Dawson trial over alleged sex with student

CHRIS DAWSON
Chris Dawson denies the carnal knowledge charge. Picture NCA NewsWire/ Gaye Gerard.

Convicted murderer and former Sydney schoolteacher Chris Dawson will fight allegations he had a sexual relationship with one of his teenage students at a judge-alone trial.

The 74-year-old has been charged with one count of carnal knowledge by a teacher, relating to an alleged relationship with a girl aged between 10 and 17 in the 1980s.

Dawson was sentenced in December to 24 years in jail over the murder of his wife Lynette Simms.

Following on from the lengthy trial in the second half of 2022, Dawson is now facing a fresh fight in the NSW District Court.

Crown prosecutors allege Dawson began a relationship with the student while he was a sports teacher at a public high school on Sydney’s northern beaches.

CHRIS DAWSON
Chris Dawson was convicted of his wife’s murder last year. Picture NCA NewsWire/ Gaye Gerard.

The student was allegedly 16 at the time, while Dawson was aged in his 30s.

The former Newtown Jets rugby league player denies the charge.

He did not appear in court on Thursday as Dawson’s barrister, public defender Claire Wasley, asked Acting Judge Graeme Henson to make an order for Dawson’s fate to be decided by a judge rather than a jury given the case’s likely publicity.

“Given the background of Mr Dawson’s recent court proceedings it’s entirely appropriate,” Judge Henson told the court.

The court was also told the trial was expected to run for just two weeks when it begins on May 29.

Judge Henson also made an order for Dawson to appear in person from Long Bay Jail.

The carnal knowledge case will hinge on when Dawson first had sex with the student, with the Crown seeking to prove Dawson was still the girl’s teacher at the time.

Dawson’s murder trial was also heard in front of a judge only after his defence argued the pre-trial publicity meant a jury was unsuitable.

He is serving his sentence at Long Bay Prison. Picture: Vincent de Gouw/ NCA NewsWire
He is serving his sentence at Long Bay Prison. Picture: Vincent de Gouw/ NCA NewsWire

Justice Ian Harrison last year convicted Dawson of the murder of his wife, who vanished from their Bayview home in January 1982.

Over the past four decades, Dawson has consistently maintained his innocence.

Justice Harrison said the only explanation was that he killed his 33-year-old wife to be with the young student.

He was found to have killed his wife just weeks after he had unsuccessfully attempted to run off and start a new life in Queensland.

“(The crime) was neither spontaneous nor unavoidable,” Justice Harrison said.

He described Dawson’s crime as one of “self-indulgent brutality”

Dawson will first be eligible for parole in August 2040, with Justice Harrison saying it is likely he will die in prison.

His lawyers have lodged an intention to appeal the guilty verdict.