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Backpacker killer Ivan Milat's FIFTY new victims: Damning revelations he slaughtered tourists years before Belanglo - as haunting photo of his 'kill kit' emerges

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Daily Mail
2026/05/03 - 14:44 501 مشاهدة
By CANDACE SUTTON, SENIOR NEWS REPORTER, AUSTRALIA Published: 15:44, 3 May 2026 | Updated: 15:44, 3 May 2026 A new investigation will examine claims Australian serial killer Ivan Milat may have murdered dozens more young people over the course of decades before killing the seven backpackers whose bodies he dumped in Belanglo State Forest.  The inquiry, which opens next month, will focus on at least 50 people aged from their late teens to their late twenties who were strangled, stabbed, shot or beaten to death, with Milat identified as the likely perpetrator. It will examine a list of missing and murdered people from every Australian state and territory which, if proven to be linked to the so-called 'backpacker killer', would make him a more prolific serial killer than American monster Ted Bundy - or anyone else. The list includes backpackers or tourists from the US, Italy, New Zealand, Germany and Britain, as well as Australians, whose bodies were dumped or whose remains were never found. The murders stretch from the 1970s to the early 1990s - when Milat killed the three German, two British and two Australian travellers whose remains were found in shallow graves in Belanglo. The parliamentary inquiry spearheaded by NSW Upper House MP Jeremy Buckingham will look into multiple cases of people who vanished while travelling in pairs, like six of the seven Belanglo deaths. It will also investigate why Milat roamed free after skipping bail on a double rape in 1971 and his 1994 arrest. 'The issue for us is how, from the early 1970s to [the] Belanglo [murders], he was allowed to commit scores of abductions and opportunistic homicidal killings,' Mr Buckingham told the Daily Mail. Ivan Milat (right, with brother Bill and his nephew) is believed to have murdered many more people before he killed the seven backpackers whose bodies he dumped in the Belanglo Forest Jeremy Buckingham, above with his 'Ivan Milat wall' in Parliament House, is spearheading an inquiry into unsolved murders which may be attributed to serial killer Ivan Milat Keren Rowland, from Canberra, was 20 when she went missing on February 26, 1971, the night of the Royal Canberra Show. The next day, Milat reported for work in Liverpool, in south-west Sydney, where colleagues say he boasted about murdering someone and burying the body in the bush. Keren's remains were discovered at the Air Disaster Memorial nearly three months later on May 13, 1971 'He was recognised at crime scenes, in identikit images, and never questioned or arrested. Coroners found him to be the person of interest at inquests.  'A man wearing a large black cowboy hat, which we know Ivan owned and loved to wear because we've seen the photos of him posing in one with his guns, was identified by witnesses in some cases. 'There was a man named "the cowboy killer" that was believed to have been Milat, and he was recognised - by a passing police officer - at the scene of a murder by a lone gunman.  'He was acquitted of crimes his accomplices - one of them his brother - got 18 years for. He was never pursued for another crime until Belanglo, and that inquiry stalled until a citizen on his own found the second two sets of bodies. 'There was a task force called Fenwick before Task Force Air [the NSW Police task force established to investigate the Belanglo backpacker murders], which looked into 17 murders and failed to arrest or convict anyone, and it was only after a coroner slammed that [that] the NSW Police formed the Unsolved Homicide Unit. 'Why was one of the worst serial killers in Australia let loose when police had already identified him as probably responsible for these 50 murders? 'NSW Police were well aware of  the savagely brutal murders of beautiful women, sometimes in pairs, and then increasingly couples and men, and that they were connected to Milat.'  Standing by a wall in his office at NSW Parliament House which is covered with photos, news articles, maps and the images of dead and missing, Mr Buckingham showed the Daily Mail a police photograph of Milat's 'kill kit'. Ivan Milat's kill kit: a selection of the gun-obsessed Milat's firearms, plus an array of knives, gags, spray bottles and a hood made from a paintball mask with 'Die' inscribed on one cheek Trudie Adams vanished in 1978 from Newport in the early hours of June 25, 1978, after attending a dance at the Newport Surf Life Saving Club Marty Fox and his partner Anneke Adriaansen disappeared in Kempsey, NSW, in 1979 The inquiry could well find that Milat was a more prolific serial killer than American monster Ted Bundy (pictured in June 1977)  It consists of a selection of the gun-obsessed Milat's firearms, plus an array of knives, gags, spray bottles and a sinister hood made from a paintball mask with 'Die' inscribed on one cheek. Detailing how Milat’s modus operandi evolved over time, Mr Buckingham described some of the most tragic cases: young women never to be seen again who wrote notes to loved ones, he believes, while they were restrained under threat of death. 