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In 1984, the body of six-year-old Kylie Maybury was found in a gutter in the early hours of the morning following Melbourne Cup Day. So why did it take 32 years after her death for police to finally find her killer — a man with previous convictions for sexual assault and violence, who lived just around the corner? Former Herald Sun journalist and true crime author Keith Moor has covered the case since the day Kylie's body was found. He has interviewed her grieving mother many times and considered her a friend. For the 40th anniversary of Kylie's death, Keith details this case. You can read more about Keith and his work here. This episode details the case of a child who was sexually assaulted and murdered. Please take that into consideration and listen with care. If any of the contents in this episode have caused distress, know that there is help available via Lifeline on 13 11 14 or Beyond Blue on 1300 22 4636. THE END BITS Subscribe to Mamamia Find out more about Mamamia's charity partner RizeUp Australia here. CREDITS Guest: Keith Moor Host: Gemma Bath Producer: Tahli Blackman Audio Producer: Thom Lion GET IN TOUCH: Feedback? We're listening! Email us at truecrime@mamamia.com.au or send us a voice note, and one of our Podcast Producers will come back to you ASAP. Mamamia acknowledges the Traditional Owners of the Land we have recorded this podcast on, the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation. We pay our respects to their Elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures.Become a Mamamia subscriber: https://www.mamamia.com.au/subscribeSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This is a re-issue of episode #14. Originally aired July 13th, 2017.Sent on a simple errand to the local shops by her mother, six-year-old Kylie Maybury never made it home alive. Her body was found the following day, discarded in a gutter, but the circumstances of her death, and the identity of her killer remained unknown for 33 years. In the end, he was eerily close to home all along. Veteran crime reporter Keith Moor talks us through the details of the case, and the strange twists and turns in Kylie's case.For Support: Lifeline on 13 11 1413 YARN on 13 92 76 (24/7 crisis support phone line for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples)1800RESPECT: 1800 737 732CREDITS:Host: Meshel Laurie. You can find her on Instagram Guest: Keith Moor. You can click here to browse his published works.GET IN TOUCH:https://www.australiantruecrimethepodcast.com/Follow the show on Instagram @australiantruecrimepodcast and Facebook Email the show at AusTrueCrimePodcast@gmail.comBuild your pro podcast with The Audio CollegeSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/australiantruecrime. Become a subscriber to Australian True Crime Plus here: https://plus.acast.com/s/australiantruecrime. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Episode #56. Authenticity is the leadership and personal understanding topic in this episode. Abby is joined by Marketing Week's Marketer of the Year – Keith Moor, to discuss the importance of authenticity and how being your best self at work and leading by example starts by knowing yourself, your personality and clarity on your values. Keith Moor is Chief Marketing Officer of Camelot, the operator of the National Lottery. Prior to this role Keith worked at Santander at the time of launching the new brand into the UK. In this episode Keith shares his journey to greater personal understanding and what his purpose is. Plus, his career highs and lows – a must listen from such an inspirational marketer. First published December 6th 2021. This podcast is sponsored by Labyrinth Marketing http://www.labyrinthmarketing.co.uk (www.labyrinthmarketing.co.uk) Host: https://www.linkedin.com/in/abigailcdixon/ (linkedin.com/in/abigailcdixon/) Guest: https://www.linkedin.com/in/keithmoor/ (linkedin.com/in/keithmoor/) The Whole Marketer podcast is here to support and empower the people behind brands and businesses with the latest technical tools, soft and leadership skills and personal understanding for a fulfilling marketing career and life as a whole. For more info go to https://my.captivate.fm/www.thewholemarketer.com (www.thewholemarketer.com)
