Phillip Island is best known to most as the home to the fairy penguin. Each night, tourists can watch them waddling home at dusk, out of the ocean and up the beach. But beneath the postcard beauty lies one of Australia’s most unsettling unsolved murders.
In The Phillip Island Murder, Vikki Petraitis takes readers back to 1986, when 23-year-old Beth Barnard was brutally murdered in her bedroom in a farmhouse on the island. Her throat was cut, her body repeatedly stabbed and slashed, and her hands showed clear defensive wounds, evidence of a desperate fight for her life.
That same night, wife of wealthy and influential local Fergus Cameron, and mother to two young children, Vivienne Cameron vanished without explanation. Beth, meanwhile, had been working as a farmhand on the Cameron property and was engaged in a well-known affair with Fergus at the time of her death.
An inquest in 1988 ruled Vivienne the likely killer before taking her own life, yet her body was never recovered and to this day she has never been found.
First published in 1993, this was Petraitis’ first endeavour into true crime writing, and it is a compelling one. Unwelcome on the island once locals learned what she was investigating, she persisted anyway, turning over every stone until she hit brick walls. What she uncovers forces the reader to seriously question the coroner’s findings because when the evidence is laid out, things simply don’t add up.
Did Vivienne really have the physical strength to inflict such brutal injuries? Would she truly abandon her children? And why was Fergus never scrutinised more closely? Did his standing within the community shield him from suspicion and did he get away with murder?