The Sharpe family murders refer to an Australian 2004 double murder.
Australian man John
Myles Sharpe killed his pregnant wife, New
Zealander Anna Marie Kemp, and their 20-month-old daughter, Gracie Louise Kemp, in the semi-rural Melbourne suburb of Mornington, Victoria, in March 2004.
Authorities say Sharpe repeatedly fired a speargun into the heads of his
victims, later exhumed the body of his wife from a shallow grave, dismembered
her, and then disposed of her body in a landfill.
Sharpe later appeared in emotional interviews on television
seeking information on his family's whereabouts. He eventually confessed to the
murders and was sentenced in 2005 to two consecutive terms of life
imprisonment, with a non-parole period of thirty-three years. He will be
eligible for parole in 2037.
Background
John Sharpe was
born on 28 February 1967 in Mornington,
Victoria, where he also grew up. He met his New Zealand-born wife, Anna Kemp when they worked together at
the Commonwealth Bank of Australia. They
married in October 1994 and lived together in various locations around the Mornington Peninsula area south of Melbourne. At the time of the murders,
Sharpe was self-employed as a conveyancer. Their daughter, Gracie, was born in
August 2002. Gracie was born with a condition called hip dysplasia, a
congenital abnormality in her hips that required orthopedic treatment by a
corrective harness for the first three months of her life. She cried often and
had difficulty sleeping, a situation which appeared to place some strain on the
marriage. Even after the harness was no longer required, Gracie still had
difficulties with feeding and sleeping, for which Kemp sought professional
assistance.
In 2003, Sharpe purchased a high-powered speargun and an
additional spear at Sport Philip Marine,
a local shop in Mornington. He had not previously shown an interest in
spearfishing. Sharpe practiced firing the speargun in the backyard of the
couple's residence to become familiar with its operation. Later that
year, the Sharpes purchased a house at 116 Prince Street, Mornington. In
November 2003, when Gracie was about fifteen months old, Kemp became pregnant
again. Sharpe later told police investigators that this pregnancy came as a
surprise to him. He apparently decided that he did not want another child—in
his mind, one was enough of a burden—and he began to resent Kemp and the unborn
child.
Murders
On 21 March 2004, Sharpe and his family attended a nephew's
birthday party. Others present at the party noticed no tension or arguments
between the couple. On 23 March, according to Sharpe’s confession, the couple
both retired to bed for the night between 9:00-10:00pm after an argument; Anna
quickly fell asleep, while Sharpe lay brooding over the argument and the state
of his marriage. Sharpe left the bed and retrieved the speargun from the
backyard garage. Returning to the bedroom, he fired the spear from a distance
of a few centimeters into his wife's left temple. Noticing his wife was still
breathing, Sharpe fired a second spear into her head, killing her. He then
covered the body in towels and went downstairs to sleep on a sofa bed.
The next day, Sharpe attempted to remove the spears but
failed, removing only the shafts by unscrewing them from the heads. That same
day, he took Gracie to and then collected her from, her childcare center.
Sharpe turned away a TV serviceman who came to the house, lest he discover the
body. He later buried his wife in a shallow grave in their backyard.
Sometime after his wife's death, Sharpe returned to Sport Phillip Marine with his daughter
and purchased another spear that would later be used to kill the child. This
was described at his sentencing hearing as being "circumstances of unspeakable callousness.”
In the following days, Sharpe told staff at Gracie's
childcare center that Kemp had left him and told Kemp's mother in New Zealand
that Kemp had left him for a man with whom she had been having an extramarital
affair. He said he did not know her current whereabouts but that she would
return in a few days to collect Gracie.
On 27 March 2004, Sharpe put his daughter Gracie to bed in
her cot and then drank several glasses of whiskey and Coke to "numb his senses," he later
said. He retrieved the speargun from the garage, loaded it with the newly acquired
spear, and fired at his daughter's head, penetrating her skull. With his child
wounded and screaming loudly, Sharpe retrieved the two spear shafts that he
had earlier removed from his wife's head and returned to the bedroom. He fired
both into Gracie's head, but she was still alive, so he withdrew one spear and
fired it again, finally killing her. Sharpe returned to her bedroom the next
morning and pulled the spears from her head.
He then wrapped her body in garbage bags and a tarpaulin and
disposed of her body at the Mornington refuse transfer station. At the same
time, he discarded the speargun, the spears, and some of Gracie's clothes and
toys.