Episode #56. Authenticity is the leadership and personal understanding topic in this episode. Abby is joined by Marketing Week's Marketer of the Year – Keith Moor, to discuss the importance of authenticity and how being your best self at work and leading by example starts by knowing yourself, your personality and clarity on your values. Keith Moor is Chief Marketing Officer of Camelot, the operator of the National Lottery. Prior to this role Keith worked at Santander at the time of launching the new brand into the UK. In this episode, Keith shares his journey to greater personal understanding and what his purpose is. Plus, his career highs and lows – a must listen from such an inspirational marketer. Sponsored by Labyrinth Marketing www.labyrinthmarketing.co.uk
In this special edition of the podcast we have tips for anyone entering this year's Marketing Society Awards. Society President and Chair of Judges Syl Saller CBE explains why her Diageo team enter the awards. And we chat to two of this year's judges, Camelot CMO Keith Moor and Octopus Energy CMO Rebecca Dibb-Simkin. They tell us what they're looking for in an award-winner, and share their tips on crafting a successful entry. +++++ Talk to us podcast@wearewaxon.com +++++ Leave us your review on iTunes. And please subscribe. +++++ www.wearewaxon.com +++++ KEEP WELL AND STAY SAFE
On Thursday 2 June 2011, 13 year old Siriyakorn Siriboon, or Bung as she’s commonly known, had breakfast with her Mum, Vannida, and her older sister, Pang, before she left her home in Boronia, Victoria, to walk to school, as she did every weekday.Bung was wearing her blue and white checked school uniform and her dark blue zip-front school jacket and carrying a backpack. She was seen by a neighbour a short time later in Elsie Street, walking towards Albert Avenue.Bung didn’t arrive at school that day or return home thereafter. Somewhere during the 700 metre walk to Boronia Heights College, Bung Siriboon vanished and she hasn’t been seen or heard from since...Support the show on Patreon - https://www.patreon.com/truebluecrimeWebsite - www.truebluecrimepodcast.com - includes our merch storeFacebook - https://www.facebook.com/groups/380493356066315/Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/truebluecrime/Email - truebluecrime@gmail.comCheck out True Crime Island and get your weekly rage on with Cambo (promo @ 15:14)This episode was produced by True Blue Media using the open source materials referenced below. Thanks to John for the assistance with research and writing on this episode.Australian Institute of CriminologyWas schoolgirl Bung Siriboon snatched off a suburban street in broad daylight? By Kathy Marks, SBSTravelfish.org - Ubon Ratchathani Wikipedia - Ubon Ratchathani Man quizzed over disappearance of Siriyakorn 'Bung' Siriboon dies in prison jump, by Jon Kaila, HeraldSun'Unlikely Mr Cruel took Bung,' say police 20 years after child predator's last known attack, by Keith Moor and Elissa Hunt, HeraldSunThe torment over missing Siriyakorn "Bung" Siriboon lingers a year on by Mark Buttler, HeraldSunBung Siriboon search given new hope, by Wayne Flower, HeraldSunAFP - Missing Persons
6th of November 1984 Melbourne Cup DayThey say it’s ‘the race that stops a nation’. Australia’s most famous horse race, it’s also a world-class one that’s among the top sporting events in the world - sitting alongside other famous races like the Kentucky Derby in the USA and The Royal Ascot in England.But in 1984 Melbourne Cup Day wasn’t a day to be celebrated by Kylie Maybury and her family.Join Shaun and Chloe as they discuss this heart-wrenching murder of an innocent young girl who was taken from her family far too young, and the subsequent arrest in 2016 of a vile old man named Gregory Keith Davies.Support the show on Patreon - https://www.patreon.com/truebluecrimeWebsite - www.truebluecrimepodcast.com - includes our merch storeFacebook - https://www.facebook.com/groups/380493356066315/Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/truebluecrime/Email - truebluecrime@gmail.comThis episode was produced by True Blue Media using the open source materials referenced below. Thanks to Jenny and Elissa for the assistance with writing and research on this episode.The Queen v Davies [2017] VSC 800 (21 December 2017)Mugshots 3 by Keith MoorSix-year-old Kylie Maybury’s 1984 Melbourne Cup Day kidnap, and rape and murder, faces fresh investigation by Victoria Police, by Keith Moor, Herald SunKylie Maybury’s killer trapped by mix of new age science and old fashioned policing, by John Silvester, The AgeGregory Davies pleads guilty to murder of six-year-old Kylie Maybury 30 years ago, by Adam Cooper, The AgeSuspect charged over 1984 killing of six-year-old Kylie Maybury, By Nino Bucci, Tammy Mills and Allison Worrall; The AgeKylie Maybury, 6, was murdered on a family errand. 32 years later, police swoop, by John Silvester, The AgeMan accused of Kylie Maybury’s murder lived a quiet life in tiny town, Nino Bucci, The Age
