Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

Tragic end for young hitcher friends

- ALISON MARKS & LUCY KINBACHER

ONE thing sticks in Barbara Jahnke’s mind from when her family learned of her sister’s unexplaine­d murder 43 years ago: her mother’s tears.

“Mum would always just constantly break down (after it happened),” said Ms Jahnke yesterday about her older sister Gabriele’s death in October 1973.

“We lost Dad about seven years ago and it would have been nice for that to be solved before it,” she said. “He always wanted answers.

“After all this time if they haven’t found him (the killer) now they never probably will, he might be dead.”

A decision to save money for partying proved fatal for Gabriele Ingrid Jahnke and her best friend, Michelle Anne Riley, who, on October 5, 1973, decided to hitchhike from Brisbane to check out the nightlife in Surfers Paradise and Coolangatt­a.

The pair had known each other for only two months but , they had become inseparabl­e and were often seen together in pubs in the Brisbane area.

Ms Jahnke and Ms Riley were last seen alive at Michelle’s home in Emperor St, Annerley, about 5pm on October 5.

Eight days later, two children made the gruesome discovery of 19-year-old Gabriele’s decomposed body beside the Pacific Highway at Ormeau. Her body lay at the bottom of an embankment and it looked as if she had been thrown there.

She was dressed in a black caftan-style dress with white flowers and a black bra, but no other underwear.

Her dress had been pulled up, suggesting she may have been raped.

Eleven days later, the body of 16-year-old Michelle was found in bushland off the Camp Cale Rd at Loganholme.

Her clothes had been pulled up and the killer had hurriedly tried to conceal Ms Riley’s body by pulling some branches over it.

Police at the time said one person – “a frenzied maniac” – was responsibl­e for both murders.

Both victims had massive head injuries.

Homicide detectives followed up several leads in the double murder case, but no arrests were made.

Barbara Jahnke said she had only recently begun thinking about her sister’s case again while watching crime stories on TV.

“You’d think after all these years they would have found something,” said Ms Jahnke, who was 14 at the time of her sister’s murder.

“I don’t know how many years back it was that they said they were going to (get a cold case team to look into it) but we still never heard anything.

“We haven’t heard anything about it for years.

“They put the occasional piece in the paper and just stuff like that.”

Just days after the double murder, police were given a third case.

An 18-year-old Ipswich girl had been raped, stabbed and left for dead near Nerang.

Police initially linked all three murders and focused their attention on the descriptio­n of a man and his car wanted in relation to the stabbing attack.

He was eventually caught, but to the disappoint­ment of the investigat­ors at the time, was found not to be connected to the Jahnke-Riley murders.

The pair weren’t the only ones to meet a violent death in the southeast corner of Queensland during the 1970s.

They were the third and fourth to endure such a gruelling end.

The murders began in July, 1972, with the deaths of 18year-old Robin Hoinville-Bartram and Anita Cunningham, 19.

The pair were hitchhikin­g from Melbourne to Bowen in northern Queensland to visit Ms Hoinville-Bartram’s parents when they disappeare­d near Coolangatt­a.

Ms Hoinville-Bartram’s body was found four months later under a bridge at Sensible Creek, west of Charters Towers. She had been shot in the head with a .22 rifle.

Ms Cunningham’s body has never been found, but there is not much doubt about her fate.

Ms Jahnke and Ms Riley were the next to be murdered, and then on October 5, 1974 – one year later – two Sydney trainee nurses, Lorraine Wilson and Wendy Evans, both 20, disappeare­d while hitchhikin­g from Brisbane to Goondiwind­i after their car broke down.

Then there was Surfers Paradise teenager Margaret Rosewarne, 19, who was last seen alive trying to hitch a ride near her home to Burleigh Heads on May 5, 1976.

Sixteen days later, her battered body was found in grass in a West Burleigh cul-de-sac.

She had been so savagely beaten that her forehead was pulped, both upper and lower jaws were broken and the top row of her teeth shattered.

Police were never able to pin anyone to the “hitchhiker” killings and avoided suggesting the evil acts had been committed by one serial killer.

However there was no denying the chilling common denominato­rs.

All seven women were under 21, all were hitchhikin­g in the Coast-Brisbane area, they all suffered serious head injuries, it appears they were all sexually assaulted and, in most cases, there was little effort to hide the bodies.

You’d think after all these years they would have found something BARBARA JAHNKE

 ??  ?? Murder victim Michelle Anne Riley was just 16. Gabriele Jahnke, whose death at 19 still haunts her family.
Murder victim Michelle Anne Riley was just 16. Gabriele Jahnke, whose death at 19 still haunts her family.
 ??  ?? Detectives at the scene in Ormeau where the body of Gabriele Jahnke was discovered.
Detectives at the scene in Ormeau where the body of Gabriele Jahnke was discovered.

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