to stop a freight train.

He slammed the door of the 4WD and roared down the street, narrowly missing another car and a reveller before hitting the kerb on the wrong side of the road. One of the doors flew open from the impact, then the tail-lights disappeared from view. A “Bad Boy”sticker was on the back of the 4WD.

About 2km away, at Mia’s Ridgewood St home, 16-year-old Jessica Gaudie was babysitting Sam and Mia’s children, who were six, three and one. Sam was living elsewhere in Nambour.

Freckly, red-haired Jess was in Year 10 at Burnside State High and lived around the corner from Mia. After Mia had gone to the party the kids had played games inside while “Big Jess”, as they affectionately called Gaudie, watched television, before they’d all gone to bed.

About 2am the eldest of the three children, Nakita, woke and peered out her window to see her father getting out of his 4WD.

There was a knock on the rear laundry door and Gaudie, wearing a loose red jumper and silk boxer shorts, got up from a mattress on the floor of Nakita’s room to see what he wanted. There was a muffled conversation and then Sam’s vehicle drove off.

“And Jessica didn’t come back in my room,” Nakita would say later. “I kept on waiting for Jessica to come back and she didn’t.”

Gaudie was meant to be home early in the morning to go to a triple christening for a niece and two nephews.

When she didn’t arrive, her older married sister Kelly Dodd, who lived nearby and was 26 at the time, walked to Mia’s place.

“Jess wasn’t there,” Dodd recalls. “At that point I began to panic because her shoes were still there, her bag was there, the money she got for babysitting was still on the bench. All her belongings were still there, but she wasn’t. So then I ran home and I rang the police straightaway. It was not her to do that.”

Mia had gone straight to bed after the party and hadn’t realised Gaudie was missing until Dodd turned up. But thanks to Nakita’s chance sighting of her father through her bedroom window, police instantly had a suspect.

Two detective senior constables from the Sunshine Coast, Mark Wright and Peter Brewer, interviewed Sam at Nambour CIB later that night. Sam told the officers he’d known Jessica for about six months; she used to go around to Mia’s a fair bit and he would offer her lifts home from school.

Sam admitted going to Mia’s house early that morning and ­taking Gaudie for a drive, but he claimed he dropped her off near the party so Mia would be forced to go home to be with the kids. Gaudie didn’t turn up at the party.

After the interview, Wright and Brewer drove Sam back to his home and asked for the clothes he was wearing. He pulled a shirt out of the dryer; it was still damp from being washed.

For police, there was a dawning realisation that Gaudie’s disappearance could be part of an even bigger and more sinister set of events. Sam worked as a supervisor at Piabun Farm, where young Aboriginal offenders could stay instead of going to youth detention.

The property was on Booloumba Creek Rd, where in the previous 13 months two women had vanished without a trace.

She was walking alone with a heavy backpack crammed with camping gear, a 28-year-old tourist who was more than 16,000km away from her home town of Carlisle in northwest England. Celena Bridge had an environmental science degree and a thirst for adventure. She was in ­Australia for three months to study bird life and ecosystems.

On July 16, 1998, after spending a couple of nights at ­Conondale’s Crystal Waters permaculture village, she had made her way to Booloumba Creek Rd, about 30km away, to meet up with a birdwatching group at a camp ground.

Police would later describe her as “165cm tall, of slim build, tanned complexion, with brown hair and green eyes”, but photos show her with fair skin and her hair with a red tinge.

A woman who lived on the road saw her passing by and they had a chat at the gate. The resident was worried about Bridge being there on her own and told her so; the area looked tranquil but it was isolated.

Bridge assured the woman she was OK and walked on. She stopped again down the road, this time outside Piabun Farm, where she asked a supervisor, Geoff Turner, for directions. The camp ground was 1.5km away and she kept walking.

According to police, a witness says Sam drove out of ­Piabun Farm soon after and turned right, heading towards Bridge. She was never seen again. It was almost a month before the alarm was raised, when Bridge failed to meet her boyfriend, Jonathan Webb, as arranged at Brisbane International Airport when he arrived from the UK in early ­August 1998. Webb contacted police, who initially suspected a hiking accident.

