Mark Haydon
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Mark Haydon | |
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Mark Haydon |
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Background information | |
Birth name: | Mark Ray Haydon |
Born: | December 4, 1958 |
Penalty: | 25 years |
Killings | |
Number of victims: | 7 |
Span of killings: | 1992 through 1999 |
Country: | Australia |
State(s): | South Australia, Australia |
Mark Ray Haydon (b., December 4, 1958 [1]) is an Australian criminal, currently serving 25 years imprisonment with a non-parole period of 18 years for his role of assisting offenders in the Snowtown murders. [2]
Haydon was found guilty of assisting serial killers John Bunting, Robert Wagner and James Vlassakis in as many as seven murders, either by driving the bodies to new locations or providing storage for them. Haydon, using the alias Mark Lawrence, together with Bunting, would rent the bank premises in Snowtown, South Australia where eight of the victims bodies were discovered. Haydon will be 72 when eligible for parole.
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[edit] Early life
Haydon was described as shy and withdrawn throughout his childhood. His mother, diagnosed with schizophrenia, regularly abused him both mentally and physically. He grew up socially isolated with very few friends. [2] Haydon met Bunting in 1989.
[edit] Murder of Elizabeth Haydon
Haydon lived with his wife, Elizabeth, at Smithfield Plains. Elizabeth's sister, Jodie Elliot, lived with the Haydons's in a shed at the rear of their house. Haydon's wife, Elizabeth would eventually become Bunting and Wagner's second last murder victim and the only female murdered. Fred Brooks, an intellectually disabled son of Elliot's would be murdered by Bunting and Wagner during September, 1998.
Elizabeth was murdered on November 20, 1998 while Haydon and Elliot were away from the house. Elizabeth was reported missing by her brother Garion Sinclair to police at 3pm the following day. Haydon would later assist in concealing his wife's murder [2].
[edit] Assisting offenders
Haydon, the last to face trial, was initially charged with ten counts of murder and six counts of assisting offenders. In 2006, he was acquitted of murder but convicted on six counts of assisting an offender. [3]
[edit] References
- ^ R v BUNTING & OTHERS (NO 3) No. SCCRM-01-205 (2003) SASC 251 (29 October 2003), Supreme Court of South Australia, October 29, 2003
- ^ a b c R v HAYDON (2006) SASC 238, Supreme Court of South Australia, August 10, 2006
- ^ Fourth man sentenced over Snowtown murders, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, February 24, 2006
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