Mr Cruel

Mr Cruel
Nationality Australian
Known for Home invasion, Abduction, Rape and suspected Murder
Reward amount
$1,200,000
Capture status
Never identified
Wanted since 1987
Comments 3 confirmed attacks 1987-1990 and 1 suspected murder 1991

"Mr Cruel" is the name given to an Australian serial paedophile rapist who attacked three girls in the northern and eastern suburbs of Melbourne in the late 1980s and early 1990s and is the prime suspect in the abduction and murder of a girl. He was described by Victoria Police in late 1980s as "super cool and super cruel” and a subsequent newspaper headline dubbed him as "Mr. Cruel" which was adopted by the media.[1]

He has never been identified and his three confirmed attacks and the suspected murder remain unsolved cold cases. There is a reward of $200,000 for two abductions and a reward of $1,000,000 for murder on offer for information leading to his conviction. On the 25th anniversary of the 1991 abduction and murder the reward was increased from $100,000. [2]

Police describe him as highly intelligent. He meticulously planned each attack, conducting surveillance on the victim and family, he ensured he left no forensic traces, protected his identity by covering his face at all times and left red herrings to divert family and/or police attention. He was softly spoken, his behaviour was cool even taking a break during an attack in a victim’s house to eat a meal and his behaviour was horrendously cruel threatening to kill with a large hunting knife or a handgun.

Crimes

Investigation

Mr. Cruel is believed to have videotaped or perhaps taken still photographs of his attacks. Detectives believe that if he is still alive, he will have kept the tapes and/or photos and will still collect, and possibly swap, child pornography. They say he almost certainly continues to collect pornography through the internet and may communicate with children using chat lines. [5] He plans his crimes - for example, in one case he abducted a girl and told her he would release her in exactly 50 hours, and indeed he did. He bathed his victims carefully, with one victim describing the act as "like a mother washing a baby". In one case, he took a second set of clothes from the girl's home to dress her before she was freed. In another, he dumped the girl in garbage bags so police could not test her original clothes. The modus operandi was the same in the home invasions/abductions in the three attacks and victim statements provided confirmation to police it was the same offender. [6]

Two of his victims were able to provide police with details of the house where they were kept. Both were shackled to a bed with a rough neck brace. One told detectives she heard planes landing, leading police to believe the house was on one of the flight paths to Melbourne Airport. Police checked houses in Keilor East, Niddrie, Airport West, Keilor Park and Essendon North.

On 14 December 2010 Victoria Police announced that a new taskforce had been established about eight months earlier following substantial new intelligence. The new taskforce has been reviewing both the Spectrum Taskforce investigation and some new leads that have come in the last year or so.[7]

Police have searched 30,000 homes and interviewed 27,000 suspects over the attacks, at a cost of $4 million.[8] There is an A$300,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of Mr. Cruel. Police have admitted that some evidence retrieved from the crime scenes at the time has gone missing. One missing item is the tape used to bind one of the victims, which could have provided DNA samples of Mr. Cruel using new forensic technologies.

In April 2016, in the lead up to the 25th anniversary of Karmein's murder, Victoria Police released a 1994 dossier (nicknamed the 'Sierra files') to the Herald Sun newspaper containing intimate details of the case that had previously not been released to the public. The dossier, which had been prepared with the assistance of the FBI, contained information about seven possible suspects, including details concerning the prime suspect.[9] The newspaper stated that they had obtained the names of these suspects and also attempted to contact them for information, to varying degrees of success. Victoria Police subsequently increased the reward for information to $1 million[10]

Earlier crimes

There have been varying reports by the media of suspected earlier attacks prior to 1987. [11][12][13][14][15] The police have never released specific details of suspected attacks. Detective Stephen Fontana answered a journalist question in 2001 on earlier attacks "that there just wasn't enough known about him and he didn't want to speculate". [16]

References

  1. "Police hunt for Mr. "Cruel"". The Sun. 19 November 1987.
  2. "$1 MILLION REWARD ANNOUNCED ON 25TH ANNIVERSARY OF ABDUCTION AND MURDER OF KARMEIN CHAN". Victoria Police News. Victoria Police Media Unit.
  3. Moor, Keith (2 April 2001). "A cruel time on manhunt". Herald Sun.
  4. Moor, Keith (7 November 2013). "Retiring veteran detective Chris O'Connor says the unsolved Mr Cruel case still haunts him". Herald Sun. Retrieved 12 April 2016.
  5. Silvester, John (8 April 2006). "'Mr Cruel' filmed his victims, say police". The Age. Retrieved 2008-01-17.
  6. Moor, Keith (7 November 2013). "Retiring veteran detective Chris O'Connor says the unsolved Mr Cruel case still haunts him". Herald Sun. Retrieved 12 April 2016.
  7. Greg Roberts; Edwina Scott (2010-12-14). "New clues in police hunt for 'Mr Cruel'". The Sydney Morning Herald. AAP. Retrieved 2010-12-14.
  8. Victoria Police News - Karmein Chan
  9. Moore, Keith (9 April 2016). "Victoria Police unable to eliminate seven Mr Cruel suspects". Herald-Sun. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  10. "Delayed $1m Mr Cruel reward regretted". Special Broadcasting Service. 9 April 2016. Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  11. Moor, Keith (11 April 2012). "Mr Cruel suspected of at least a dozen attacks on children". Herald Sun. Retrieved 12 April 2016.
  12. "The killing of Karmein". The Age. 1 April 2001.
  13. "Child porn network linked to Mr Cruel". The Sunday Age. 16 May 1992.
  14. "Unmasking Mr Cruel". Herald Sun. 6 February 1993.
  15. "Mr Cruel Alert". Herald Sun. 30 August 1991.
  16. Moor, Keith (2 April 2001). "A cruel time on manhunt". Herald Sun.
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