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Strewth - Australian True Crime and Mystery Podcast
Strewth - Australian True Crime and Mystery Podcast
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Welcome to Strewth, where we uncover Australia's most captivating tales of true crime and mysterious happenings. Yarns so extraordinary they'll make you stop and say, "Strewth!"
From the sun-scorched outback to the seedy underbelly of our biggest cities, Australia harbours some of the world's most perplexing mysteries. Stories so bizarre that even hardened detectives could only mutter that distinctly Australian expression of disbelief.
Each episode takes you deep into extraordinary cases through atmospheric storytelling and meticulous research. You'll walk alongside the detectives, feel the frustration of families seeking answers, and experience the shock of communities torn apart by inexplicable events.
Strewth reveals how these cases shaped Australian society and exposes the dark undercurrents flowing beneath the nation's beautiful facade. From colonial-era crimes to modern forensic breakthroughs, these are the stories that made headlines and left investigators scratching their heads.
New episodes weekly. Because some stories are too strange not to tell.
From the sun-scorched outback to the seedy underbelly of our biggest cities, Australia harbours some of the world's most perplexing mysteries. Stories so bizarre that even hardened detectives could only mutter that distinctly Australian expression of disbelief.
Each episode takes you deep into extraordinary cases through atmospheric storytelling and meticulous research. You'll walk alongside the detectives, feel the frustration of families seeking answers, and experience the shock of communities torn apart by inexplicable events.
Strewth reveals how these cases shaped Australian society and exposes the dark undercurrents flowing beneath the nation's beautiful facade. From colonial-era crimes to modern forensic breakthroughs, these are the stories that made headlines and left investigators scratching their heads.
New episodes weekly. Because some stories are too strange not to tell.
30 Episodes
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In October 1977, nineteen-year-old Constable Tony Russell responded to a welfare check on his first day at Paddington Police Station. What he found in Florence Broadhurst's wallpaper factory would haunt him for nearly fifty years. This special follow-up to our "A Murderer Takes Tea" episode tells the story that couldn't be told in our original Florence Broadhurst investigation, because at the time, the first officer on the scene was never allowed to tell it. Tony Russell saw critical evidence that morning but within hours of finding the body, Tony was told to forget what he'd seen. He was never interviewed. Never asked for a statement. Never allowed to document his observations. Through Tony's own words, recorded in a phone interview, we reconstruct what he saw that day, what happened to him afterward, and what his observations tell us about who really killed Florence Broadhurst. Sources: Thomson, Katherine: Unfolding Florence: The Many Lives of Florence Broadhurst - Shand Adam: Australian Crime Stories (Season 2, Episode 4) "Killing Florence" O'Neill, Helen. The Laughing Hangman: The True Story Behind the Florence Broadhurst Murder. Sydney: Random House Australia, 2006. Title Music: by Jesse Frank from Pixabay Strewth Social Media Links: https://linktr.ee/strewthpodcast Contact us: strewthpodcast@gmail.com
An hour north of Sydney, a drowned valley plunges forty metres into darkness. For over a century, witnesses have reported something moving through the Hawkesbury River that shouldn't exist. Long necks rising from murky water, massive shapes surfacing near boats, creatures that defy explanation. The Darug people have stories about this river that stretch back 50,000 years. Bull sharks are confirmed. Seals enter from the Pacific. In Episode 29 of Strewth, we dive into Australia's deepest river mystery. Sources Australian Geomechanics Society: "Marine geophysical investigations of palaeo-drainage systems in the Hawkesbury River Estuary, New South Wales, Australia." MiNDFOOD. "Sydney Siders Urged to Exercise Caution and