Aftermath
On 29 March 2004, Sharpe visited a local Bunnings Warehouse
hardware store in Frankston, where he purchased a roll of duct tape, two
tarpaulins, and an electric chainsaw. The following day, he exhumed Kemp’s body
and cut it into three pieces. He then wrapped the remains in a tarpaulin and
disposed of them, along with the chainsaw, in waste collection bins at the
Mornington transfer station. On the same day, he sent a forged e-mail to Kemp's
family in New Zealand to create the
impression she was alive and well. Rather than comfort the family, Sharpe's
e-mail raised further concerns, and Kemp's mother reported her disappearance to
police in Dunedin. Sharpe told police that Kemp had moved to the nearby
Melbourne suburb of Chelsea with their daughter, and denied any knowledge of or
involvement in her disappearance. He also arranged for flowers in Kemp's name
to be delivered to his mother-in-law on her birthday.
During May 2004, Sharpe gave several media interviews,
appearing on national television to speak of his wife and child's
disappearance. His strange behavior attracted attention. In part of his appeal, he said: "Anna, our marriage may be
over but I still love you and you are the mother of our beautiful daughter
Gracie, whom we both adore more than anyone else". Sharpe then said he
had spoken to his wife a week earlier and he asked for anyone with information
to come forward. However, he also maintained that she had run off with another
man.
Sharpe's use of the past tense also aroused police suspicion
that Kemp and Gracie were both dead.
Arrest and conviction
On 20 May 2004, New
Zealand Police requested Victoria Police conduct inquiries into the
disappearance of Kemp and Gracie. The same day, police from Mornington spoke
with Sharpe. The family was shocked by Sharpe‘s assertion that Kemp, a devout
Catholic, would have an affair, and were skeptical that she had not taken
Gracie with her initially, something her closest friends and family all agreed
she would never do. After receiving e-mails and flowers purported to be from
Kemp without any telephone contact, the family suspected that Sharpe was
deceiving them. Sharpe also used Kemp's phone and ATM card on several occasions
throughout the southeastern suburbs of Victoria to create the impression she
was alive and well.
On 10 June, Sharpe was again interviewed by police in
Mornington but maintained that Kemp had left voluntarily on 23 March. However,
investigators were unconvinced by his story and lack of emotion. Police kept
Sharpe under surveillance and witnessed him retrieving Kemp's phone and ATM
cards from a hiding place at a public bathroom in Mornington, as well as
dumping potential evidence in a bin in Mount
Martha.
On 22 June 2004, police arrested Sharpe and interviewed him
twice: during his first interview, he continued to deny any knowledge of their
whereabouts, but during the second, having spoken to his family, he admitted to
both murders.
He told police he killed his wife because she was "controlling and moody" and
their marriage was unhappy. He also told police he "was thinking of taking care of Gracie by myself and just amongst
all this madness ... that's when I lost the plot". According to some
family members, Sharpe may have killed his wife because she discovered he had
abused Gracie, but this has not been substantiated.
Police undertook an extensive search lasting three weeks of
the Mornington landfill site, and eventually recovered both bodies. As some
time passed, their remains were scattered across several areas of the
refuse station. Both were buried in Green
Park Cemetery, Dunedin, under Kemp's maiden name, along with mention of her
unborn son, Francis.
Sharpe appeared in the Supreme
Court of Victoria where he was arraigned and pleaded guilty to the murders.
On 5 August 2005, the Court sentenced Sharpe to two consecutive terms of life
imprisonment, with a non-parole period of 33 years. Sharpe resides in
protective custody while incarcerated, due to threats on his life from fellow
prisoners.
Media coverage
The stages of the Sharpe case were all major news items in
the Australian print and television media of the time. The murder also received
general media attention in New Zealand and sparked the interest of the New
Zealand Police. Some examples include:
Crime Investigation
Australia Season 1 episode "The
Mornington Monster" (aired 2005) in which the crimes and Sharpe's
actions were re-enacted.
12 True Crime Stories
that Shocked Australia (2005) by Paul Anderson
Criminal Profiling:
An Introduction to Behavioral Evidence Analysis (2008) by Brent E. Turvey.
60 Minutes
episode "Unmasking the Truth"
(aired August 2009) about human lie detectors who can unmask killers "tearfully pleading for help in finding
a missing loved one. And all the time, they know their husband, wife, even
their own child, is already dead."
Why Did They Do It?
Inside the Minds of Australia's Most Unlikely Killers (2015) explores
Sharpe's pathology, particularly his avoidant personality disorder.
Australian True Crime
– Case 11 (May 2017); Case 21 (August 2017)
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