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Robert John LANE

Robert John LANE

Victoria Police Force

Squad 7/65

Regd. #   15051

Rank:  Detective Senior Constable

Stations?, Carlton, Russell Street HQ,  Swan Hill CIB – death

ServiceFrom  ? ? 1965?  to  13 July 1979 = 14? years Service

AwardsVictoria Police Star medal – granted, to Val, 2006

Born:  12 December 1946 at Kerang, Victoria

Died on Friday  13 July 1979

Cause:  Murdered – shot in back of head

Event locationKyalite, NSW

Age:  32

Funeral date?

Funeral location? – Swan Hill, Victoria

Buried at:  Swan Hill Cemetery, Coronation Ave, Swan Hill

 Memorial at:  Robert Lane Resuscitation Unit at Swan Hill District Health

Dedication Ceremony was held on 28th November 2008 to open the Robert Lane Resuscitation Unit

Equipment purchased for the Robert Lane Resuscitation Unit
•    June 2008 – Patient Monitoring Equipment – $60,000 ($40,000 donated by Blue Ribbon Foundation)
•    May 2010 – Cardiac Arrhythmia Software – $5778.00
•    May 2011 – Portable Ventilator $30,999 (Included $11,000 raised from SHDH Charity Golf Day)
•    May 2012 – External Pacing Machine $12,950 ($7,000 donated by Blue Ribbon Foundation
•    June 2013 – Diathermy Equipment $22,119.90 ($10,000 donated by Blue Ribbon Foundation)

Robert John LANE

Robert John LANE

ROBERT IS mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance

 


 Funeral location ?


 

FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal


About 11.30 a.m. Friday 13 July 1979 Detective Lane accompanied David Bernard Chapman an 18 year old car theft suspect, to a disused bus parked in a camp site at Kyalite Southern New South Wales.

Chapman had been living there for a short time and had told the Detective he had a receipt amongst his possessions which would exonerate him of the theft.

Whilst Lane searched the bus Chapman took out a .22 calibre rifle and shot the Detective in the head. The policeman fell to the floor and Chapman then walked up and again shot him in the head. He then dragged the corpse to a nearby pit where he dumped it. He then escaped in the police car in company with his 17 year old girlfriend Kerryn Anne Bonser. He later dumped the police car in the Edwards River 5 kilometres away and took to the bush.

Despite a massive man hunt Chapman was not located until 19 July 1980 at a property in the Kyalite District.

He admitted his guilt and appeared before Parramatta Supreme Court charged with the murder.

On 1 July 1980 he was sentenced to life imprisonment.


 

Bob Lane: Blues Honour Policeman

By: Anthony De Bolfo on: Thu 11 of Sep., 2008 23:52 AEST (7352 Reads)

(6630 bytes)

 

First published: 2006

ROBERT Lane was not yet 20 when his clearance to Carlton came through. It was May 27, 1966, five rounds into the VFL season, and for an aspiring league footballer, Princes Park was a great place to be.

Eighteen months earlier, George Harris had wrested control of Carlton after it had plummeted to its worst placing — 10th — in its centenary season, 1964.

In late 1964, Harris completed one of the game’s most audacious coups when he landed Ron Barassi as captain-coach. The Blues then entered what would be arguably their greatest era.

These were glory days for Lane, who in November 1965 earned an on-the-record endorsement from Superintendent Gilbert Trainor after graduating as a policeman. Superintendent Trainor described Lane as a “sound, reliable type who applied himself diligently and obtained good results”.

Robert John LANE
When St Kilda and Hawthorn footballers play at Telstra Dome this afternoon wearing blue-and-white chequered armbands to denote their part in the Silk-Miller Cup, the annual match in honour of two murdered policemen, thoughts will turn to the 141 men and women of the Victoria Police who have died upholding the law, and to all the loved ones they have left behind.

Among the fallen is Detective Senior Constable Lane, today survived by his wife Valerie, daughters Dana and Chelsea, and grandson Charlie Robert.

Lane’s senseless murder on the morning of Friday, July 13, 1979, made front-page news, which resulted in the swift apprehension of the perpetrator. But what appears to have been lost in time is Lane’s standing as the only league footballer to have died representing the Victoria Police.

Robert John Lane was born at Kerang on December 12, 1946, one of five sons and five daughters reared by George and Jean Lane. The Lane siblings would be blessed with strong sporting genes, with Robert excelling in football and basketball and younger twin sisters Jeanette and Helen each captaining Victorian basketball teams.

Retired policeman Gomer Davies, who lives in Lalbert, near Swan Hill, said Lane was stationed in Carlton when he embarked on his league football career. “Carlton (Football Club) got Bob down at the time he joined the police force and he played a couple of games there,” Davies said.

Ian Collins, the former Carlton president, chief executive and premiership player, remembers well his brief moments playing alongside Lane in 1966.

“He was a handy, but not great, footballer and he seemed to be a fairly quiet type,” Collins said. “I remember that he used to turn up to training in his police uniform.

“He was solidly built, but not overly tall. He was a key-position player and I played with him in both of his games in 1966 — round 13 versus St Kilda at Princes Park and the following round against Fitzroy there.”

It’s just on 40 years since Lane took the field for the Blues. He was the first to carry No. 46 into a Carlton senior game. In his first game, Lane was named 19th man, with Jim Pleydell joining him on the pine, while Richard Vandenberg (a distant cousin of the current Hawthorn captain), made his senior debut that day starting in a forward pocket and exchanging roving duties with Adrian Gallagher.

Lane and the likes of fellow country recruits Ian Nankervis, a namesake of the former Geelong player who hailed from Mildura Imperials, and Gil Lockhart, from Mansfield, were turned over by Barassi during the 1966 season. According to Vandenberg, who is now a chartered accountant in Swan Hill, the die might have been cast for Lane with the arrival of the lanky Tasmanian ruckman Peter “Percy” Jones.

In April the following year, in 1967, Lane was cleared to Williamstown. Not long after, he opted to combine his policing duties with a stint as captain-coach of Lake Boga, just south of Swan Hill, in the then Mid-Murray Football League.

