This is a list of Australian people who have been convicted of serious crimes.
Australians convicted of bank robbery:
Australians convicted of child sex offences:
- Brett Peter Cowan, Australian murderer and child rapist who was convicted of the murder of Daniel Morcombe[6]
- Mr Cruel, an unidentified Australian serial child rapist who attacked three girls and is suspected of murdering Karmein Chan in the northern and eastern suburbs of Melbourne, Victoria. In 2016, the reward for his arrest increased from $100,000 to $1,000,000.[7]
- Robert 'Dolly' Dunn, paedophile,[8] died in 2009 while serving a 20-year sentence
- Dennis Ferguson, paedophile who has caused controversy in NSW and Queensland[9] found dead in December 2012[10]
- Rolf Harris, Australian entertainer convicted of twelve counts of indecent assault while living in the UK involving underage girls[11]
- Robert Hughes, actor convicted of ten child sex offences committed against five young girls, including Hey Dad! co-star Sarah Monahan between 1985 and 1990, sentenced to 10 years and 9 months with a non-parole period of six years[12][13] Hughes was released from Long Bay Correctional Centre on 15 June 2022, renouncing his Australian citizenship and deported to the United Kingdom[14]
- Brian Keith Jones, aka "Mr Baldy", serial paedophile, jailed indefinitely in 2006 for breaches of parole[15]
- Brother Bernard McGrath, paedophile, a member of the Hospitaller Order of St John of God, McGrath has had five separate criminal trials for his crimes against vulnerable children with mental and physical disabilities in New Zealand and Australia. McGrath's offending was so prolific, the true number of his victims will never be known.[16][17]
- Milton Orkopoulos, NSW state MP and child sex offender[18]
- Patrick Power, Crown Prosecutor convicted of possessing child pornography[19]
- Father Gerald Francis Ridsdale, paedophile, Australian Catholic priest convicted of sexual abuse against scores of children. The true number of Ridsdale's victims will never be known but by his own admission, is believed to be in the hundreds.[20]
- Father Vincent Gerard Ryan, paedophile, Australian Catholic priest convicted of sexual abuse against 37 children.[21]
- Peter Scully, paedophile charged with abduction, human trafficking, rape, torture and murder. Known for creating and selling the dark web video Daisy's Destruction, which features the torture and rape of three girls including 18-month-old Daisy. Scully and his girlfriend Carme Ann Alvarez, who also abused children in Scully's videos, were sentenced to life imprisonment.[22]
- Robert Kingsley Whitehead was convicted of 24 counts of child sexual offences in 2015, dying in prison later that year. Whitehead, who had been convicted of offences against children in 1959, was involved for decades with the railways and railway enthusiast groups, including the Puffing Billy Railway, through which he gained access to many young volunteers.[23]
Australians convicted of drug-related crimes both in Australia and overseas:
- Dennis Allen (1951–1987) nicknamed "Mr. Death," member of the Pettingill family[24]
- Bali Nine:[25]
- Kevin Barlow and Brian Chambers, sentenced to death on 1 August 1985 and executed by hanging in Malaysia on 7 July 1986[33]
- Nola Blake, sentenced to death in Thailand in 1988; sentence later commuted to life[34]
- Schapelle Corby, served a 9-year prison sentence in Indonesia.[35]
- Warren Fellows, drug courier sentenced to life imprisonment in Thailand in 1978[36]
- Jim Krakouer, star AFL footballer imprisoned for 16 years on amphetamine trafficking charges[37]
- Michael McAuliffe, executed in Malaysia[38]
- David McMillan, smuggler, escaped from Thailand's notorious Bangkok Prison in 1996[citation needed]
- Van Tuong Nguyen (1980–2005) Vietnamese Australian executed in Singapore[39]
- Victor Peirce 1958–2002) member of the Pettingill family, murdered in 2001[40]
- Kath Pettingill, former brothel worker and owner; criminal matriarch of the Pettingill family[41]
- Roger Rogerson, corrupt former police officer[42]
- Stephen John Sutton, imprisoned in Argentina on drug charges[43]
- Robert Trimbole (1931–2007) International felon and drug lord[44]
- Andrew "Benji" Veniamin, murdered in 2004[45]
- Carl Williams, murdered in 2010[46]
Notable Australian criminal families:
Australians convicted of fraud:
- Rodney Adler, Sydney-based fraudster imprisoned for his role in transactions to hide true financial status of FAI Insurance[50]
- Hajnal Ban, defrauded an elderly man with a mental incapacity of $660,000[51]
- Alan Bond, English-Australian businessman imprisoned for three years in 1996 for fraud[52]
- Brian Burke, former Western Australia Premier imprisoned for rorting travel expenses[53]
- Michael Cobb, former politician convicted of fraud after rorting travel expenses[54]
