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Felon True Crime

Felon True Crime

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Stories of the worst felons.


Biografías y Memorias Crímenes Reales
Episodios
  • Tom Silvagni Sentencing - Courtroom Audio
    Dec 17 2025
    This episode presents the raw courtroom audio from the sentencing of Tom Silvagni.

    Recorded as the judge delivers final remarks, the audio captures the gravity of the proceedings.

    In January 2024, a young woman reported being sexually assaulted at a private residence in Melbourne’s inner east. The allegations related to events that occurred late at night, after a social gathering, inside a bedroom where the complainant believed she was alone.

    The prosecution case was that Tom Silvagni entered the room, deliberately misled the complainant as to who he was, and carried out sexual acts without consent. The court later heard that, in the days following the incident, steps were taken to obscure what had occurred, including attempts to alter records and shape a false timeline.

    Silvagni was charged later that year. For much of the legal process, strict suppression orders prevented his identification or any reporting of his family background. Those orders were eventually lifted, and the matter proceeded to trial in the Victorian County Court.

    At trial, the defence denied the allegations and challenged the complainant’s account. The jury ultimately rejected that version of events. In December, Silvagni was found guilty on two counts of rape.

    What follows is the court’s final response to those verdicts — the sentencing remarks delivered in open court. There is no commentary, no interpretation, and no embellishment. Just the words of the judge, explaining how the law assessed the offending, the harm caused, and the punishment imposed.

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    35 m
  • Felon: Debrief - Episode 11 - 30th November 2025
    Dec 4 2025
    NSW Triple Murder (Kwang Kyung Yoo) – Taekwondo instructor Yoo pleaded guilty to killing Min Cho, her husband Steven, and a seven-year-old boy in North Parramatta and Baulkham Hills in February 2024. Families gave victim-impact statements in court, describing the lasting trauma. Police have not identified a clear motive but noted Yoo’s history of lying about achievements and possessions. Sentencing is ongoing.

    Perth Cyber Offender (Michael Clapsis) – Clapsis, 44, was sentenced to seven years and four months after admitting to stealing intimate images from 17 women over six years and using a fake Qantas Wi-Fi network to capture passenger data. Victim statements highlighted the long-term impact, and Clapsis’s autism diagnosis and job loss were noted.

    Missing Man in Mackay (Wayne Pedro Morseu) – Police declared two properties crime scenes as they investigate the suspicious disappearance of 71-year-old Morseu, missing since November 10. Detectives are examining both properties and asking the public for information.

    Melbourne School Stabbing (Aaron Sykes) – Principal Aaron Sykes was stabbed at Keysborough Secondary College but suffered non-life-threatening injuries. The suspect, known to Sykes, was arrested, and the school briefly went into lockdown. Investigation is ongoing.

    Darwin Murder Conviction (Brendan Kantilla) – Kantilla was found guilty of murdering 23-year-old student Isfaqur Rahman in May 2023, who was attacked in his share house with a paving stone and fire extinguisher. The defence’s diminished-responsibility claim was rejected. Sentencing is forthcoming.

    Sea World Helicopter Collision Inquest (Ashley Jenkinson) – Helicopter pilot Jenkinson, who died in a midair collision in January 2023 along with three others, had a history of cocaine use and a recent mental breakdown. Inquest testimony suggests he was unlikely impaired at the time; the investigation continues.

    Bevan Spencer von Einem (Adelaide Child Murders) – Von Einem, 79, convicted of murdering 15-year-old Richard Kelvin, remains silent about other suspected victims linked to “The Family” killings in the late 1970s–1980s. His failing health has reignited public reflection on the unsolved cases.

    Chris Robertson Investigation (Adelaide) – Police seized a Mitsubishi Triton linked to the September 2024 death of 49-year-old Robertson, found assaulted in a warehouse. Forensic analysis of the vehicle is underway as investigators pursue multiple leads.

    Melbourne Doctor Murder (Ashley Gordon) – Dr Gordon, 16 at the time of the attack, was fatally stabbed during a botched home invasion in January 2024. His killer, eligible for parole in 12 years, prompted family outrage over the perceived leniency.

    Northern Beaches Manslaughter (Guy Haymes) – Jayson Brett Dal Molin pleaded guilty to manslaughter after assaulting surfer Guy Haymes during a money dispute in Manly. Haymes later died from a traumatic brain injury; Molin’s murder charges were withdrawn.

    Blacktown Shooting (Mal Seve) – Two men, Taine Crompton (25) and Hoani Tewhare (18), were charged with the murder of 28-year-old Mal Seve in a daylight shooting linked to gang associations. Police are investigating the incident, which followed a vehicle chase.

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    16 m
  • Four Cases of Bomb Attacks in Australia
    Nov 26 2025
    Australia has seen moments when ordinary life was torn apart by sudden violence. In 1942, the mining town of Boulder was struck by bombings that killed fourteen and injured fifteen, carried out by miner Pero Raecivich, whose motives remain unclear.

    In 1978, Sydney faced the Hilton Hotel bombing. A bomb hidden in a rubbish bin killed three men, injured eleven, and exposed gaps in security during a Commonwealth leaders’ meeting. The legal aftermath raised questions about justice and intelligence failures.

    Melbourne endured the Russell Street Police bombing in 1986. The attack killed Constable Angela Taylor, injured more than twenty others, and revealed the deadly coordination of criminal networks, reshaping policing in the city.

    Finally, in 2010, Darwin’s CBD was rocked when Paul Wayne Clarke detonated petrol and fireworks inside the Territory Insurance Office, wounding nineteen. Amid the chaos, civilians and police acted with extraordinary bravery.

    This episode explores these four bombings—the human toll, the investigations, and the communities forever changed by sudden acts of terror.


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    26 m
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