Australia 'Teacher's Pet' podcast subject gets 24-year sentence for 1982 murder
A 2003 inquest had recommended charging Dawson with his wife's murder but prosecutors declined, citing a lack of evidence. "Dawson has enjoyed until his arrest 36 years in the community, unimpeded by the taint of a conviction for killing his wife, or by any punishment for doing so," New South Wales Supreme Court Judge Ian Harrison said during the sentencing.
An Australian former high school teacher who was the subject of the hit podcast "The Teacher's Pet" was sentenced on Friday to 24 years in jail for murdering his wife 40 years ago, in a case that has gripped the nation.
The cold case against Christopher Dawson was reopened after the 2018 podcast put pressure on the police to revisit their investigation. A 2003 inquest had recommended charging Dawson with his wife's murder but prosecutors declined, citing a lack of evidence.
"Dawson has enjoyed until his arrest 36 years in the community, unimpeded by the taint of a conviction for killing his wife, or by any punishment for doing so," New South Wales Supreme Court Judge Ian Harrison said during the sentencing. "In a practical sense, his denial of responsibility for that crime has benefited him in obvious ways."
Dawson's lawyer, Greg Walsh, said he planned to appeal the sentence. "Our system of justice and our democracy is based upon the presumption of innocence," he told media on Friday. "He maintains his innocence."
Prosecutors and the victim's family did not immediately make any public comments. Dawson will be eligible for parole in 2040, when he will be 92 years old.
In August the Supreme Court found Dawson deliberately killed his wife, Lynette Dawson, in January 1982 to pursue a relationship with a teenage student he was having an affair with, and who had babysat and lived in his Sydney home. Dawson, now 74, claimed his wife had left him - a defence that Harrison said was fanciful.
Lawyers for Dawson, who was tried without a jury due to the publicity surrounding the case, argued that the podcast, produced by News Corp's the Australian newspaper, denied him a fair trial because of the way he was depicted. Harrison had agreed the podcast - a number-one hit that the newspaper says has been downloaded more than 50 million times - had cast Dawson in a negative light, but had not factored into the verdict.
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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