- Laurie Connell, gaoled for conspiring to pervert the course of justice[55]
- Peter Foster, one of Australia's most famous conmen, gaoled for fraud[56]
- Simon Hannes, insider trading ahead of takeover of TNT in 1996[57]
- Theresa Lawson (1951–2004) former Sydney Woolworths payroll clerk imprisoned for stealing $2.6 million[58]
- Ray O'Connor, former WA Premier imprisoned for stealing[59]
- David Parker, former WA Deputy Premier imprisoned for perjury for evidence given to WA Inc royal commission
- Rene Rivkin (1944–2005) stockmarket guru imprisoned on insider trading charges[60]
- Christopher Skase (1948–2001) failed businessman and fugitive who escaped to Majorca[61]
- Andrew Theophanous, bribery and fraud offences relating to assisting in visa applications as a Member of Parliament[62]
- Craig Thomson, fraud against the Health Services Union for sexual purposes and gratification[citation needed]
- Glenn Wheatley, (1948–2022) Musician and talent manager gaoled for tax evasion[63]
- Ray Williams, fraud related to the collapse of HIH Insurance[64]
- George Freeman, Sydney gangster[citation needed]
- Alphonse Gangitano, associate of Jason Moran, murdered[citation needed]
- Mick Gatto, well known member of the Melbourne underworld, active during the Melbourne gangland killings
- John 'Chow' Hayes, violent criminal who became known as Australia's first gangster[citation needed]
- Michael Kanaan, multiple murderer and gang member[citation needed]
- Lenny McPherson, Sydney gangster[citation needed]
- Tony Mokbel, serving a 12-year sentence, awaiting further charges[65]
- Jason Moran (1967–2003) killed by rival gangster Carl Williams in a gang war[48]
- Lewis Moran (1941–2004) ( killed by rival gangster Carl Williams in a gang war[48]
- Mark Moran (1964–2000) killed by rival gangster Carl Williams in a gang war[48]
- Michael Odisho, DLASTHR and BFL underworld Sydney gangster[citation needed]
- Nikolai Radev (1959–2003) killed in gang war[66]
- Abraham Saffron, (1919–2006) Hotelier, nightclub owner and property developer. King of Kings Cross, Sydney gangster[citation needed]
- Squizzy Taylor, (1888–1927) Melbourne gangster of the 1920s and before[citation needed]
- Andrew Veniamin (1975–2004) killed in gang war by Mick Gatto[48]
Australians convicted of murder:
- Dante Arthurs, murdered Sofia Rodriguez-Urrutia-Shu[67]
- James Beauregard-Smith, convicted triple murderer and rapist[citation needed]
- Kenneth Brown, explorer and pastoralist hanged for murdering his wife[68]
- Martin Bryant, convicted of 35 murders in the Port Arthur massacre[69]
- Bevan Spencer von Einem, murderer[70]
- Keith Faure, convicted Melbourne gangland killings murderer[3]
- Christopher Dale Flannery, (born c. 1948, disappeared May 1985) known as "Mr-Rent-A-Kill", rapist and armed robber who shot an undercover policeman[71]
- Sef Gonzales, murdered his mother, father and sister[72]
- Maddison Hall, murdered a hitchhiker, had a sex change operation in prison[73]
- Edward "Ned" Kelly (1854/1855–1880), Victorian bushranger[74] murdered three troopers (policemen) named Lonigan, Scanlon and Kennedy, as well as former friend turned police informer Aaron Sherritt
- Julian Knight, Hoddle Street massacre[75]
- Katherine Knight, murdered her de facto husband John Charles Thomas Price on 29 February 2000; first Australian woman to be sentenced to life imprisonment without parole[76]
- Keli Lane, convicted of the 1996 murder of her newborn daughter Tegan on 13 December 2010[77]
- Martin Leach, bound, gagged and stabbed Charmaine Aviet and bound, gagged, stabbed, raped and slit the throat of her cousin Janice Carnegie, both teenagers, before burying their bodies in a gully at Berry Springs[citation needed]
- Francesco Mangione, the Mr Whippy ice-cream turf war murderer[78]
- Craig Minogue, Russell Street bombing[79]
- Bradley John Murdoch, convicted for the murder of Peter Falconio[80]
- Anthony Perish, convicted of murdering Terry Falconer[81]
- Ronald Ryan, last person executed in Australian in 1967[82]
- Joseph Schwab (1960–1987) murdered five tourists across the Northern Territory and Western Australia in 1987[83]
- Neddy Smith (1944–2021) convicted of the murder of Sydney brothel owner, Harvey Jones[84]
- John Travers, convicted ringleader of the Anita Cobby murder[85]
- Brenton Tarrant, convicted of the Christchurch mosque shootings in 2019.
Australians convicted of rape:
Australians convicted of multiple murders:
- Catherine Birnie, rape and murder of four women in Perth in 1986[88]
- David Birnie (1951–2005) rape and murder of four women in Perth in 1986[88]
- Gregory Brazel, shot dead a woman in 1982 armed robbery, and murdered two sex workers in 1990[90][91]
- John Bunting, Adelaide-based serial killer, with partners Robert Wagner and James Vlassakis was responsible for the murder of 12 victims known as the Snowtown murders or bodies in a barrel murders.
