Mercury (Hobart)

Tantalisin­g new lead in cold case

- JAMES KITTO

A NEW witness has emerged who could hold answers into Tasmania’s most documented cold case investigat­ion.

John Butterwort­h, the brother of Tasmanian model Lucille Butterwort­h, who disappeare­d from a Claremont bus stop in 1969 at age 20, said the family had been given new hope of finding his sister’s remains after he was informed about a witness coming forward to police.

Seven years after her disappeara­nce, key suspect in the case Geoffrey Charles Hunt allegedly confessed to murdering Lucille while he was being questioned about the murder and rape of 24-year-old Susan Knight — a crime for which Hunt served 22 years in prison.

An abandoned riverside car park on the way to New Norfolk was dug up by police in 2015, but the two-week excavation found nothing.

Mr Butterwort­h, who now lives in Queensland, said Deputy Commission­er Scott Tilyard confirmed to him during a recent trip to Hobart that Tasmania Police had received a new witness statement which was being investigat­ed.

He said he had gained informatio­n about the witness statement through other inquiries.

Mr Butterwort­h said it gave him reason to believe his late sister’s body was discarded near the dig site.

“Apparently a man now in his sixties overheard a conversati­on between Geoffrey Hunt and his brother, where it’s said Hunt placed Lucille about 200 metres near where police dug four years ago,” he said.

A year after the 2015 police excavation, a coroner found Hunt had strangled Lucille but there was not enough evidence for Hunt to be charged.

Mr Butterwort­h said he was disappoint­ed his brother Jim, who passed away in April, wasn’t able to find answers into Lucille’s death.

”A sad part of this latest witness informatio­n is that Jim isn’t here to hear about it,” Mr Butterwort­h said.

“I’d like to think, given this new informatio­n that’s come to light, that Tasmania Police will pursue the case further.

“We need to find Lucille, we can’t give up, we want to lay her to rest. We want closure.”

Mr Butterwort­h said the latest witness statement may provide the “haystack the family has been looking for before attempting to find the needle in it”. making

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