The Gold Coast Bulletin

Guards say fiend will ‘never stop’

- PAUL WESTON

SERIAL sex offender Robert John Fardon would brag about what he intended to do to women and children once he left jail, say other prisoners.

As Fardon walks free this month, former prisoners and Correction­al Services staff in 2013 spoke about his three decades behind bars.

A former drug user recalls spending five hours with Fardon during processing at the Arthur Gorrie Correction­al Centre at Wacol in 1994. Fardon opened up about his crimes, which had included carnal knowledge of a 10-year-old girl and the rape and sodomy of a 12-year-old.

“I spoke to him and he wasn’t concerned at all about what he told me. It was making me sick.

“He wouldn’t shut up about what he was going to do to women and kids when he got out. I couldn’t help but to ask why. He said he had needs and couldn’t help acting on those needs. I called him sick … but he tried to insist he was just like a drug addict.’’

One of the ex-prisoner’s mates was forced to share a cell with Fardon.

“He clubbed Fardon because he used to brag about some of the sick sh** he did,’’ the exprisoner said.

An ex-prison officer recalls Fardon refusing to undertake a sexual offender’s program.

“He would never talk to us (about his crimes). But he’s definitely screwed. He will never stop,’’ he said.

Fardon was a “loudmouth’’ who would be abusive to staff if he did not get his own way.

“Fardon is going to interfere with some children and rape a woman again,’’ the ex-prison officer said. “That’s his go.’’

A prison guard working out of the Townsville Correction­al Centre told the Bulletin yesterday that Fardon was a germ in the North Queensland jail.

“He was real grimy, a putrid human being,” the guard said. “He was a nothing person, dirty, yes, but no worse than a lot of the other grubs in there.

“He had a lot of notoriety, but everyone steered clear of him, it was like he was a leper.”

A former friend who recalls Murwillumb­ah-born Fardon as a teenager could not understand how his life turned.

Fardon was 18 when in 1966 he pleaded guilty to attempted carnal knowledge of a girl under 10 and was placed on a bond. He had been living with his aunt and uncle and would often fish by the river.

“He was as good as gold in those days,” the former friend told the Bulletin in 2013.

After the vicious rape of a 12year-old and Fardon’s sentencing to eight years’ jail in 1980 gained him notoriety, the exfriend instinctiv­ely knew he would take advantage of the innocent and vulnerable.

“If he saw a child, he’d snap. He only has to have alcohol and drugs and it happens,’’ he said.

What did Fardon think of his past and why did he argue for his release?

His thoughts were outlined in a submission presented on his behalf to the Human Rights committee in March 2007.

Fardon maintained the new Sexual Offenders law being used to keep him inside imposed “double punishment without further determinat­ion of criminal guilt’’.

He argued he had served his punishment, yet was being subjected to jail as if he had been convicted of another crime.

The report notes: “He (Fardon) adds that his detention is neither justified by mental illness.’’

Is Fardon mentally ill? When asked in 2013, Gaven MP Dr Alex Douglas, who has had 20 years’ experience with Corrective Services, could not talk specifical­ly about Fardon but explained a typical offender’s psychology.

In Parliament at the time, Dr Douglas said: “They are not only dangerous but calculatin­g, often homicidal psychopath­s who, far from showing any remorse, are incessantl­y planning the next offence.’’

A psychologi­st at an early hearing discussing Fardon’s release diagnosed him with posttrauma­tic stress disorder caused by a childhood trauma when he was seven. Another psychologi­st said Fardon had a complex psychopath­y.

Both specialist­s acknowledg­ed that Fardon wanted to change and had improved his relations with prison staff. But the veteran former Corrective Services staffer remembers Fardon refusing to attend a sexual offenders program.

His one wish for Fardon has gone ungranted: “Hopefully he will die in prison.’’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia