A teenage killer who fatally stabbed 70-year-old grandmother Vyleen White during a struggle over her car keys has lodged an appeal against his 16-year prison sentence, sparking fury from her family.
The Fatal Incident
In February 2024, the then-16-year-old approached Ms White in a car park at Redbank Plains shopping centre, west of Brisbane, and demanded her car keys. He inflicted a 17cm-deep knife wound, described as non-survivable, in front of her granddaughter. The boy later stole her 2009 Hyundai Getz hatchback and drove it to a nearby area to show off to peers.
CCTV footage shows the teen deliberately stabbing the elderly woman as she attempted to flee.
Sentencing and New Laws
The crime prompted Queensland’s ‘adult crime, adult time’ laws, which mandate at least 20 years for juveniles convicted of murder. However, these rules do not apply retroactively. Under prior laws, the teen received a 16-year term in November 2025. He must serve 60% of the sentence, including time already served, likely leading to release in late 2033 at age 26.
The Appeal Hearing
During Tuesday’s Court of Appeal hearing, defence barrister Matthew Hynes argued the sentence was excessive for a non-premeditated murder in a ‘fleeting moment of madness,’ noting it as the longest in Queensland for a 16-year-old’s single-stab killing.
Justice David Boddice emphasized that a brief intent to kill or cause life-threatening injury suffices for murder: ‘That’s the offence, that’s how you get to murder: one moment.’
Director of Public Prosecutions Todd Fuller countered that the sentence was not manifestly excessive, calling the murder particularly heinous.
The three justices reserved their decision.
Family’s Response
Ms White’s family, too upset to attend, expressed devastation over the appeal grounds. Daughter Cindy Micallef stated: ‘I’ve had my own fleeting moments of madness, but I haven’t acted on them. With no intent in the fleeting moment of madness – I’m sorry, but if you had no intent, why were you carrying a knife? There’s no heroism here. You’ve taken a person’s life – what is that life worth? Obviously nothing… If we keep downgrading these sentences for murders, the only ones left with a life sentence are the families.’
Victims 1st ambassador Lyndy Atkinson called the appeal an insult: ‘A precedent needed to be set and this was the right precedent to be set. I think it’s an insult to the family and there will be community outrage if the original sentence is not upheld.’

