The family of murder victim Teresa Bradford has called for tougher bail laws on domestic violence offenders following her death.
Her brother, Darren OโBrien, spoke to 7News about how heartbroken the family are about Teresaโs death, and how they will be fighting for a crack down on lenient bail laws.
โTeresa was loved by a lot of people and didnโt deserve this,โ Mr OโBrien said.
โIn honour of my sister, we will fight to get this no-bail, or some sort of ankle bracelet to stop (domestic violence offenders) going near victims.โ
He added that the family have started a GoFundMe page to raise funds for Mrs Bradfordโs children, who were inside the house at the time of her murder.
โWe really appreciate any help anyone can donate,โ Darren said.
โThis money will go towards my niece and nephewsโ future.โ
RELATED: Teresa Bradford โ The Horror Behind The Headlines
The mother-of-four was killed by her estranged husband just two weeks after he was released on bail over a raft of domestic violence charges. Teresa Bradfordโs children found their bodies in her Gold Coast home early on Tuesday morning, reports the Brisbane Times.
David Bradford, 52, was released on bail, despite knocking his wife unconscious, dragging her across the room and gaffer-taping her mouth shut on November 28 last year. This was explicitly against the objections of police, reports news.com.au, who pointed to his โfragile mental stateโ. Among his bail conditions were that Bradford stay 100 metres away from his wife.
He broke into Teresaโs home early on Tuesday morning and stabbed her to death before taking his own life. The coupleโs children ran to neighbours for help.
Her friends told the Brisbane Times that the 40 year old was โterrifiedโ but keen to move on, studying nursing at Griffith University, despite a back injury sustained during one brutal attack.
โShe was trying to protect [her children] from what was going on at home and provide for them, trying to get nursing done so she could provide a good life for them,โ friend Rebecca Degraaf said. โShe was really trying to hold it together for them.โ
Worried that her husband would attack her again, she was trying to find somewhere else to live.
DV Connect chief executive officer Diane Mangan told the ABC Mrs Bradford was in โgrave danger of being murderedโ.
โThis was definitely a woman who was in grave danger of being murdered. She knew it herself,โ Ms Mangan told the broadcaster.
Mrs Bradford is the fifth Gold Coast woman to be murdered by her partner in just 16 months.