A mother is eyeing her next target after her advocacy following her daughter's shock killing fuelled a push for minimum prison terms for domestic violence-linked murders.
Tabitha Acret hopes new NSW legislation that would lift the standard non-parole period for intimate partner deaths to 25 years will prove a powerful deterrent.
She is calling on governments to go further and introduce mandatory minimum sentences when offenders breach apprehended violence orders while committing an assault or murder.
More than 110,000 people have signed a petition backing the reform after Ms Acret told her story.
Her daughter Mackenzie Anderson, 21, was stabbed 78 times by ex-boyfriend Tyrone Thompson in a furious attack in March 2022.
Thompson had been released on parole 16 days earlier for assaultin