Synopsis:
The Bega schoolgirl murders refers to the abduction, rape and murder of
New South Wales schoolgirls, 14-year-old Lauren Margaret Barry and
16-year-old Nichole Emma Collins of Bega, New South Wales on 6 October
1997.
The girls were abducted by Leslie Camilleri and Lindsay
Beckett, both from the New South Wales town of Yass, some 60 km from
Canberra. The men subjected the girls to repeated rapes and sexual
assaults on five or more separate occasions, while driving them to
remote locations throughout rural New South Wales and Victoria. Over a
twelve-hour period the girls had been driven several hundred kilometres
from Bega, New South Wales, to Fiddler's Green Creek in Victoria, where
they were stabbed to death by Beckett under the order of Camilleri.
The
girls were reported missing on the day of their disappearance, and a
massive manhunt consisting of family, friends, police and members of the
Bega community combed the area but failed to locate any sign of the
missing girls. Police investigations lasting several weeks eventually
led to Camilleri and Beckett, career criminals with over 200 criminal
convictions between them. Camilleri, who claimed he was innocent of any
crime and insisted Beckett acted alone, was facing existing charges
relating to other sexual assaults against minors at the time of the
schoolgirl murders.
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