Bridge’s parents, Lionel and Beth Bridge, flew to Australia from England to search for her. They returned home without their beloved daughter. “We think the most likely thing that has happened is that she’s had an accident,” ­Lionel Bridge told media. “But there is always the poss­ibility in the back of our minds that something else has ­happened. We have no hope — it’s a terrible thing to say but we’ve got to be realistic.”

Like everyone else from the area, Sabrina Glassop would almost certainly have been worried sick about the missing backpacker. Little did Glassop know that she would soon go missing too.

Glassop, 46, lived on the corner of Booloumba Creek Rd and the Maleny-Kenilworth Rd. She had separated from her husband, forestry worker Eric Glassop, but they remained friends and had dinner at her home the night before she disappeared. Eric, who lived nearby, left about 8.30pm, saying he’d be back the next morning with newspapers and fresh bread for breakfast.

About 6am the next day, May 29, 1999, Glassop’s ­parents, Joan and John Worsley, who lived in a caravan on the same property, heard her red Suzuki speed off towards Kenilworth. Unusually, the gate to the property was left wide open, suggesting Glassop was in a rush.

Her car was found about 500m away at the Little Yabba Creek rest stop on Maleny-Kenilworth Rd, where she was known to walk her poodle, Poppy.

Unlike the delayed reaction to Bridge’s disappearance, there was an immediate and large-scale search for Glassop. The result, however, was the same.

Glassop could not be found, and nor could her dog.

The two women, though almost 20 years apart in age, shared a physical resemblance; photos show Glassop with a fair complexion and red hair. Three months after Glassop’s disappearance, Gaudie went missing.

Piabun Farm had started with the best of intentions. The Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody of 1987 to 1991 had led to a push to break the cycle of recid­ivism of Aboriginal youth.

As a result, the Piabun Aborig­inal Corporation secured funding to set up an “outdoor rehabilitation and diversion centre” and bought a 58ha rural property on Booloumba Creek Rd in September 1994 for $400,000.

Within weeks, boys were arriving from youth detention centres to stay in dormitory accommodation at the farm. The idea was for the boys to be taught traditional laws and practical farming skills such as horse-breaking and riding. It was run by Mark Johnson, a cowboy hat-wearing horseman with a bushy moustache, who hired Sam as an assistant.

Years earlier, Sam had run into trouble as a 13-year-old and had been sent to Petford Training Farm, a ­diversionary camp for indigenous youths that had been running near Atherton since the 1970s.

Petford manager Geoff Guest would recall Sam as having done well at the farm as a teenager, showing he had a “natural ability with horses”. But after he went home he found himself in ­trouble again.

“He got back into the drink and the dope and got into trouble with the police,” Guest said in 2009.

“Derek was sent back here after he was arrested walking down the middle of the street with a gun or a knife, I can’t remember which exactly. He was 17 then.”

Sam put his troubles behind him again at Petford and was hired to work as a horse trainer there. Then in September 1997 he was poached to work at Piabun. Guest had ­concerns.

“I was really worried when he left because he had no support and he started drinking and smoking dope again,” Guest said.

“Derek was not the sort of bloke who should drink. He had alcoholic tendencies. When he got on the drink and the dope, Derek became a different person.

“It was well-known Derek got aggressive when he was drinking and had a history of misbehaving under the ­influence. He would black out and not remember anything he’d done … When he was under the influence, Derek was ­capable of anything.”

Typically, five or six juveniles at a time would stay at ­Piabun. They’d feed horses from 6am, then do farm work including fencing and slashing, horse work and riding. Sam would also take paying international guests on 40km horse rides to Kenilworth and through the surrounding forests.

There were countless roads and tracks to explore and Sam got to know them well; some areas were treacherous, with abandoned mine shafts all over the place.

Things were soon going off the rails at Piabun, which has since ceased operating. The Queensland Government — ­concerned about financial management and accountability — slashed funding.

Claims would later emerge that boys had been harshly treated and forced to fight each other. Tragedy struck when a teenage boy, Howard “Harry” Cobbo, comm­itted suicide in a tractor shed, and claims arose that he had been bullied and assaulted.

