Follow this author to personalize your feed and get instant alerts. WHY FOLLOW? Update your preferences in Account Settings A photo taken in August 1980 shows Lindy Chamberlain holding her daughter ...
In an Australian outback campground in August 1980, a desperate Australian mother wailed, “A dingo’s got my baby!” Her cry, misheard as “a dingo ate my baby,” became an inexplicable punchline and pop ...
IT captivated not only Australia but the world and almost four decades later it continues to spark debate. The disappearance of Azaria Chamberlain is a story ingrained into the national consciousness.
CANBERRA, Australia - A coroner has found that a dingo took a baby who vanished in the Australian Outback more than 32 years ago in a notorious case that split the nation over suspicions that the ...
Answering an unknown number on his mobile phone at a service station one recent Tuesday afternoon, Blake Selmes was ...
In this episode of Insight, Lindy Chamberlain and Saxon Mullins put Australia's jury system on trial. Is the idea of twelve ...
Lindy Chamberlain has lashed out at the Australian justice system after claiming the evidence in her trial was too complex ...
CANBERRA (Reuters) - A 32-year legal mystery over the death of a baby in Australia's outback came to an end on Tuesday when a coroner found a dingo was responsible for killing infant Azaria ...
On this day in history, one of Australia’s most talked about missing person cases began – with a cry of “the dingo’s got my baby”. On 17 August 1980, nine-and-a-half week old Azaria Chamberlain went ...
CANBERRA (Reuters) - An inquest began hearing new evidence on Friday into the 1980 death of baby Azaria Chamberlain, a case that has haunted Australia for decades and drew international attention ...