Teresa Cormack

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Teresa Maida Cormack
Born June 18, 1981(1981-06-18)
Flag of New Zealand Napier, New Zealand
Died June 19, 1987 (aged 6)
Flag of New Zealand Napier, New Zealand

Teresa Maida Cormack (June 18, 1981June 19, 1987) was a six-year-old murder victim from Napier, New Zealand.

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[edit] Teresa's death

Teresa lived in Napier, New Zealand, with her mother, Kelly Piggot, and a younger sister named Sara.[1] Although reluctant to go to school on the day after her birthday, Cormack departed home on her normal walking route to Richmond Primary School, which was a short distance from where she lived. However, she did not go to school and instead wandered the streets in the suburb of Maraenui for around an hour.

Eight days later, Cormack's body was discovered at the base of a tree on Whirinaki Beach, presumably having been dumped from the road, by a woman walking her dog. An autopsy revealed that she had been raped and suffocated.

[edit] Investigation

Three male pubic hairs were found orally or in her underwear and semen was found vaginally on Cormack's body. However, genetic fingerprinting at the time was not advanced enough to find her killer.

Jules Mikus was questioned by police and provided samples of his saliva and blood. Mikus provided an alibi for the time the abduction was believed to have occurred. Afterwards, he was excluded as a suspect.

The case was not closed until a conviction was made.

[edit] Breakthrough

Due to advances in genetic fingerprinting, a minute sample of semen stored sealed between two microscope slides was able to be profiled in 2001 by technicians at ESR (Environmental Science & Research, a Crown Research Institute owned wholly by the New Zealand government).

Despite having this profile, an arrest was not immediate. A public television broadcast by the detective in charge and seen my Mikus provoked a reaction in front of the people with whom he lived but they did not contact police. Eight-hundred and forty-five blood samples had been taken, of these, four were of insufficiently quality to make a profile. After nearly a year of testing the blood (taking until Friday, 22 February 2002), only one blood profile matched the semen and it came from Mikus.

On February 26, 2002, fifteen years after Cormack's death, police arrested Jules Pierre Nicholas Mikus for Cormack's murder. Although Mikus pleaded not guilty, a jury found him guilty for kidnapping, rape, sexual assault and murder.

[edit] Aftermath

The case attracted widespread interest in New Zealand.

In 2004, Rowene Marsh-Potaka (who had campaigned to stop her brother from being paroled for murder) collaborated with Cormack's mother Kelly Piggot to write an anti-parole song. They wanted the song to let people know that offenders such as Mikus should serve their full sentences. Piggot also has a daughter named Hannah. [2]

Paul Rothwell's play Golden Boys, which ran at Circa Theatre in early 2006, was inspired by the Cormack case.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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