Keith Moor, CMO of Santander UK and soon to join national lottery operator Camelot, talks to Lauren Reynolds, global brand manager for Love Island at ITV Studios, and Martin Loat of Propeller Group. They discuss why a serious bank should make fun ads like “the bank of Ant and Dec”, paying agencies for great ideas, giving celebrities a second chance if they have “issues”, taking Love Island into fourteen international countries, why Keith’s joining Camelot… and what can go wrong when you put a poster of a frozen chicken in a bank branch.
When police raided a shipment of Italian tomatoes, they found themselves seizing the world's biggest ecstasy haul.... And there were no surprises which crime organisation was behind it. Keith Moor joins Andrew Rule to discuss the bust. Read Keith's original in-depth investigation. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
As he stood in the street of an Italian town, hot on the heels of a mafia supergrass, journalist Keith Moor found himself looking down the barrels of three shotguns. He tells his remarkable tale to Andrew Rule. Subscribe to the Herald Sun at https://www.heraldsun.com.au/jabra See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
WARNING: Disturbing content. From interviewing mass murderer Julian Knight to literally being chased out of town, journalist and author Keith Moor has unearthed some of the biggest crime stories in Australia. He sits down with Andrew to talk about his new book, Mugshots 3. More on Mugshots 3 at: https://www.wilkinsonpublishing.com.au/book/mugshots-3 See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
What do people in the marketing and media industry enjoy about attending events? What do they dislike about such extravaganzas? And where else do they go to expand their industry knowledge? This second of three Dog ‘n’ Bone specials recorded amid the hustle and bustle at Advertising Week Europe continues the theme of Part 1 by quizzing a host of top movers and shakers, including Sir John Hegarty, co-founder of BBH and Chairman of Whalar, Keith Moor, Chief Marketing Officer at Santander UK and Harsh Kapadia, departing ECD at VMLY&R London who is relocating to the agency’s New York office, among others.
Sent on a simple errand to the local shops by her mother, six-year-old Kylie Maybury never made it home alive. Her body was found the following day, discarded in a gutter, but the circumstances of her death, and the identity of her killer remained unknown for 33 years. In the end, he was eerily close to home all along. Veteran crime reporter Keith Moor talks us through the details of the case, and the strange twists and turns in Kylie's case.Show notes:Your hosts are Meshel Laurie and Emily WebbWith thanks to Keith MoorLike us on the Facebook Follow us on Instagram or TwitterSupport us on PatreonIf you have any information on the cases covered by this podcast, please contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.Thank you for listening! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Since the 1920s, a town built on rich farming soil around 500kms west of Sydney has been the epicentre of an organised crime network. Yep, there is Mafia in Griffith. But not just any Mafia, Calabrian Mafia. And they're alleged to be responsible for Australia's first political assassination. This week Emily and Meshel are joined by crime writer Keith Moor to talk about the Calabrian HQ here in Australia, the many disappearances that have occurred over the years, and what happened when Keith went into town to investigate.Show notes:Your hosts are Meshel Laurie and Emily WebbWith thanks to Keith MoorLike us on the Facebook Follow us on Instagram or TwitterSupport us on PatreonIf you have any information on the cases covered by this podcast, please contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.Thank you for listening! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.