Then in 1973, Lane returned to the big smoke, renewing acquaintances with Davies at Russell Street. “He was a senior detective at that stage and he was also playing for ‘Willy’ at centre half-forward in the old Channel 0 days,” Davies said.

“Three years later, he returned to take on the job as captain-coach of Lalbert. He got Lalbert to a premiership in his first year, (in) 1976, when they beat Woorinen by a point.”

Davies said Lane eventually relinquished the coaching role at Lalbert to Chris Drum, the brother of former Fremantle coach Damian Drum. “Bob just wanted to continue as a player in 1979, but unfortunately he was killed that July.”

On that Friday morning, Lane made a routine trip across the border, to Kyalite, to question a man suspected of stealing a car. Tragically, the move would cost Lane his life, as the suspect turned a rifle on him and fired three times. Lane was 32.

Davies was then left with the terrible task of recovering his mate’s body from a roadside camp by the Wakool River.

“Bob went out to do a little job which would normally have taken him about half an hour,” Davies said. “He left Swan Hill station at half-past 10 in the morning and by half-past 11, he was dead. Val was waiting for him back at the station. One of their girls was not quite three at the time and the other girl was six or seven.”

Lane was laid to rest at the Swan Hill cemetery after a service attended by more than 1200 mourners.

Yesterday, during a graduation ceremony at the Victoria Police Academy in Glen Waverley, chief commissioner Christine Nixon presented the Victoria Police Star medal to Val in memory of her late husband. The medal, introduced last year, recognises members killed or seriously injured in the line of duty.

While Val Lane preferred not to be quoted for this article, she retains a fervour for the fortunes of the team that her late husband represented.

It has not been lost on the club, either, with chief executive Michael Malouf confirming this week that Carlton would work with Victoria Police and the Blue Ribbon Foundation to honour Lane’s memory.

Such endorsement is in keeping with those in the Mallee who remember Robert Lane as a champion, on and off the field.

Richard Vandenberg said: “A lot of former players who didn’t make it went on and contributed to local communities because of the league football brushwork on them. Bob was a great leader in bush football — hard but fair, and dedicated to the sides that he coached — and the country people with whom Bob spent most of his time always appreciated it.

“He was a popular fellow, a terrific policeman.”

Anthony De Bolfo

http://www.blueseum.org/tiki-read_article.php?articleId=16

 

Murder made his careerBrett BELLIS - Retired NSWPF Inspector - article from 2002

BRETT Bellis, who retired from Quakers Hill police after 41 years of service, is a walking encyclopaedia of major crimes in NSW and Victoria.

He rose to the rank of inspector and was involved in most of the major cases that made headlines from 1971 to 2011.

They included the murder of anti-drug campaigner Don MacKay in Griffith in 1978, the kidnap and murder of Renee Aitken, 5, in Narooma in 1986, and the arrests of Daniel Bernard Chapman for the killing of Detective Robert John Lane in 1980 and of Andrew Mark Norrie, who killed two men in 1986.

Mr Bellis said that among the worst cases was the killing of Michael Lewis and his wife.

He said the killer left their children, who were aged two and three, near their badly decomposed bodies and that they were there for several days until they were found.

Mr Bellis said he would never forget hearing one of them: “Mummy is turning green.” He said: “We got our man by tracking him to a special rifle that was lent to him.”

Mr Bellis, who is now a grandfather of one with another on the way, said he could never completely forget some of the other cases either.

“But retirement helps, because it allows me to spend more time travelling with my family and playing golf at Stonecutters Ridge,” he said.

Mr Bellis was one of about 100 retired police officers and their wives and husbands at Retired Police Day at Quakers Hills and Blacktown on the 150th anniversary celebrations of the NSW Police Force.

The officers received commemorative pins at Quakers Hill police station from Superintendent Gary Merryweather and at Blacktown Workers Club from Superintendent Mark Wright.

Police Commissioner Andrew Scipione said the day enabled citizens and the current crop of police to recognise and commend the work of former officers.

http://www.blacktownsun.com.au/story/314551/murder-made-his-career/


Robert John LANE 2 - VicPol - Murdered 13 July 1979 Robert John LANE 3 - VicPol - Murdered 13 July 1979

http://www.parliament.vic.gov.au/images/stories/historical_hansard/VicHansard_19791206_19791211.pdf


 


 


 

 

 

 

 




Graeme Sidney John PARKER

Graeme Sidney John PARKER 

( late of Hadspen, Tasmania )

Victoria Police Force

Regd. #   13625

Rank:  Sergeant

Stations?

ServiceFrom  ? ? ?  to  ? ? ? = ? years Service

Awards?

Born:  18 December 1940

Died on:  Friday  15 July 2016

Cause?

Age:  75

Funeral date:  Tuesday  19 July 2016 @ 11am

Funeral location:  Christ Church Anglican, 2 William St, Longford, Tasmania

Buried at?

 Memorial at?

 


[alert_yellow]GRAEME is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance[/alert_yellow]  *NEED MORE INFO

 

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FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

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PARKER Graeme Sidney John
Retired Victoria Police Sergeant, 13625.
18.12.1940 – 15.07.2016.
Loved son of George and Daphne.
Loved and loving husband of 57.5 years to Iris.
Brother to Gail, brother-In-law to Noel and uncle to Leonie, Adam and Stacey.
Father to Gregory (dec.), Kenneth, Suzanne and Glenn.
Father-in-law to Karen and Shelley.
Grandfather to Thomas, Sarah, Claire, Paul, Robbie, Penelope and Hudson.
Great grandfather to Florence and Henley.
A man’s man, a copper’s copper and a gentlemen’s gentleman. One of the world’s true gentlemen and a friend to all who knew him. You fought long and hard. Sleep peacefully.
A Funeral Service will be held at Christ Church Anglican Longford, Tasmania on TUESDAY (July 19, 2016) commencing at 11.00 a. m.
Lethborg Family Funerals
1300 789 906
Published in The Examiner on July 16, 2016
– See more at: http://tributes.examiner.com.au/obituaries/examiner-au/obituary.aspx?n=graeme-sidney-john-parker&pid=180678627&fhid=31996&eid=sp_ommatch&eid=sp_ommatch#sthash.0VSXBbpu.dpuf
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Robert John SMITH

Robert John SMITH

Victoria Police Force

Regd. #   ?