- Robert Joe Wagner, Adelaide-based serial killer, formed part of a serial killing team with John Bunting and James Vlassakis, responsible for the Snowtown murders.
- James Spyridon Vlassakis, Adelaide-based serial killer, formed part of a serial killing team with John Bunting and Robert Wagner, responsible for the Snowtown murders.
- Robert Francis Burns, murdered eight men between 1876 and 1881 in Victoria and New South Wales
- Eric Edgar Cooke, The Nedlands monster[92]
- Bandali Debs, convicted of murdering two police officers and two prostitutes in the 1990s[93]
- Paul Denyer, Melbourne-based serial killer during the early 1990s dubbed the "Frankston Serial Killer"[94]
- Peter Dupas, Melbourne-based serial killer who killed several times upon release from prison[86]
- Bradley Robert Edwards; convicted of killing two females and suspected of killing a third in Claremont , Western Australia during 1996–1997.[95]
- Leonard Fraser, also known as "The Rockhampton Rapist"; killed four to seven women in Rockhampton, Queensland[89]
- John Wayne Glover (1932–2005) the Sydney North Shore granny murderer[96]
- Caroline Grills (c.1888–1960) also known as "Auntie Thally"; serial poisoner of five family members[97]
- Paul Steven Haigh, convicted of the murders of six people in the late 1970s and another in 1991; currently serving six life sentences without the possibility of parole[98]
- Matthew James Harris, strangled a friend's brother, a female friend and a male neighbour to death over five weeks in 1998 in Wagga Wagga
- Thomas Jeffrey, Tasmanian penal colony escapee responsible for the murders of five people; executed in 1826[99]
- Eddie Leonski, American serial killer known as the Brownout Strangler[100]
- John Lynch, convicted of the murder of Kernes Landregan in 1842 near Berrima, New South Wales; prior to his execution he confessed to murdering ten people during the period 1836 to 1842.[101][102]
- William MacDonald, also known as "the Mutilator"; killed at least five men between June 1961 and April 1963[103]
- John and Sarah Makin; baby farmers convicted for the murder of Horace Amber Murray; suspected of the murders of 13 infants in total.[104]
- Ivan Milat, (1944–2019) convicted of the murder of seven young men and women between 1989 and 1993; known as Australia's most prolific serial killer. His crimes are collectively referred to as the "Backpacker murders".[105][106]
- Martha Needle, poisoner of four family members and boyfriend's brother[citation needed]
- Derek Percy, linked to the mysterious deaths of at least nine other children in the 1960s.[citation needed]
- Martha Rendell, killed three stepchildren with hydrochloric acid in the 20th century; last woman to be hanged in Western Australia[107]
- Lindsay Robert Rose, serial killer and contract killer from New South Wales who murdered five people between 1984 and 1994[108]
- Arnold Sodeman, the schoolgirl strangler[109]
- Carl Williams, convicted of murdering three people and suspected of killing, or ordering the killing of, many more in the Melbourne gangland killings.[110]
- Christopher Worrell and James Miller: also known as the "Truro Murderers"; were convicted of killing seven people in 1976–1977.[111]
Australians convicted of other offences:
- Geoffrey Edelsten (1943–2021) high-profile doctor convicted of soliciting a hit man and perverting the course of justice[112][113][114][115]
- Marcus Einfeld, former Superior Court Judge, imprisoned subsequent to his retirement for lying relative to a speeding ticket[116][117]
- David Hicks, Guantánamo Bay detainee, convicted of providing material support for terrorism[118]
- Bon Levi, conman[119]
- Barry Morris (1935–2001) politician who was gaoled for making bomb and death threats[120]
- Mark "Chopper" Read (1954–2013) attempted murder, armed robbery, assault, kidnapping, torture, arson and impersonating a police officer
[abc.net.au/news/2011-08-16/morcombes-alleged-killer-named/2842126], abc.net.au, 17 August 2011, retrieved 3 September 2020
Western Australia v Bond Corporation Holdings Ltd; Wardley Australia Limited; Lawrence Robert Connell; Wardley Australia Securities Limited; Rothwells Limited (In Liquidation) and James Philip Yonge [1993] FCA 20 (5 February 1993), Federal Court (Australia).
Cowan, Peter (1988). Maitland Brown: A View of Nineteenth Century Western Australia. Fremantle, Western Australia: Fremantle Arts Centre Press. ISBN 0-949206-27-X.
Goodsir, D. Line of Fire: The inside story of the controversial shooting of undercover policeman Michael Drury, Allen & Unwin, Crows Nest, 1995, p.66 ISBN 978-1-86448-002-3
Barry, John V. "Kelly, Edward (Ned) (1855–1880)". Cultural Advice. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University – via Australian Dictionary of Biography.
Thomas Jeffries convict No. 3634, conduct record, State Archives of Tasmania.
Berrima, Sydney Herald, 2 May 1842, page 2.