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Inmate dies at Jacksonville hospital before making it to Duval County Jail, police say
Inmate dies at Jacksonville hospital before making it to Duval County Jail, police say

Yahoo

time6 days ago

  • General
  • Yahoo

Inmate dies at Jacksonville hospital before making it to Duval County Jail, police say

An inmate died at a hospital while in police custody before he made it to the Duval County Jail, the Jacksonville Sheriff's Office said. Adam Christopher Torrens, 59, was arrested on May 17 in Clay County on a violation of probation warrant out of Duval County, JSO said. JSO said Torrens' violation of probation stemmed from his local arrest on February 18, for aggravated assault with a deadly weapon (domestic). While in Clay County Sheriff's Office custody, Torrens was being treated at a hospital in Clay County. [DOWNLOAD: Free Action News Jax app for alerts as news breaks] On May 19, Torrens was transferred into JSO custody and taken directly to a Jacksonville hospital, JSO said. Torrens remained at the Jacksonville hospital until Tuesday, when he died. [SIGN UP: Action News Jax Daily Headlines Newsletter] Click here to download the free Action News Jax news and weather apps, click here to download the Action News Jax Now app for your smart TV and click here to stream Action News Jax live.

Ex-wife of Adrian Torrens, who killed Audrey Griffin, shares chilling detail on night of the murder
Ex-wife of Adrian Torrens, who killed Audrey Griffin, shares chilling detail on night of the murder

News.com.au

time04-05-2025

  • News.com.au

Ex-wife of Adrian Torrens, who killed Audrey Griffin, shares chilling detail on night of the murder

The ex-wife of the man accused of killing teenager Audrey Griffin has revealed he was 'aggressive' towards her on the night of the murder. Adrian Torrens' ex-wife Michelle said 'something was very off' with Torrens on Easter Monday evening, when 19-year-old Audrey Griffin was horrifically murdered after walking home from a night out with friends on the NSW Central Coast. 'Something was very off that night … he was so aggressive,' Michelle told 60 Minutes reporter Dimity Clancey. When asked if she believed that Torrens was on her way to kill her the night of Ms Griffin's murder, Michelle said: 'I think so.' She said she had 'no idea' about Torrens' true nature when she married him. Ms Griffin left the Hotel Gosford in the early hours of Sunday March 23, telling her friends she was going to get an Uber or a cab back to her dad's house. However, the next morning when Ms Griffin's mum checked her daughter's location on her phone, she knew something was wrong. Ms Griffin's best friend tragically found her body partially submerged in Erina Creek the next morning while attempting to locate her. Police inititally declared that Ms Griffin's death was not suspicious, as an autopsy led them to quickly to rule the teen's death an accidental drowning. However Ms Griffin's mother, Kathleen Kirby, told A Current Affair this did not make sense to her. 'My gut was telling me one thing, and it was not to give up. I couldn't just go with she drowned. Not one person has walked up to me and said she drowned… No one believed it,' she said. 'She was a swimmer, she's an ocean swimmer, she was strong.' Nearly a month later, police revealed a man had been charged with her murder. That man, Adrian Torrens, was found unresponsive in a cell at Silverwater Correctional Complex in Western Sydney at about 4.50pm on Thursday April 24 after taking his own life. He was unable to be revived by Corrective Services staff and paramedics. Torrens also faced 11 unrelated domestic violence charges, including using a mobile phone in a harassing or menacing manner and 10 counts of breaching an apprehended violence order. Michelle spoke about Torrens' violent history, saying: 'He would just flip … I could never see it coming.' Michelle also shared she felt let down by the legal system, after they failed to lock Torrens away despite numerous domestic violence offences. The Sydney Morning Herald reported Torrens was spared jail two months earlier and was on bail at the time of Ms Griffin's death. 'They should have put him in jail after breaching his second AVO,' Michelle said. The interview will air on Channel 9 on Sunday at 8:00pm.

