logo
Australia's most notorious killer is now so overweight he needs three mattresses to sleep on - as details emerge about his pen pal girlfriend

Australia's most notorious killer is now so overweight he needs three mattresses to sleep on - as details emerge about his pen pal girlfriend

Daily Mail​a day ago

Australia's worst mass murderer, Martin Bryant, is now so overweight he reportedly needs to sleep on three mattresses stacked on top of each other.
The 58-year-old also spends his time in Risdon Prison Complex boasting to inmates about a supposed long-distance romance with a woman he calls his 'girlfriend'.
Byrant is serving 35 life sentences over the 1996 Port Arthur massacre in Tasmania.
In new details obtained exclusively by the Daily Telegraph, it was revealed Bryant is considered 'lower than zero' on the food chain by his fellow inmates.
Former inmate Jackson, who was cell neighbours with Bryant, gave a bleak account of his condition behind bars, describing him as untidy, dirty and suffering from acne.
The mass murderer is reportedly now so large he sleeps on three 10cm thick mattresses stacked on top of each other in his tiny cell bed, which he rarely leaves.
Most bizarrely, Jackson revealed Bryant had a reputation for previously giving sexual favours, in return for chocolates and sweets.
'He's had a few sexual experiences in jail so someone will tease him and go "How about you swap me a head job for a Mars Bar" with such and such,' he said.
Jackson recalled the moment he finally summoned the courage to ask Bryant about the Port Arthur massacre, saying the killer's face immediately shifted.
He added that he wasn't sure Bryant's mother still visited him but that the killer would speak frequently about a woman he claimed to be in a relationship with.
The woman, said to own a horse property in Victoria, was one of 10 people approved by the jail service to have phone calls with Bryant.
Jackson said he wasn't sure if the woman ever visited Bryant in jail but that he had once been shown a photo of her by the notorious killer.
Former prison guard Tony Burley told the Daily Telegraph he had caught the murderer fixating on himself and other guards with an intense stare.
He said this only added to his reputation as an odd and isolated figure.
'In terms of the food chain, he's lower than zero,' Mr Burley said. 'It's not that people don't like him, he just doesn't exist.'
'No one would know who he was, he's not a concern to anybody. He's not targeted, he's nobody.'
The Port Arthur massacre remains one of the darkest days in Australia's history.
At the time, it was considered the world's worst massacre, with 35 people killed and 23 injured by Martin Byrant, who is serving 35 life sentences and more than a thousand additional years' jail without parole.
Bryant has never explained his actions but investigators have speculated the murders were sparked out of retribution for grievances. Others were collateral damage.
The shooting prompted significant gun reform under then-prime minister John Howard via the 1996 National Firearms Agreement.
The laws banned rapid-fire guns from civilian ownership except under certain, restricted licences.
It also tightened requirements for firearms licensing, registration and safe storage and established a government buyback of semi-automatic and pump-action rifles and shotguns.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

EXCLUSIVE Major update after human remains were found in search for Pheobe Bishop - and the key clues cops have yet to find
EXCLUSIVE Major update after human remains were found in search for Pheobe Bishop - and the key clues cops have yet to find

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE Major update after human remains were found in search for Pheobe Bishop - and the key clues cops have yet to find

