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    Australia asks _ again: Did a dingo kill the baby?

    SYDNEY (AP) — The growl came first, low and throaty, piercing the darkness that had fallen across the remote Australian desert. A baby's cry followed, then abruptly went silent. Inside the tent, the infant girl had vanished. Outside, her mother was screaming: "The dingo's got my baby!"

    With those panicked words, the mystery of Azaria Chamberlain's disappearance in the Australian Outback in 1980 became the most notorious, divisive and baffling legal drama in the country's history. Had a wild dog really taken the baby? Or had Azaria's mother, Lindy, slit her daughter's throat and buried her in the desert?

    Thirty-two years later, Australian officials hope to finally, definitively, determine how Azaria died when the Northern Territory coroner opens a fourth inquest on Friday (Feb. 24). Lindy Chamberlain, who was convicted of murdering her daughter and later cleared, is still waiting for authorities to close the case that made her the most hated person in Australia.

    To the rest of the world, the case is largely known for its place in pop culture: countless books, an opera, the Meryl Streep movie "A Cry in the Dark," and the sitcom Seinfeld's spoof of Lindy's cry, "Maybe the dingo ate your baby!"

    But to Australians, the case is about much more than the guilt or innocence of one woman. It is about the guilt or innocence of a nation — a nation that prides itself on the concept of a "fair go," an equal chance, for all. Did Lindy Chamberlain get a fair go? Or had Australians misjudged this woman? With doubts growing about just how fair and tolerant they truly were, many wondered if they had misjudged themselves.

    And so Australia will once again try to get to the bottom of one of the most painful chapters in its history.

    "It's a bit like a really bad war," says Tony Raymond, chief forensic scientist in an investigation that debunked much of the evidence used to convict Lindy. "You've got to learn from it and make sure it doesn't happen again."

    ___

    The nightmare began on Aug. 17, 1980, during a family vacation to Ayers Rock, the sacred Outback monolith now known by its Aboriginal name Uluru.

    Lindy and Michael Chamberlain, their two sons and their 9-week-old daughter Azaria were settling in for the night at a campsite near the rock. Azaria was sleeping in a tent and Lindy and Michael making dinner nearby when a baby's cry rang out. Lindy went to check on her daughter and says she saw a dingo slink out of the tent and disappear into the darkness. Azaria's bassinet was empty, the blankets still warm.

    There was an intense search, but Azaria was never found.

    The Chamberlains insisted the dingo snatched their daughter. Outside the tent were dingo tracks; inside were spots of blood. Fellow campers told officials they had heard a low growl, then a baby's cry. Azaria's torn, bloodied jumpsuit was found in the surrounding desert. There was no motive for a crime, no eyewitness, no body.

    But police and the public doubted a dingo was big or strong enough to drag away a 10-pound (4.5 kilogram) baby. Nobody could find documentation of a dingo killing a child before. While Australia is notorious for its deadly creatures — snakes, spiders, crocodiles — the humble dingo was considered a shy animal that posed little threat to people.

    And without the DNA testing available now, the forensic evidence looked damning. The dashboard in the Chamberlains' car was drenched in baby's blood, and a bloody hand print was found on Azaria's jumpsuit. Years later, more sophisticated tests determined the "blood" was a combination of spilled milk and a chemical sprayed during manufacture. The "hand print" was not a hand print at all — and was made mostly of red desert dust.

    The prosecution said there was no dingo saliva on Azaria's jumpsuit, which Lindy put down to the jacket she had been wearing over it. But the jacket was missing, and police said she was lying.

    The daily details of the trial were picked over in pubs and debated around dinner tables, breeding a generation of armchair cops who analyzed every piece of evidence described in the morning papers and on the nightly news.

    Australians didn't like the Chamberlains. Their religious affiliation — Seventh-day Adventist — was too weird, and Lindy was too calm.

    Her clothes, her nasally voice, her cool demeanor — it was all wrong for a grieving mother. Australians didn't understand her stoicism and recoiled when she spoke of graphic evidence clinically and without tears. "They'll just peel it like an orange," she told one reporter, describing how a dingo slashes the skin of its prey.

    She began receiving death threats. People spat at her, howled like a dingo outside her house, called her a bitch, a witch and worse.

    Lindy — heavily pregnant with her fourth child — was convicted of murder, accused of slashing her daughter's throat with nail scissors and making it look like a dingo attack. She was sentenced to life in prison with hard labor. Michael was convicted of being an accessory.

