“HE DESERVES TO SUFFER a thousand times for what he’s done,” says Tim Everist, brother of Deborah Everist who, at 19, was one of Milat’s first victims. “It’s wrong to say that of any human being, but what he did was inhumane, and I’ve got no sympathy, none at all. Nothing can bring back my sister, and the other people. People say, ‘there’s closure’, well, the door has been closed a couple of inches, but [there’s] still a massive, gaping hole.”
When Ivan Milat died on October 27 this year from cancer at the age of 74, Tim Everist felt no sorrow. Instead, it reignited an anger he’s lived with most of his adult life – since his little sister disappeared along with her friend James Gibson, also 19, after…
