The jury has reached a decision is what must be one of the most bizarre murder trials in Australian history.
Rest of story here
He is how the case was reported back in August
Rest of story here
I have always thought she was guilty as there seemed to be no other reasonable explanation for Tegan's disappearance. However I wasn't certain that she would be convicted.
Former water polo champion Keli Lane has been found guilty of murdering her baby.
Lane screamed "no", collapsed and fell off her seat on to the floor of the Sydney court as the verdict was read out. An ambulance was called.
Her mother also screamed "no" from the public gallery and burst into tears.
Lane, 35, had pleaded not guilty to murdering her daughter, Tegan, shortly after leaving Sydney's Auburn hospital in September 1996.
It took a week of deliberations for the NSW Supreme Court jury of six men and six women to reach a verdict following a four-month trial.
She was also convicted of three counts of making a false statement on oath in relation to documents dealing with her adopting out two other babies.
About ten minutes after the ambulance was called, Lane composed herself and sat in the dock with her lawyer.
Rest of story here
He is how the case was reported back in August
IF TEGAN LANE were alive today, she would be 13. Police have never found her body, but they believe they have finally gathered the evidence to prove her mother, Keli Lane, killed her soon after her birth in 1996.
It was one of three times Ms Lane, a national representative water polo player, gave birth without her partner, her family or her fellow athletes knowing.
Ms Lane, now 34, will face the Supreme Court in Sydney on December 4, charged with Tegan's murder, almost three years and nine months after a coroner concluded the missing girl was dead, but stopped short of calling it foul play....................................
Keli Lane was a 21-year-old water polo star when she gave birth to Tegan at Auburn Hospital on September 12, 1996.
Two days later, she left the hospital in a taxi at 2pm. Tegan has not been seen since
At the conclusion of an inquest in February 2006, Coroner John Abernethy described the case as surreal. Ms Lane chose not to give evidence. Her barrister, Peter Hamill, SC, insisted Ms Lane was innocent and suggested Tegan was still alive.
Ms Lane was two days shy of her 20th birthday when she had her first child, a girl, at the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital in March 1995. She had cried when hospital staff brought her a cake.
On the hospital record she named the father as Duncan Gillies, a rugby player and her boyfriend at the time. But the inquest - starting nine years later - would hear he was not the father. Furthermore, he had no idea she had been pregnant.
Ms Lane gave up this girl for adoption and was soon back in the pool, training to represent Australia at the Junior Water Polo Championships in Canada.
Eighteen months later, she gave birth to Tegan. She was still with Mr Gillies. By now she had been spending four nights a week at his Gladesville home. Yet again, however, he did not notice she was pregnant, and he would tell the inquest this made him feel like a fool. They broke up in 1998, but he said he would never know if he was Tegan's father because Ms Lane had left hospital before DNA samples were taken.
It was not until May 1999 - with the arrival of Ms Lane's third child at Ryde Hospital - authorities started to ask questions. Where was Tegan?
Ms Lane had chosen to give up the third child. A Department of Community Services worker, processing this adoption, noted the hospital record of Tegan's birth, but no other paperwork.
Later, Ms Lane would tell Detective Senior Constable Richard Gaut that Tegan's father was Andrew Norris.
The first public appeal for Tegan came with the launch of the inquest in October 2004. As the close of the inquest in 2006, the coroner asked police to do more work on the case.
They had already checked school enrolments for all girls in Australia born on September 12, 1996. While they found a Tegan whose father was called Allen Norris, DNA tests proved she was not the one. Now police checked records for girls with different birthdays, but a similar age, in NSW. After the inquest the police's unsolved homicide unit went further and tried to find Tegan by checking records of all girls in Australia of her approximate age - close to 100,000.
Rest of story here
I have always thought she was guilty as there seemed to be no other reasonable explanation for Tegan's disappearance. However I wasn't certain that she would be convicted.