Ken Schroder, who still owns a property on Booloumba Creek Rd, had a run-in with ­Piabun’s manager Johnson for running cattle on his land without ­permission. A fire later broke out on Schroder’s property and he suspected someone from Piabun might have lit the blaze deliberately, but he didn’t make a complaint to police.

Meanwhile, Piabun’s youths were escaping and trekking to Kenilworth, where they were suspected of being ­involved in petty crimes like breaking into cars.

“It was a very tense, frightening atmosphere at that time,” says Schroder.

Schroder’s ex-wife was the resident who talked to Bridge the day she was last seen alive.

“It was very unusual to see backpackers, let alone single women backpackers, just walking along the road by themselves,” Schroder says. “You’d see people on horses, but not just people tramping along the road.”

On the day Gaudie vanished, police seized Sam’s 4WD and found it had been thoroughly cleaned. Police officer Mark Wright, who interviewed Sam that day and became one of the main investigators on Gaudie’s case, is now a ­sergeant based in Coolum.

He recalls the 4WD “lit up like a Christmas tree” when sprayed with Luminol, a substance which reacts to blood and other substances including cleaning agents.

The only confirmed blood was found in the boot, in two small stains, but Sam claimed injured wildlife had been in the 4WD and forensic tests were inconclusive.

Sam had filled the 4WD with fuel the day before andbased on the fuel levels, detectives found he could not ­account for between 75km and 150km of travel.

Sam claimed he drove to Coolum the morning after the party and sat on the beach.

Wright asked him, “What, all day?” and Sam ­replied, “Yeah”.

Police thought he’d gone to dispose of the body. “That puts him able to get out to the bush where he knows the area at Booloumba Creek and back,” says Wright.

A strand of hair was recovered from the jeans Sam was wearing on the night, but it did not yield any DNA.

Wright and his detective colleague Brewer travelled to Bamaga to follow up on the stories Mia had told them.

The relationship had been marked by violence when they lived there; when Sam had been drinking he’d throw her around and pull her hair and push his clenched fist into her jaw.

Sometimes he’d bite her. He had a rifle and would put the barrel in his mouth and threaten to pull the trigger until she talked him out of it. After one fight, Sam had walked into the bedroom and fired the gun into the floor, just a foot from where Mia was lying.

Police came and took the gun at the time.

“We saw the damage to the concrete floor,” Wright confirms.

After another argument Mia had gone to a church, only to have Sam ride inside the building on a horse, like some crazed cowboy, to demand she leave with him.

Things were at their worst when he was drunk, and in Bamaga this was often.

He’d drink until there was nothing left to drink, bingeing all day and all night, then demand sex. He became moody, aggressive and violent when he didn’t get his way, then when he sobered up he’d say he couldn’t remember.

The couple moved from Bamaga to Cairns and Sam agreed to stop drinking, but his abstinence didn’t last.

After the birth of their first child, Nakita, they had an argument and Sam grabbed his daughter and a knife and threatened Mia.

It was the final straw; Mia called police, took out a restraining order and left Sam. But within months they were back together. It was on-again and off-again for years.

They ended up living together at Piabun Farm as “house parents” for the boys sent there. July 1998 — when Bridge went missing — appears to be one of the “off again” times in the relationship. Mia told police she had moved to Cairns at the time, while Sam had stayed on at Piabun.

They got back together in September 1998 and eventually moved into the house at Ridgewood St, Nambour. Mia told police they broke up for the final time in May 1999 — the same month Glassop went missing.

Because of the kids, Mia would let Sam visit for Sunday night dinners and to watch videos. They’d agreed they would just be friends, but Sam wanted more. After watching a State of Origin football match one night, he’d kept telling Mia she was beautiful, but when she flatly refused his ­demands for sex, he called her a slut and a bitch and said he wouldn’t pay maintenance.

About seven weeks before Gaudie went missing, Sam lost it badly, accusing Mia of sleeping around. She’d told him it was none of his business and he’d leapt over and grabbed her around the throat with one hand as she sat in a lounge chair.

With her life in his hands, he squeezed; then he calmed down and let go.

