Chrissie Foster AM was born in Victoria and worked as a public servant for nine years. She married in 1980 and by 1985 with husband Anthony, had three beautiful daughters, Emma, Katie and Aimee. In October 2017 Chrissie became a documentary presenter, when she again joined forces with co-writer Paul Kennedy to make the ABC documentary Undeniable which aired nationally to coincide with the Closing Ceremony of the Royal Commission. By 2018, Chrissie was awarded the Human Rights Medal for her ‘enormous contribution’ to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse alongside Justice Peter McClellan. In 2019, she was recognised in the Australia Day Honours ceremony and awarded a Member of the Order of Australia for her significant service to children, particularly as a tireless advocate for child abuse survivors, in the face of unimaginable hardship.
Paul Kennedy is a national television presenter for ABC News Breakfast. He has worked for three television networks and has written three books, including co-authoring Hell on the Way to Heaven (with Chrissie Foster), one of the triggers for Australia's Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. He lives on the eastern shore of Port Phillip with his wife, Kim, and their three sons, Jack, Gus and Leo.