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Notorious paedophile Michael Guider who killed schoolgirl Samantha Knight has died in custody – as he takes his evil secret to the grave


  • Authorities have confirmed the inmate died on Saturday morning 
  • Guider had served 17 years for killing Bondi schoolgirl Samantha Knight, 9 
  • The serial paedophile had been jailed in 1996 for other offences against children 

The serial paedophile who abducted, drugged and killed schoolgirl Samantha Knight has died in custody. 

A Department of Correctives NSW spokesperson confirmed Michael Guider, 73, died at the Prince of Wales hospital on Saturday morning about 7.25am. 

‘As a matter of protocol, Corrective Services NSW and NSW Police investigate all deaths in custody regardless of the circumstances,’ the spokesperson said.

Guider kidnapped Sydney schoolgirl Samantha Knight from her Bondi home in 1986 and drugged her, which resulted in a later conviction of manslaughter.

He also preyed upon other children across two decades and has shown no remorse for Samantha’s manslaughter, which he once claimed was accidental and recently said he had not committed.

Guider was let out of jail in 2019 but re-arrested in 2022 for breaching conditions relating to his five-year extended supervision order.

He has never said where he left schoolgirl’s body – with her location unlikely to ever be revealed with his death. 

Notorious paedophile Michael Guider who killed schoolgirl Samantha Knight has died in custody – as he takes his evil secret to the grave

Michael Guider (pictured in 2022) has died in hospital while in custody in Long Bay Jail 

Michael Guider kidnapped, drugged and killed nine-year-old school girl Samantha Knight in 1986. She was snatched from near her home at Bondi and her remains have never been found 

For the first six months of his freedom in 2019, Guider was holed-up in a secure facility attached to the Long Bay prison complex along with other offenders too problematic to return to society. 

But in March 2020 the loathed paedophile was quietly moved out of the Nunyara Community Offender Support Program centre at Malabar and placed in new permanent accommodation.

That angered and frustrated some of Guider’s surviving victims, who said at the time authorities had refused to reveal where their tormentor was now living. 

Guider’s younger brother Tim had previously warned his sibling would have used his time in Nunyara preparing himself to commit sex crimes on prepubescent girls again.  

After his initial release Guider refused to receive letters, phone calls or visits from anyone, including Tim. 

‘His minders have said to me he doesn’t want contact with anybody from the outside world,’ Tim said in 2019. 

Guider served 17 years for the manslaughter of schoolgirl Samantha Knight

‘He’s trying to keep his secrets basically. He doesn’t want anyone to know where he is or what he’s doing.’ 

Tim predicted Guider would have altered his appearance before he left Nunyara, including removing the long grey beard he grew in 2019. 

Samantha’s body has never been found and Guider has shown no remorse for her manslaughter, which he once claimed was accidental and most recently said he had not committed. 

Guider had previously been jailed for sexually assaulting 13 children from 1980 to 1996. Police are aware of other victims still too traumatised to come forward.

His brother believed Michael would find a way to return to his old ways once he was back in the community.

In September 2022, Guider was arrested again for allegedly possessing child abuse material on his mobile phone, violating the terms of his extended supervision order.

The Daily Telegraph reported that during a routine check on an address at Fairfield Heights in Sydney’s south-west police discovered he had allegedly been looking up material on his phone in contravention of those conditions. 

The alleged offences occurred over seven months between February 23 and September 25.

After a brief appearance at Fairfield Local Court the child killer was returned to prison.

He was subsequently sentenced to a maximum of three years imprisonment.

More to follow. 

Michael Guider was molesting kids for years before and after he killed Bondi schoolgirl Samantha Knight 

Samantha Knight’s 1986 disappearance from near her mother’s home at Bondi in Sydney’s eastern suburbs remained a mystery for 15 years.

Michael Guider has never publicly expressed any remorse for killing the schoolgirl and her body has never been found.

She was one of perhaps dozens of children aged two to 16 who Guider molested over many years. His usual method of offending was to drug then molest pre-pubescent girls.

Guider first molested Samantha when she was living with her mother Tess at Manly in 1984 and 1985.

He snatched Samantha from near her home in Imperial Avenue, Bondi, after school on August 19, 1986.

The honey-blonde, green-eyed girl had been seen that afternoon walking the streets in her uniform. Within days Sydney was plastered with ‘Find our Sam’ posters which described her as intelligent, outgoing and well-spoken.

Guider later claimed he had drugged Samantha with the sleeping pill Normison and she died of an overdose on his lounge while he went out to the shops.

He has since claimed he had nothing to do with her death. 

Many of Guider’s victims were the daughters of mothers he had befriended and he sexually assaulted them during babysitting sessions.

Guider played a ‘game’ called statues with some victims in which he ordered them to stand still while he exposed himself and touched their genitals.

He took thousands of images of the children he violated while they were unconscious. Some of his victims have not been identified.

In 1996 Guider was sentenced to a minimum ten years and six months for 60 offences committed against 11 children between 1980 and 1986. 

Four years later he was convicted of further sex offences against children but his release date was extended by only six months. 

While in custody he was linked to Samantha Knight’s disappearance. 

Guider was charged with Samantha’s murder in February 2001 but pleaded guilty to manslaughter under the weight of damning evidence including a confession to his brother Tim.

He was sentenced to  17 years with a non-parole period of 12 years to date from June 2002. The maximum sentence expired last year.

Efforts to keep Guider in custody beyond his original sentence failed and he was released on an extended supervision order which will last for five years.  



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