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Roxy Jacenko and husband Oliver Curtis take children on family holiday

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After a one-year stay at Cooma Correctional Centre, Oliver Curtis is spending his newfound freedom making up for lost time with wife Roxy Jacenko and their two children, Pixie and Hunter. 

The former investment banker, 31, was spotted at Sydney International Airport on Wednesday as he jetted off for his first family holiday since he was incarcerated for conspiracy to commit insider trading. 

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After a year behind bars, the husband of Roxy Jacenko and father of two left jail and was greeted by the media rather than his family, before boarding a private jet.

Checking in business class, it's a far cry from how he spent the last 365 days behind bars. It's believed the family are jetting to Bali.

A shroud of mystery has surrounded Jacenko and Curtis' marriage since he was released with neither of them wearing their wedding rings, but this trip abroad might be a fresh start for the pair. 

Jacenko, 37, boss of Sweaty Betty PR, maintained that she is still married to Curtis, but that was before she was spotted kissing her ex-boyfriend, property developer Nabil Gazal, in April during a late-night party at his Darling Point home.

Since Curtis' release, she has dodged questions about their relationship.

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Upon his release two weeks ago in snowy Cooma, a startled Curtis was asked by reporters about his marriage with Jacenko and her relationship with Gazal, but he made no comment.

Instead, with the help of a personal bodyguard, he hightailed it straight to a waiting, chauffeur-driven car that whisked him to the nearby Cooma-Snowy Mountains Airport where Jacenko and Pixie, 5, and Hunter, 3, were waiting to take him home in a private jet.

It had been an emotional reunion for the children, who ran to the door of the jet screaming "Daddy! Daddy! Daddy!" in delight once they caught a glimpse of Curtis on the tarmac.

They believed that he spent the last year in China on business.

Curtis was jailed for his role in an insider trading conspiracy that netted him and former school friend John Hartman about $1.4 million.

He was sentenced to a maximum of two years in jail to be released on recognisance after serving a year.

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