Avoid Harbour Waters After Recent Shark Attack." https://www.mindfood.com/article/sydney-siders-urged-to-exercise-caution-and-avoid-harbour-waters-after-recent-shark-attack/ Trove: "SHARK TRAGEDY - YOUTH'S TERRIBLE DEATH." The Canberra Times, December 14, 1936. https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/2417183 The Dictionary of Sydney. "The Dyarubbin Project: Aboriginal history, culture and places on the Hawkesbury River." https://dictionaryofsydney.org/entry/the_dyarubbin_project_aboriginal_history_culture_and_places_on_the_hawkesbury_river "Darug women claim back their Hawkesbury history." Central News, May 31, 2021. https://centralnews.com.au/2021/05/31/darug-women-claim-back-their-hawkesbury-history/ "The Hawkesbury River Monster." Mysterious Australia. https://www.mysteriousaustralia.com/the_hawkesbury_river_monster.html Title Music: by Jesse Frank from Pixabay Strewth Social Media Links: https://linktr.ee/strewthpodcast Contact us: strewthpodcast@gmail.com
An Island of Secrets - Part 2 of 2 - Analysing the Evidence The official story seemed simple: Vivienne Cameron murdered Beth Barnard in jealous rage, then jumped from the San Remo Bridge. Case closed. But when forensic scientists examined the evidence, they found something impossible. A pink mohair jumper that never left a single fibre. A blood-soaked murder scene where the killer left no victim's blood in the escape vehicle. Phone calls at times that don't match the timeline. A handbag that appeared in two different places. And a woman who supposedly drowned hours before her friend received a phone call from her discussing sewing patterns. In Part 2, we examine what the evidence really shows and why every piece of forensic science points away from the official narrative toward something more complex, more troubling, and more deliberately concealed. After forty years, the bones in the sand might finally reveal the truth. Or they might prove that Phillip Island's secrets run even deeper than anyone imagined. Sources Petraitis, Vikki and Paul Daley: The Phillip Island Murder (1993, 3rd edition 2018) Petraitis, Vikki: The Vanishing of Vivienne Cameron: Forty Years Searching for the Phillip Island Murderer (Simon & Schuster, January 2026) Casefile Presents Podcast (2020): The Vanishing of Vivienne Cameron Sensing Murder (2006) The Scarlett Letter (Series 1 - Episode 8) Under Investigation: Adultery, Murder and Mayhem (2021) Title Music: by Jesse Frank from Pixabay Strewth Social Media Links: https://linktr.ee/strewthpodcast Contact us: strewthpodcast@gmail.com
An Island of Secrets - Part 1 of 2 - The Fateful Night September 1986. A brutal murder on Phillip Island. A woman carved with the letter "A" for adulteress. Another woman vanished without trace. For forty years, Australia accepted the official story: jealous wife kills mistress, then commits suicide by jumping from a bridge. But in January 2026, plumbers digging for a septic tank found human bones buried in the sand. And suddenly, questions that were never properly answered demanded attention. Join us for Part 1 of the Phillip Island Mystery as we walk through the night of September 22nd, 1986. The wine glass attack, the hospital visit, the mysterious 3 AM phone call, and the discovery of Beth Barnard's body with a message carved into her chest. Every detail matters, because when you look closely, nothing about this night makes sense. One night. Two women. Forty years of unanswered questions. Sources Petraitis, Vikki and Paul Daley: The Phillip Island Murder (1993, 3rd edition 2018) Petraitis, Vikki: The Vanishing of Vivienne Cameron: Forty Years Searching for the Phillip Island Murderer (Simon & Schuster, January 2026) Casefile Presents Podcast (2020): The Vanishing of Vivienne Cameron Sensing Murder (2006) The Scarlett Letter (Series 1 - Episode 8) Under Investigation: Adultery, Murder and Mayhem (2021) Title Music: by Jesse Frank from Pixabay Strewth Social Media Links: https://linktr.ee/strewthpodcast Contact us: strewthpodcast@gmail.com
