Murder of Janine Balding


Janine Kerrie Balding was a homicide victim who was abducted, raped and murdered by a homeless gang of five on 8 September 1988, in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Balding's murder is often compared to the 1986 murder of Sydney nurse Anita Cobby.

Early life

Balding was born on 7 October 1967 and lived in Wagga Wagga, New South Wales before moving to Sydney and gaining employment as a teller at a branch of the then State Bank of New South Wales on George Street. She was due to marry her fiancé Steven Moran in March 1989. The couple had purchased a house in Berkeley Vale, approximately north of Sydney, and rented out that house to help finance their wedding.

Abduction and murder

A month before her twenty-first birthday, she was abducted from a Sutherland railway station car park by a group of homeless persons consisting of four males and one female.
These persons were Bronson Blessington, Matthew Elliott, Stephen 'Shorty' Jamieson, Wayne Wilmot and Carol Ann Arrow.
Blessington had met Jamieson and Elliott at a homeless shelter named 'The Station' in the Sydney CBD earlier that day and had proposed "Why don't we get a sheila and rape her?", a quote which became infamously known through Australian news media. The idea was agreed to. Arrow and Wilmot joined in. The victim, who was to be picked at random, became Balding.
The gang of five had earlier approached another female—Christine Moberley—at the same car park, but she became concerned and quickly locked herself in her vehicle and drove home where she reported the matter to her partner. They became concerned for other commuters, so drove to the Sutherland Police Station to report the matter. On passing the same car park en-route they saw the offenders speaking with another female near a motor vehicle there. That person was Janine Balding.
Police, upon being alerted to these incidents, immediately attended the Sutherland Railway Station car park itself, not realising that the earlier encounters had happened in an overflow dirt car park on the opposite side of the rail line. This was the same car park from where Janine Balding had been abducted in the intervening period.
She was driven in her vehicle to the side of the F4 Freeway at Minchinbury in Sydney's west, and during that time was partially stripped of her clothing and raped at knifepoint by Blessington, Jamieson and Elliott. Arrow and Wilmot were in the car but did not rape her. On arrival at Minchinbury, she was again raped. She was then dragged from her vehicle, gagged with a scarf, hog-tied, then lifted over a fence and carried into a paddock by Blessington, Jamieson and Elliott. She was then held down and drowned in a dam on the property.

Convictions

All five members of the group were arrested and charged over the murder of Balding and each faced court. After weeks of deliberations and testimonies, Elliott, Blessington and Jamieson were each given life sentences plus 25 years, while Wilmot was sentenced to seven-and-a-half years in jail and Arrow released on a good behaviour bond as the pair did not participate in the rape and murder.
The sentencing of Blessington and Elliot became a topic of extreme controversy, because at the time they committed the murder and were sentenced, they were aged 14 and 16, respectively—becoming the youngest killers in Australia to be convicted and given the maximum sentence for murder.
In sentencing the defendants, Justice Newman said:
In 2007, Elliott and Blessington were granted an additional appeal based on a staple missing from their files. Essentially, it was argued, because the Crown indictment was not stapled to the court file, it was not "fixed" to the court file as required by law and the judgement was therefore not technically finalised. The High Court of Australia subsequently rejected this ground of appeal.
In an article published in The Sydney Morning Herald, the crime was classified as a thrill killing.

Sentences

Imprisonment

Stephen Jamieson is currently housed in Goulburn Correctional Centre in maximum security.
Bronson Blessington is currently housed in South Coast Correctional Centre in maximum security. After being sentenced in 1990 at age 16, Blessington served two years in Minda Youth Detention Centre and stated that he had become a born-again Christian. A day after turning 18 he was transferred to Long Bay Correctional Centre where he served some time prior to being transferred to Goulburn Correctional Centre. He served some years there prior to being transferred to the Mid-North Coast Correctional Centre. In 2012 he was reclassified from maximum security to medium security until July 2015, when he was again reclassified and returned to maximum security.
Matthew Elliott is currently housed in Long Bay Correctional Complex in maximum security. After turning 18, Elliot was transferred to Long Bay Correctional Complex. He was eventually transferred to Goulburn Correctional Centre. In 2007 he was reclassified into medium security and was transferred to Cooma Correctional Centre and participated in programs inside the gaol. Elliott eventually started to self-harm. In July 2015 he was reclassified from medium security back to maximum security and was placed in to Long Bay Correctional Complex.
Wayne Wilmot is currently housed at Long Bay Correctional Complex in maximum security. He is now a serial sex offender and is serving sentences for sexual assault and kidnap. He was released from gaol in 1996 after serving sentences for kidnapping and sexual assault of Janine Balding, but was reimprisoned two years later. Since then he has served the majority of his sentence in Lithgow Correctional Centre and has been in trouble whilst there. On 8 January 2014 he was charged with sexual assault on other inmates. On 21 June 2019 he was rejected from the Sex Offenders' Program. Wilmot’s sentence was to expire on 26 June 2019, when he will know if he is to be released or remain in custody due to disciplinary issues.

Further developments

In 1998, Wilmot returned to prison for seven years after an attempted abduction and rape of a young girl in Western Sydney just two years after being released for time served over the accessory to murder of Balding. Wilmot was then linked to an earlier attack on a 19-year-old woman at Leightonfield, New South Wales after undertaking a DNA testing program for prisoners.
In 2003, the NSW Innocence Project used the latest DNA techniques to review the DNA evidence of the crime. This was done because Jamieson denied taking part in the murder, and one of the murderers had claimed that it was 'Shorty' Wells who had committed the murder.
The DNA results demonstrated that Jamieson's DNA was not found in a rectal swab taken from the victim at autopsy, and neither was the DNA of Wells. Police Minister John Watkins announced that the NSW Innocence Project would be suspended. Arrow subsequently stated that Jamieson was one of the murderers.
In late October 2014, the United Nations Human Rights Committee ruled that the sentences of Blessington and Elliott breached the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. The Committee asked the Australian Government to "review the case and remedy the human rights breach".
In February 2016, Blessington lodged an appeal to be released from prison given he was only 14 at the time he committed the murder. Blessington claimed "he found God", that he was remorseful for his actions and was a changed man. Despite these claims, Janine's family reported that nearly three decades on from the murder, it had not received any formal apology or letter from Blessington expressing such remorse and did not believe he had changed.
Janine's mother Beverley co-wrote, with journalist Janette Fife-Yeomans, a book entitled The Janine Balding Story – A Journey Through A Mother's Nightmare, in which she relates how her family coped with the loss of Janine, of the police investigations and the lengthy trials. In October 2013—shortly after what would have been Janine's 46th birthday—and after suffering from and battling two-and-a-half years of depression, Beverley Balding died after a short stay in hospital. She is buried alongside her daughter in the Wagga Lawn Cemetery.