    Three years into Lindy's prison sentence, Azaria's jacket was found by chance — near a dingo den. Days later, Lindy was released from prison. A Royal Commission, the highest form of investigation in Australia, debunked much of the forensic evidence used at trial and her conviction was overturned.

    ___

    The turnaround stunned Australians. It was a wrecking ball to the notion that the justice system protected good people. That an innocent woman — an innocent pregnant woman — could never be thrown in prison. That the courts were immune to prejudice.

    "The general public didn't want to believe it," says Anthea Gunn, curator at Australia's National Museum, home to a popular collection of Chamberlain memorabilia. "Because why would you? You want to believe those places are above reproach."

    Australia is a nation that was, in many ways, born out of judgment, when Britain began sending its unwanted convicts to the continent in the 1700s. These social outcasts fought against what they considered the elitism of the British class system, cheered for the underdog and honed a sharp sense of injustice. Australia proudly dubbed itself "the land of the fair go."

    Today, the "fair go" is a key part of Australian identity, a phrase that shows up in politics, popular culture and everyday life.

    Prime Minister Julia Gillard once declared, "We will hang on to our Aussie mateship and our Aussie fair go in the worst times and in the best." Virgin Mobile ran a "Fair Go For All" ad campaign featuring a character named "Robin da Hood." A perceived injustice, such as a parking ticket, is often greeted with a frustrated grumble of "Fair go!"

    But the fair go mentality didn't seem to apply to the Chamberlains, with their little-known religion.

    Michael Chamberlain was a pastor with the Seventh-day Adventist church, a Protestant denomination that few Australians understood. In the absence of fact came rumors that spread with frightening ferocity, of child sacrifice, witchcraft, even Satanism. Had Lindy killed Azaria as part of a twisted religious ritual? Did the name Azaria really mean "sacrifice in the wilderness?" (It is a Hebrew name that means "helped by God.")

    The hysteria was reminiscent of the Salem witch trials in the U.S. Even a black dress once worn by Azaria was seen as proof that Lindy was an evil murderess — because what kind of mother dresses her baby in black?

    Michael Chamberlain, who was divorced from Lindy in 1991, is now an author in a small town north of Sydney. When asked about the case, he is both weary and wary, carefully limiting what he says ahead of the inquest as he waits to see whether the system will give him a chance.

    "The church got so smashed up, erroneously, and all through, really, a nasty dose of prejudice," Chamberlain says. "I can say that I think our religion definitely impacted quite strongly on the attitude that many Australians developed."

    The growing evidence that they had unfairly judged the Chamberlains was a bitter pill for Australians to swallow, says John Bryson, author of "Evil Angels," the definitive book on Azaria's disappearance.

    "Australians always thought of themselves, and this country, as being the country of fair play," Bryson says. "That certainly wasn't the case."

    ___

    As the evidence shifted in favor of Lindy's innocence, public guilt grew. Three decades later, it remains.

    "We can't let it go," says Michelle Arrow, a cultural historian who helped edit the book, "The Chamberlain Case: Nation, Law, Memory." ''I feel a bit embarrassed that I did think she was guilty when I was a 9-year-old, just reading the tabloids and watching TV. And I think a lot of people are still in the same boat."

    Faith in the system was shattered. The National Institute of Forensic Science was later established to ensure better scrutiny of evidence. Still, many Australians now cast a more skeptical eye on judicial proceedings.

    "People became a little more cynical," says Raymond, the Royal Commission's chief scientist. "People test the evidence a lot better now. Up 'til then, it was, 'Believe me, I'm a scientist.'"

    Not all Australians believe a dingo killed Azaria. Even recent polls show a deep divide in opinions.

    Graeme Charlwood, the former Northern Territory cop who led the investigation and eventually arrested Lindy, is 60 now and has left the police force. When asked what he now believes happened the night Azaria vanished, he sighs.

    "I've probably given up analyzing it," he says. "I, as a policeman, always accepted the rule of law. If a court or jury made a finding, then I accepted it whether or not it aligned with my private view. Sometimes juries got it wrong, sometimes they didn't. It's not a perfect system."

    It's a careful response, and when asked to clarify exactly what he believes happened, he demurs.

    "I'm not going to share it publicly," he says with a tired chuckle. "I'll get into a heap of trouble."

    Ten years ago, there was a series of dingo attacks on Australia's Fraser Island, including the fatal mauling of a 9-year-old boy. That was a turning point for some Australians who had, until then, maintained Lindy killed Azaria.

