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Shock details emerge about teenager, 15, accused of stabbing Universal Store co-founder Greg Josephson to death during a house party

Shock details emerge about teenager, 15, accused of stabbing Universal Store co-founder Greg Josephson to death during a house party

Daily Mail​5 hours ago

A teenager charged over the fatal stabbing of a Universal Store co-founder had attended three different schools - including two of Brisbane 's most exclusive private boys' colleges.
Greg Josephson, 58, was allegedly stabbed to death during a teen house party at his three-storey home on Oriel Road in Clayfield, an affluent inner northern Brisbane suburb, on Thursday night.
Police allege an altercation took place between the father-of-three and a 15-year-old boy, who are believed to be known to each other.
The 15-year-old was arrested in nearby Barlow Street soon after the discovery of the body, before he was charged with one count of murder.
CCTV footage shows the moment police arrested the teenager, The Courier Mail reported, with a neighbour saying they witnessed the young man being loaded by officers into the back of a police car.
Daily Mail Australia can reveal the teenager had changed several schools.
Around 30 teenagers, many of whom are from private schools, had attended the house party to celebrate the end of the school term and unknowingly partied downstairs while Mr Josephson's body lay upstairs.
Teenagers oblivious to the tragedy unfolding were rounded up in the backyard of the house as officers searched the grounds of the large block, with Queensland Police later stating they had found the alleged murder weapon at an undisclosed location.
CCTV showed the accused boy on the same evening at a cafe in nearby Ascot walking across a patio area while wringing his hands.
Neatly dressed in a button-up shirt and dark trousers, the boy proceeded to squeeze his way into a narrow rubbish area at the back of the venue.
He then appeared to create a barricade by moving several bins in front of him.
Police arrested the 15-year-old at about 8.15pm after he called Triple-0. He was refused bail and later taken to hospital to have a minor injury to his hand treated.
His case was listed in Brisbane Children's Court on Friday and adjourned until September 2. The accused will remain in custody until then.
On Saturday, forensic police continued to search the Oriel Road property, which the Josephson family had been in the process of selling to move to the Sunshine Coast.
Mr Josephson co-founded the Universal Store with his brother Michael in 1999.
He built up an Australia-wide network of 53 stores, and sold the business in 2018 to private equity investors in a reported $100million deal.
He had also amassed a multimillion-dollar property portfolio, including the $13.9million Noosa Reef Hotel on the Sunshine Coast, and a $3.5million group of boutique cottages in Cooran, in the Noosa hinterland.
The Josephson brothers come from a clothing dynasty in Brisbane, their great-grandfather having started Josephson's Clothing Factory in 1910, their grandfather creating the Can't Tear 'Em' workwear brand, and their uncle distributing Lee Cooper jeans.
The house where Mr Josephson was allegedly murdered had been on the market for 43 days when he died.
He and his wife Tamra, who shared children, had bought the 1930s Art Deco home in 2016, conducted a major renovation and were planning to move to Noosa to live.
Queensland Police are urging anyone with information, or with CCTV or dashcam footage from the area, to come forward to assist with the investigation.
Police said they had still to interview some of the young people who attended Thursday's party.
'We are still establishing the timeline of what has happened at this address,' inspector Jane Healy said.
Acting assistant commissioner Rhys Wildman said police will allege a household implement was used during an altercation between the man and the teen.
'There was some sort of altercation that's resulted in this 58-year-old male tragically losing his life,' he said.
'It's not a case of carrying knives, it's unfortunately occurred in a home.'

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