Piabun’s manager, Johnson, was initially hostile towards police but then provided a detailed 18-page statement that was damning for Sam. Johnson told detectives he went on at least two drives with Sam to go back over the events of the night Gaudie disappeared.

According to Johnson, Sam appeared confused and seemed to have trouble remembering what happened, saying he thought Gaudie might have had a head injury.

Detectives arrested Sam on September 28, 1999, and charged him with Gaudie’s murder. At his trial in the ­Supreme Court in Brisbane in 2001, prosecutor Brendan Campbell said the only rational explanation for the disappearance of a “happy and normal” teenager was that Sam murdered her.

The jury, after deliberating for 12 hours, agreed and convicted Sam of murder.

Wright and Brewer went and confronted Sam in prison after his appeal failed.

“He got brought up (from his cell) and they didn’t tell him it was us. When he got there, he went off. He was sick of us,” Wright says.

The detectives changed tack and asked Gaudie’s sister, Kelly Dodd, now 44 and living on the Sunshine Coast, for help. Dodd agreed to confront Sam in ­prison. Wright and Brewer drove Dodd to prison and ­escorted her inside, but then she was on her own. She had a plan for what she was going to say, but it was all forgotten when she came face-to-face with Sam.

“I was crying. I got him upset at one stage. The whole time I was in there I was asking where Jess (was),” Dodd says.

“He just denied it the whole time — just kept saying, ‘I’m sorry, I’m sorry, I’m sorry, I didn’t do it’. We spoke for about 45 minutes and I got nothing from him.

“There could be a number of reasons why he doesn’t admit to it. Maybe Celena (Bridge) and Ann Glassop are at the same location Jess is at. He might have just talked ­himself into it that he is innocent. I don’t know.”

Dodd reveals that since the initial prison visit, she has tried to see Sam on two more occasions. Once, she drove to Maryborough, 250km north of Brisbane, where Sam was then jailed, but he wouldn’t meet her. It’s a mark of both her courage, and his lack of it.

“He won’t agree to it. He won’t see me,” she says.

Wright recalls of Dodd’s prison visit: “It was pretty nerve-wracking for her. It’s pretty daunting, ­especially if you’ve not been to (prison) before. And then to confront the person who has been found guilty of mur­dering your sister. It was pretty brave of her. But they were ­desperate enough to try anything. From memory she thought at one stage he was going to roll, going to tell her, but then he just backed away, like he always does.

He’s cold and calculating. To give the bodies up, that would bring shame to his family. But it also exposes him for what he is.

“The problem we’ve got is I believe the three ladies’ ­bodies are together or in similar circumstances or nearby to each other. If we find one, we’ll find all three.”

No one has ever been charged over the disappearances of Bridge and Glassop and Sam has denied any involvement.

An inquest was held at Maroochydore Coroner’s Court in 2002. Sam’s workmates told the inquest they saw Bridge on Booloumba Creek Rd; but Sam, according to media reports, said he could not tell if the person he saw was a man or a woman. One witness said that while ­watching a television report about Bridge’s disappearance, Sam said he’d seen the backpacker at a camp ground.

Another witness, Piabun worker John Poole, said that only weeks before Glassop went missing, Sam boasted he “had a date with a schoolteacher”. His date was “a lovely lady … with a beautiful body”. The inference was that he was talking about Glassop, a teacher’s aide.

“She’d be a good f---,” Sam is alleged to have said.

While horseriding near Little Yabba Creek after ­Glassop went missing, Sam is said to have opened up some more to Poole.

“They won’t find her down there,” Sam said, according to Poole. When Poole asked why not, Sam laughed and said: “I’m a blackfella and a black tracker.”

Sam had previously helped Glassop with her horses; he’d once taken her shetland pony to a school fete. And the night before Glassop went missing, he’d been drinking at a party and could not account for his movements.

When called to give evidence at the inquest, Sam ­insisted: “It wasn’t me”. He’d been convicted of Gaudie’s murder “but I didn’t kill her”. Coroner Paul Johnstone found Bridge and Glassop had been murdered and their bodies concealed, but said there was not enough evidence to commit Sam or anyone else for trial.