    Around that time, staff at the National Museum set up a video camera near the Chamberlain exhibit and invited the public to record messages. The video became something of a confessional, curator Sophie Jensen says, with several visitors apologizing for doubting Lindy.

    In 2007, Lindy agreed to be interviewed by Jensen at the museum. All 180 audience seats were filled. Many in the crowd wept.

    "I'm one of the many mothers who had kids at the same time," one woman told Lindy, and began to cry. "I identified with you. I felt the injustices with you, and the powerlessness and the joys when you were released. ... I'm so ashamed to be Australian at that period of time. I think if anyone deserves an apology from the government, it's you."

    Thunderous applause filled the room.

    Despite the increased public support, Azaria's death certificate remains incomplete. Three coroner's inquests held to determine a cause of death have returned conflicting results. On Friday, Northern Territory Coroner Elizabeth Morris will examine fresh evidence of dingo attacks before issuing a finding on how Azaria died.

    Lindy declined an interview request, but in an open letter on the 30th anniversary of Azaria's disappearance, she wrote that she was fighting for her daughter.

    "Our family will always remember today as the day truth was dragged in the dirt and trampled upon, but more than that it is the day our family was torn apart forever because we lost our beautiful little Azaria," Lindy wrote.

    "She deserves justice."

    ___

    Perhaps no one exemplifies the shifting opinions, uncertainty and nagging guilt of Australians more than Yvonne Cain, one of the jurors who voted to convict Lindy.

    At first, she empathized with the woman on trial: Cain's own son was bitten by a dingo when he was just a baby. But the prosecution's forensics looked strong, and the defense looked weak. When the verdict was announced, Cain couldn't look at Lindy, and wept as she was sentenced.

    "I'll never forget the judge saying that Lindy would be put into jail for life with hard labor," says Cain, now 63 and living in the southern city of Adelaide. "I imagined her smashing rocks, like in the old days."

    After the trial, Cain was shattered. Had she gotten it wrong?

    Her sleep was riddled with nightmares. She daydreamed about smuggling Lindy out of jail. She grew convinced she had made a horrible mistake.

    Soon after Lindy's release, the two women met, in a moment captured on video. Cain couldn't stop crying as she hugged Lindy. "Are you all right, now that it's all finished?" she asked.

    "It's not finished yet," Lindy replied. "We've got a fight to go."

    The two are now friends. But Cain still struggles with her conscience. The guilt will probably always plague her, she says. She believes it should plague all Australians who condemned Lindy.

    Because if the dingo is guilty, then so is Australia.

    "I never, ever got over it," Cain says, her voice shaking. "I'm guilty for calling her guilty. ... I keep thinking back to the time when we were deliberating. If only — if only — I'd have said no, I don't think she's guilty."

    "That woman was as innocent as you and me."

     
    • STRA  •  3 months ago
      I want to know who was in charge of the logic that a wild dog couldn't carry off a 10lb baby?
      • Phebes 3 months ago
        My thumbs up came up as a thumbs down, just wanted you to know that I was NOT trying to thumbs that... You get the idea.

