New clip shows dying ‘Outback killer’ refuse to reveal where Peter Falconio’s body is

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New footage released ahead of the 25th anniversary of Peter Falconio’s murder shows killer John Murdoch refusing to reveal where the British backpacker’s remains are.

Murdoch died of throat cancer last year while serving a life sentence for the murder of Mr Falconio, 28, and assaulting his girlfriend Joanne Lees.

Huddersfield-born Mr Falconio was shot dead on a remote stretch of road near Barrow Creek in Australia’s Northern Territory on July 14, 2001.

Ms Lees was kidnapped but managed to escape by hiding out in some scrub for several hours until she was able to wave down two men in a passing truck.

NT police have now released body-worn footage from one of the final attempts at getting Murdoch to reveal where he hid Mr Falconio’s body.

Recorded weeks before his death, it shows an officer saying: ‘I need you to have a think about if Peter Falconio was your son … and somebody knew something about where his body was.’

But Murdoch replies: ‘Don’t beat around the bush because I’m just going to cut you short every time OK?

‘I know nothing. I’ve said this for 22 years. I know nothing.’

When the officer invited him to think about his answer, Murdoch again denied any knowledge, saying: ‘I’m not thinking about it. I’ve thought about, I thought about it for 22 f*****g years.

‘I’ve been with these fellas for 22 years. They’ve all understood what’s going on, I’ve said the same story over and over and over, and now you’re here at the last minute because I’m f*****g dying.’

Undated handout photo of Peter Falconio and his girlfriend Joanne Lees in the back of their camper van. The trial of an Australian mechanic accused of the murder of British backpacker Peter Falconio will begin next April. The Director of Public Prosecutions Friday August 20, 2004 announced the trial would begin on April 26 and would probably go on for six weeks. Bradley John Murdoch, of Broome, will stand trial in Australia's Northern Territory Supreme Court charged with the murder of the 28-year-old tourist from Huddersfield. He is also charged with the unlawful assault and deprivation of liberty of Mr Falconio's girlfriend Joanne Lees, from Brighton, beside an Outback road three years ago. See PA story AUSTRALIA Falconio. PA Photo / Handout.
Handout photo of Peter Falconio and his girlfriend Joanne Lees in the back of their camper van (Picture: PA)
DARWIN, AUSTRALIA: Bradley John Murdoch (C) surrounded by police arrives at Darwin airport from Adelaide 24 November 2003. One of Australia's most enduring crime mysteries came to an end 13 December 2005 when a mechanic and admitted drug runner, Bradley John Murdoch, was found guilty of the 2001 murder of missing British tourist Peter Falconio. Murdoch, 47, was also found guilty by a jury in the Northern Territory Supreme Court of assault and the attempted abduction of Falconio's English girlfriend, Joanne Lees, on a moonless night in remote central Australia. AFP PHOTO/David HANCOCK (Photo credit should read DAVID HANCOCK/AFP via Getty Images) - 10692497
John Murdoch surrounded by police arrives at Darwin airport from Adelaide in 2003 (Picture: AFP via Getty)

After he died, police said Murdoch had not provided any fresh information.

They said in a statement: ‘The Northern Territory Police Force acknowledges the death of Bradley John Murdoch, the man convicted of the 2001 murder of British backpacker Peter Falconio near Barrow Creek.

‘It is deeply regrettable that Murdoch has died without, as far as we are aware, ever disclosing the location of Peter Falconio’s remains.

‘His silence has denied the Falconio family the closure they have so long deserved.

‘Our thoughts are with the Falconio family in the United Kingdom, whose grief continues.’

Mr Falconio’s father, Luciano Falconio, said he wished that Murdoch had ‘left something’ to help him recover his son’s body.

‘I don’t wish anybody dead because you have only got one life and I think if you’ve been given that gift of life… I don’t even know what to say,’ Luciano Falconio told Newscorp.
‘I tell you what I think, I wish he (Murdoch) left something for me to find him.’

Luciano and Joan Falconio of Britain, parents of Peter Falconio, leave the Northern Territory Supreme Court hand in hand after the guilty verdict was delivered to Bradley John Murdoch by the jury on Tuesday, Dec. 13, 2005. Murdoch was found guilty on all counts, murder of British backpacker Peter Falconio; abduction of his then girlfriend Joanne Lees; and deprivation of Lees' liberty - and sentenced to life imprisonment. (AP Photo/Rick Stevens)
Luciano and Joan Falconio leave the Northern Territory Supreme Court hand in hand after the guilty verdict was delivered (Picture: AP)
Joanne Lees, former girlfriend of missing British backpacker Peter Falconio, leaves the Northern Territory Supreme Court in Darwin, Australia, Monday, Oct. 17, 2005, after giving evidence. Bradley John Murdoch appeared in the Northern Territory Supreme Court accused of murdering the 28-year-old Falconio beside an outback highway in July 2001, and the unlawful assault and deprivation of liberty to Lees. (AP Photo/Rob Griffith)
Ms Lees leaves court after giving evidence (Picture: AP)

Peter Falconio and Ms Lees had been driving near the tiny settlement of Barrow Creek, around 188 miles north of Alice Springs, when Murdoch pulled up beside them claiming to have seen sparks coming from their van.

He shot Mr Falconio in the head as he inspected the vehicle, before forcing Ms Lees into his vehicle and binding her wrists with cable ties.

She managed to escape, hiding in the Outback for hours before flagging down a passing truck.

During the trial, prosecutors argued that Murdoch was likely to have disposed of the backpacker’s body somewhere in the vast, remote expanse of desert between Alice Springs and Broome, covering more than 1,200 miles.

Despite repeated searches, Mr Falconio’s body has never been found.

Ms Lees, who returned to the UK, told Australian current affairs programme 60 Minutes in 2017 that she still wanted to ‘bring him home’.

‘Pete lost his life on that night, but I lost mine too,’ she said at the time.

‘I’ll never be fully at peace if Pete’s not found, but I accept that that is a possibility.’

Murdoch lodged several unsuccessful appeals over the years, with Australia’s highest court refusing to hear his case in 2007.

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