The New Zealand Herald

Winz gunman quizzed over Bentley case

Double murderer interrogat­ed in prison about schoolgirl’s death 20 years ago

- Herald. Herald Kurt Bayer Herald Herald

Convicted double killer Russell John Tully has been interviewe­d behind bars over the unsolved 1998 murder of Ashburton schoolgirl Kirsty Bentley. A senior detective quizzed the Ashburton Work and Income murderer about one of New Zealand’s most notorious cold cases at Auckland Prison last week, the understand­s.

Tully, who is now 52, flatted opposite the Bentley family’s South St home in Ashburton for about three years in the early 1990s.

He was not identified or spoken to during the massive original investigat­ion.

But Tully told police last week that he was married and living in Nelson, working full-time, when 15-year-old Bentley disappeare­d on December 31, 1998, while walking the family dog on the Ashburton riverbank.

Her body was found on January 17 in the Rakaia Gorge, more than 40km away from where she vanished.

The has learned that Tully left for Australia with his wife on February 12, 1999.

During his police interview, Tully, who was notoriousl­y disruptive during his High Court murder trial, is believed to have given a detailed account of his old car, how he used to camp near the Bentley abduction site, the reasons for his move to Australia, and his knowledge of the Bentley family.

Unless further informatio­n comes to light, or further probes into his story raise doubts, Tully’s alibi looks likely to stack up and police are satisfied he was not involved in Bentley’s abduction and murder.

Detective Inspector Greg Murton of Canterbury CIB, who took charge of the cold case in 2014, refused to comment when approached by the

It is believed that Tully, who is serving a life sentence with a minimum non-parole period of 27 years for the Winz slayings, was one of three suspects police have been looking at closely. The revealed last year that he was a person of interest in the Bentley case.

Several senior detectives have handled the inquiry over the years. But to this day, it remains an open homicide investigat­ion.

More than 300 persons of interest have been looked at, including Kirsty’s father, Sid Bentley, who denied any involvemen­t in his daughter’s disappeara­nce or murder until he died of cancer in 2015, aged 64.

Murton confirmed last March that Tully, who after the shootings escaped along the same stretch of Ashburton riverbank where Bentley vanished, was being scrutinise­d.

“There’s probably 20 or 30 reasons why someone could be of interest to us in relation to the case, either being there or previous history or connection­s, and there are lots of people in that category,” he said at the time.

“And until they are eliminated, and sometimes that’s impossible, then they remain a person of interest, without being a suspect, so to speak.”

Tully was found guilty two years ago of storming the Ashburton Winz centre at 9.51am on September 1, 2014, and shooting dead receptioni­st Peggy Noble, 67, from point-blank range and shooting case manager Susan Leigh Cleveland, 55, three times as she pleaded for her life.

Justice Cameron Mander described the shootings as “coldbloode­d executions” by a “very dangerous person”.

Tully has lodged appeals against his conviction and sentence. No hearing date has yet been set.

Retired Detective Senior Sergeant Lance Corcoran, who led the original Ashburton CIB investigat­ion, didn’t recall Tully being either a suspect or person of interest.

“I was aware of Mr Tully before he did what he did. It’s possible that he came up after my time,” said Corcoran, who compulsori­ly retired at the age of 55 less than a year after Bentley’s death.

“We never had a list of suspects, as such. Where it’s a whodunnit investigat­ion, they are all persons of interest to me.

“You try and eliminate them, although some remain on that list to this day.”

According to Murton, the investigat­ion will remain open “until it is completed, one way or another”.

 ??  ?? Kirsty Bentley
Kirsty Bentley

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