Rank?

Stations?, Boronia – death

ServiceFrom  ? ? ?  to  29 June 2013 = ? years Service

Awards?

Born:  28 September 1981

Died on:  Saturday  29 June 2013

Cause:  Suicide – Service Firearm to head at Boronia Police Station

after complaining about bullying & harassment at work

Age:  32

Funeral date?

Funeral location?

Buried at?

 Memorial at?

 

 [alert_red]ROBERT is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance[/alert_red]  * BUT SHOULD BE

 

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FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

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Robert John Smith (1981 – 2013)

 

Born 28/9/1981 – died 29/6/2013.


A sweet, decent and honourable man who achieved so much, had so much to be proud of and so much more to look forward to. Robert, you were a shining star, your life extinguished way too soon.

Our love and heartfelt sympathy to partner Sarah, mum Caroyn, dad Gary, sister Elisa, brother Perry, Granny Iris and Nana Dor.

Your death leaves a huge hole in our lives, you will be forever in our hearts – Linda, Niall and Damon.

Published in The Age on July 2, 2013
  • “Sleep forever peacefully”
  • Mel
    – Melinda Riches

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May you forever Rest In Peace.

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Fiancee of bullied police officer who took his own life sues the state

EXCLUSIVE: THE fiancee of a bullied police officer who shot himself with his service firearm is suing the state.

Sarah Fleming, 32, says that prior to his suicide, her fiance, Robert John Smith, was in “emotional turmoil” and had made a complaint of workplace bullying, harassment and other stressors.

Ms Fleming says Mr Smith’s decision to take his life was due to the negligence of the force, which was responsible for the training and action of its employees.

Mr Smith died of a gunshot wound to the head while on duty at the Boronia Police station on June 29, 2013.

In a writ filed in the County Court Ms Fleming claims unspecified damages for the injuries she suffered as a result of Mr Smith’s death.

Since 2000, five Victoria Police officers have died in the line of duty, but 16 more have died by their own hand.

Last October, a policewoman and mother of three, who had previously been on mental health leave and had reported her struggles to Victoria Police, turned her police-issued gun on herself while she was on duty at the Seaford Multi-Disciplinary Centre.

That suicide prompted Police Association boss Ron Iddles — who had previously criticised the force’s efforts to tackle bullying — to call for more to be done to improve welfare of police.

Mr Iddles called for early identification programs in police training programs and at the workplace and for more police to talk about problems and show their colleagues help is available.

The association declined to comment yesterday on what progress was being made or whether there needed to be, or had been, a review of the provision of weapons to officers who have lodged mental health claims.

Ms Fleming’s legal action comes as police and ambulance unions campaign to change how mental health claims are treated, and in the case of post-traumatic stress disorder claims, reverse the onus on emergency workers to prove their condition was caused by work, which can sometimes delay much-needed treatment for years.

Between July 2010 and June last year, WorkCover accepted 482 mental injury claims from Victoria Police (and rejected 500), including 241 resulting from harassment and bullying, 252 for work pressure, 167 sparked by traumatic events and 54 due to occupational violence.

And police were hit harder by bullying than stress and trauma, according to members’ claims in 2014-15.

A National Coronial Information System report on Intentional self-harm among emergency service personnel last year revealed that of the 62 police suicides in Australia between July 1, 2000, and December 2012, 25 shot themselves23 with their service-issued firearm.

A Victorian Coroners Prevention Unit report into suicide rates among workers in key professions last year found the annual suicide rate among Victoria police was 10 per 100,000.

Police spokeswoman Sophie Jennings said in the past year the force had improved its complaints handling and completely reformed the way it responds to conflict, claims of bullying and harassment.

DO YOU NEED HELP? If this article causes you distress or if you require more information, police employees can call Welfare Services confidentially 24 hours 7 days a week on 9247 3344, and other members of the community can call Lifeline 13 11 14 or Beyondblue 1300 224 636

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/victoria/fiancee-of-bullied-police-officer-who-took-his-own-life-sues-the-state/news-story/c1c4511877a9c84580d1d2c4ee787c6d

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Christopher Alexander John COE

 Christopher Alexander John COE  KPFSM

( Victoria Police FIRST recipient of the King’s Police Medal for gallantry )

Victoria Police Force

Regd. #   ?

Rank:  Constable

Stations?, Cheltenham, Motor Cycle Patrol Branch

ServiceFrom  ? ? ?  to  ? ? ? = ? years Service

After Policing – Christopher became a Private Investigator in Melbourne some time between 1934 – 1937

Awards:  King’s Police and Fire Services Medal  KPFSM – granted 1 January 1934 for Gallantry

Born?

Event Date:   25 November 1932

Event location:  Highett Railway Station, Victoria

Injuries received:  Shot twice.  Reportedly through the lung, arm and abdomen.

Outcome:  Recovered from injuries ( aged 30 ) In Hospital about 3 weeks.

Died on? “possibly”  3 January 1964 – late of 12 Peter St, Footscray – Furniture Dealer

Cause?

Age?

Funeral date?

Funeral location?

Buried at?

 Memorial at?


[alert_yellow]COE is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance[/alert_yellow]  *NEED MORE INFO

 

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FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal

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Weekly Times ( Melbourne )     Saturday  31 December 1932     p 4

HIGHETT AFFRAY

Story Told to Court

CHARGES arising out of the fatal shooting affray at the Highett railway station on November 25 were heard at Cheltenham Court on December 28. Harry Quong. a Chinese, was charged with having shot Constable Coe on November 25. with intent to kill him: with having broken into and entered the house of James Dickman in Highett Road, Highett. on the same date, and having stolen property valued at £50 ; and with having broken into and entered the house of Frederick Thornton, in Glen Iris Road. Camberwell, on November 7 and having stolen property valued at £125.