November 24th, 1978. Bank employees, locksmiths, vault experts and finally council workers in Murwillumbah spend nine hours trying to open a bank vault. When they finally broke through, Chief Inspector Frank Charleton looked around the empty space and said three words: "They got the lot." One point seven million dollars. Vanished. Taken by professionals who used an electromagnetic drill, a medical cystoscope, and surgical precision to crack a vault that was supposed to be impregnable. Right across from a pub. One hundred metres from the police station. Forty-six years later, it's still unsolved. Australia's perfect crime. This week on Strewth, the podcast exploring Australia's most baffling mysteries, we examine the robbery, the suspects and the enduring legend of the Murwillumbah Heist. Sources: Sydney Morning Herald, "Bank Robbers 'Got the Lot' - $1.7m Haul," November 25, 1978 Tweed Regional Museum, Murwillumbah - Permanent collection Kidd, Robert "Bertie," memoirs (2022) Bullamakanka, "Murwillumbah Bank Job" (1979) Title Music: by Jesse Frank from Pixabay Strewth Social Media Links: https://linktr.ee/strewthpodcast Contact us: strewthpodcast@gmail.com
On August 7-8, 1993. Kelly Cahill is driving home through Victoria's misty Dandenong Ranges when her car was surrounded by seven-foot tall beings with eyes that glowed burning red through the darkness. One hour of her life vanished. Within weeks, she discovered triangular burns on her body and was hospitalised with infections doctors couldn't explain. Then came the breakthrough that should have changed everything. This was the holy grail of UFO cases. Multiple independent witnesses. Physical evidence on multiple bodies. Medical documentation. Everything needed to be definitive. But there was a problem. This week on Strewth, the story of a terrifying encounter on a dark road, a woman who risked everything to tell her truth, and the evidence that could have proven her claims. When the investigation becomes the mystery, the questions matter more than the answers. Sources: Cahill, Kelly: Encounter. HarperCollins Australia, 1996. Chalker, Bill. "The Kelly Cahill Abduction." International UFO Reporter, Vol. 19, No. 5, September/October 1994. Chalker, Bill. Blog posts and case updates, 2002, 2016. Available through Australian UFO research archives. Phenomena Research Australia (PRA) statements through John Auchettl ABC Australia retrospective. "The Kelly Cahill UFO Encounter: 27 Years On." September 2020. Ferntree Gully Star Mail. "Kelly Cahill UFO Case Revisited." March 2022. Title Music: by Jesse Frank from Pixabay Strewth Social Media Links: https://linktr.ee/strewthpodcast Contact us: strewthpodcast@gmail.com
October 15, 1977. Two police officers discover the body of Florence Broadhurst, a 78-year-old wallpaper designer whose patterns hung in palaces and penthouses around the world, beaten to death in her Paddington studio. The crime scene tells multiple stories and the investigation has spanned decades producing a mix of theories and suspects as eclectic as Florence's celebrated wallpaper designs. This week on Strewth, we analyse the crime, the suspects and celebrate the amazing life of Australia's wallpaper queen, Florence Broadhurst. Sources: Thomson, Katherine: Unfolding Florence: The Many Lives of Florence Broadhurst - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0460427/ Shand Adam: Australian Crime Stories (Season 2, Episode 4) "Killing Florence" O'Neill, Helen. The Laughing Hangman: The True Story Behind the Florence Broadhurst Murder. Sydney: Random House Australia, 2006. Title Music: by Jesse Frank from Pixabay Strewth Social Media Links: https://linktr.ee/strewthpodcast Contact us: strewthpodcast@gmail.com
On June 17, 1826, Frederick Fisher, a convict-turned-successful farmer, vanished from his Campbelltown property. His neighbour George Worrall claimed Fisher had sailed back to England, but there was a problem. Fisher was still a convict, bound to the colony. Returning to England would mean hanging. Three months later, Worrall sat in gaol, arrested on suspicion of murder. But without a body, he couldn't be charged. Then, in October 1826, a farmer named John Farley reported seeing Frederick Fisher's ghost. The apparition sat on a fence rail, blood streaming from its head, pointing toward a creek. Following that direction, authorities found Fisher's body, skull crushed, buried in a shallow grave exactly where the ghost had pointed. It's Australia's most famous ghost story. A tale of supernatural justice. An