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posted by martyb on Tuesday June 15 2021, @12:09PM   Printer-friendly
from the Always-clear-your-history-when-planning-crimes dept.

A woman's search history has been used by authorities to convict her of murder after her husband died. Natasha Darcy was found guilty of murdering partner Mathew Dunbar with her plans to inherit his $3.5 million farm exposed as she attempted to lie to police about her actions and intent. Key evidence was found in her search history which matched up to physical evidence found.

Natasha Darcy guilty of murdering partner Mathew Dunbar

Natasha Darcy has been found guilty of murdering her partner Mathew Dunbar by drugging him with a sedative cocktail blended in a Nutribullet and gassing him in his bed in a bid to inherit his $3.5 million farm.

In the months before Mr Dunbar was found dead, dozens of incriminating searches were recorded on Darcy's iPhone, among them: "How to commit murder."

A jury of 11 declared the 46-year-old mother guilty on Tuesday after deliberating since last Wednesday.

Mr Dunbar, 42, was a sheep farmer who lived and worked on his property Pandora on the outskirts of Walcha in northern NSW.

Darcy claimed she found her partner of three years in the early hours of August 2, 2017, with a plastic bag over his head that was hooked up to a helium cylinder. She rang triple-0 and he was declared dead at the scene.

The ram sedative acepromazine and medications temazepam, clonidine and seroquel were found in both Mr Dunbar's blood and a dirty blender cup and glass left in the dishwasher.

Darcy pointed to Mr Dunbar's finances, history of depression and suicidal ideation, "unclear sexual orientation" and a severe calf infection he suffered weeks before his death as reasons he might have killed himself.

But her search history told a different story, the jury heard during the 10-week trial in the NSW Supreme Court.

Same things goes for porn and your marriage.


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  • (Score: 2) by maxwell demon on Wednesday June 16 2021, @04:05AM

    by maxwell demon (1608) on Wednesday June 16 2021, @04:05AM (#1145765) Journal

    Yes, I know browser fingerprinting. The vast majority of it requires JavaScript. And yes, having JavaScript disabled itself can be used as part of a fingerprint, but that is not very specific.

    And for a long time, I had ben using standard Firefox, not exactly a fringe browser. And of course, once I switched browsers, as far as Google is concerned, I was a different person anyway (note that I don't have a Google account, so there's no way to identify me that way). Now currently I'm using a pretty non-standard browser (Waterfox), thus Google probably has a much easier time identifying me. But then, I very rarely use Google to search, so they still don't get much of a search history.

    And my screen resolution is probably the most common one, 1920x1080.

    Cookies? Well, that's another thing you can disable.

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