Over the past month, the court has heard allegations of how Ms Lilley, a young woman obsessed with knives and serial killers, and Ms Lenon – a mother-of-three with a history as a “submissive” in Perth’s BDSM scene – had built a close relationship, referring to each other by ‘pet names’.While it appears clear that they had some sort of sexual kink relationship, I'm not sure whether they count themselves as lesbians or not.
Ms Lilley was referred to as SOS – which was also a serial killer character in a book she had written in her teens, and also the name of an American serial killer who had murdered eight victims in the mid 70s’.
Ms Lenon was known as ‘Corvina’, a name she had adopted through her participation in bondage and sado-masochistic sex.
The state alleges after the two women met and moved in together, along with Ms Lenon’s younger children, they teamed up to carry out a ‘thrill kill’ on a vulnerable target.
That target, according to the state, was Mr Pajich, who was known to Ms Lenon through a shared attendance at a Kwinana college and his friendship with her teenaged son Cameron.
The 18 year-old was also on the autism spectrum, and according to Mr Taggart “still inhabited a child’s world”, including a passionate interest in computer games.
It was that interest which the state says Ms Lenon used to lure Mr Pajich to the Orelia house she shared with the 26 year-old Ms Lilley, who worked as a nightfill manager at Woolworths in Palmyra.
“Trudi Lenon delivered Aaron Pajich right into Jemma Lilley’s hands and together they murdered him,” Mr McTaggart said.
“These two ladies took Aaron Pajich’s life in a way that was as brutal and violent as could possibly be imagined.”
The motive, Mr McTaggart said, was Ms Lilley’s “life’s objective” to kill someone before she was 25 years-old, which she had revealed to a friend some years before.
In any event, it got me thinking of other thrill kill nutty lesbian cases: Brisbane had its famous one in the "lesbian vampire killer" murder in 1991 - the main protagonist is now living in the community on parole.
There was also the famous New Zealand case that was the subject of the Heavenly Creatures film. (OK, not a thrill kill exactly, but a weird, obsessively relationship between young women none the less.)
Now, we're obviously not talking a huge sample here, but in comparison to male gay couples, apart from the famous Leopold and Loeb murder from way back in 1924, I can't say I have heard of any gay couple murders which are in the "thrill kill" category.
Sure, serial killers are almost always male, and presumably often kill for all sorts of demented reasons, but my point is that it seems that the shared idea of a kill, based on weird fantasy motivations, might be more of a female/lesbian thing than a male thing?
I notice that some people complain of lesbians being too readily portrayed as obsessive killers in Hollywood - I don't really know as it is a genre of film that generally doesn't interest me.
But, given the grotesque examples of some lesbian murderers, I have to say I'm not all that surprised. If any reader wants to set me straight with true stories of male couples murdering for the weirdest motivations, let me know...
2 comments:
You certainly have some 'interesting' articles Steve.
I do my best...:)
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