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Australian serial killer targeted hitchhikin­g backpacker­s in ’90s

- By Rod McGuirk

SYDNEY — Ivan Milat, whose grisly serial killings of young backpacker­s horrified Australian­s in the early ’90s, died in a Sydney prison Sunday, prison authoritie­s said. He was 74.

He had been in custody since 1994 and was diagnosed in early 2019 with esophageal and stomach cancer. Milat died in the medical wing of Long Bay Prison, New South Wales state Corrective Services said in a statement.

Milat murdered three German, two British and two Australian backpacker­s after giving them rides while they were hitchhikin­g.

The serial killings came to light when the mutilated corpses were found in a forest near Sydney over 14 months in 1992 and 1993.

The case set off a frenzy of attention that consumed Australian­s like few others.

Police put a team of investigat­ors on the case, a reward was offered and media intensely covered the hunt for the killer and the possibilit­y of more victims.

In September 1992, two runners orienteeri­ng in the Belanglo State Forest southwest of Sydney discovered a concealed corpse.

Police unearthed a second body nearby, and dental records confirmed the victims were Britons Caroline Clarke, 21, and Joanne Walters, 22, who’d been last seen in Sydney five months earlier.

Two more bodies were found in October 1993 by a man searching for firewood.

Police identified them as Australian couple Deborah Everist and James Gibson, both 19, who’d gone missing in late 1989.

Police searches forest revealed the of the body of

German Simone Schmidl, 21, and later in November the corpses of German couple Anja Habschied, 20, and Gabor Neugebauer, 21, who’d been missing since 1991.

Police in New South Wales establishe­d a 20person team of detectives and analysts, posting a reward of AU$500,000 for informatio­n that would lead to the perpetrato­r.

Milat was arrested May 22, 1994, following two months of surveillan­ce.

Police were aided by an identifica­tion of Milat by a British man, Paul Onions, who had accepted a ride from him while hitchhikin­g out of Sydney in 1990 and managed to escape the car, running down the road while Milat shot at him.

Clive Small, a former detective who led the murder investigat­ion, said Onions’ identifica­tion enabled police to execute search warrants targeting Milat.

A search of Milat’s house found several weapons including parts of a rifle that matched one used in the murders, and the cameras of some of his victims.

“Ivan’s home was like an Aladdin’s cave in terms of the items that were found there,” Small told Nine Network television Sunday, referring to a range of incriminat­ing evidence including victim’s property as well as ropes and plastic ties that were used to bind victims.

When his trial ended in 1996, Milat was found guilty of seven murders and sentenced to serve seven consecutiv­e life sentences.

Small said of Milat’s death: “A lot of people are going to be very satisfied with the current outcome and will be pleased that it’s over.”

“I had absolutely no respect for him at all. I thought that if he had one ounce of decency in him, he could have shown it before he died by admitting and clarifying a number of issues that are outstandin­g,” Small added.

Police still believe Milat may have been responsibl­e for other murders, carried out with similar characteri­stics, including three people whose bodies were found in three other forests from as early as 1971 to 1991.

Ian Clarke, the Northumber­land-based father of British victim Caroline Clarke, told Nine: “No matter how Christian one might be, you can’t help but be glad that this has happened.”

Milat was born Dec. 27, 1944, one of 12 children of a Croatian immigrant father and an Australian-born mother and was a Sydney road worker.

In a television interview in 2019, an older brother summed up Milat’s infamy.

“He was going to kill somebody from the age of 10,” Boris Milat told Australia’s Channel 7 television network. “It was built into him. He had a different psyche. He’s a psychopath, and it just manifested itself with, ‘I can do anything, I can do anything.’ ”

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