apparition refusing to let murder go unpunished. This episode explores one of Australia's most enduring mysteries. We'll examine the meticulously documented murder trial, the brilliant tracking skills of Namut Gilbert and the dark possibilities surrounding John Farley's role in the case. Content warning: This episode discusses murder and contains descriptions of violence. Sources: Supreme Criminal Court transcripts, February 2, 1827 Chief Justice Forbes' original court notes (examined by Andrew Lang, 1903) The Sydney Gazette, September-November 1826 The Australian, November 1, 1826 The Monitor, November 3, 1826 Riley, James. "The Sprite of the Creek!" Hill's Life in New South Wales, August 1832 Title Music: by Jesse Frank from Pixabay Strewth Social Media Links: https://linktr.ee/strewthpodcast Contact us: strewthpodcast@gmail.com
This is Part Two of our Highway of Death investigation. After hearing the victims' stories in Part 1, we now examine the hunt for justice, or rather, the spectacular failures of justice. The confessions that led nowhere. The corruption exposed by the Fitzgerald Inquiry that destroyed investigations and let killers walk free. The suspects who died before facing trial. The families who've waited fifty years for answers. And at the center of it all, one haunting question. Were these ten murders the work of a single serial killer who stalked the Flinders Highway for decades? Or multiple predators who independently discovered that isolation makes the perfect hunting ground? After fifty years, over $1.25 million in rewards, and hundreds of thousands of investigative hours, these cases remain unsolved. Content Warning: This episode discusses police corruption, systemic failures of justice, and the ongoing impact on families of unsolved murders. Sources: Fitzgerald Inquiry Report (1987-1989): "Report of a Commission of Inquiry Pursuant to Orders in Council" "The Hunters" - Channel 7 documentary (March 2025) Fisher, Ian (Coroner). (2002, February). Inquest into the disappearance of Anthony "Tony" Jones. Queensland Coroner's Court. Wilson, Nerida (Coroner). (2021). Inquest into the death of Jayden Penno-Tompsett. Queensland Coroner's Court. R v Arthur Stanley Brown (1999). Queensland Supreme Court. Trial transcript, October 1999. Title Music: by Jesse Frank from Pixabay Strewth Social Media Links: https://linktr.ee/strewthpodcast Contact us: strewthpodcast@gmail.com
Between 1970 and 2017, at least ten people were murdered or vanished along the Flinders Highway, a 776-kilometer stretch of isolated Queensland outback. This episode tells their stories: two schoolgirls who walked to the bus stop and never came home. Hitchhiking art students one found with bullets in her head, one still missing. An 18-year-old who made a terrified phone call to her mother. Three motorcycle adventurers found executed in the spinifex grass. A young man who called home and then disappeared so completely his case changed how Australia handles missing persons. Ten names across forty-seven years. Bodies found in dry creek beds. Families left with questions that have no answers. This is Part One of our investigation into Australia's Highway of Death. Before we examine the suspects and the failures of justice, we remember the victims. Content Warning: This episode contains descriptions of violence against children and adults, sexual assault, and murder. Listener discretion is strongly advised. Sources: Fitzgerald Inquiry Report (1987-1989): "Report of a Commission of Inquiry Pursuant to Orders in Council" "The Hunters" - Channel 7 documentary (March 2025) Fisher, Ian (Coroner). (2002, February). Inquest into the disappearance of Anthony "Tony" Jones. Queensland Coroner's Court. Wilson, Nerida (Coroner). (2021). Inquest into the death of Jayden Penno-Tompsett. Queensland Coroner's Court. R v Arthur Stanley Brown (1999). Queensland Supreme Court. Trial transcript, October 1999. Title Music: by Jesse Frank from Pixabay Strewth Social Media Links: https://linktr.ee/strewthpodcast Contact us: strewthpodcast@gmail.com