Adrian Torrens had been threatening to kill his ex: Hours later, he would instead kill a complete stranger
Adrian Torrens had been threatening to kill his ex: Hours later, he would instead kill a complete stranger

Sydney Morning Herald

time02-05-2025

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Adrian Torrens had been threatening to kill his ex: Hours later, he would instead kill a complete stranger

Warning: Graphic content The Elanora Hotel had been closed for almost three hours when 19-year-old Audrey Griffin walked past in the wee hours of Sunday, March 23. After struggling to get an Uber when Hotel Gosford shut at 2am, her only option was to walk towards home through the empty streets, past shuttered shops and gloomy parks. The Elanora's cameras spotted Griffin at 2.45am, along a road that would take her past the murky Erina Creek towards Terrigal. Several minutes later, the same camera captured her killer, Adrian Noel Torrens, striding purposefully along Victoria Road in a white hat and a red singlet. He was hundreds of metres behind her. She may not have even realised he was there. She certainly didn't know how dangerous he was. Already that day, Torrens had threatened to kill a woman. It wasn't Griffin. In the sleepless frenzy of a four or five-day bender, he'd been bombarding his former partner with death threats, despite an apprehended violence order. Domestic abusers like Torrens pose an acute danger to women they know, but they are not usually a threat to strangers. Yet Torrens killed Griffin in the early hours of that morning. Days after his arrest, he killed himself in custody. Her family may never know why he did it, or if there was any reason at all. The murder of women by strangers is rare and frightening; it leaves deep scars on the community psyche. Anita Cobby, killed while walking home in 1986. Jill Meagher, killed while walking home in 2012. Eurydice Dixon, killed while walking home in 2018. Aya Maasarwe, killed while walking home in 2019. At first, Griffin's death was not put in that category. When her friends found her bag, then her phone, and finally her body in the creek on Monday afternoon, police thought she had drowned. Her mother, Kathleen Kirby, did not. 'She's an ocean swimmer,' she told the Nine Network. 'She's strong … I couldn't just go with, 'she drowned'.' Griffin wasn't just an ocean swimmer. She was a water polo star, an Ironwoman competitor, and a rugby league player who'd 'hit with a sting, check [her opponents] were okay, then skip to … the scrums,' said the Terrigal Wamberal Sharks in tribute. She skydived, she rode horses, she skied. She had, as her mother said, the world at her feet. '[She was] probably the happiest person I ever knew,' said schoolmate Jake Chambers, who graduated from Central Coast Sports College with Griffin in 2023 and stopped to pay tribute to her at a makeshift memorial by the creek this week, where friends had left sweets, photos, flowers and letters. 'I never saw her without a smile on her face.' Griffin's visit to the Central Coast that weekend had the air of a farewell tour; two weeks later, she would begin training to become an officer in the navy. She had just visited her grandfather in hospital, and taken her grandmother out for lunch. She was staying with a friend and that night she headed out to Hotel Gosford for drinks with her Coastie friends. Hotel Gosford is a renovated pub in the heart of Gosford's CBD, with dark timber, exposed brick, and two giant Aperol umbrellas in the middle bar. Griffin's friend went home early that night, but she stayed until pub close at 2am, and intended to sleep at her father's house in Terrigal instead. There's a bus stop opposite the hotel, but services finish at midnight. There's only a few dozen taxi licences on the Central Coast, and beating the other patrons to an Uber at closing time can be fraught. At close on most Friday and Saturday nights, patrons mill, stranded, on the footpath, and often have little option but to walk home, even if it takes an hour or more, says Chalmers. 