Sub-Inspector Brophy prosecuted, and Quong, who was undefended, asked no questions. He remained impassive throughout the hearing.

Forced Window Up

Norah Thompson, of Worthing Road. Highett, said that about 12.30 p.m. on November 25, she saw two men, one wearing an overcoat, go to Dickman’s house. After having knocked at the front and back doors, the men forced the front window up, and one man. wearing a dark suit, climbed through.

Mrs Thompson then went to a dairy in Highett Road, owned by Frederick Snelling, and told Snelling to ring the police.

Refusing a chair in the witness-box, Constable Christopher Alexander John Coe said that when he received the message he went to Claud Dunn’s garage in Point Nepean Road, Highett. Dunn drove him to the Highett station.

“When I arrived at the station,” said Coe. “I walked along the platform to where Quong and the other man, whose name is Moulynox, were sitting, and asked them to come to the office. I told them I had a revolver, and followed them in.

“Noticing that Quong had his right hand in his overcoat pocket, I said to him, ‘What have you got in your pocket?’ He said he had nothing, and I asked to let me see it, and moved closer. He walked back, and I grabbed his hand, trying to pull it out. “At this moment I heard Moulynox, who was behind me, say, Let him go or I will plug you.’

“Felt Stinging Pain”

“I realised that he had a gun and released Quong and turned to Moulynox. At this instant Moulynox fired, and I felt a stinging pain in my chest. I rushed at him and grabbed his right hand, thrusting the gun in the air. ‘While I was grappling at him three shots were fired from the direction of Quong. I felt a pain in my right hip and other pains. “I continued to wrestle with Moulynox, who seemed to be trying to force me to the door. We struggled through the door into the booking office.

“Moulynox was striking me on the head with the side of his gun but I managed to pull the gun down past my face. I fastened my teeth into his hand and he dropped the gun to the floor near my right hand.

“I had let my right hand go by this time, as it was weakening. “As he broke the grip of my left hand, I fired point blank at him with the nickelplated gun he had used before. He then struggled to his feet, and hung on to the ledge at the window. He called out and sank to the floor. At that time I was almost on my knees on the floor. “I took out the loaded automatic I brought from the police station and handed it to Dunn, telling him to cover Moulynox as he might have been shamming.

” I’m Finished “

Leopold Martin Hunt, stationmaster, told the Court that he had seen Moulynox shoot Coe once, and when Coe was grappling with Moulynox Quong fired three shots. Quong then dropped the gun and ran out of the office.

Hunt followed Quong but he had to attend to an incoming train. He saw Quong run out of the ticket gate and down the road.

A few minutes later Moulynox said. “You have no need to worry about me, I’m finished.”

When the detectives arrived Moulynox was dead.

The accused was committed for trial.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/224467091

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The Argus ( Melbourne )     Wednesday  22 February 1933     p 9

20 YEARS IN GAOL SENTENCES OF CHINESE.

FOR WOUNDING POLICEMAN. Shooting at Highett Station.

Describing his record of crime as “appalling. ” Mr. Justice Mann in the Criminal Court yesterday, sentenced Harry Quong, a Chinese, aged 44 years, of Mary street, Brunswick to terms of imprisonment totalling 20 years.

Quong was captured after a struggle in an office at Highett railway station on November 25, when Constable Coe though seriously wounded grappled with one of his two assailants and shot him dead. Quong, was charged with having shot Christopher Alexander John Coe with intent to murder him; alternatively, with having wounded Constable Coe with intent to do grievous bodily harm or with intent to resist lawful apprehension; and with having broken into the dwelling of James Duckman in Highett road, Highett, on November 25, and stolen jewellery and other articles.

The Crown case was that while being questioned about at the Highett railway station about a housebreaking, Quong and Arthur Herbert Moulynox of Victoria street Flemington, attacked Constable Coe. Moulynox shot him through the chest and it was alleged that Quong fired three shots.

In evidence yesterday Quong said that on November 25 he went to Highett with Moulynox, who said that he wished to see a Mr. Kelly who had some property for him. They reached a house which Moulynox said was Kelly’s place. Moulynox took a jemmy from a paper parcel and told Quong, to keep watch. Later Moulynox returned, and at the railway station gave him some jewellery to mind.

Then Constable Coe arrived and told them to go with him to the stationmaster’s office. Coe asked Quong, what he had in his pocket and when Quong replied “Nothing,” Coe tried to seize his hand. As Coe turned toward Moulynox a shot was fired. Coe seized Moulynox‘s arm and more shots were fired. Quong then ran away and hid in a drain until the police found him.

Cross examined by Mr. C. H. Book ( prosecutor for the Crown ), Quong, said that he had been in Australia for 40 years. He knew that Moulynox was housebreaking when he used the jemmy and that the jewellery had been stolen.

Constable Praised.

Summing up Mr. Justice Mann praised the way in which Constable Coe had given his evidence stating that he had not attempted to “colour” it against Quong, The defence suggested that all the shots had been fired by Moulynox but Coe said that shots came from the direction of Quong,

Coe was a truthful witness.

Quong was found not guilty of wounding with intent to murder but guilty of the alternative count of wounding with intent to do grievous bodily harm. He was also found guilty on the charge of housebreaking.

He admitted to previous convictions between 1911 and 1931 in New South Wales, Victoria, Western Australia and Tasmania. The terms of imprisonment imposed in respect of those convictions totalled more than 16 years.

Mr. Justice Mann sentenced Quong to imprisonment for five years on the charge of housebreaking. He said that Quong had been convicted of having shot a constable who was doing his duty. Quong had an appalling record of crime. It seemed right to inflict the maximum penalty of imprisonment for 15 years with hard labour on the count of shooting with intent to do grievous bodily harm, the two sentences to be cumulative.