New Year's Day, 1963. Two bodies are discovered on the banks of Sydney's Lane Cove River. Dr. Gilbert Stanley Bogle, a brilliant physicist. Margaret Chandler, a young mother of two. Both dead. Both half-dressed. No detectable poison in their systems. The FBI is consulted. Scotland Yard investigates. Over a thousand theories tested. The wronged husband. The jealous mistress. Soviet spies. LSD experiments. All dead ends. For forty years, Australia's most baffling mystery remains unsolved. Then a documentary filmmaker asks a question nobody thought to ask. What he discovers is an invisible killer hiding in plain sight. An answer that just might explain everything but can never be proven. This is Strewth. Join us for Australia's most baffling New Years mystery. Sources: Who Killed Dr Bogle & Mrs Chandler?: Podcast series, Peter Butt https://open.spotify.com/show/7C1naUe8jUEzWiWFzhftfS?si=825754256bb14594 Geoffrey Chandler, So You Think I Did It, Sydney: Sun Books, 1969 Who Killed Dr Bogle and Mrs Chandler?, Film Australia in association with Blackwattle Films, 2006 DR. BOGLE AND MRS CHANDLER - DID HYDROGEN SULPHIDE REALLY KILL THEM? ABC Catalyst Story Archive, 23 November 2006, http://www.abc.net.au/catalyst/stories/s1795448.htm Peter Butt, Who Killed Dr Bogle and Mrs Chandler?, Sydney: New Holland, 2012 Tracey Bowden,Two women may hold answer to how Dr Gilbert Bogle and Margaret Chandler died in 1963, ABC News, 2 September 2016: http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-09-02/two-women-may-hold-answer-to-bogle-chandler-case/7808820 The Dictionary of Sydney: The Bogle-Chandler Mystery (2018) https://dictionaryofsydney.org/blog/the_bogle_chandler_mystery Title Music: by Jesse Frank from Pixabay Strewth Social Media Links: https://linktr.ee/strewthpodcast Contact us: strewthpodcast@gmail.com
This Christmas, we're doing something different on Strewth. The Victorian English had a tradition of telling ghost stories around the fire on Christmas night, long before it became all tinsel and shopping, it was a time for sharing tales of the unexplained. We're reviving that tradition with three spooky Australian accounts that never made it into our regular episodes. Over the past year, I've collected dozens of firsthand testimonies while researching cases, witness statements and personal experiences that didn't quite fit into the main episodes, but are no less fascinating for it. Tonight, you'll hear dramatised versions of three of these accounts: a teacher's terrifying encounter during a school hiking trip in the Victorian Alps, spiritualist Ben Davey's hair-raising experience at the infamous 1921 Guyra séance, and Bongo's disturbing radio call about what happened to him in the Pilliga Scrub in 1978. Three witnesses. Three encounters with the inexplicable. Three stories that'll remind you the Australian bush holds more mysteries than we like to admit. Sources: Bongo's radio call - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vUjtoXMAvKs Haunts of Brisbane - Ben Davey seance report - https://hauntsofbrisbane.blogspot.com/2012/05/guyra-ghost-australias-very-own.html The teachers report - https://www.reddit.com/r/melbourne/comments/vl306f/does_anyone_have_any_stories_about_the_button_man/ Title Music: by Jesse Frank from Pixabay Strewth Social Media Links: https://linktr.ee/strewthpodcast Contact us: strewthpodcast@gmail.com
Two ghosts haunt the same stretch of Australia's Central Coast. For fifty years, drivers on Wilfred Barrett Drive have reported picking up a young woman in white who vanishes from their back seat near Norah Head Cemetery. The legend says she was murdered by five men in the 1970s, and that all five died mysteriously afterward. It's one of Australia's most famous ghost stories. A second ghost seems to be from an earlier period, a time when shipwrecks were common along these treacherous shores. There is also real tragedy at Jenny Dixon Beach. In 1950, two sisters, Grace and Kathleen Holmes were brutally murdered near Tuggerah Lakes. Their graves went unmarked for 64 years. Their killer was never found. And while a ghost became famous, the real victims were forgotten. This is the story of how urban legend intertwines with actual horror. How shipwreck folklore mergew with a fabricated murder. And how the wrong victims ended up being remembered. The truth at Jenny Dixon Beach is stranger and sadder than any ghost story. Sources: Newcastle Herald - (February 2024) - https://www.newcastleherald.com.au/story/8523178/ghostly-hitchhiker-of-wilfred-barrett-drive/ Brunvand, Jan Harold. The Vanishing Hitchhiker: American Urban Legends and Their Meanings (1981) Jenny Dixon Beach - Full Movie - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sDNxQlkgcXo Goss, Michale. The evidence for phantom hitch-hikers (1984) True Hauntings Podcast - Episode 25 (April 28, 2021) https://open.spotify.com/episode/10iNaJBCTwzMrV2EMWFRPO Casefile True Crime Podcast - Case 32 - https://casefilepodcast.com/case-32-grace-kathleen-holmes/ Title Music: by Jesse Frank from Pixabay Strewth Social Media Links: https://linktr.ee/strewthpodcast Contact us: strewthpodcast@gmail.com