'Why was this homicidal maniac not caught and locked up sooner?' he said. 'We can link these murders and the locations of bodies and places of disappearance to areas where Ivan was living or working. 'He frequented Kings Cross and I believe that the three couples he killed and dumped in Belanglo he met there, not hitchhiking out west on the Hume Highway. 'On one of the times he was in jail, on remand in Long Bay, he told his cellmate how when he was a roadworker on the Kings Cross tunnel, which was built from 1970 to 1975, he murdered dozens of young people. 'He dumped them, he told Noel Manning, around Heathcote and the Royal National Park. 'There are a number of sites that were never properly searched, which need to be looked into as Ivan's burial grounds.'  The 'Inquiry into unsolved murders and long-term missing persons cases in NSW between 1965 and 2010' will investigate cases including:  STEPHEN LAPHTHORNE &  MICHELLE POPE It was August 25, 1978, when Michelle Pope, 18, and Stephen Lapthorne, 20, left his home in West Pymble, Sydney, heading for her place in Berowra. They were driving in Stephen's pride and joy, a rare lime green Bedford CF van, the 'Scooby Doo'-style vehicle which he had lovingly customised. The 1977 car had a four-inch, dark green horizontal band along each side, chrome-plated mag wheels, and a 150cm aerial in the centre of the roof, with a clip-on aerial above the driver's window. Stephen Lapthorne and girlfriend Michelle Pope disappeared while driving his distinctive lime green van from Sydney's northern suburbs. Milat, who was working in the region at the time, loved lime green cars  A vehicle of the same model and colour that Lapthorne owned and was last seen with his girlfriend Michelle in 1978 In 2017, almost 40 years after Stephen and Michelle vanished without a trace, his Bedford CF van was found burnt out in the bush 50km south of Belanglo, where Milat dumped seven of his victims in the early 1990s Inside the vehicle were high-back Ford Escort seats and black curtains across the rear windows. The couple didn't turn up at Michelle's home, but a witness saw the vehicle at Gordon alongside two carloads of men.   Days, months and years went by with no sign of the couple or the lime green Bedford. In August 2005, a coronial inquest found Stephen and Michelle had died. Milat, who was working around northern Sydney at the time of the disappearance, was named as the person most likely to have killed the couple, but the coroner handed down an open finding as to the date, time and cause of death. It has since emerged that Milat loved lime green cars - he once owned a lime green Valiant. And then, in 2017, a burnt-out Bedford was found in the NSW bush. Traces of lime green paint were identified and it had the bucket seats and customised items. The vehicle's engine number was the same, bar one digit, from the one Lapthorne had registered. The location of the van was 50km south of the Belanglo Forest. Coober Pedy, South Australia. November 28, 1971 Anna Rosa Liva, who came from Pordenone, in northern Italy, arrived on a bus at Coober Pedy from Alice Springs at 10pm on November 27, 1971. She was one of many foreign backpackers who had arrived to explore the Outback town, and was booked into a well-known budget motel just off the main thoroughfare. Italian backpacker Anna Rosa Liva vanished from Coober Pedy, South Australia, on November 28, 1991. The inquiry believes she could be linked to German Belanglo victims Gabor Neugebauer and AnjaHabschied At 8am the next day, Anna ate breakfast at the Last Resort Cafe and walked the few hundred metres back to her accommodation, had a cup of coffee, and told staff she was going opal hunting. She used the words 'noodling for opals', which the staff believed she must have picked up from a local. She was last seen at 11.30am around the town's council chambers. Police believe it is most likely that she had a discussion with someone and went willingly with her killer. Her body is believed to have been disposed of in one of the thousands of disused mineshafts that surround the town. The inquiry will look into possible links between Anna Rosa and the Belanglo victims Gabor Neugebauer and Anja Habschied, who just two days before she vanished had been at Uluru. Milat was recognised at crime scenes, in identikit images, and resembled a killer wearing a large black cowboy hat seen at several murders. (Left: the identikit for the 1965 Wanda Beach murders; and right: a young Milat) After the German couple had arrived in Australia, they are believed to have travelled swiftly through the Outback, possibly riding with the same person who eventually dropped them in Sydney. Gabor and Anja were last seen alive on Bondi Beach on Christmas Day 1991, and there is growing evidence Milat's hunting ground for backpackers was Kings Cross, where most stayed while in Sydney. In November 1993, their bodies