Thatorder was revoked on Friday,allowing this masthead to reveal further details about the man accused of deliberately killing Murphy,although his alleged motive remains unexplained.
Defence lawyer David Tamanika expressed concern in Ballarat Magistrates’ Court that some people believed the gag order was a manipulation tactic.
Tamanika also noted the suppression order had been destructive to his client,who had since told him to withdraw it.
Stephenson,sporting a beard,grey tracksuit and flanked by two security officers,spoke only to confirm he understood Magistrate Michelle Mykytowycz.
“Yes,your honour,” he said.
Stephenson,who has never previously been in custody,will appear in court again on August 8.
Hundreds of mourners gathered at Ballarat’s Eureka Stockdale Memorial Garden on a clear,warm Friday evening for a vigil for Murphy.
At one point,the line to sign a condolence book that will be given to the Murphy family stretched back about 100 metres.
In fading light,the crowd held up their phone torchlights in silence,reflecting on a tumultuous past month for the regional city.
“After everything the community has done,it’s had a big impact on everyone,” said Jasmine Krause,the vigil organiser.
“I thought it’d be nice for everyone to get together and just have a bit of reflection.”
The only vigil speaker,Ballarat Mayor Des Hudson,said next week the council would figure out how to open city facilities so more tributes could be made out to the Murphy family.
“Yesterday was a sad day in Ballarat,” Hudson told the silent crowd.
“We have lost someone who made a real contribution to the Ballarat community.”
With the only other sound heard being the gentle splashes of a memorial fountain behind him,Hudson spoke of the immense toll the ordeal had taken on the Murphy family,pointedly mentioning damaging unsubstantiated speculation and innuendos that had circulated on social media. “That was not okay,” he said.
Hudson urged those still struggling with grief to speak up so Ballarat could “wrap our arms around each other”.
Ballarat MP and Infrastructure Minister Catherine King was among the crowd,many of whom had volunteered to search for Murphy over the past month.
Loading
Krause,the vigil organiser,said she saw part of herself in the 51-year-old.
“It’s all very shocking,” Krause said.
“I just think that as long as we think of Samantha,and are there for her family,and keep that on the full front of our minds - that’s what’s important.”
The mayor flagged he hoped another remembrance service would be possible once Murphy’s body was found.
Stephenson went to Damascus College and St Patrick’s College in Ballarat,private schools with a conservative culture imbued with a sense of tradition.
Jessie Metcalfe,21,was in the year below Stephenson at Damascus.
Although they were in different friendship circles,and he hadn’t seen much of him since school,Metcalfe said Stephenson was a popular kid who played a lot of sport.
“It’s been a huge shock,” he said.
In his formative years,Stephenson wasimmersed in the world of top-tier football.
He would tag along with his father,late-life AFL draftee Orren Stephenson,into the clubs – mixing with players,seeing the sport up close.
But while the Stephenson family is liked and respected in the Ballarat community,the feelings are mixed about middle child Patrick.
A local newspaper featured Patrick and his footy friends advocating for mates to look after one another on the roads.
But following news of his arrest,locals described him as a troubled teenager.
Loading
The allegations made by police sit in contrast with the image of Patrick Stephenson as a young man enmeshed in the upper echelons of football,tagging along with his father,rubbing shoulders with AFL greats.
His father was picked up in the draft at 29,one of the oldest ever drafted,and played as a sporadic member of Geelong and Richmond.
Orren Stephenson’s only son has his father’s first name as his middle name.
The father’s brief AFL career was a huge boon for the family.
When asked,Mount Clear neighbours quickly recall a friendly home and gregarious sisters,but struggle to remember a lot about the boy who would ride his bike around the cul-de-sac.
“They were wonderful,absolutely wonderful neighbours. I didn’t really know[the man],I only really know girls,” a neighbour said.
“I was totally amazed,I didn’t expect it at all,didn’t know what was going on,particularly when I got home[to the street] full of cars.”
Like his father,Patrick was an enthusiastic footballer,playing for the Redan Football Club under-19s,though his involvement with the team had frayed in the past couple of years. He was also a rower.
Orren is now an electrician and well known in Ballarat for playing footy with Redan/North Ballarat and then the AFL. His wife is a primary school teacher.
Stephenson split his time between a home in Scotsburn and his parents’ place in Mount Clear,both close to where Murphy went missing.
Scotsburn,where the accused was arrested,is a farming hamlet wrapped around the Midland Highway about 20 minutes south-east of Ballarat.
Properties in the area have long driveways and boundaries screened by tall trees and native vegetation.
It’s suited to people who run hobby farms and value privacy. Many residents are elderly,and few know the accused.
“I know the parents of the accused killer,” a person who knew the family,but who wanted to remain anonymous,told this masthead. “They are just lovely people and have brought their children up beautifully. I just feel sick for them.”
“Absolutely no idea of motive,or where it occurred,or what occurred,or what method was used,” another neighbour said.
Loading
A second person who knows the Stephenson family described them as “beautiful people”.
“I can’t imagine what they’d be going through,” they said.
Police,too,haven’t released their theory about what might have motivated Patrick Stephenson to allegedly take Murphy’s life. Chief Commissioner Shane Patton said police weren’t looking for anyone else.
Murphy died in a “deliberate attack” at Mount Clear on the day she went missing,Patton said. Finding Murphy’s remains will now be police’s top priority.