It's 4 AM on the most isolated highway in Australia. The Knowles family are driving toward a fresh start when they see a light on the road ahead. Within minutes, they're fleeing at speeds approaching 200 kilometres per hour, but the glowing object matches them effortlessly. Then something lands on their car roof with a heavy metallic thud. Faye Knowles reaches up to touch it and what she feels defies description. Black ash fills the cabin. Their voices distort impossibly. The dogs go into a frenzy. And then the car lifts off the road. Six days before Australia's Bicentennial, the Knowles family encountered something on the Nullarbor Plain that police took seriously, scientists struggled to explain, and witnesses never forgot. Physical evidence was collected. Independent corroboration emerged. But nearly forty years later, we still don't know what happened that night. Something real occurred on that desert highway. But what? Sources: A.T. Brunt The Skeptic, 1989 Keith Basterfield - UFO Research South Australia The Skeptic, Volume 8, No I (Autumn 1988) UFO Research Queensland - https://uforq.org/the-knowles-family-ufo-incident-1988/ Title Music: by Jesse Frank from Pixabay Strewth Social Media Links: https://linktr.ee/strewthpodcast Contact us: strewthpodcast@gmail.com
In February 1944, after ten years floating in a bath of formalin, the Pyjama Girl finally got a name. Two teeth fillings mysteriously appeared at the bottom of her preservation bath, just as Police Commissioner William MacKay desperately needed to solve his department's most embarrassing cold case. Within weeks, Antonio Agostini, a recently released wartime internee working as a waiter, confessed to killing his wife Linda. But the confession didn't match the autopsy. The dental evidence was based on memory, not charts. And Agostini maintained until his death in 1969: "That's not my wife." This is Part 2 of our investigation into what may be one of Australia's most disturbing miscarriages of justice. Where a broken man confessed to a murder he may not have committed, and a woman was buried under a name that probably wasn't hers. Sixty years later, a criminologist would expose the case as police corruption and fabricated evidence. But by then, everyone involved was dead, and the truth was buried in an unmarked grave. Join us as we examine the suspicious 1944 "breakthrough," the trial that made no sense, the lenient verdict that suggests even the jury had doubts, and the modern forensic analysis that reveals how solving a case became more important than solving it correctly. Warning: This episode contains discussion of violence against women, wrongful conviction, and the unethical display of human remains. Sources: New South Wales Police: Original investigation files and witness statements (1934) Coroner's inquest: Death of unknown woman, Albury, NSW (September 1934) The Argus (Melbourne): Front-page coverage, September-December 1934 Sydney Morning Herald: Extensive reporting, 1934-1944 Evans, Richard. The Pyjama Girl Mystery: A True Story of Murder, Obsession and Lies. Deakin University Press, 2004. Gilling, Tom. The Pyjama Girl Mystery. Text Publishing, 2004. Title Music: by Jesse Frank from Pixabay Strewth Social Media Links: https://linktr.ee/strewthpodcast Contact us: strewthpodcast@gmail.com