Mr. Doyle ( instructed by Mr. F. O’Brien ) appeared for Quong.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/4526262

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The Argus ( Melbourne )     Thursday  23 February 1933     p 9

HARRY QUONG’S SENTENCE.

To Serve 15 Years.

Mr Justice Mann in the Criminal Court on Tuesday sentenced Harry Quong, a Chinese, aged 44 Years, of Mary Street, Brunswick, to five years imprisonment on a charge of having broken into the house of James Dickman, of Highett road, Highett, and to 15 years‘ imprisonment on a charge of having at Highett wounded Christopher Alexander John Coe, a constable of police, with intent to do grievous bodily harm. Mr. Justice Mann did not direct that the sentences should be concurrent, and under section 21 of the Goals Act 1928 it is provided that in such cases the sentences are cumulative. That meant that Quong would have to serve 20 years’ imprisonment. Yesterday, however, Mr. Justice Mann told Mr. C. H. Book, the Crown prosecutor, that the sentences would be concurrent. In ordinary circumstances, therefore, Quong will serve 15 years.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/4526458

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The Advertiser ( Adelaide )     Wednesday  26 April 1933     p 8

Constable Receives Gift For Bravery

MELBOURNE April 25.

In recognition of the bravery which he displayed during a shooting affray with thieves at the Highett railway station on November 26. Constable Christopher Coe of Cheltenham was presented with an inscribed rosewood clock by the Chief Commissioner of Police ( Major-General Blamey ), at the Russell street police station this morning.

The clock was the gift of Mr. H. L. Penfold Hyland, of South Australia, who gives a trophy each year for the most meritorious act by a member of the South Australian Police Force. He thought Constable Coe’s act so gallant that he decided to give a trophy in Victoria for last year.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/74005170

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Weekly Times ( Melbourne )     Saturday  6 January 1934     p 7

POLICE V.C.

Constable Christopher Coe, 31, has been awarded the King’s Medal for conspicuous bravery at Highett railway station on November 25. 1932.

Coe is the first Victorian policeman to receive the award, which is termed the police V.C.

The announcement was made in a cable received by the Lieutenant-Governor from the Secretary of State for the Dominions.

Coe was questioning the two men about a robbery in the district when one, a Chinese, attempted to get away. The constable grappled with him, and while they were struggling the other man shot Coe m the back. Coe turned on the gunman, and was hit by two more bullets. He wrested the pistol from his assailant and shot him dead. The constable then collapsed.

For many months Coe was in a serious condition in Alfred Hospital.

On his return to duty four months ago he was transferred to the motor cycle patrol branch.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/223200561

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The Argus ( Melbourne )     Thursday  10 May 1934      p 7

KING’S MEDAL FOR CONSTABLE COE

Award for Gallantry

400 Police Watch Presentation

In recognition of his bravery in an encounter with two desperate criminals at the Highett railway station in November, 1932, Constable Christopher Coe was presented yesterday by His Excellency the Lieutenant-Governor ( Sir William Irvine ) with the King’s Police Medal. The presentation was made at a special parade at the police depot St Kilda road. This was the first time that the medal which is the highest award for bravery and devotion to duty in the police force has been awarded in Victoria.

Constable Coe when summoned to Highett railway station, detained and questioned two men one a Chinese who had been seen breaking into a house. When Constable Coe grappled with the Chinese, who attempted to escape, the other man shot Coe from behind. Although severely wounded Coe closed with the second man, who knocked him down. The Chinese then shot Coe in the abdomen and the arm. As the second man attempted to pick up his revolver, Coe wrested it from him and shot him dead. Constable Coe then fell unconscious. The Chinese later was sentenced to a long term of imprisonment.

Four hundred constables and police recruits, mounted and foot, paraded at the depot for the ceremony. Escorted by Senior-constables D V Burns and W C Jackson, both of whom wore the police Valour Badge, Constable Coe marched forward from the ranks to have the decoration pinned to his breast by Sir William Irvine. ” I have read most carefully the official record of your act ” said Sir William Irvine, ” and I am convinced that in the annals of the police force in this or in any other country, there has been no act of more determined gallantry and courage. It is my privilege to complete the honour which His Majesty the King has thought fit to confer upon you”

Addressing the parade, Sir William Irvine said that on the eve of relinquishing the office of Lieutenant-Governor, he desired to convey to the police force his warm appreciation of its undoubted loyalty and courteous efficient service.

Later a physical culture display was held and musical items were given by the police band.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/10935254

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Truth ( Brisbane )     Sunday  6 July 1947     p 35

Christopher Alexander John Coe, of Lonsdale St, Melbourne, is mentioned as a ‘private investigator’.  Is confirmed as the same person as mentioned in this memorial.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/203237843?searchTerm=%22christopher%20alexander%20john%20coe%22&searchLimits=

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Mirror ( Perth, W.A. )     Saturday  10 April 1948     p 10

Masseuse Divorced

A Sydney divorce of interest is that of Amy Featherstone, who accompanied crippled Marjorie Lawrence as masseuse on her 1944 visit to the US..

Her husband, masseur Leslie McLean Featherstone, proved she’d misconducted herself with an unidentified man in a St. Kilda ( Melbourne ) flat last year. An AIF man, Featherstone was then stationed at Tidworth. There were 8 children of the marriage.

His evidence of misconduct was supported by Melbourne inquiry agent Christopher Coe, who was Victoria’s first policeman to win the King’s Medal for exemplary courage. He got it for disarming a Chinese housebreaker after being badly wounded.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/75771001

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Christopher Coe was Victorian State Manager of Tubular Steel Industries in the 1950’s.

I was then working for TSI – an Adelaide manufacturer of chrome tube furniture.

I was Marketing Manager and spent from Feb to November 1958 with Chris at their office and assembly plant in Footscray.  I cannot remember the name of the street but the office was behind the Coe home.

I think he may have retired in 1959 or 1960 – not too sure.

He was a character and we all enjoyed his company.