Human remains found in the search for Phoebe Bishop have been removed from the site by authorities. Daily Mail Australia can reveal an undertaker collected the remains from the 'unforgiving' area deep within the Good Night Scrub National Park on Saturday night. Dangerous dogs and feral pigs had hampered efforts to recover the body after it was located by authorities at 2.30pm on Friday. Queensland Police remained on the scene on Sunday morning, sweeping the region for any remaining clues over the 17-year-old's tragic death. The area is about an hour from Pheobe's hometown of Gin Gin, near Bundaberg in central Queensland, where she lived with Tanika Bromley and James Wood and is about 9km from where forensics found 'items of interest' last week. The couple have been charged with her murder, along with two counts of interfering with a corpse, and are in police custody. Wide Bay-Burnett Detective Inspector Craig Mansfield revealed on Saturday that police had yet to locate the luggage and phone belonging to Pheobe. Pheobe's distraught mother Kylie Johnson last night thanked Bundaberg Police and the State Emergency Service for their efforts in locating her daughter. 'These guys have literally been on their hands and knees to find our baby and get her home to us. I will honestly never be able to repay them for what they have done for my family and Pheobe,' she said. 'They have worked 24 hour days since Pheobe went missing and they won't stop until she's home'. This comes as family and friends prepare to honour Pheobe's life this evening at a candlelight vigil in Gin Gin from 4pm. The community is encouraged to wear bright colours and butterflies, and bring a candle. A family friend yesterday launched a go fund me in the teenager's memory, with proceeds going to the SES and Y Schools Bundaberg, which Pheobe attended. It has so far raised almost $5,000. Earlier on Friday, Pheobe's older sister, Kaylea, 18, had begged for help finding her sister's body in an impassioned plea outside Bundaberg Magistrates Court after Bromley and Wood's murder charges were heard. She sat in the far corner of the front row, staring straight ahead flanked by friends, family and a court security guard as details of the murder charges against the couple were read out. Neither Wood nor Bromley appeared in person or by video link for the hearing and afterwards Kaylea walked outside to make her heartbreaking statement. 'We just want her home,' she said tearfully through red-rimmed eyes. 'I don't know what to say, if you've got any information about Pheobe or the car, just come forward. 'Three weeks is too long for us as a family. She was loved, she's missed dearly.' It comes as the house where Pheobe lived has been turned into a shrine. A makeshift memorial has appeared at the ramshackle, rubbish-strewn Gin Gin home Pheobe shared with Bromley and Wood. A large pink teddy bear stood guard over the property, surrounded with bouquets of flowers. A poignant message left by one mourner read, 'Pheobe, you grew your wings too early beautiful girl. Now, you will no longer feel pain or heartache. 'You can spread your wings, and know you will be loved.'

Shock death of newborn ‘Baby C' at women's prison being probed
Shock death of newborn ‘Baby C' at women's prison being probed

The Sun

time3 hours ago

  • The Sun

Shock death of newborn ‘Baby C' at women's prison being probed

PRISON bosses are investigating the tragic death of a newborn baby inside a jail. The child was just one day old when they died at HMP Foston Hall in Derbyshire. An inquest into 'Baby C' is set to be held to establish how it died at the prison, which also has a Young Offenders' Institution. The tot's gender and mother's condition has not been disclosed following the death behind bars on October 16, 2023. It was confirmed by the Prison and Probations Ombudsman after featuring in its latest Independent Investigations Annual Report. Ombudsman Adrian Usher said: 'We are saddened to confirm that the Prisons and Probation Ombudsman are investigating the death of a baby. 'We offer our sincerest condolences to the family.' The newborn was among 292 deaths inside prisons in 2023/24, according to the report. A final investigation report will be published by the PPO after the inquest has finished. Three babies have now died in the English prison system in the last five years following deaths at HMP Bronzefield in 2019 and HMP Styal in 2020. Aisha Cleary died in her mum Rianna's cell at Bronzefield in Surrey, the biggest women's prison in Europe, in September 2019. Rianna, 18, endured more than 12 hours of labour and had repeatedly pressed her 'cell bell' before anyone came to help. Chilling moment prisoners smirk before battering sex offender to death in cell in 37-sec attack - then calmly walk away Officers found her covered in blood with her dead infant after biting through the umbilical cord as she had no other way of severing it. Louise Powell, 31, begged for an ambulance at HMP Styal before giving birth to her stillborn baby girl, Brooke-Leigh, in a toilet. She didn't know she was pregnant before going into labour in June 2020. A PPO report found the duty nurse made 'a serious error of judgement' by not visiting Powell after they were contacted three times about her severe pain. 1

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store