'It helps you sober up. Usually, you keep your friends updated.' This lack of late-night transport has been a problem on the Central Coast for decades. About 25 years ago, council began a night owl bus service because of the high number of young men dying in crashes involving alcohol. It was scrapped due to lack of funding in 2006. Piper Yanz, a former classmate of Griffin and the organiser of a rally protesting against violence against women in Gosford last weekend, doesn't walk home, but waiting doesn't feel safe, either. 'So many times I have been sitting on the side of the road in Terrigal alone, waiting for my Uber, and I've been harassed,' she says. 'I've had men approach me. I've had men yell at me.' Damien Cusick, manager of the Elanora, says it's been this way on the coast since he began working in pubs, 35 years ago. It has been raised 'continually' at liquor accord meetings, he says, but nothing has changed. After failing to find an Uber, Griffin headed south-east. Her mother believes she was still hoping to find transport. 'She'd taken the long way home along the water, obviously to try and hail down a cab, or she would have taken a shortcut through the heart of Gosford,' she says. Her friends followed her on Snapchat's live tracker feature, and she sent them two videos while walking home. Cusick says the camera captured her walking past his hotel in Gosford's east, which closes at midnight, at about 2.45am. Torrens was several hundred metres behind her. By 3am, Griffin's friends had lost touch with her. They reported her missing. Thirty-six hours later, friends found her bag and phone by the creek. Then, they found her body. 'It's not right for a young girl to have to find her best friend in the water,' Kathleen said. Loading Police decided it was likely she had drowned; there were no injuries or obvious defensive wounds. They referred the death to the coroner and, as part of the coronial investigation, collected CCTV footage. Three weeks later, they were sorting through vision from the Elanora Hotel and noticed a man walking past, several minutes after Griffin. They wanted to know if he'd seen anything. On April 17, they released his picture in a bid to track him down. It was the breakthrough in the murder case they didn't know they had. Friends of Torrens saw it, including one who had been told by Torrens that he'd killed someone, and 'left her body in the mangroves', the Daily Telegraph reported. The friend contacted the police. In a call to the friend after the image was published, Torrens admitted to the murder. 'Why did I do it?' he reportedly said. 'I don't know … I just f--king clicked … I was awake for four or five f--king days, and I just did it.' The following Monday, Torrens was charged. Investigators believe Griffin tried to fight Torrens off, scratching him and collecting some of his DNA under her fingernails. They think he struck the left side of her face and knocked her unconscious, causing her to drown. He may have held her underwater. She had scratches on her upper arms and a mark on the left side of her face. Torrens, 53, was a deeply troubled man. His criminal history dates back to 1994, when he was jailed for robbery. He already had substance abuse issues, as he was paroled to a rehabilitation facility. His record shows he has been sent to others since. He's driven while disqualified, been fined for offensive behaviour, stalked someone and maliciously damaged property. The official record of his domestic violence offending began 10 years ago, with the first ADVO. In 2019, he faced a slew of DV charges, including stalking and assault. In January, he was placed on an 18-month community corrections order for more domestic violence offending despite having breached a similar order in 2020. This history horrified Griffin's family. The noncustodial sentence in January was 'just wrong', said her mother. 'He's gone and murdered someone when he should be behind bars.' Not much is known about Torrens' personal story. He'd worked as a traffic controller, and moved between northern NSW and Queensland. His most recent address is listed as Milsons Point. His former partner, Michelle – who he originally met at school, and began a relationship with a few years ago – lives on the Central Coast. They split last September. She took out an ADVO, which he breached. On the night Griffin died, Torrens had called Michelle 12 times, she told the Daily Mail. 