I was told by the Mng Director of TSI of Chris’s bravery in the incident at Highett so I know it is the same person about whom you enquire.

 

 

 

Tony Gwynn-Jones

47 Victoria Road

Clare SA 5453

0888423323

0429193611

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George HOWELL

 George HOWELL  KPFSM

( Howell is the second, Victorian Policeman, to be awarded the KPFSM )

Victoria Police Force

Regd. #  10323

Rank:  Constable

Stations?, East Malvern, Caulfield – death

ServiceFrom  ? May 1948 to  1 February 1952 = 3+ years Service

Awards:  Queen’s Police Medal, as mentioned in all of these articles, was NOT awarded to George but he WAS awarded ( posthumously ) the King’s Police & Fire Services MedalKPFSM – which was granted on 29 August 1952 for Gallantry.

Born? ? 1926

Died onFriday  1 February 1952 – 5.40am in Alfred Hospital

Cause:  Shot – Murdered

Event Date:   Wednesday  30 January 1952 about 10.35pm

Event Location:  Normandy Rd, Caulfield, Victoria

Age:  25

Funeral date:  Monday  4 February 1952 @ 2.30pm

Funeral location:  Ewing Memorial Presbyterian Church, East Malvern, Victoria

Buried at:  Cheltenham Memorial Park, Cheltenham, Bayside City, Victoria

Plot: Plot is CE (Church of England), Monumental, Section 337, Gave 024

 Memorial at?

George HOWELL

George HOWELL

 

GEORGE IS mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance


 

 

FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal


 

On the night of Wednesday 30 January 1952 Constable Howell rode his police bicycle to the Crystal Palace Theatre Dandenong Road Caulfield. He had been assigned to investigate and prevent the numerous thefts from cars which occurred in the vicinity.

About 10.35 p.m. Constable Howell intercepted a man tampering with a Morris Minor motor car. After a struggle the man ran off and the Constable ran after him. The offender then shot the Constable in the stomach with a sawn-off .22 calibre rifle. Although unarmed and mortally wounded the Constable continued to chase the gunman before collapsing in the centre of Normanby Road. The offender then escaped.

Although in shock and terrible pain and lapsing in and out of consciousness he was able to give a description of his assailant to bystanders who assisted him and to police who arrived shortly after. Crucially to the later trial he identified a hat and other items as belonging to the offender.

Rushed to the Alfred Hospital for emergency surgery Constable George Howell died in the early hours of 1 February 1952.

A skilful investigation primarily based on articles found at the crime scene and information from Constable Howell led to the arrest and subsequent conviction of a well known and active criminal.


 

The Argus      Friday  1 February 1952     p 1 & p 16

Constable’s condition is ‘very low’

THE condition of 26-year-old Constable George Howell, who was shot by a gunman at Caulfield on Wednesday night, is dangerously low.

 The bullet entered his stomach, travelled upward, and lodged in a back muscle.

Police believe they know the gunman who fired the bullet, and are confident they will ‘ pick him up” today or tomorrow.

They think he is hiding in an inner northern suburb.

Police last night detained a man for questioning but later allowed him to leave.

Doctors in Alfred Hospital began their fight for Constable Howells’ life soon after he was admitted at 11 o’clock, on Wednesday night.

They tried for three hours to extricate the bullet but by 3 a.m. his condition was so low that they abandoned their probing.

Nearly 50 of Victoria’s top detectives including the entire homicide and consorting squad backed by fingerprint experts, have worked around the clock in the hunt for the gunman.

Before he lapsed into unconsciousness at midnight on Wednesday, Constable Howell described his attacker as about 26 years, 5ft 8in, solid build, ruddy, round face, wearing a tweed overcoat over brown sports clothes.

Interviewed in hospital, Howell said “I had nearly caught him – he turned and fired straight at me – he was so close he just couldn’t miss.”

Constable Howell told homicide detectives he saw the man trying to enter several of the cars. When challenged, the man threw a leather satchel in his face. In a chase through the railway viaduct into Smith st, the man dropped a bunch of car keys, a screwdriver, a pair of tin snips, a torch, a small tin box, and “pork pie” black hat.

Police yesterday rounded up all known car thieves tor interview. They were still interviewing people late last night.

They also interviewed owners of cars which were parked outside the Crystal Palace Theatre, Caulfield, where Constable Howell surprised the gunman. The cars were thoroughly examined for fingerprints.

Police believe the man they are seeking has three convictions for car stealing, but is not a hardened criminal.

“A hardened criminal would not have pulled a gun on a policeman,” a detective said yesterday. “An experienced crook would know he could receive only a minor gaol sentence for attempted larceny and possession of a gun and house breaking implements.

“Shooting is a major charge which most criminals try to avoid.”

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/23160492


 

The Argus      Saturday  2 February 1952     p 17

HOWELL. — On February 1 at Alfred Hospital, George, dearly beloved son of Ernest and Nellie Howell, of 9 Lord Weaver grove, Bon Beach loved brother of William, Edith (deceased) Joyce ( Mrs. Lumley ) and Rob dear grandson of Mrs Feist of Brunswick and Mr. George Howell aged 25 years ( late Victoria Police Force ) loved by all

HOWELL. — On February 1

George. dearly loved friend of Marj. and Ced Lumley, Ripponlea. So dearly loved, so sadly missed.

HOWELL – Loving memories of our dear George, passed away February 1. Sadly missed. ( Lomax family ).

HOWELL. — On February 1 at Alfred Hospital. George, dearly loved fiancé of June.

Dearly loved, sadly missed.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/23160797


 

The Argus      Saturday  2 February 1952

POLICE DRAW DRAGNET TIGHTER ROUND KILLER OF CONSTABLE

The hunt for the man who shot dead Constable George Howell at Caulfield is getting hot. Police have gathered much valuable information which may lead to his arrest.
Scores of armed police, working in twos and threes, made a series of surprise raids last night on suburban haunts and homes of known car thieves.

After a courageous fight for life, Constable Howell died in Alfred Hospital yesterday from the bullet wound he received in the stomach while chasing a car thief on Wednesday night.