September 1, 1934. A farmer walking his prize bull along a country road outside Albury catches the smell of kerosene. In a concrete culvert, he discovers a woman's body, shot, beaten with eight savage blows to the skull, and burned. What she's wearing shocks Depression-era Australia as much the violence. Silk pyjamas embroidered with a Chinese dragon. For ten years, her body floats in a bath of formalin at Sydney University while thousands file past hoping to identify her. Artists sketch her distorted features. Police make death masks and distribute doctored photographs. A £1,000 reward is offered. Filmmaker Rupert Kathner defies a police ban to create Australia's first true crime film about the case. But despite 125 women investigated as possible matches, despite a decade of intensive forensic examination, despite the grotesque spectacle of public display, no one can say who she is. This is Part 1 of our two-part investigation into the Pyjama Girl Murder, exploring the crime, the investigation, the ethical nightmare of preserving a body as public entertainment, and the institutional pressure that would eventually produce a convenient solution to an impossible mystery. Warning: This episode contains discussion of violence against women, graphic descriptions of murder, and the unethical treatment of human remains. Sources: New South Wales Police: Original investigation files and witness statements (1934) Coroner's inquest: Death of unknown woman, Albury, NSW (September 1934) The Argus (Melbourne): Front-page coverage, September-December 1934 Sydney Morning Herald: Extensive reporting, 1934-1944 Evans, Richard. The Pyjama Girl Mystery: A True Story of Murder, Obsession and Lies. Deakin University Press, 2004. Gilling, Tom. The Pyjama Girl Mystery. Text Publishing, 2004. Title Music: by Jesse Frank from Pixabay Strewth Social Media Links: https://linktr.ee/strewthpodcast Contact us: strewthpodcast@gmail.com
On March 20, 1993, a homeless woman named Clare Wibson was struck and killed by a truck on the Newell Highway through Australia's largest forest. The driver's official statement described her final moments in chilling detail: "She turned towards me, arms outstretched in a hugging-like gesture, and ran towards the truck. The last thing I saw was the white hair flaring out around her wild-eyed face and the expression was one of manic glee." Since that night, hundreds of travelers have reported seeing an elderly woman with white hair and a shopping trolley walking the same desolate 120-kilometer stretch through the Pilliga Forest. Truckers who've never heard the legend stop in nearby towns to report an old woman on foot in the middle of nowhere. Some describe hitting a trolley on the road, only to find no damage and no wreckage. Others speak of a figure that appears in their headlights, arms outstretched, before vanishing into darkness. This episode explores one of Australia's most persistent modern hauntings, from the 2006 ABC Radio Overnights broadcast that brought the legend to national attention, to the disturbing 1978 account by a caller named "Bongo" who claimed something far worse than the Princess walks the Pilliga at night. With over 2.5 million TikTok posts and countless witness testimonies spanning three decades, the Pilliga Princess has become embedded in Australian trucking culture and folklore. Is she a ghost? A collective hallucination born from highway hypnosis on one of the country's most isolated roads? Or something that defies easy explanation? Sources: ABC Radio Overnights broadcast (2006) - witness testimonies Daily Liberal and Central Western Daily - official accident reports (March 1993) Museum of Lost: "The Pilliga Princess" - comprehensive case documentation Coonabarabran Lawn Cemetery records - grave marker documentation True Hauntings Podcast, All Aussie Mystery Hour, Belief Hole Podcast - witness interviews "There's Something in the Pilliga" (2014, dir. Dane Millerd) - documentary evidence Content Warning: This episode discusses homelessness, mental illness, and fatal traffic accidents. Title Music: by Jesse Frank from Pixabay Strewth Social Media Links: https://linktr.ee/strewthpodcast Contact us: strewthpodcast@gmail.com
