Arrest warrant issued for quadruple murderer Ljube Velevski 8 days after he was released

Arrest warrant issued for quadruple murderer Ljube Velevski 8 days after he was released

Newborn twins Daniel and Dijana also had their throats cut by their father –  with prosecutors arguing he committed the murders after his wife threatened to leave them….

Just days after being freed from prison, detectives are now looking for a triple killer who murdered his family.

After spending more than 20 years in prison for the murder of his wife and three children in their house south of Wollongong, Ljube Velevski was finally freed eight days ago.

Currently, a police source has disclosed that Velevski has a warrant out for his arrest because he allegedly disregarded his duties under the Child Protection Register.

The register is in charge of keeping track of those who violate minors sexually or violently.

According to reports from The Daily Telegraph, authorities assume Velevski has relocated back to the Illawarra, where he still has relatives.

In their Wollongong home in 1994, Veleski viciously murdered his spouse Snezana, their six-year-old daughter Zaklina, and their newborn twins Daniel and Dijana.

The 57-year-old was handed a maximum term of 25 years in prison, but he was released last Friday after completing his sentence at Junee Correctional Centre.

He had not demonstrated any remorse while incarcerated or engaged in any rehabilitation, according to a statement from the State Parole Authority.

After being released from custody, Velevski had seven days to return to the local police station and be included on the register.

A trained police officer would have gone over his rights and obligations with him.

According to the CPR legislation, a person who is added to the register is required to give the police a variety of details, including any aliases they may have and their address.

According to The Daily Telegraph, a police source confirmed Velevski (pictured) is wanted for allegedly failing to comply with his obligations under the Child Protection Register

According to The Daily Telegraph, a police source confirmed Velevski (pictured) is wanted for allegedly failing to comply with his obligations under the Child Protection Register

Additionally, it contains information about their work, any affiliations with groups or clubs that let minors to join, the registration of their car, and all of their email addresses and user names from the internet.

According to the police source, Velevski’s failure to report by the deadline will be charged.

They stated: ‘He had seven days to report and today is day eight.’

The bodies of Velevski’s family, whose necks had been slit open, were discovered by authorities on June 20, 1994, stacked on top of one another inside their Berkeley, south of Wollongong, house.

In his original statement to police, the father claimed that he had not seen his family since the previous evening and that his wife had closed the door on a room with their kids inside.

The remains were stacked between a bed and cot when police officers broke into the room.

Velevski said he had been sleeping in his daughter’s room for a continuous 17 hours when authorities discovered their bodies, and he denied killing them.

After an eight-week trial in 1997, he was found guilty and given a 25-year prison term for four charges of murder by the judge.

He killed his family, according to the prosecution, when his wife threatened to leave him.

Snezana’s obstetrician testified that she was “exactly the opposite” of what was described in the court testimony about her postpartum depression and her family’s history of mental illnesses.

The High Court dismissed the case after receiving an appeal, too.

Velevski committed the “worst imaginable” act, but, according to NSW Attorney-General Mark Speakman, he had already served his sentence and there was no likelihood of an extended supervision order or a continued detention order.

As a result of his failure to “engage in any programs to address his violent offending,” the NSW State Parole Authority denied him parole in May 2016.

Only the media were aware that Velevski was scheduled to be released on Thursday.

They claimed they were unhappy and had no notion of his whereabouts.