        Your point is a good one.
      • Bellawhile 3 months ago
        Yes, a large dingo can carry something weighing 10 pounds. Also, why did everyone assume only one dingo grabbed the baby? Dingos travel and hunt in packs.
      • RR 3 months ago
        Yah, I kinda wondered about that. Dingoes aren't exactly tiny foxes... they're about a medium to medium/large size dog. My 45lb dog could pick up and carry off 10lbs without too much trouble, and he's a pampered housepet. I'm sure a wild animal could handle much more.
    • KimberlyC  •  Longview, United States  •  3 months ago
      what i dont understand is how can they say her throat was cut if there was no body ???
      • Conan the Philosopher 3 months ago
        her 'torn, bloody jumpsuit' was found, as it says in the article, and likely the blood was in that area of the jumpsuit. elementary.
      • Jessica-Lynn 3 months ago
        I was wondering that same thing
      • Sean X 3 months ago
        Well, case solved.
    • GaelicGolfer  •  Paramus, United States  •  3 months ago
      So let me get this straight..... people's dogs go nuts and drag kids off and maul them to death but they just couldn't believe that a wild animal that hunts for food every day could do this? Seriously? Maybe it was, maybe it wasn't but if the whole case was based on "a dingo would never kill a baby" that is HORRIBLE police work.
      • EthanK 3 months ago
        i thumbed you down because your from jersey and are there for worthless
      • Laurel 3 months ago
        Um...I don't know where you're getting this information from where people's dogs go nuts and drag off their kids and maul them to death. Unless a dog is rabid, it doesn't go nuts randomly and kill the nearest kid. It's hard to use logic, reason and facts to argue a point based off of misguided emotional thinking, fear and a possible two bits of anecdotal evidence so I won't bother to continue trying with that one. As far as a wild animal that hunts for food...of course they're capable of killing a baby but please try to think a little deeper than just what's at face value. Is it possible that a dingo walked into a campsite, went straight for the baby, wasn't intimidated at all by the fact that there were people nearby, snatched the baby and left? Yes, of course it is. But then why was there no dingo saliva on the baby's jumpsuit? The mother said the baby had a jacket on but clearly the jacket and the jumpsuit were found in separate locations and considering the fact that the jumpsuit was bloodied and torn...that indicates that there should've been some kind of mouth-to-jumpsuit contact at some point. So once again, where's the dingo saliva? Is it possible that the baby was killed and then the body discarded in an area known to have a dingo population? Yes. So really, as the general public anyhow, we don't know enough to say she's guilty or innocent.
      • unknown 3 months ago
        @ Laurel, what about when Dobermens went biserk and than St. Bernards and a few other breeds? It was found that due to demand the dogs were in-bred so fast and often the brain kept growing but not the skull. So yes even popular breeds have gone nuts.
    • Scanner  •  3 months ago
      PLEASE ""But police and the public doubted a dingo was big or strong enough to drag away a 10-pound (4.5-kilogram) baby."" A few years ago, my dog (which weighted only about 40 pounds), dragged a piece of a deer I had quartered (which weighed 15 pounds) over 100 yards. I had only left the quarters in my cooler less than 15 minutes before I returned to find the cooler overturned, and saw my dog a little over 100 yards away in my back yard, still dragging the quarter towards the woods! I am sorry for the child, but dogs are much stronger than most people believe!
      • ISellTheDead 3 months ago
        I agree, My 6 month old 50 pound Lab puppy drags me across the yard when we play Tug-o-war and I weigh 120 pounds.
      • Desktop Genius 3 months ago
        But why were no remains from Azaria's body found after extensive searching? No skull, no leg bone fragments, nothing. Your dog left, or would have left, some of the bone or some sort of evidence.
      • A Yahoo! User 3 months ago
        But dogs eat bones, scavengers....not sure there would be bone left
    • The Constitutionalist  •  Dallas, United States  •  3 months ago
      This is another example of how the media persuades the minds of the masses to make the deciscions they want you to make. Thirty years later we can look back and se how dumb we were. This type of stuff has only gotten worse in the last eight years.
      • GregU 3 months ago
        Jury system is a bad idea. Take a group of people, some more, some less than average. Pull them away from their jobs, family, friends, unwillingly. Then put them in front of manipulating lawyers and expect them to find the truth.
      • mik 3 months ago
        You got that right.
      • Sharon 3 months ago
        It's not just the media that can persuade the minds of many.
    • wild crow  •  3 months ago
      everything about this story is sad
    • pgm  •  Santa Ana, United States  •  3 months ago
      The dingo is a calculating predator that would only go for an unattended infant - it's an easy meal, and I firmly believe that child was snatched into the night, just like that 9-year-old boy on Frazier Island holiday was killed by a single dingo in full view of his terrified younger brother. Given the weight disparity between an infant and a 9-year-old, that infant being dragged into the night is exactly what happened, and a mother has been much maligned by the "Fair go" that all of us Australian's like to think we live by, but fell far short of by refusing to believe that the romanticised dingo is capable of such predation!
    • Vonna  •  Southfield, United States  •  3 months ago
      My husband is an Aussie. He and I have argued I don't know how many times over this story. I think it is entirely possible that a dingo could have snatched little Azaria. He argues otherwise and so do my in-laws.

      Two years ago, when I went to Australia, I asked most of my husband's friends and my mother-in-law's friends what their thoughts were on this story. To my surprise, just about everyone I asked told me they believed it was NOT a dingo and most likely her parents.

      I even went to Fraser Island when I was over there and a dingo came right up to us on the beach!! This dingo was not the least bit afraid of us at all. My husband thought I was crazy because I kneeled down and snapped an awesome close-up pic of him. (It was so easy to snap that pic too, since he laid down in the sand within just a few feet of us.) Although I was tempted to, I did not dare to pet him for fear he would bite or attack.

