Former Jetstar pilot Greg Lynn could be free for Christmas as court overturns his murder conviction and orders a retrial
- Greg Lynn will face a new trial over two alleged murders
- READ: How former Jetstar pilot Greg Lynn plans to walk free from jail over murder of missing camper
Former Jetstar pilot Greg Lynn could walk free from jail on bail after his murder conviction was overturned.
Lynn fronted the Supreme Court of Appeal on Thursday where the court ordered his conviction over the murder of Carol Clay be scrapped and a retrial ordered.
A Supreme Court jury last year found Lynn guilty of murdering the retiree at a campsite in Victoria's High Country in March 2020, but acquitted him of murdering her companion Russell Hill.
Lynn has always maintained his innocence, saying the pair died in tragic, accidental deaths following a dispute involving a knife and one of his guns.
On Thursday, Court of Appeal President Karin Emerton said there was a 'substantial' likelihood of a miscarriage of justice during the original trial.
The decision had been made by Justice Emerton and justices Phillip Priest and Peter Kidd.
Lynn was jovial upon hearing the judge's decision, embracing his legal team.
Dressed in a suit and hiking boots, he had appeared confident of the decision before it had even been made.
Greg Lynn enters the Supreme Court of Victoria on Thursday
Lynn smiled at supporters, which included his son Geordie, who refused to comment to media upon leaving the court.
There was no sign of Lynn's wife Melanie, who had supported him throughout his first trial.
Ms Clay’s loved ones, including her daughter Emma Davies, were in court to witness the decision being handed down.
They left shortly after, making no comment.
Lynn's barrister, Dermot Dann, KC refused to say whether he intended to now apply for bail.
If he does as expected, the matter will be listed in the Supreme Court of Victoria.
Lynn faces a decent chance of securing bail given the length of time he has already spent behind bars and the expected long wait for the retrial.
Any retrial is not likely to commence until late next year or even the following year given the complexity of the case and backlogs.
A jury found Lynn murdered Carol Clay (left) but not Russell Hill
Greg Lynn arrives at court on Thursday
A swag of evidence had been tossed out by the presiding judge for Lynn's first trial.
A lengthy pretrial had already been run before that trial even began.
It is expected Lynn's defence team and prosecutors will again face-off to work out how the next trial might proceed.
Lynn had entered the witness box himself during his first trial where he was grilled for days by both his own barrister and the prosecution.
In announcing a retrial, Justice Emerton said that 'serious irregularities in the course of the trial were not capable of being remedied'.
Lynn was found guilty of murdering Ms Clay, 73, at a remote campsite in the Wonnangatta Valley in March 2020.
The burnt remains of Russell Hill's camp site after Greg Lynn allegedly destroyed it
Lynn's son Geordie (left) made no comment as he left the court on Thursday
The former airline pilot had pleaded not guilty, claiming the elderly pair both died accidentally and he had panicked, bundling Ms Clay and Mr Hill’s bodies into the back of his trailer and hiding their remains before later returning and burning them.
He was sentenced in October last year to 32 years in jail over the murder of Ms Clay on what his barrister rightfully claimed was an 'unsafe verdict'.
Mr Dann KC had opened the appeal by claiming trial prosecutor Daniel Porceddu 'played outside the rules' to get the conviction.
The jury had cleared Lynn of the murder of Mr Hill, paving the way for the appeal.
'We say to this court, what we said to the jury, by way of submission, that in an adversarial contest where there were two sides, one side, the prosecution, played outside the rules, and one side in the defence, played inside the rules,' Mr Dann said.
'So we say it was a prosecution that broke the rules from start to finish.'
Lynn's barrister Dermot Dann, KC has secured his client a new trial. He is pictured leaving court on Thursday
Mr Dann said the jury was improperly persuaded by the prosecution to come up with the shock split verdict.
'We say that the jury, by way of developments in the trial and directions that were given, were placed in a very difficult intellectual position,' Mr Dann said.
'There was just too much of the risk that in arriving at that jury verdict, the guilty verdict, the jury travelled down an improper pathway, or engaged in illegitimate compromise.'
While Lynn had always denied murdering the couple, the jury heard he freely admitted to cleaning up the crime scene and destroying the evidence.
'It was despicable,' Lynn conceded to the jury.
'All I can say to the families is that I am very sorry for all of your suffering that I've caused ... yes I should be punished for it. For what I did.'
Greg Lynn is now regarded once again as an innocent man
The jury heard Lynn had offered to plead guilty to the destruction of evidence before going on trial, but it had been rejected by the prosecution.
'I am innocent of murder,' he said. 'I am innocent (of manslaughter too). I haven't killed anyone.'