So what’s changed? Detective Sergeant Daren Edwards, the head of Maroochydore’s Criminal Investigation Branch, says police have been going back over the ­evidence; it was why Sam was taken back to Booloumba Creek Rd last year, with the aid of a court order approving the mission.

“It was certainly a bit unsettling for him,” ­Edwards says of Sam’s visit.

“That’s how (detectives) ­described it — he appeared very unsettled. There was ­certainly the opportunity for him to assist more, but he didn’t prove to assist.”

Edwards says the ongoing investigation is a joint effort between local detectives and the state’s homicide squad, and he says they are close to finalising a brief of evidence with the intention of asking prosecutors if there is enough evidence to charge Sam with the murders of Bridge and Glassop.

Police and prosecutors also have another option to consider: if Sam led police to the bodies of the three women, he could escape further prosecution. It would be a deal with the devil, but the recovery of their remains would provide enormous relief to the families.

Such a deal has a recent precedent after Michael Atkins, 54, confessed he knew where to find the remains of ­Matthew Leveson, 20, and helped police locate them in ­exchange for immunity from prosecution in NSW.

Dodd says she would be torn if such a deal allowed Sam to be released. “Every day you think about where she is and we just want to bring her home. Obviously we want Jess back, but on the other hand we don’t want him out either, so it’s extremely difficult,” she says.

Glassop’s eldest son, Jed Moore, has embraced the idea; when contacted, he said the most important thing was to find his mum and give her a proper burial.

Failing these options, Sam is set to be caught up in new “no body, no parole” laws. Former barrister and now Court of Appeal president Walter Sofronoff recommended, in his review of the state’s parole system last year, that killers be kept behind bars if they haven’t identified the location of victims’ bodies.

The State Government introduced a Bill in May. The laws will be debated in parliament next week and are expected to be passed. It will be just in time — Sam ­became eligible for parole last year, but is yet to apply. ­Unless he reveals the location of Gaudie’s remains, he may never be released.

“There still remains an opportunity for Derek to help himself. He has still got a lot of years ahead of him,” ­Edwards says.

Wright remains hopeful there will be a resolution, ­believing the bodies of the three women are not far from Piabun Farm.

“I hope one day we can finally find Jess and give her back to her family. There’s not too many days that go by that I don’t think about Jess and the case, even after all these years.”

Kenilworth cold case: Killer refuses to help police

'I don't think I have gone a day since Jess went missing that I have not thought about where she might be.'

By Josh Preston Courier Mail

 

THE Kenilworth killer convicted of murdering a Nambour schoolgirl and linked to two other suspicious deaths in the area refuses to lead investigators to the location of the body, police say.

Derek Bellington Sam, who was sentenced to 15 years in prison in August 2001 for the murder of 16-year-old Jessica Gaudie, remains in jail under "no body, no parole” legislation.

A Queensland Police Service media spokeswoman confirmed Sam was still serving the life sentence, and there had been "no information” supplied as to the whereabouts of Ms Gaudie's body.

"The offender is currently serving a life sentence for the murder and no information has been supplied concerning the location of the body of Jessica Gaudie,” a Queensland Police media spokeswoman said.

"The offender is subject of 'no body no parole' legislation, and at this stage the QPS is not aware of any application to the parole board,” she said.

In March 2017, it was reported police were "readying to charge” Sam with murdering two other women who vanished from the same rural road between 1998 and 1999.

The Courier-Mail reported detectives were expecting to complete a brief of evidence against Sam amid renewed investigations into the suspected murders of British backpacker Celena Bridge and teacher's aide Sabrina Glassop.

The 28-year-old Ms Bridge was the first to disappear after she set off for a hike to the Little Yabba Creek camping ground at Kenilworth on July 16, 1998.

Teacher's aide Ms Glassop, 47, vanished after last being seen by her mother at her Kenilworth district home on May 29, 1999.

A Kenilworth-based horse trainer and indigenous tracker who was known to the Glassops, Derek Bellington Sam, was jailed for the murder of Ms Gaudie years after she went missing from Burnside in August 1999.

He was reportedly the last person to see Ms Gaudie alive when he went to the house where she babysat he and his estranged de facto's three children.