Detectives have a fairly accurate description of the killer, and have narrowed the hunt down to the metropolitan area.
The man they are seeking is thought to have been responsible for about nine thefts from parked cars outside the Crystal Palace Theatre since mid-December.
The man was in the act of robbing another car near the theatre, after unlocking it, with a duplicate key, when he was challenged by Constable Howell.
He was fast seen running along Normanby Rd., Caulfield, near the railway viaduct where the shooting occurred.
The man has an unusually large head. The hat he dropped while being chased is size 7 1/4.
The hat is one of the best clues in police hands. It is a black “Continental” type “pork-pie” model, several years out of fashion.
The hat has an unusually narrow brim, and a wide black band of a type not seen on modern hats. The bow on the band is ripped, and hanging loosely.
Police also have a set of car thieves’ tools dropped by the gunman. These tools have been examined by scientific experts.
Fingerprints have been obtained from cars which had been parked outside the theatre on the night of the shooting, and police have contacted several people who saw the killer running away from the viaduct.
After Constable Howell died at 5.40 a.m. yesterday, doctors extracted from his back the bullet which had fatally wounded him. The bullet was of .22 calibre.

Police originally thought the gun used was of a heavy calibre. Now it is thought to have been a sawed off pea-rifle.
Neither the gun nor the shellcase of the spent bullet has yet been found.

The wanted man’s description is: About 26 years, 5ft., solid build, round face, ruddy complexion, large head; wearing Donegal brown tweed coat over sports clothes.

Interstate police as well as all Victorian police, are watching for a man of this description.

Homicide squad chiefs in Melbourne said last night they had already had valuable aid from the public in their hunt and would appreciate still more help.

The killer dropped, with his hat on Wednesday night, a leather satchel containing a screwdriver, a pair of tin snips for cutting leads to car radios, a broken silver brandy flask with a round hinged top and 13 labeled car keys on a ring.

D24, police radio control, yesterday broadcast a detailed description of the keys to all Victorian police stations. A check will be made on garages and spare parts stores which sell such keys.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/23160735

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/23160735/17


 

The Argus     Monday  4 February 1952     p 1 & p 18

Belief killer was migrant

THE hunt for the killer of Constable George Howell took a new turn at the weekend, when detectives began questioning European migrants.

Many senior detectives are convinced that Constable Howell’s murderer was a foreigner.

They base their beliefs on the fact that the killer wore a black, Continental type hat, and carried an unusual type of flask.

They are also puzzled that a car thief should carry a satchel.

Some detectives admitted yesterday they had no real clue to the identity of the murderer.

Fingerprints taken from cars parked outside the Crystal Palace Theatre, Caulfield, where Howell was shot, have not proved useful, they added.

None of the 350,000 sets of “prints” of Victorian people has been linked with the killer.

The homicide squad last night appealed for the driver of a grey Holden car, who was one of the first at the scene of the shooting, to call on them.

They believed that the driver of this car drove to the Crystal Palace Theatre and telephoned police from there.

Detectives believe they are dealing with an experienced car thief. It was unusual that he had not even one conviction against his name.

One detective said yesterday. “A European, however, could be quite an expert in this line, yet we would never know about him.

“The killer sounds like a European. He is reasonably short, solidly built, and has a round face.

“The fact that he carries an unusual brandy flask is a good clue.”

A hat expert told detectives on Saturday that the hat of the type left behind by Howell’s killer had not been sold in Melbourne for 10 years.

It was similar to a type which could be bought in London or in European countries, he added.

Detectives are certain the killer was an expert car thief because his equipment was so comprehensive.

State Cabinet tomorrow will consider whether to offer a reward for the apprehension of the killer of Constable Howell.

Constable Howell will be buried at the New Cheltenham Cemetery with full police honors this afternoon.

A service will be conducted at 2.30 at the Ewing Memorial Presbyterian

 

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/23160995


 

The Argus     Tuesday  5 February 1952     p 1

Police think killer not alone

DETECTIVES believe that an accomplice was keeping watch while the man who killed Constable George Howell tried to break into cars outside the Crystal Palace Theatre at Caulfield.

Those who have been hunting for the gunman since the fatal shooting at Caulfield on Wednesday night were investigating this theory last night.

Inspector H. R. Donnelly, in charge of the investigations, said last night: “Car thieves invariably work in pairs. Records prove that they seldom operate alone.”

Police think the accomplice could have been sitting in a car near the theatre, and could have driven the killer away.

The fact that the murderer vanished seconds after the shooting” suggests that he might have fled in a car, detectives say.

They appealed last night to anyone who saw a man sitting in a parked car or acting suspiciously near the theatre to call on them.

The driver of a grey Holden car who was one of the first to reach the dying constable called at Russell st. headquarters yesterday.

He could not add to the description of the killer.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/23161172

 

 


 

The Age      5 February 1952

TRIBUTE PAID TO POLICE CONSTABLE

Six thousand people, many of them aged and in tears, yesterday attended the funeral of Constable George Howell, aged 26, who was fatally wounded by a man he was chasing at Caulfield on Wednesday last.
Long before the service commenced, Ewing Memorial Presbyterian Church, East Malvern, was packed.
Thousands, including 500 uniform and plains-clothes comrades, waited in Burke road and surrounding streets.
Parked cars stretched for hundreds of yards.
In his funeral oration, Rev. C. T. F. Goy, who was a close friend of Constable Howell, said he was sure everyone shared his mixed feelings of shock, sorrow and righteous anger at the deed which had caused George Howell’s death.
He added: “We are apt to take our police force for granted until something like this happens.
“Without that police force, there would be chaos and lawlessness leading to anarchy.
“The police are the guardians of our civil security. In their duty they take grave risks; even make the supreme sacrifice.
“We honor the name of this young man who made the supreme sacrifice in the pursuing of his duty. He has set a splendid example to others.”

As it moved away from the church, the cortege was headed by mounted police and the police band, which played the Dead March.
At one stage, the procession was more than a mile long.

