The Gold Coast Bulletin

Wife killer’s freedom bid

- GREG STOLZ greg.stolz@news.com.au

A GOLD Coast man jailed for life for brutally murdering his wife and dumping her body in the Southport Seaway has launched a sensationa­l legal challenge to Queensland’s tough “no body, no parole” laws.

And he is set for a showdown with Police Commission­er Katarina Carroll as he fights to be freed from prison.

Clive Anthony Nicholson received a life sentence in 2006 for bludgeonin­g his wife Julie to death with a hammer at their Southport home and stuffing her body in a walk-in wardrobe before dumping her in the Seaway.

He later wrote suicide letters in which he told their young daughter: “Mummy died as a result of an accident in a fight with Daddy … and Daddy died as a result of a broken heart.”

Nicholson, now 67, became eligible for parole last year, 12 months after the state’s “no body, no parole” laws came into force.

But despite his wife’s body never having been found, Nicholson has applied for parole. At a Parole Board hearing last month, he applied to interrogat­e one of the cops who put him behind bars. Detective Senior Sergeant Chris Knight penned two reports to the board about Nicholson’s lack of cooperatio­n to locate his wife’s body.

Under the “no body, no parole” laws, the Parole Board must refuse parole to a convicted murderer “unless it is satisfied that the applicant has co-operated satisfacto­rily in the investigat­ion of the offence to identify the victim’s location”.

In one of his last duties before retiring this month, thenPolice Commission­er Ian Stewart formally objected to Sen-Sgt Knight being quizzed by Nicholson’s lawyers as part of his parole bid.

But the Parole Board dismissed the objection and allowed the officer to be questioned set down for today.

However, days before he retired, Mr Stewart launched Supreme Court action seeking a judicial review of the decision.

Lawyers for the Commission­er argue that the decision was ‘contrary to law’, that the board had no power to make it and it should be quashed.

Ms Carroll, who was sworn in on Monday, is now set to take over the legal challenge.

 ?? Picture: DAVID CLARK ?? Clive Nicholson arriving at Southport Watchhouse in April, 2004, and (inset) his wife Julie Nicholson, who he bludgeoned to death with a hammer.
Picture: DAVID CLARK Clive Nicholson arriving at Southport Watchhouse in April, 2004, and (inset) his wife Julie Nicholson, who he bludgeoned to death with a hammer.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia