Avsnitt
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They thought they had him. For more than sixteen hours, his answers kept changing. He was never charged.
In April 1978, two months after Mary Anne Fagan was murdered in her own home, the Homicide Squad sat a man down in Russell Street and worked through his movements, his money, and what he had said about her. By the end, he had been caught in contradiction after contradiction. The Coroner would later name him in open court as far from honest.
He walked free.
For forty-eight years, the gap between what police believed and what they could prove has remained open.
Here, we stop assuming and start testing.
Four conditions any explanation of this murder has to meet — the door, the blood, the cigarette, and the departure — are held against both men the investigation pursued: the man at the corner, and the man at the gate nobody ever named.
One thread comes apart. The other has been sitting in an institutional shadow since 1978.
Content warning: this episode discusses murder and includes explicit sexual language drawn from sworn inquest testimony. Listener discretion is advised.
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Police had the omissions, the contradictions, the missing time, the money, the alibi problem, and the forensic traces. If that still wasn’t enough, what was missing?
On the morning Mary Anne Fagan was murdered, three council workers were repairing the road outside her Armadale home.
One of them had spoken to her directly.
One of them later admitted making graphic sexual remarks about her while sitting on a fence facing her house.
One of them left the worksite during the period investigators came to treat as the murder window.
And one of them would later sit through hours of homicide questioning as detectives tried to pull apart his account of that day.His name was “James”.
Across statements, interviews, forensic evidence, witness accounts and the 1979 inquest, investigators believed a pattern had emerged: omissions, contradictions, unexplained money, a disputed bookmaker alibi, a boot print, microscopic bitumen-like flecks found in the house, and a man the Coroner would later describe in open court as “far from honest”.
By the end, the case against “James” looked substantial.
And yet, no charge followed.
In this instalment of Civilian Sleuths, we follow the evidence that made “James” the focus of the investigation — and the unanswered gap that has remained for more than 48 years.
Content warning: this episode discusses the murder of Mary Anne Fagan and includes references to sexually explicit language quoted from sworn inquest testimony. Listener discretion is advised.
If you have information about the murder of Mary Anne Fagan, contact Victoria Police Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000, or submit a confidential report online at police.vic.gov.au/crime-stoppers.
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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What if the best witness in the case was eventually treated as if he had seen nothing at all?
At 12.10pm on the day Mary Anne Fagan was murdered, a retired Navy serviceman saw a man in RAAF uniform walk out of the front gate of 575 Dandenong Road.
He reported it to police less than 24 hours later.
Detectives called it their best lead. A statewide investigation followed. RAAF bases across Victoria were searched. Identity parades were conducted. A photofit was published nationally.
And then the investigation changed direction.
This instalment walks through the witness sightings, the timeline, and the institutional shift that moved detectives away from the man in uniform — despite two independent witnesses placing him on Dandenong Road that afternoon.
Content warning: This series discusses sexual violence and the murder of a mother of five. This episode includes references to post-mortem examination and children discovering their mother after her death. Listener discretion advised.
If you have information, contact Victoria Police Crime Stoppers: 1800 333 000 or police.vic.gov.au/crime-stoppers. The reward for information leading to an arrest and conviction is $1,000,000.
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Who had the opportunity to enter a house, in the middle of the day, surrounded by witnesses, and not be seen?
On Friday, 17 February 1978, Mary Anne Fagan was last spoken to at approximately 10:30am inside her home at 575 Dandenong Road, Armadale.
By mid-afternoon, she was dead.
This episode follows the investigation from the moment police arrived — through sixteen months of forensic examination, witness statements, and formal inquiry — to the only findings the evidence could support.
What was established.
What was not.Who came forward — and who did not.
The lead described by the head of Homicide as the most significant — and where it led.
Because at approximately 12:10pm that day, a man was seen leaving through the front gate - and he was never publicly identified.
Content warning: This series discusses sexual violence and the murder of a mother of five. This episode includes references to post-mortem examination and children discovering their mother after her death. Listener discretion advised.
If you have information, contact Victoria Police Crime Stoppers: 1800 333 000 or police.vic.gov.au/crime-stoppers. The reward for information leading to an arrest and conviction is $1,000,000.
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A Friday morning in Armadale. An ordinary suburban street. A crime that remains unsolved.
On 17 February 1978, Mary Anne Fagan — a 41-year-old mother of five — was killed inside her home on Dandenong Road, Armadale. No one has ever been charged.
That morning, she got her children off to school, spoke to her husband on the phone, and set up the bathroom to dye her hair. A few hours later, three of her children came home from school. The door wouldn't open.
Civilian Sleuths returns to coronial records, witness statements and contemporaneous reporting to reconstruct the morning minute by minute — from the council work crew on the corner, to the neighbour who saw Mary Anne drive past, to the uniformed man seen leaving the house just after midday.
