National Post (National Edition)

Podcast leads to arrest of husband

- Jonathan pearlman

SYDNEY • An Australian whose life was laid bare in a popular crime mystery podcast about the disappeara­nce of his wife nearly 40 years ago was arrested Wednesday.

Chris Dawson, 70, a former first grade rugby league player, is expected to be charged with the murder of his wife Lynette, authoritie­s said.

The body of the mother of two, who went missing in Sydney’s northern beaches in 1982, has never been found.

Dawson denies killing his wife and says she left home to have some time to herself.

The cold case is the subject of The Teacher’s Pet, a podcast that details a troubled marriage leading up to the disappeara­nce and examines the shortcomin­gs of the police response.

It was listened to by some 27 million people globally, and appears to have helped to spur the police into action.

Dawson was arrested before 8 a.m. at a small apartment attached to his daugh- ter’s home in Queensland’s Gold Coast. Police said he was “calm and a little taken aback.”

Officers are expected to extradite him to Sydney, where he will be charged with the murder. Lynette Dawson, who worked as a nurse, was 33 when she vanished.

Two days after her disappeara­nce, Dawson’s 16-year-old lover, Joanne Curtis, a former babysitter for the couple, moved into the house and apparently wore the missing woman’s jewelry and clothes.

Dawson did not report his wife missing for six weeks, and said that he thought she might have run away to join a religious cult.

Later, he told one of his daughters that her mother appeared to be in the audience of a 2006 episode of the BBC television show Antiques Roadshow — a claim strongly disputed by her family.

Dawson and Curtis were married for six years and had a daughter before divorcing. She claimed he was violent and later assisted police with their inquiries and even suggested that they search around the home’s swimming pool for a body.

During a search in 2000, police found a cardigan of Lynette Dawson’s that had cuts consistent with a stabbing.

Despite these various clues, and a coroner’s finding that Dawson should be charged with murder, police made no move to arrest him.

The case was reopened in 2015 and was taken up by the podcast, produced by The Australian, which then made almost daily headlines in Australia.

POLICE SAID HE WAS ‘CALM AND A LITTLE TAKEN ABACK.’

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