Gemma Bath
👤 SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Well, it's also you were making a documentary about an unsolved cold case and suddenly it was becoming breaking news.
Which would have, I can imagine, given you a bit of whiplash.
They were only recently in February 2026 publicly exonerated.
So I can imagine for them as well it would have felt like closure and they could move on.
What do you hope people get from watching your documentary?
Thanks so much for listening.
I'll be back next week with another true crime conversation.
Let's go live to Cassie Zervos now in Melbourne.
Cassie, this is all happening.
What can you tell us?
It's important.
For too long, Australian law didn't just fail survivors.
It forced them into silence.
Nina Fennell is a Walkley Award-winning journalist and a survivor who helped overturn damaging gag laws in the Australian justice system.
She was the driving force behind the campaign that allowed women to finally speak their own names.
Her work doesn't just tell stories, it drives change.
Hi, I'm Gemma Bath, host of True Crime Conversations.
And this very special two-part episode isn't just about the justice system.
It's about what happens when women are finally heard.
A raw, honest look at the power of a single voice, how silence is shaped and how women push through it.