When Willi Koeppen's blue Kombi was found abandoned with keys in the ignition, police initially dismissed it as a man running from his problems. By the time they realised it was murder, crucial evidence had vanished into the dense Dandenong Ranges. Part 2 follows the investigation that spanned five decades: the underworld confessions that couldn't be proven, the jealous lovers and mistaken identities, the mysterious vehicles seen in the pre-dawn darkness. But as detectives dug deeper, the most compelling evidence pointed not to criminals or strangers but to the tight circle of friends who surrounded Willi's estranged wife. A doctor who brought psychiatric drugs "just in case." A mysterious phone call at 3 AM that only a handful of people could have made. An anonymous tip-off about a potential burial location and witnesses who, nearly 50 years later, still refuse to speak. In 2018, a coroner finally ruled it homicide. Expert investigators agree the case is solvable, if those who know the truth would finally break their silence. But as witnesses age and die, time is running out for Willi's children, who have spent their entire adult lives searching for answers about what really happened that leap year night in the mountains. Content warning: This episode contains references to suicide, alcohol abuse, and suspected violence. Sources 2018 inquest finding by State Coroner Sarah Hinchey (July 11, 2018) "The Cuckoo affair: What happened to Willi Koeppen?" by Tammy Mills (July 13, 2018) Channel Nine "Under Investigation" "Where's Willi" episode (February 15, 2023) "Life and Crimes with Andrew Rule" Podcast - Episode on Koeppen case (October 3, 2020) Marrett Investigations - Case summary and ongoing investigation by Damian Marrett Title Music: by Jesse Frank from Pixabay Strewth Social Media Links: https://linktr.ee/strewthpodcast Contact us: strewthpodcast@gmail.com
On a cold February night in 1976, Australia's first celebrity chef vanished from his Bavarian restaurant in the misty Dandenong Ranges. Wilhelm "Willi" Koeppen, the man who brought smorgasbord dining to Australia and hosted the country's first televised cooking show, left behind a blue Volkswagen Kombi with keys in the ignition and the door wide open. Part 1 reconstructs the final hours: a violent argument with his estranged wife, threats of suicide, hours of drinking with the local doctor, and a mysterious phone call at 3 AM. By sunrise, only his van remained, parked in the wrong spot, abandoned in haste. The window for his disappearance was just 90 minutes. Nearly five decades later, his body has never been found. But the secrets of that night, kept by those who saw him last, may finally be unraveling. This is the story of how a man can disappear in plain sight, and how the people closest to the truth chose silence over justice. Content warning: This episode contains references to suicide, alcohol abuse, and suspected violence. Sources 2018 inquest finding by State Coroner Sarah Hinchey (July 11, 2018) "The Cuckoo affair: What happened to Willi Koeppen?" by Tammy Mills (July 13, 2018) Channel Nine "Under Investigation" "Where's Willi" episode (February 15, 2023) "Life and Crimes with Andrew Rule" Podcast - Episode on Koeppen case (October 3, 2020) Marrett Investigations - Case summary and ongoing investigation by Damian Marrett Title Music: by Jesse Frank from Pixabay Strewth Social Media Links: https://linktr.ee/strewthpodcast Contact us: strewthpodcast@gmail.com
Strewth - Episode 11 - The Gatton Murders On Boxing Day night 1898, Michael Murphy and his sisters Norah and Ellen were brutally murdered while returning from a cancelled dance near Gatton, Queensland. Their bodies were discovered arranged in a triangle, feet carefully positioned pointing west, a detail never repeated in Australian criminal history. What followed was one of the most incompetent police investigations ever recorded, featuring delayed responses, contaminated crime scenes, and a suspect who read Italian poetry. More than a century later, the Gatton Tragedy remains Australia's most baffling and gruesome unsolved murder. Sources: Bennett, Stephanie - The Gatton Murders: A True Story of Lust, Vengeance and Vile Retribution (2013) Bennett, Stephanie - The Killer with 300 Names: 1898: The Scandalous Escape of the Gatton Murderers (2014) Stevenson, Caroline & Sim, Jack - The Tainted Cross: The Oxley & Gatton Murders Unveiled Fagan, Cheryl - Murder and Misconduct (2020) "Gatton's Tragedy Claimed Three Lives in 1898" by C.S. Voll (December 7, 2021) Title Music: by Jesse Frank from Pixabay Strewth Social Media Links: https://linktr.ee/strewthpodcast Contact us: strewthpodcast@gmail.com























