[21] Mr Farr SC, who represented the appellant, argued that on the whole of the evidence it was not open to the jury to be satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the appellant killed the deceased or did so with the intention of killing her. He emphasised the absence of evidence of the cause of death and the conflicts in the statements by the appellant in his police interviews which, Mr Farr argued, rendered them unreliable as a source of the appellant's intention; the evidence of the conflicting statements made by the appellant demonstrated that he was so unreliable that a jury could not reasonably rely upon his bland statements to the effect that he had intentionally killed the deceased to the exclusion of his quite specific statements that she had died in his absence. Mr Farr argued that the known location and positioning of the remains of the deceased demonstrated that the statement which White attributed to the appellant that the appellant had staked the deceased to a bull ants' nest and cut her thighs was untrue so that, if one accepted White's evidence as an accurate statement of what the appellant said, that claim by the appellant was demonstrably false. Whilst the appellant's conduct in disposing of the body of the deceased and her possessions was suspicious, it did not support the finding of an intentional killing in the absence of other evidence and did not support an inference, to the exclusion of reasonable inferences consistent with innocence, that an unlawful killing had occurred. Mr Farr argued that the Crown case therefore necessarily relied upon the evidence of Naum, Cook or White to prove that the appellant had intended to kill the deceased. He argued that the evidence of Naum and Cook was insufficient to supply the missing evidence of the appellant's intention because they were notorious prison informers who had motives to give false evidence. White also had a criminal record and a motive to give false evidence. Furthermore, the evidence of one did not relevantly corroborate the evidence of any other. Instead, the evidence of those witnesses simply demonstrated that the appellant's statements to each of them were in conflict and unreliable.