When millionaire Australian socialite Margaret Wales-King and her husband, Paul King, disappeared in April 2002, friends and family became concerned something serious had happened to the older couple. Those fears and concerns were confirmed a few weeks later, when park rangers discovered their bodies in a shallow grave in Marysville, Victoria. Margaret and her husband had been clubbed and strangled to death.
The press dubbed the murders “the society killings” and the tragedy captured the Australian public’s attention for the ways it seemed to have been pulled right out of a classic mystery novel. Yet for all the couple’s wealth, nothing appeared to be missing from their home and their bodies were discovered still wearing jewelry and in possession of credit cards and other valuables. Under the circumstances, police looked to Wales-King’s children, who stood to gain a great deal of money in the event of Margaret’s death. Within a week the case started to come together, and a suspect was revealed.
While most of the family responded to the Wales-King murders in a manner one would expect, thirty-four-year-old Matthew Wales behavior was erratic, explosive, and suspicious. Upon interviewing Matthew, investigators learned he was the last person to have seen his mother and stepfather the night they were murdered, after having dinner with Matthew and his wife, Maritza. A few weeks later, after multiple interviews, Matthew Wales confessed to murdering his parents; though why he had done it came as a shock to everyone who knew the family.
References
Anderson, Paul, Philip Cullen, and Mark Butler. 2002. "Bodies of missing couple in shallow grave." Advertiser, May 1.
Bonney, Hilary. 2003. The Society Murders: The true story of the Wales-King murders. Crows Nest, Australia: Allen and Unwin.
Clifton, Brad. 2002. "From high society to a grave in the bush." Daily Telegraph, May 4.
Daily Telegraph. 2002. "Son guilty of family killing." Daily Telegraph, October 18.
Green, Sue. 2002. "Crowds gather as search unfolds - son, wife charged over murders." Daily Telegraph, May 13.
Medew, Julia. 2007. "Wife of 'society murderer' avoids jail on ring theft." The Age, February 21.
Monroe, Ian. 2002. "The wayward youngest son." The Age, October 18.
Murphy, Padric. 2002. "Couple's disappearance baffles police." The Age, April 11.
Ross, Norrie, and Mark Buttler. 2003. "Death family vendetta, wife of killer brother will not profit." The Mercury, April 12.
Silvester, John. 2003. "Murder in the Family." The Age, April 11.
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Episode 374: The Almost Valentines Day Massacre with Jordan from Nighttime Podcast
Episode 373: The Unsolved Murder of Marilyn Sheppard
Episode 372: Listener Tales 52
Episode 371: A Spooky Sit-down with Tobias Forge from Ghost!
Episode 370: Spooky Woods
Episode 369: Listener Tales 51
Episode 367: JonBenet Ramsey Part 2
Episode 366: JonBenet Ramsey Part 1
Episode 365: Spooky Lakes Vol. 1
Episode 364: Terrifying Home Invasions- Listener Tale Edition
Episode 368: BONUS EPISODE!!! The Butcher and the Wren discussion and preview
Episode 363: New England Witches
Episode 362: The Source Family
Episode 361: Listener Tales 50
Episode 360: Dueling Campfire Tales with Jordan from Nighttime Podcast!
Episode 359: The Club Kid/Party Monster Murder
Episode 358: Gerard John Schaefer "The Hangman"
Episode 357: Listener Tales 49 ft. Special Guest DREW!!
Episode 356: Spooky Lighthouses with Special Guests National Park After Dark Pod!
Episode 355: Kelly Cochran AKA "The Devil Woman of Michigan"
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