A notorious triple serial killer who moved in with two foster children and their elderly carer has been separated from them after public uproar.
Reginald Arthurell, who now goes by Regina after transitioning in 2020, is understood to have moved in with the children, aged 12 and 14, a year after an extended order supervising the inmate’s release expired.
Arthurell spent 24 years behind bars for bludgeoning their fiancée, Venet Mulhall, to death in 1996. They were on parole at the time, after killing their stepfather with a carving knife in the 1970s and a teenage sailor in the 1980s.
The triple-killer began sharing a home with the foster children after being invited to stay by an elderly woman they met at Westmead Hospital.
The Daily Mail understands an extended supervision order for the killer, now believed to be in their late 70s, ran out in December 2024 and was not renewed by authorities.
The woman’s daughter alerted police after growing increasingly concerned for the safety of her mother and the children in the western Sydney home.
On Tuesday, 2GB radio host Ben Fordham revealed heavily-armed cops had raided the home and separated the serial killer from the children.
It comes after the elderly woman’s daughter also shared concerns that Arthurell may be brainwashing her mother into handing over her superannuation funds as well.
Reginald Arthurell, who now goes by Regina after transitioning in 2020 upon her release, reportedly moved in with the children, aged 12 and 14, a year after an extended order supervising the inmate’s release expired (the triple killer is pictured)
The triple-killer (pictured before they transitioned) moved in with the foster children after being invited to stay by an elderly woman they met at Westmead Hospital
After learning about Arthurell’s crimes, the woman said she tried to question her mother about why she had allowed the killer to move in with her, but was dismissed and told ‘this person has changed’.
‘I don’t know what Reginald has disclosed, I don’t know what balances and checks have been done in regards to NSW authorities allowing this person to reside with my mother,’ she told 2GB on Monday.
‘If this person is supposed to be under community correction orders where they’re supposed to be supervised within the community, what are the details of those orders and who is making sure those orders are being followed?’
Paul Quinn, the brother of Ms Mulhall, said he last heard his sister’s killer was being supervised in a secure location on the NSW South Coast.
‘He was released in secrecy and the whole system has failed,’ he told Fordham.
‘It’s history repeating itself, the story that I heard is the same story he told my sister. He’s targeted vulnerable women his whole life.’
Mr Quinn said it was a ‘failure of the judicial system’ that Arthurell had even been released from jail after murdering three people.
‘A serial killer should be given an automatic life sentence with no chance of release,’ he told the radio host.
The Daily Mail understands an extended supervision order for the killer, now believed to be in their late 70s, ran out in December 2024 and was not renewed by authorities
When contacted by the Daily Mail on Monday, a spokesperson for NSW Police said: ‘The living situation is not a police matter and not for police to confirm/comment on.’
It comes five years after Arthurell was forced to move out of a Yagoona retirement home after local community members learned of her real identity.
Canterbury Bankstown Mayor Khal Asfour said he didn’t want Arthurell living in his city, describing the killer as a ‘grub’.
‘Not welcome in my city,’ Asfour said.
‘I am outraged that convicted serial killer Regina Kaye, formerly known as Reginald Kenneth Arthurell, has been allowed to live in our city under a cloud of secrecy.’
Arthurell was arrested in January 2022 on sex crime allegations after they were accused of sexually touching a 55-year-old man.