'He started calling from 7pm and the last phone call was at 12.10am on the night he killed her. He kept threatening to kill my son and I … my children are completely traumatised.' Women are far more likely to be killed by their current or former partner than by someone they don't know; the violence is driven by control and punishment. Stranger homicides represent just one in five murders in NSW, and the majority involve men who are killed by men. If statistics were any guide, Michelle was in much greater danger that night than Griffin. The murder of a stranger tends to be opportunistic; perhaps driven by a sexual motive, or by substance abuse. Torrens' description of four of five days without sleep suggests he may have been using the stimulant drug, ice. 'The escalation from [domestic violence] to murdering a stranger is significant and highly unusual,' says Xanthe Mallett, associate professor of criminology at the Queensland Centre for Domestic Family Violence Research. Beyond the phone call with his friend, Griffin's family may never know why Torrens killed her. He can no longer tell them. At 4.50pm on April 24, just three days after his arrest, Torrens was found unresponsive in his cell at Silverwater Correctional Complex. Prison guards tried to resuscitate him until he was pronounced dead by paramedics 40 minutes later. Torrens had spent his first few days on remand alone in a so-called safe cell, which has no hanging points and allows frequent monitoring of the inmate. He was cleared of being at high risk of self-harm, so he was moved to a double cell. He used a sharp object to cut himself; several outlets reported he used a safety razor borrowed from his cellmate. One of Griffin's family friends, Ali Paparestis, said his suicide denied the family closure. 'It's going to leave the family with a few questions they haven't had answers to yet,' he told the ABC. The most recent statistics, from 2023, show a third of the 33 deaths in custody were from self-harm. Prisoners can be desperate; one used bed linen to hang himself from the window bars, another put a plastic bag over his head and tied a sock around his neck, and another 'swallowed about a gram and a half of ice'. Corrective Services regularly comes under attack from the Inspector of Custodial Services on opportunities for self-harm; in 2024, it criticised the remand centre that housed Torrens for having hanging points in many of its cells. Loading There are many complexities to Torrens' story, many of which the justice system is struggling to grapple with; domestic violence, addiction, self-harm. But many who live on the Central Coast say one simple, affordable thing could have protected the much-loved 19-year-old; safe, accessible late-night transport. 'One way we could have avoided this is if Audrey had some capacity to get home, in a way that women in the city do,' says NSW Greens justice spokeswoman Sue Higginson. 'Why was this woman left with no option [other than to] work it out?' Laurel Johnson, who works on the Safe Streets for Women and Girls project at the University of Queensland, says governments have everything they needed to operate overnight transport – surplus buses, technology that can link people to rides, knowledge of when and where the transport is most needed, such as when pubs close their doors. Too often, responsibility is tossed between state authorities and transport. 'This is a known vulnerability,' Johnson says. 'No one can say 'we didn't know this was a likely outcome'. All the ingredients are there. It's leadership that's needed.' In response to questions, the Central Coast Council said it had been advocating for better public transport. 'Council encourages local hospitality venues to provide free courtesy buses or similar transport for patrons after venue closing hours,' it said. Transport for NSW said it was looking at ways to improve transport on the Central Coast.