Someone saw something that day. Someone still knows.
If you have information, contact Victoria Police Crime Stoppers: 1800 333 000.
Content Warning: This episode discusses the murder of a woman in her home, including children discovering their mother. Listener discretion is advised.
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She was dyeing her hair when something interrupted her. She never washed it out.
On 17 February 1978, Mary Anne Fagan — a 41-year-old mother of five and wife of a senior RAAF officer — was murdered inside her locked home at 575 Dandenong Road, Armadale, while her baby slept in the next room.
Three council workers were repairing the road outside. A man in Air Force uniform was seen leaving through her front gate. Her children found her body when they came home from school.
No one was ever charged. The case remains open. A $1 million reward remains in place.
Civilian Sleuths returns to the original inquest documents, witness statements, autopsy reports, and police records to rebuild her last day minute by minute - and examine what the investigation focused on, and what it may have missed.
Series 2 premieres 14 April. Subscribe now.
If you have information, contact Victoria Police Crime Stoppers: 1800 333 000.
Content Warning: This series discusses the murder of a woman in her home. Listener discretion is advised.
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Forty-eight years ago, thirteen-year-old Denise McGregor was murdered on a country road north of Melbourne.
For forty-eight years, the case has remained unsolved — and the investigation has never been closed.
Across five episodes, this series has placed the evidence under pressure, testing explanations against time, geography, movement, and the physical record. A concealment pattern has been identified. A call sign has been named. And a single investigative thread from 1978 has been laid out in full.
In this final episode, the focus shifts — from what happened to Denise McGregor, to who has been living with it ever since.
Forensic science has transformed what is possible. DNA profiling, touch DNA, and forensic genetic genealogy — techniques that were science fiction in 1978 — now solve cases once considered permanently closed. The question is no longer whether science can reach the person responsible. It is whether the evidence still exists to allow it.
But science is only one path — and it may not be the one that closes this case.
If you lived in Pascoe Vale, Strathmore, Broadmeadows, or the northern suburbs of Melbourne in 1978 — if you knew someone who used CB radio, who travelled the roads north, or who went by the call sign Lightning One — what you remember could be the detail that closes this case.
The one-million-dollar reward for information remains active.
Victoria Police Crime Stoppers: 1800 333 000.Someone has lived an ordinary life while carrying an extraordinary fact.
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On the night she disappeared, a thirteen-year-old girl arranged an alibi before she left.
Why?
One detail is a coincidence.
Two is unusual.
Three is a pattern.
Four is something else.On the evening Denise McGregor disappeared, four details were already in place: an alibi arranged in advance, a deviation from her errand, a separation from her sister, and movement away from home.
Individually, each can be coincidence.
Together, they are not easily explained.
Bureau of Meteorology records confirm rainfall across both Pascoe Vale and Wallan that evening. The road where Denise was found was unsealed. It was dark.
Someone drove it anyway.
The scene indicates activity — not simply disposal.
This episode defines the shape that any explanation must fit.
Nearly fifty years later, that shape has not been met.
If you lived in Melbourne’s northern suburbs in 1978, and something has never quite aligned, it may matter.
Content warning: This series discusses the sexual assault and murder of a child. Clinical, non-graphic language throughout. Listener discretion advised.
If you have information, contact Victoria Police Crime Stoppers: 1800 333 000 or www.police.vic.gov.au/crime-stoppers
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What explanations can actually account for what happened to Denise McGregor?
Any explanation must fit the evidence — and the limits of what can still be known.
Denise was last seen near her home in Pascoe Vale on 20 March 1978. Within minutes, she had disappeared.
In this episode, possible explanations are tested against the constraints established so far: time, distance, opportunity, risk, and the realities of surviving evidence.
Some explanations hold.
Others begin to fail.
This is not an episode about identifying suspects or assigning guilt.
It is an exercise in feasibility — examining what can be ruled out, what remains possible, and why certainty has remained elusive.
Because any account of what happened must satisfy the same conditions.
And not all of them do.
Content warning: This series discusses the sexual assault and murder of a child. Clinical, non-graphic language throughout. Listener discretion advised.If you have information, contact Victoria Police Crime Stoppers: 1800 333 000 or www.police.vic.gov.au/crime-stoppers
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This is a brief listener update.
Since the release of this series, a number of people have reached out privately to share memories, documents, photographs, and contemporaneous newspaper material connected to Denise McGregor and to Pascoe Vale and Broadmeadows in the late 1970s.
Some of that material no longer exists anywhere else. Some memories have not been spoken about in decades.
This update is both a thank you to those who have contributed so far, and a short explanation of the care being taken as the series continues — including why public accusations, speculation, and naming individuals beyond what is firmly established on the public record are avoided.