Mr Dann claimed the prosecution had 'gone mad' suggesting the jury was right to conclude it could convict on Ms Clay without accepting Mr Hill had been murdered.
The prosecution argued Lynn murdered Ms Clay because she witnessed him stab Mr Hill to death after he had tried to grab Lynn's gun.
'Had she been allowed to live, Ms Clay would have been in a position to identify the accused,' Mr Porceddu told the jury.
Mr Dann accused the prosecution of continuing to mislead the court during subsequent pre-sentence hearings where it was claimed that motive was still available to the jury when it came to its verdict.
'They're saying this is how the jury got to that verdict. Beyond reasonable doubt. They're not just saying this may have happened. They're saying, beyond reasonable doubt, that's what happened.' Mr Dann said.
Lynn's wife Melanie did not attend Thursday's hearing
'They've gone mad. They've just gone mad. There was no risk of that happening. This prosecutor, over months in the plea process, he's just gone mad.'
Mr Dann claimed the prosecution went against well established rules on how criminal trials are to be run.
He claimed the prosecution launched a 'sustained attack' on Lynn’s version of events during the closing address, which included statements never put to his client during his time in the witness box.
These attacks greatly impacted Lynn's credibility in the eyes of the jury, Mr Dann suggested.
'It looked like the learned prosecutor had chickened out. Another way of saying that, he didn't want to come off second best in these credit contests with Mr Lynn and he deliberately refrained from putting all sorts of matters,' he said.
He accused the prosecutor of breaching cross-examination rules six times, in failing to give Lynn the opportunity to respond to evidence in the case.
Mr Dann argued the jury arrived at an improper pathway or engaged in an illegitimate compromise.
'There has been such a departure from proper processes at trial, that there has been a substantial miscarriage of justice,' he said.
Daniel Porceddu was slammed by Lynn's defence team
Mr Dann further submitted the prosecution had failed on five grounds - four related to Lynn’s conviction and one to his sentence.
He took aim at evidence provided by Victoria Police ballistics expert Paul Griffiths, who brought the murder weapon into court and showed the jury how it operated.
Mr Dann accused the expert of changing his evidence mid-trial.
The court heard Mr Dann thought the prosecution had gone so far off script he contemplated having the jury discharged altogether.
When questioned why he didn't, Mr Dann took issue with suggestions from the appeal judges that he decided to 'roll the dice' and continue with the trial instead of asking for the jury to be discharged 'to maximise his chances of an acquittal'.
Had the jury been discharged then, Lynn would have been forced to give evidence again to a different jury and face the prospect of evidence not used in that trial being put into the next, he said.
'A decision had to be made by the applicant,' he said.
'We're talking about someone who's faced with an impossible forensic decision. It's two evils that he's facing, both of them are unfair. adding that he was trying to choose the lesser of two evils that are upon him.'
The remains of Russell Hill's tent after Greg Lynn allegedly torched it
He told the appeal judges they could still intervene, despite having made no application for discharging the jury, giving examples of other cases where a re-trial was ordered in similar circumstances.
'Despite there being no application for discharge, the appeal against conviction is successful because the court has a duty to intervene where a substantial miscarriage of justice is identified,' Mr Dann said.
Mr Dann said Justice Croucher had repeatedly warned Mr Porceddu to 'stick to the rules' and remarked he was 'wincing' and 'flabbergasted' by the prosecutor’s repeated breaches.
The barrister claimed said the breaches were so 'egregious' and a 'gross departure of the proper processes' at trial that his client did not get a fair trial.
The Victoria's Director of Public Prosecutions, Brendan Kissane KC, attempted to counter Mr Dann's arguments.
He came under immediate fire from experienced appeal judge Phillip Priest, who branded elements of Mr Porceddu's performance during the trial a 'disgrace'.
He further pondered how the director could even attempt to defend some of the decisions that were made by his team during the trial.
'It is a disgrace that the prosecutor did not call that evidence,' he said in relation to one of Mr Dann's complaints against the prosecutor.
Greg Lynn could soon be released from his chains
The judge was scathing of Mr Porceddu's closing address to the jury, agreeing with Lynn's barrister that he did indeed break the rules of fairness.
'I mean I'm not suggesting it was a perfect cross examination.' Mr Kissane said.
Justice Priest suggested the breaches were of such a concern Justice Croucher had no choice but to provide more than a dozen directives to the jury in the hope of steering it to a sound verdict.
'He was so concerned about the prosecutor's behaviour in cross examination, he felt moved to give very strong directions about it,' he told Mr Kissane.
Mr Kissane argued the directions provided to the jury wiped the slate clean about any notion the jury had been misled.
'We say that once the direction is given, there's no miscarriage of justice,' he said.
He was wrong.