Adrian Torrens had been threatening to kill his ex: Hours later, he would instead kill a complete stranger
Adrian Torrens had been threatening to kill his ex: Hours later, he would instead kill a complete stranger

The Age

time02-05-2025

  • The Age

Adrian Torrens had been threatening to kill his ex: Hours later, he would instead kill a complete stranger

Warning: Graphic content The Elanora Hotel had been closed for almost three hours when 19-year-old Audrey Griffin walked past in the wee hours of Sunday, March 23. After struggling to get an Uber when Hotel Gosford shut at 2am, her only option was to walk towards home through the empty streets, past shuttered shops and gloomy parks. The Elanora's cameras spotted Griffin at 2.45am, along a road that would take her past the murky Erina Creek towards Terrigal. Several minutes later, the same camera captured her killer, Adrian Noel Torrens, striding purposefully along Victoria Road in a white hat and a red singlet. He was hundreds of metres behind her. She may not have even realised he was there. She certainly didn't know how dangerous he was. Already that day, Torrens had threatened to kill a woman. It wasn't Griffin. In the sleepless frenzy of a four or five-day bender, he'd been bombarding his former partner with death threats, despite an apprehended violence order. Domestic abusers like Torrens pose an acute danger to women they know, but they are not usually a threat to strangers. Yet Torrens killed Griffin in the early hours of that morning. Days after his arrest, he killed himself in custody. Her family may never know why he did it, or if there was any reason at all. The murder of women by strangers is rare and frightening; it leaves deep scars on the community psyche. Anita Cobby, killed while walking home in 1986. Jill Meagher, killed while walking home in 2012. Eurydice Dixon, killed while walking home in 2018. Aya Maasarwe, killed while walking home in 2019. At first, Griffin's death was not put in that category. When her friends found her bag, then her phone, and finally her body in the creek on Monday afternoon, police thought she had drowned. Her mother, Kathleen Kirby, did not. 'She's an ocean swimmer,' she told the Nine Network. 'She's strong … I couldn't just go with, 'she drowned'.' Griffin wasn't just an ocean swimmer. She was a water polo star, an Ironwoman competitor, and a rugby league player who'd 'hit with a sting, check [her opponents] were okay, then skip to … the scrums,' said the Terrigal Wamberal Sharks in tribute. She skydived, she rode horses, she skied. She had, as her mother said, the world at her feet. '[She was] probably the happiest person I ever knew,' said schoolmate Jake Chambers, who graduated from Central Coast Sports College with Griffin in 2023 and stopped to pay tribute to her at a makeshift memorial by the creek this week, where friends had left sweets, photos, flowers and letters. 'I never saw her without a smile on her face.' Griffin's visit to the Central Coast that weekend had the air of a farewell tour; two weeks later, she would begin training to become an officer in the navy. She had just visited her grandfather in hospital, and taken her grandmother out for lunch. She was staying with a friend and that night she headed out to Hotel Gosford for drinks with her Coastie friends. Hotel Gosford is a renovated pub in the heart of Gosford's CBD, with dark timber, exposed brick, and two giant Aperol umbrellas in the middle bar. Griffin's friend went home early that night, but she stayed until pub close at 2am, and intended to sleep at her father's house in Terrigal instead. There's a bus stop opposite the hotel, but services finish at midnight. There's only a few dozen taxi licences on the Central Coast, and beating the other patrons to an Uber at closing time can be fraught. At close on most Friday and Saturday nights, patrons mill, stranded, on the footpath, and often have little option but to walk home, even if it takes an hour or more, says Chalmers. 'It helps you sober up. Usually, you keep your friends updated.' This lack of late-night transport has been a problem on the Central Coast for decades. About 25 years ago, council began a night owl bus service because of the high number of young men dying in crashes involving alcohol. It was scrapped due to lack of funding in 2006. Piper Yanz, a former classmate of Griffin and the organiser of a rally protesting against violence against women in Gosford last weekend, doesn't walk home, but waiting doesn't feel safe, either. 'So many times I have been sitting on the side of the road in Terrigal alone, waiting for my Uber, and I've been harassed,' she says. 'I've had men approach me. I've had men yell at me.' Damien Cusick, manager of the Elanora, says it's been this way on the coast since he began working in pubs, 35 years ago. It has been raised 'continually' at liquor accord meetings, he says, but nothing has changed. After failing to find an Uber, Griffin headed south-east. Her mother believes she was still hoping to find transport. 'She'd taken the long way home along the water, obviously to try and hail down a cab, or she would have taken a shortcut through the heart of Gosford,' she says. Her friends followed her on Snapchat's live tracker feature, and she sent them two videos while walking home. Cusick says the camera captured her walking past his hotel in Gosford's east, which closes at midnight, at about 2.45am. Torrens was several hundred metres behind her. By 3am, Griffin's friends had lost touch with her. They reported her missing. Thirty-six hours later, friends found her bag and phone by the creek. Then, they found her body. 'It's not right for a young girl to have to find her best friend in the water,' Kathleen said. Loading Police decided it was likely she had drowned; there were no injuries or obvious defensive wounds. They referred the death to the coroner and, as part of the coronial investigation, collected CCTV footage. Three weeks later, they were sorting through vision from the Elanora Hotel and noticed a man walking past, several minutes after Griffin. They wanted to know if he'd seen anything. On April 17, they released his picture in a bid to track him down. It was the breakthrough in the murder case they didn't know they had. Friends of Torrens saw it, including one who had been told by Torrens that he'd killed someone, and 'left her body in the mangroves', the Daily Telegraph reported. The friend contacted the police. In a call to the friend after the image was published, Torrens admitted to the murder. 