Kathleen Folbigg: True cost Seven Network paid for exclusive interview on 7News Spotlight revealed

The Seven Network is rumored to have paid significantly more than the reported $400,000 to secure the exclusive rights to interview Kathleen Folbigg.

The interview with the 55-year-old will air sometime on 7News Spotlight after the network won an intense bidding war with its rivals, including Nine Network.

Folbigg was convicted of three counts of murder and one count of manslaughter in 2003 after her babies Patrick, Sarah, Laura and Caleb died in suspicious circumstances between 1989 and 1999.

The mother of four was sentenced to 30 years in prison and was not eligible for parole until 2028, but had consistently maintained her innocence.

Kathleen Folbigg is rumored to have paid much more than the previously reported $400,000 figure to tell her story in an exclusive interview with Channel Seven

Folbigg was convicted of the murder of her son Patrick (right), as well as the manslaughter of her first child Caleb (left)

Earlier this month, NSW Attorney General Michael Daley pardoned Folbigg because of “reasonable doubt” about her children’s deaths.

The decision came after an investigation – launched by Supreme Court Justice Tom Bathurst KC – found new evidence that the children died of natural causes.

Shortly after her release, it was revealed that Folbigg would be sitting down with Channel Seven, with reports suggesting the price of the exclusive interview was $400,000.

Sources close to the negotiations have already told this The Age’s CBD column other networks had backed out when Folbigg’s team reportedly set a $1.5 million fee for the interview, security costs, and some archived footage.

A spokesperson for Seven declined to comment or provide an official figure when Daily Mail Australia reached out.

Folbigg may also receive hefty compensation from the state government for her time behind bars.

In the wake of the pardon, which does not overturn her conviction but frees her from prison, attorney Rhanee Rego revealed that her client could potentially receive compensation.

“We haven’t spoken to her about this. She tries very hard to concentrate on taking one step at a time and not doing things in a hurry, because she has just been waiting to feel the grass at her feet, look at the sky and look at it for the first time in 20 years. watch the sunrise,” Ms. Rego said on June 6.

“Kathleen is still having a cup of tea, getting acquainted with normal life, and we’re just getting used to not talking to her in a prison about an AVL call.

‘We are taking it step by step, but in the near future we will certainly think about all the options available to her.

“We won’t rush her or force her to do anything. She doesn’t have to do it until she’s ready.’

Folbigg (pictured in 2005) was convicted of three murders and one count of manslaughter in 2003 after her babies Patrick, Sarah, Laura and Caleb died in suspicious circumstances between 1989 and 1999.

Medical experts say there may have been a genetic mutation that caused the deaths of Sarah (left) and Laura (right).

First, Folbigg’s convictions must be overturned in the Court of Criminal Appeal before compensation options can be discussed.

Figures as low as $1 million to $20 million have already been speculated in the media.

“Not only has she lost one child, she has lost four and has been in prison for 20 years,” Ms Rego said.

“The system has let her down every step of the way.

“Instead of trying to understand why her children died, possibly through an inquest…we threw her in jail, locked her up and labeled her Australia’s worst female serial killer.”

Robyn Blewer, director of the Griffith University Innocence Project, pointed to two recent cases to indicate the extent to which Folbigg could be compensated for her 7,300 days in prison.

Western Australian man Scott Austic was paid $1.3 million in May on top of a previous payment of $250,000 after serving nearly 13 years for the murder of his pregnant secret lover.

He had demanded $8.5 million after being acquitted on appeal in 2020.

Both payments were voluntary, while David Eastman was awarded $7 million in damages from the ACT Supreme Court in 2019 following his wrongful conviction for the murder of Australian Federal Police Assistant Commissioner Colin Winchester.

Dr. Blewer said the amount Folbigg received could depend on what the government was willing to pay.

“Twenty years is a significant amount of lost time,” she said.

“It may depend on the good graces of the NSW government.”

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