      I still maintain, in spite of what the Aussies that I know think, that it is totally within the realm of possibility that a dingo could've snatched that baby and killed her.
    • Stormgod  •  Jacksonville, United States  •  3 months ago
      Put it to rest! It's not like she maybe killed her daughter, taped her up with duct tape, drove around with her in the trunk of her car for a while, and fabricated some made-up babysitter whole allegedly stole the baby. That's a tough one to decide on - but this one's a no-brainer!
    • J T  •  3 months ago
      so a dingo can't carry a 10lb baby?
      because the babies name, when translated, has something to do with God it automatically means sacrifice?
      and because their religion is not the same as everyone else its a twisted religious ritual?
      .....yea OK. talk about being quick to judge and assume, I can't imagine what their other cases are like.
    • Cherrie  •  Raleigh, United States  •  3 months ago
      So very sad... I wonder whatever happened to her other children? The story doesn't actually say, but I would assume she lost them to the 'state' as well. It really is horrifying what this family went through...
    • Rick  •  Albuquerque, United States  •  3 months ago
      I gotta throw the #$%$ flag here! I have an Austrailian Dingo. He is the coolist dog I've ever owned, very obedient and tame!! Any dog left in the wild will become ferrill and do what ever it takes to survive. Take the Mexican Chihuahua for instance. You let a pack of them go wild for a couple of generations, they'll run off with a baby too! Though it may take 8 or 10 too carry a baby, they will do whatever it takes to survive.
    • JESMD  •  New Orleans, United States  •  3 months ago
      If the baby's body was never found, then why did authorities assume her throat was slit? That's pretty specific for not having a motive or a body.
    • Kathleen  •  Clearlake Oaks, United States  •  3 months ago
      I admire the Aussies for even examing themselves regarding this issue. The people in the US are NEVER that reflective on our behavior. Remember the McMartin preschool America??? Have we EVER apologized for that crap?
    • Oldefarte  •  Medford, United States  •  3 months ago
      There is an element in society - particularly among urban dwellers - who absolutely insist on the unwillingness/inability of wild animals to harm and attack humans. Go back to the early 1970's (pre-"Jaws") and you will find tons of literature claiming that sharks do not attack people (at most, people were mistaking "exploratory" barracuda bites for shark attacks). There is a case still ongoing down south in which a woman was clearly killed by a cougar, but the authorities refuse to countenance that explanation and continue to try to pin the death on a family member. To do otherwise would be to admit that there is a cougar "problem". Even the death documented in "Beast in the Garden" raised "doubts" because "everyone knows" that cougars don't kill people (never mind that the culprit had "cached" and was still munching on the victim when found and killed). This was one more such case. There is no question, in my mind, based on the evidence, that a dingo did, in fact, kill this baby, but some folks simply don't want to admit it. Maybe it is because they have been raised on the Disney notion of what animals are like. Maybe they don't want to give an excuse to the authorities to institute animal control and culling programs. Maybe they simply refuse to believe that we can, in some cases, not be the highest rung on the food chain, that that somehow offends their notions of human dignity. Whatever the explanation, the belief is held with the fervor of all such irrational convictions and therefore the Chamberlains MUST be guilty of infanticide. To me, this is so open and shut it never should have raised a question and the nation of Australia should be utterly ashamed of itself for what they have put this woman and her family through. Put simply, a dingo ate her baby. Put it to bed and pay this woman reparations for the injustices inflicted on her.
    • lmg  •  3 months ago
      Poor little baby girl.
    • Bare  •  Sacramento, United States  •  3 months ago
      I never thought she did it and there was no evidence she did. Her story stands.
    • Nomad  •  Fountain Valley, United States  •  3 months ago
      They are WILD animals; WILD ANIMALS GET HUNGRY, LIKE MEAT, EAT MEAT.
      As for the hauling off a child more than likely they would tear it appart first like other preditors. "Azaria's torn, bloodied jumpsuit was found in the surrounding desert."
    • Mike  •  San Antonio, United States  •  3 months ago
      I don't remember the whole thing very well - very sad. Though one thing about our justice system: you can get a FAIR trial - but it DOESN'T mean you will get justice.
    • TexanProud  •  Abilene, United States  •  3 months ago
      I've never seen a dingo but I have seen coyotes and wolves take lambs, chase dogs as large as they are and attack calves. I know they can carry off a 10lb dog in their mouths so it makes sense to me that a dingo who is related to the grey wolf could easily carry a baby since they can not fight. The verdict in this case seems to be totally prejudiced based on the unknown of Seventh Day Adventists. My question is why didn't someone research the religion, inform the people and present the evidence that a dingo/wolf could carry 10lbs? Surely the people of Australia are more intelligent than this article would make one believe.
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