Heartless vandals strip Matthew Leveson’s memorial tree bare

A memorial tree decorated in memory of Matthew Leveson, whose body was found in a national park last year, has been stripped bare the night before his funeral.

His heartbroken parents visited the Royal National Park Thursday, but were shocked to find their son’s tree vandalised and its decorations taken.   

‘Absolutely devastated. The night before Matty’s funeral we visited his memorial tree in the National Park to find it vandalised,’ Mark Leveson wrote on Twitter. 

The tree (pictured) decorated in memory of Matthew Leveson, whose body was found in a national park last year, has been stripped bare the night before his funeral

‘Butterflies taken, gifts taken, memorial plaques taken, fresh flowers taken. Nothing is left!.’ 

The family were preparing to farewell their son for the final time in a funeral to be held Friday.

‘It’s our final goodbye,’ Mark Leveson told AAP ahead of Friday’s funeral for his 20-year-old son.  

‘It’s the culmination of ten and a half years of work.’

His parents, Mark and Faye’s emotional and exhausting journey has been fraught with suspicion, frustration, disbelief and determination.

Much of the fight took place in the public spotlight as the man they believe murdered Matt – his former partner Michael Atkins – broke new legal ground.

Matt was last seen leaving Darlinghurst’s ARQ nightclub with Atkins in September 2007.

Matthew Leveson's (pictured) heartbroken parents visited the Royal National Park Thursday, but were shocked to find their son's tree vandalised and its decorations taken

Matthew Leveson’s (pictured) heartbroken parents visited the Royal National Park Thursday, but were shocked to find their son’s tree vandalised and its decorations taken

Suspicion fell on the then-44-year-old Atkins, who was subsequently seen on CCTV footage buying a garden mattock and gaffer tape from a hardware shop the same day.

He was arrested in 2008 and charged with murder but ultimately acquitted by a NSW Supreme Court jury in 2009.

Years of uncertainty followed. A reward of $100,000 was offered and later increased to $250,000. Atkins continued to deny involvement as Matt’s parents pleaded for information.

The case broke new legal ground when Atkins was granted immunity from contempt and perjury charges over evidence he gave at Matt’s inquest on the condition he led police to the body.

For the Levesons, desperate to find their son’s remains and give him the dignified burial he deserved, it was a deal with the devil.

The tree had been lovingly decorated with butterflies, flowers, personal messages and plaques - but that was all gone when Mark and Faye visited it on Thursday

The tree had been lovingly decorated with butterflies, flowers, personal messages and plaques – but that was all gone when Mark and Faye visited it on Thursday

Police searched bushland near the town of Waterfall, south of Sydney, for six months based on the information provided by Atkins.

Digging machinery ground to a halt in late May 2017 when a skeleton was uncovered beneath a cabbage-tree palm in the national park.

Mark and Faye embraced. They had found their son.

The coronial inquest in 2017 heard Atkins told police he found Mr Leveson’s body in their bedroom after their night out and assumed he had overdosed.

Atkins said he was worried about his reputation so decided to bury Matt’s body in the park.

Matthew (pictured) was last seen alive in 2007 and his body was finally found last year underneath a cabbage-tree palm in the national park

Matthew (pictured) was last seen alive in 2007 and his body was finally found last year underneath a cabbage-tree palm in the national park

Deputy state coroner Elaine Truscott wasn’t able to rule on a cause of death but said the lies Atkins told gave rise to ‘a considerable degree of suspicion’.

The very mention of Atkins’ name disgusts Faye Leveson. She refers to him as ‘it’.

The Levesons relocated the palm under which Matt was found to their back yard.

As they prepare to say their final goodbye, they’re insisting the Sydney service doesn’t reference the court cases, inquests or searches.

Instead, they’ll share with guests who Matt really was: a bright, vibrant, creative, caring son whose company they enjoyed for 20 years.

‘He was just a lovely kid and we want people to see that side of him, not what’s been put in the papers,’ his mother says.

‘This is a celebration of his life.’

 



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