Justice Ian Harrison has said Chris Dawson is likely to die in jail after he sentenced him to a minimum of 18 years in prison for the 1982 murder of his first wife, Lynette.
- The sentence is backdated to August 30, when he was found guilty, and Dawson is first eligible for parole on August 30, 2040, at the age of 92.
- Dawson’s full 24-year sentence would not expire until August 29, 2046, when he would be 98.
- The NSW parliament passed new “no body, no parole” laws after Dawson was found guilty in August of murdering Lynette, whose body has never been found. The laws “make it impossible for offenders who willfully and deliberately refuse to disclose information about their victims’ remains to be granted parole”, Premier Dominic Perrottet said in September.
- Harrison did not consider the extensive media attention surrounding Dawson’s criminal charges and trial as a mitigating factor. “As harsh as it may sound to say so, Mr Dawson is now the author of his own misfortune,” Harrison said.
- Dawson’s sentence should reflect “the disapprobation with which his self-indulgent brutality must be viewed by Australian society”, the judge said.
- Dawson has filed a notice of intention to appeal against his conviction.