'Why did I do it?' he reportedly said. 'I don't know … I just f--king clicked … I was awake for four or five f--king days, and I just did it.' The following Monday, Torrens was charged. Investigators believe Griffin tried to fight Torrens off, scratching him and collecting some of his DNA under her fingernails. They think he struck the left side of her face and knocked her unconscious, causing her to drown. He may have held her underwater. She had scratches on her upper arms and a mark on the left side of her face. Torrens, 53, was a deeply troubled man. His criminal history dates back to 1994, when he was jailed for robbery. He already had substance abuse issues, as he was paroled to a rehabilitation facility. His record shows he has been sent to others since. He's driven while disqualified, been fined for offensive behaviour, stalked someone and maliciously damaged property. The official record of his domestic violence offending began 10 years ago, with the first ADVO. In 2019, he faced a slew of DV charges, including stalking and assault. In January, he was placed on an 18-month community corrections order for more domestic violence offending despite having breached a similar order in 2020. This history horrified Griffin's family. The noncustodial sentence in January was 'just wrong', said her mother. 'He's gone and murdered someone when he should be behind bars.' Not much is known about Torrens' personal story. He'd worked as a traffic controller, and moved between northern NSW and Queensland. His most recent address is listed as Milsons Point. His former partner, Michelle – who he originally met at school, and began a relationship with a few years ago – lives on the Central Coast. They split last September. She took out an ADVO, which he breached. On the night Griffin died, Torrens had called Michelle 12 times, she told the Daily Mail. 'He started calling from 7pm and the last phone call was at 12.10am on the night he killed her. He kept threatening to kill my son and I … my children are completely traumatised.' Women are far more likely to be killed by their current or former partner than by someone they don't know; the violence is driven by control and punishment. Stranger homicides represent just one in five murders in NSW, and the majority involve men who are killed by men. If statistics were any guide, Michelle was in much greater danger that night than Griffin. The murder of a stranger tends to be opportunistic; perhaps driven by a sexual motive, or by substance abuse. Torrens' description of four of five days without sleep suggests he may have been using the stimulant drug, ice. 'The escalation from [domestic violence] to murdering a stranger is significant and highly unusual,' says Xanthe Mallett, associate professor of criminology at the Queensland Centre for Domestic Family Violence Research. Beyond the phone call with his friend, Griffin's family may never know why Torrens killed her. He can no longer tell them. At 4.50pm on April 24, just three days after his arrest, Torrens was found unresponsive in his cell at Silverwater Correctional Complex. Prison guards tried to resuscitate him until he was pronounced dead by paramedics 40 minutes later. Torrens had spent his first few days on remand alone in a so-called safe cell, which has no hanging points and allows frequent monitoring of the inmate. He was cleared of being at high risk of self-harm, so he was moved to a double cell. He used a sharp object to cut himself; several outlets reported he used a safety razor borrowed from his cellmate. One of Griffin's family friends, Ali Paparestis, said his suicide denied the family closure. 'It's going to leave the family with a few questions they haven't had answers to yet,' he told the ABC. The most recent statistics, from 2023, show a third of the 33 deaths in custody were from self-harm. Prisoners can be desperate; one used bed linen to hang himself from the window bars, another put a plastic bag over his head and tied a sock around his neck, and another 'swallowed about a gram and a half of ice'. Corrective Services regularly comes under attack from the Inspector of Custodial Services on opportunities for self-harm; in 2024, it criticised the remand centre that housed Torrens for having hanging points in many of its cells. Loading There are many complexities to Torrens' story, many of which the justice system is struggling to grapple with; domestic violence, addiction, self-harm. But many who live on the Central Coast say one simple, affordable thing could have protected the much-loved 19-year-old; safe, accessible late-night transport. 'One way we could have avoided this is if Audrey had some capacity to get home, in a way that women in the city do,' says NSW Greens justice spokeswoman Sue Higginson. 'Why was this woman left with no option [other than to] work it out?' Laurel Johnson, who works on the Safe Streets for Women and Girls project at the University of Queensland, says governments have everything they needed to operate overnight transport – surplus buses, technology that can link people to rides, knowledge of when and where the transport is most needed, such as when pubs close their doors. Too often, responsibility is tossed between state authorities and transport. 'This is a known vulnerability,' Johnson says. 'No one can say 'we didn't know this was a likely outcome'. All the ingredients are there. It's leadership that's needed.' In response to questions, the Central Coast Council said it had been advocating for better public transport. 'Council encourages local hospitality venues to provide free courtesy buses or similar transport for patrons after venue closing hours,' it said. Transport for NSW said it was looking at ways to improve transport on the Central Coast.

