In 'Suitcase Murder Case', Accused Pleads Guilty To Killing Mother, Child

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Pearce-Stevenson's bones were discovered in 2010 in Belanglo State Forest.Sydney, Australia: A man pleaded guilty Tuesday to killing a
young mother and her toddler, whose skeleton was found in a suitcase on the side of a road, ending a case that baffled police and shocked
Australians.Daniel James Holdom, 43, admitted the double murder in 2008 of Karlie Jade Pearce-Stevenson, then aged 20, and her two-year-old
daughter Khandalyce Kiara Pearce, when he appeared in the New South Wales state Supreme Court.Pearce-Stevenson's bones were discovered in
2010 in Belanglo State Forest in New South Wales, notorious as the site where seven backpackers' bodies were dumped during a serial killer
spree in the 1990s.Police were unable to identify her until 2015, when her child's remains were found by a passerby in a suitcase near a
highway close to a small South Australia town some 1,100 kilometres (684 miles) away.The child's discovery prompted two calls to a police
hotline that eventually helped investigators identify the pair through DNA.Holdom, who had a short relationship with Pearce-Stevenson,
allegedly stamped on her throat and crushed her windpipe before leaving her body in the forest, Sydney's Daily Telegraph reported, citing
court documents.Police also alleged he kept photos of Pearce-Stevenson's body as a "trophy".A few days later, Holdom claimed he was driving
her daughter to South Australia to her grandmother's house
But he killed her, placed her body in a suitcase and dumped it alongside the highway.He will be sentenced in late September.(Except for the
headline, this story has not been edited by TheIndianSubcontinent staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)