Court records from the Supreme Court Library of Queensland note Sam's statement to police was that he left a birthday party, at which his former partner Mia Summers was in attendance, "somewhere between 1 and 2am on the Sunday morning, 29 August, and went to the residence of Summers where his three children and the babysitter were”.

"According to his account which formed the basis of defence at the trial, he persuaded Jessica Gaudie to come with him to the party for the purpose of inducing Mia Summers to leave it,” the court records state.

"According to (Sam's) story, he drove Jessica Gaudie to the intersection of Bonney and Elizabeth Streets, Nambour which, on the evidence, was a distance of some 263 metres from the house where the party was being held.

"According to his statement, he told Jessica that there was a lady there that would drive her home. He claimed in the statement he then drove away and that was the last he saw of her.”

Reports in 2017 stated Sam had "always denied being involved in the disappearances of the three women”, but detectives "secretly took Sam out of prison and back to where Ms Bridge and Ms Glassop vanished as part of the new push to solve the mysteries” in 2016.

At the time, police were also "discussing an alternative plan in which Sam would not be prosecuted if he leads them to the bodies of all three missing women”.

Detective Senior Sergeant Daren Edwards said: "There remains an opportunity for Derek to help himself. All police are trying to get is an outcome for those families”.

Despite the renewed investigations, Police have confirmed the matter continues and no further charges have been laid against Sam.

"No further charges have been proffered against the convicted offender in this matter which is still an open and current investigation,” the QPS media spokeswoman said.

None of the three bodies has been found.

Acting Senior Sergeant Mark Wright, who worked with Inspector Peter Brewer to jail Sam for Ms Gaudie's murder, said back in 2014 "he was determined to find Jessica's body for the family's sake”.

"I don't think I have gone a day since Jess went missing that I have not thought about where she might be,” Acting Snr Sgt Wright said.

Cops set to push for charges over deaths of missing women

Coast detectives are just weeks off finalising a report likely to recommend prosecutors charge Derek Sam over the deaths of two other missing women.

By Scott Sawyer Courier Mail

 

COAST detectives are just weeks off finalising a report likely to recommend prosecutors charge Derek Sam over the deaths of missing women Celena Bridge and Sabrina Ann Glassop.

Sunshine Coast Criminal Investigation Branch officer in charge Detective Senior Sergeant Daren Edwards said they were left with little option, given Sam continued to refuse to cooperate with investigators still working to locate the bodies of the women presumed dead.

Sam is currently serving a life sentence for the August, 1999 murder of 16-year-old Burnside State High School student Jessica Gaudie.

He's the prime suspect for the suspected murders of 46-year-old Kenilworth teacher aide Sabrina Ann Glassop in May, 1999 and British backpacker Celena Bridge, who disappeared after being last seen in July, 1998, walking on Booloumba Creek Rd.

In 2002 a coroner determined Celena had been murdered.

Sen-Sgt Edwards said pressing charges was just about "the only option we've really got” if they were to ever get closure for the families.

"The ball's in Sam's court really,” Sen-Sgt Edwards said.

Sam had been eligible for parole since 2016, but under no body, no parole laws, had been unable to be released as he refused to reveal Jessica Gaudie's whereabouts.

Sam has continued to claim his innocence, denying killing anyone and Sen-Sgt Edwards suspected he may have refused to locate Jessica's body for fear of further imprisonment if it helped police confirm his responsibility for the murders of Celena and Sabrina.

"It's very frustrating,” Sen-Sgt Edwards said.

The experienced Coast investigator said he'd written to Sam previously, seeking co-operation in a bid to find the bodies, but his efforts had been fruitless.

He said police and Sam's legal representatives had "gone around in circles”.

Sen-Sgt Edwards said some consideration was being given to whether immunity could be offered to Sam for Celena and Sabrina's murders, in a bid to find their remains.

"It's obviously something to consider,” he said. "How much more time is he really going to get (sentenced to for their murders)?

"One day he's going to get out. I'd rather the Gaudie family recover the remains of their sister and daughter and the other families find the remains of their daughters.

"It's probably been to his detriment that he's never said anything.”