Inquest to probe how Audrey Griffin's accused killer obtained razor before prison suicide
Inquest to probe how Audrey Griffin's accused killer obtained razor before prison suicide

Daily Mail​

time29-04-2025

  • Daily Mail​

Inquest to probe how Audrey Griffin's accused killer obtained razor before prison suicide

An inquest into the prison cell suicide of Audrey Griffin's accused killer will examine how he obtained a razor blade to take his own life. Ms Griffin's family will no longer be able to seek justice in a courtroom after the death of Adrian Torrens, 53, who was charged with the murder of the popular teenager after she left a NSW Central Coast pub on March 22 following a night out. Torrens was arrested a month later off the back of a tip-off to police and was initially placed into a solitary high-risk cell at Silverwater prison, where he was assessed by corrections staff and counsellors. He was then moved to a two-person cell on April 24 after those discussions and was dead hours later. It's understood Torrens had asked to borrow a razor from his cellmate so he could shave for court the next day, despite that being the Anzac Day public holiday when courts are closed. Daily Mail Australia understands he used the razor blade in an attempt to take his own life. Prison staff found him unresponsive at 4.50pm and immediately called paramedics, but prison sources say it took 40 minutes for them to arrive. A prison source has questioned whether Torrens may have survived his suicide attempt if the ambulance had arrived sooner - raising questions about a missed opportunity for justice and closure for Ms Griffin's grieving family. There is no suggestion of wrongdoing by prison staff or NSW Ambulance, however, the death will be investigated by police for the coroner as part of a public inquest. Before his death, Torrens had a string of apprehended violence orders against him going back to 2014 and had left multiple threatening messages on the phone of his estranged partner on the day he allegedly murdered Ms Griffin, who he did not know. NSW Chief Magistrate Judge Michael Allen spared Torrens jail time when he pleaded guilty to domestic violence offending - instead imposing an 18-month community correction order. He had pleaded guilty to using a carriage service to menace, harass or offend and contravening a domestic AVO in relation to his ex-partner. Torrens also had multiple listings before both Gosford Local Court and the Downing Centre for AVOs taken out to protect a woman believed to be his estranged wife. Torrens had 11 other charges against him when he was charged with murder. These included two counts of knowingly contravene an AVO for the third time in 28 days, knowingly contravene an AVO prohibition and eight charges of contravening an AVO. Torrens also had AVOs taken out against him by two different women, in 2018 and in 2014. As part of the 18-month order he was given earlier this year, he was required to regularly report to a community corrections office, which he had not done on multiple occasions. Two weeks after Ms Griffin's death he reportedly appeared 'distressed' at one of these meetings, which he put down to his relationship breakdown and his mother being ill. Torrens is from Sydney but his estranged ex Michelle lives on the Central Coast with her two children. She told Daily Mail Australia she reconnected with Torrens decades after they met at school and had been with him for two years before they separated in September. Michelle then tried to block him out of her life. But in the hours leading up to Audrey's murder and after, he bombarded her with a string of chilling threats. 'He rang me 12 times and because he was blocked, I was receiving them as text messages,' she told Daily Mail Australia. 'He started calling from 7pm and the last phone call was at 12.10am on the night he killed her. 'He kept threatening to kill my son and I… my children are completely traumatised.' A distraught Michelle said both she and Audrey had been let down by the legal system. She also revealed she and her family had been living in fear for several months. 'My heart goes out to Audrey's family,' she said. 'I do feel let down by the police and the judge, on the first night of the AVO, the very first AVO, the police took four hours to come here to do a welfare check. 'When he breached his AVO [that was taken out] to protect me, they took five months to find him. 'I lived in fear he would carry out one of his threats.' Police earlier this month appealed to the public for new information as they released a CCTV screenshot of Torrens walking near a Gosford pub on the night Ms Griffin died. They had the footage for weeks but did not realise its significance until an associate of Torrens tipped them off that he had confessed to them he killed her. Audrey was preparing to begin a ten-week officer training course in April with the Royal Australian Navy. She had visited the Central Coast - where she grew up - to see her grandparents and invite her friends to a farewell party in Sydney the next weekend. Detectives believe Torrens followed Ms Griffin, whom he didn't know, from the pub before assaulting her. Police said Torrens' DNA was found under Griffin's fingernails and that a witness heard a high-pitched scream in the area around 3am. He was later arrested and charged with Griffin's murder after he was identified from the CCTV footage. Audrey was a much-loved member of the Terrigal Sharks rugby league and local lifesaving clubs. After completing her HSC in 2023, Ms Griffin juggled training and a part-time job at Crown Plaza Terrigal along with study commitments at University of Technology Sydney. Just weeks before her death, she had competed in the New Zealand half-ironman. Audrey was also a former member of the Gosford Water Polo ladies team. 'Audrey touched everyone, not just in her community but all over the country. She was the light in many of our lives,' a family statement on a GoFundMe read. 'There is no doubt she brought endless laughter and joy to everyone. 'She was the kindest soul to walk this earth and will always be in our hearts.' Ms Griffin was also a dedicated member of the Terrigal Wamberal Sharks rugby league club, having played junior and senior football. 'With a larger-than-life personality, and happy-go-lucky nature, Audrey would hit with sting then check that they were OK, and then skip to each of the scrums,' the club said in a social media tribute to her. 'Audrey will be sorely missed by the Sharks family, may she rest in peace.' On Thursday evening, more than 1,000 people gathered on a NSW beach to honour Audrey just hours after her killer was found dead in his jail cell. Her mother, Kathleen Kirby, shared a heartbreaking post hours before the crowd, dressed in white, flocked to Terrigal Beach on the Central Coast at dusk. 'Let's focus today on unity, remembrance, and the love we all share for Audrey,' Ms Kirby said. 'It's about standing together, remembering her light, and showing — through our presence — that we want change, awareness, and a safer future for everyone.'

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