Claremont killer will not appeal convictions, sentence 04/02/2021|4min
Court officials have confirmed Claremont serial killer Bradley Robert Edwards has failed to lodge an appeal against his convictions and sentence by the Wednesday deadline – and subsequently will not be challenging his jail term.
The 52-year-old was sentenced to a minimum of 40 years after being convicted for the murders of Jane Rimmer and Ciara Glennon in Perth in the 1990s.
Western Australia Police vowed they would continue the investigation into the disappearance of another Claremont woman, Sarah Spiers, after Mr Edwards was acquitted of her murder.
Journalist Steve Pennells told Sky News there was a “fear that he[Edwards] would appeal, the signs were there”.
Crime by Justin Lees
Premium Content  A WOMAN who fought off the Claremont Serial Killer has told for the first time how she survived - and that she wishes she had killed the coward . Liz Kirkby also indicated why she was targeted, as a young single mum of two who had just moved in to her house, by vile sex murderer Bradley Edwards. And she said she only discovered her attacker s terrifying identity years after the incident - but wished she had been spared that traumatic revelation because ignorance would have been bliss . Mrs Kirkby, formerly known as Liz Mead, tells her story this week in explosive new Sky News documentary
Crime by Justin Lees
Premium Content  A WOMAN who fought off the Claremont Serial Killer has told for the first time how she survived - and that she wishes she had killed the coward . Liz Kirkby also indicated why she was targeted, as a young single mum of two who had just moved in to her house, by vile sex murderer Bradley Edwards. And she said she only discovered her attacker s terrifying identity years after the incident - but wished she had been spared that traumatic revelation because ignorance would have been bliss . Mrs Kirkby, formerly known as Liz Mead, tells her story this week in explosive new Sky News documentary
Crime by Justin Lees
Premium Content  A WOMAN who fought off the Claremont Serial Killer has told for the first time how she survived - and that she wishes she had killed the coward . Liz Kirkby also indicated why she was targeted, as a young single mum of two who had just moved in to her house, by vile sex murderer Bradley Edwards. And she said she only discovered her attacker s terrifying identity years after the incident - but wished she had been spared that traumatic revelation because ignorance would have been bliss . Mrs Kirkby, formerly known as Liz Mead, tells her story this week in explosive new Sky News documentary
Crime by Justin Lees
Premium Content  A WOMAN who fought off the Claremont Serial Killer has told for the first time how she survived - and that she wishes she had killed the coward . Liz Kirkby also indicated why she was targeted, as a young single mum of two who had just moved in to her house, by vile sex murderer Bradley Edwards. And she said she only discovered her attacker s terrifying identity years after the incident - but wished she had been spared that traumatic revelation because ignorance would have been bliss . Mrs Kirkby, formerly known as Liz Mead, tells her story this week in explosive new Sky News documentary