The priority of this project is to keep Denise McGregor’s case as solvable as possible by protecting witness memory, avoiding theory bias, and being deliberate about how and when expert input is sought.
Future episodes examine which explanations could plausibly fit the known constraints — and which do not.
If you have memories or material you are unsure about, you are welcome to contact the podcast privately. Any specific information relevant to the case should also be directed to Victoria Police.
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Nearly fifty years later, could this case still be solved — and on what evidence?
Before any explanation can be tested, the reliability of the evidence must be established.
In the decades since Denise McGregor was murdered, technology has advanced — but the evidence itself has not stood still.
Some material remains. Some has been lost. Some can no longer be interpreted with certainty.
This episode establishes the boundaries.
It examines what evidence from 1978 can still be relied upon, what has degraded or changed over time, and where the limits of modern analysis now lie — including the role of emerging tools such as AI.
This is not about suspects or conclusions.
It is about what can safely support them.
Because once information is mishandled, it cannot be undone.
And any explanation that follows must be grounded in evidence that can still bear weight.
Content warning: This series discusses the sexual assault and murder of a child. Clinical, non-graphic language throughout. Listener discretion advised.
If you have information, contact Victoria Police Crime Stoppers: 1800 333 000 or www.police.vic.gov.au/crime-stoppers
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A thirteen-year-old girl was murdered. A major investigation followed. Why didn’t it lead to an arrest?
In March 1978, after Denise McGregor was found on Merriang Road, Victoria Police began an extensive homicide investigation.
Forensic examinations were conducted. Witnesses were interviewed. Lines of enquiry were opened — and, in some cases, abandoned.
Despite this, no one has ever been charged.
Over time, the investigation shifted into a cold case, subject to periodic review and renewed appeals.
This episode examines what was done, what was known, and how early investigative decisions shaped a case that remains unresolved.
Content warning: This episode discusses the sexual assault and murder of a child. It includes references to violence and investigative material. Listener discretion is advised.
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How does a thirteen-year-old girl disappear within 180 metres of her own home?
On Monday, 20 March 1978, Denise McGregor left her family home in Pascoe Vale to buy dinner from a nearby fish and chip shop.
On the walk home, she separated from her younger sister at the corner of Bell Street and Anderson Street to visit a local milk bar — approximately 180 metres from her front door.
She did not return.
Later that evening, Denise was reported missing. The following morning, her body was discovered on Merriang Road in Wallan East, approximately 40 kilometres north of Melbourne.
Her murder remains unsolved.
This episode reconstructs the confirmed timeline of Denise McGregor’s disappearance using witness statements, police records, inquest material, and contemporaneous reporting.
It establishes what is known — and where the gaps begin.
The case remains open with Victoria Police.
Information:
Anyone with information relating to the disappearance or murder of Denise McGregor is urged to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or submit a confidential report online at www.police.vic.gov.au/crime-stoppers
.Content warning:
This episode discusses the sexual assault and murder of a child and contains descriptions of how a child’s body was found. Listener discretion is advised.
Support services: Lifeline 13 11 14 | 1800 RESPECT 1800 737 732 -
In March 1978, thirteen-year-old Denise McGregor left her home in Pascoe Vale, Victoria, to buy fish and chips for her family.
She never came home.
Her body was discovered the following morning on Merriang Road in Wallan East, approximately 40 kilometres from where she disappeared.
Despite extensive investigation over the last forty-seven years, no one has ever been charged with Denise's murder. The case remains open with Victoria Police Homicide Squad and a million dollar reward has been posted with information leading to the apprehension and subsequent conviction of the person or persons responsible for her death.
Civilian Sleuths examines the disappearance, investigation, evidence, and modern investigative possibilities surrounding Denise McGregor's death. The series draws on materials from Public Records Office Victoria, Victoria Police, inquest transcripts, witness statements, and contemporaneous newspaper archives.
This examination considers the case through contemporary forensic knowledge while distinguishing documented evidence from areas that remain unresolved.
Information relevant to this case may still exist.
Someone saw something. Someone knows something. It's time to speak up.
Because we still owe it to Denise.
If you have information about this case that has not been provided to police, please contact Victoria Police Crime Stoppers: 1800 333 000.
Episode 1 launches January 6, 2026.
CONTENT WARNING: This series discusses the abduction and murder of a child.
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Civilian Sleuths re-examines Australia's coldest cases using publicly available records, AI-assisted research, and detailed analysis of historical evidence.
We're reconstructing timelines, cross-referencing witness statements, and exploring patterns in decades-old cases—combining technology with public memory to keep these investigations in the spotlight.
For decades, these cases went unsolved—not for lack of effort, but because the tools at the time were limited. Could one overlooked detail or forgotten memory finally bring answers?
Launching January 6, 2026. New episodes every second Tuesday.
Subscribe now.