were found in Belanglo. Habschied was headless and Neugebauer had been shot in the head six times. TONI CAVANAGH & KAY DOCHERTY Warilla, near Wollongong, NSW. July 27, 1979 Kay Docherty, 16, told her parents she was staying at her best friend Toni Cavanagh's house. Toni told her family they were going to the movies with Kay's aunt and uncle. It was July 1979, and, in reality, the two teens were on their way to the Wollongong CBD to attend a disco on the evening of the 27th. Their last sighting was at a bus stop at dusk. The following week, Toni and Kay's families received separate letters from the pair posted from the Kings Cross area, saying they were staying with friends and would be home soon. Friends Toni Cavanagh, 15, (left) and Kay Docherty, 16, told lies about their whereabouts when they were really going to Wollongong when they disappeared in 1979 A week after they vanished, Kay's parents received this letter from her, postmarked Kings Cross, said to be one of Milat's hunting grounds, and with an odd grammatical mistake in it The handwriting was theirs, but in Kay's letter there was a misspelling - 'write' instead of right - which troubled her family because she was a bright and diligent student, good at English. 'Dear Mum & Da,' the note reads, 'I have gone away with a few friends to Sydney. I will be back in a week. I am all write so don't worry about me. Love Kay. P.S. I love you both very much.' In 2009, police issued a $100,000 cash reward, saying: 'Their families have spent the last 30 years wondering what happened to their daughters. They deserve closure.' GILLIAN JAMIESON & DEBORAH BALKEN Tollgate Hotel, Parramatta, 12 July, 1980 Twenty-year-old high school friends Deborah Balken and Gillian Jamieson were drinking on the evening of July 12, 1980, at Parramatta's Tollgate Hotel, where they were seen chatting to a man wearing a large-brimmed black cowboy hat. From Cumberland, western Sydney, they were believed to have left the hotel about 7pm. Deborah Balken phoned a friend saying they were going to Wollongong with the 'gardener fellow' who was a friend of Gillian's The 20-year-old high school friends vanished after drinking on the evening of July 12, 1980, at Parramatta's Tollgate Hotel where they were seen chatting to a man wearing a large-brimmed black cowboy hat. (Above, Ivan Milat) Gillian Jamieson was drinking with her schoolfriend Deborah Balken at the Tollgate Hotel and were seen chatting with a man wearing a black cowboy hat At about 9.15pm, Deborah phoned a friend to say they were getting a lift to a party in Wollongong. During the conversation, Deborah said they were with a former workmate of Gillian, whom she described as being 'the gardener fellow.' Milat was known to drink at the Tollgate. At the time of the suspected murders of Jamieson and Balken, he was working at the Granville depot of the then Department of Main Roads. Busby, Sydney NSW. November 13, 1987 Peter Letcher had no money and no job, and on a Friday in November 1987, the flat-broke 18-year-old was in need of a lift to Bathurst from Sydney. The unemployed sawmiller had travelled to Sydney to propose to his 15-year-old girlfriend. She told him she was too young to get married. Letcher, who had lost his job at a timber mill two years earlier, left Busby in the city's south-west, saying he intended to hitchhike back home.  But he never made it home, and it wasn't until the following year that his remains were found in the Jenolan State Forest, west of Sydney. Peter Letcher, 18, disappeared while hitchhiking from western Sydney and his body was found a year later, stabbed and then shot, execution-style, five times in the head He had been stabbed and then shot, execution-style, five times in the head, and his was body covered with branches.  Milat was employed by the Department of Main Roads at the time in that area. The late Clive Small, the former Task Force Air Commander, believed this was the most likely of the unsolved murders to be Milat's doing. 'When you look at the way he was murdered, shot in the head and stabbed in the back - that's the way many of the backpackers were murdered,' he said. 'Ivan was also known to be in the area at the time, and Peter's body was also left in a bush area in a similar way to the others, but there wasn't quite enough evidence to charge him.' No comments have so far been submitted. Why not be the first to send us your thoughts, or debate this issue live on our message boards. By posting your comment you agree to our house rules. Do you want to automatically post your MailOnline comments to your Facebook Timeline? Your comment will be posted to MailOnline as usual. Do you want to automatically post your MailOnline comments to your Facebook Timeline? Your comment will be posted to MailOnline as usual We will automatically post your comment and a link to the news story to your Facebook timeline at the same time it is posted on MailOnline. To do this we will link your MailOnline account with your Facebook account. We’ll ask you to confirm this for your first post to Facebook. 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