Burial was at Chelterham Cemetery.


 

The Argus ( Melbourne )     Tuesday  5 February 1952     p 5

5,000 at funeral

Constable George Howell, who was murdered on duty, was yesterday given one of the biggest funerals ever held in Victoria.

Crowds lined the roads for seven miles as the cortege moved from Ewing Memorial Presbyterian Church, East Malvern, to New Cheltenham Cemetery.

Four hundred packed into the church for the service, and 5,000 others waited outside.

Constable Howell had planned to be married in the church this month to Miss June Lomax, of Windsor.

“Died nobly”

The procession to the cemetery was over a mile long.

The Rev. C. T. F. Goy, minister of the Ewing Memorial Church, said during the service: “It is an event like this that makes us realise how much we owe to the Police Force, a service we usually take for granted.

“Constable Howell died in the noblest traditions of that service.”

Homicide detectives said last night that they were not overlooking the possibility that the man who shot Constable Howell may have had an accomplice.

They appealed to any person who saw a “suspicious character” hurriedly leave the scene of the shooting on Wednesday night about 10.35 to contact them immediately.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/23161268


 

The Canberra Times      Tuesday  5 February 1952     p 6

Constable Howell’s Fiancée Collapses

MELBOURNE, Monday.

A crowd of 400 people attended the funeral today of Constable George Howell, 26, who was fatally shot by a gunman at Caulfield on Wednesday night.

Miss June Lomax, Howell’s fiancée, collapsed during the service at Ewing Memorial Church, Malvern.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/2847920


 

Daily Advertiser ( Wagga Wagga, NSW )     Wednesday  13 February 1952     p 5

MAN REMANDED IN CONSTABLE HOWELL CASE

MELBOURNE, Tues.: In the City Court today William John O’Mealey, 28, laborer, was remanded until February 21 on a charge of murdering Constable George Howell. 25, at Caulfield, on January 30. Bail was refused.

Detective Sergeant Tremewen said Constable Howell disturbed a man interfering with cars near the Crystal Palace Theatre, Caulfield.

Constable Howell chased the man, but fell with a bullet wound in the stomach.

O’Mealey declared he was innocent.

‘During the whole of my interrogation by police I have maintained my Innocence, and still do so,’ he said.

‘I hope to prove my Innocence at the trial. I wish the public to know this.

‘Five witnesses have stated that I am not the man concerned. I believe they are eye-witnesses.’

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/145629429


 

Examiner  ( Launceston, Tasmania )     Wednesday  13 February 1952     p 4

 Accused Of Killing Constable MELBOURNE. — Thirteen days after Constable George Howell (25) was fatally shot, William John O’Meally (28), labourer, appeared in the City Court yesterday charged with his murder.
O’Meally, dressed in a light brown suit, with a white shirt and yellow tie, was refused bail and remanded to February 21.
Detective Sergeant William Charles Tremewen of the Homicide Squad told the court that at 11.30 p.m. on January 30, Constable Howell was on duty near the Crystal Palace Theatre, Caulfield and disturbed a man interfering with cars. The man ran away and Howell chased him. It was alleged that after a short distance Howell fell with a bullet wound in the stomach. He died in the Alfred Hospital on February 1.
O’Meally said, “I would like to say a few words. During the whole of my interrogation by police, I have maintained my innocence and still do.”
The charge against O’Meally is the sequel to exhaustive enquiries by police during which more than 500 people were questioned.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/52847522


 

The Argus     Friday  28 March 1952     p 5

CONSTABLE HOWELL LEFT ESTATE WORTH £1,154

The Public Trustee yesterday applied for letters of administration of the £1,154 estate of Constable George Howell, shot dead while on duty at Caulfield on February 1.

The application was made on behalf of Constable Howell’s father. Mr. E. C. F. Howell, who with Howell’s mother is next of kin entitled to share in the estate.

Constable Howell divorced his wife last year and had no children.

His estate consists entirely of personalty.

Probate duty and legal expenses are not expected to exceed £70.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/23171272

 


 

Warwick Daily News ( Qld )     Monday  5 May 1952     p 1

Queen’s Medal for Murdered Constable

Melbourne – Constable George Howell (26) , who was fatally shot while chasing a suspected car thief near the Crystal Palace Theatre, on January 30, has been posthumously awarded the Queen’s Police Medal for bravery.

The award was announced by the Chief Commissioner of Police ( Mr. Duncan ), who asked the Government several months ago to make a recommendation to Buckingham Palace.

Approval by the Queen has been published in the London Gazette.

William John O’Meally was sentenced to death in May on a charge of having murdered Howell. He is expected to appeal to the High Court.

Police said that the medal had not yet arrived here.

For Parents

It will probably be given to Constable Howell’s parents at the next State investiture.

Mr. Duncan said that he would write to Howell’s parents about the award.

“Nothing can bring back Constable Howell’s valued life,” he said; “but it is gratifying to know that the Queen has graciously recognised his extraordinary bravery. ”

“His conduct was a fine example of devotion to duty, and will always be an inspiration to every member of the Victorian police.”

Constable Howell’s award ranks with the King’s Police Medal, which former Detective Chris Coe won for bravery at Highett in 1932.

O’Meally Appeal

The grounds of O’Meally‘s appeal are being prepared by his counsel ( Mr. M. Ashkanashy, Q.C. ), and Mr. J. F, Maloney and the Public Solicitor’s office, acting as his legal advisers.

The High Court is scheduled to begin its Melbourne sittings on September 30.

The appeal to the High Court is directed against the judgment of the State Full Court in rejecting O’Meally‘s appeal that the conviction be quashed and a fresh trial ordered.

A great deal of preparation for the High Court hearing has been made already.

This includes the combination of 12 bound appeal books containing a record of the ten day’s proceedings before the Criminal Court which convicted O’Meally.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/61217563


 

 

Warwick Daily News     Monday  5 May 1952     p 1

To Face Trial For Murder of Constable

MELBOURNE: William O’Meally , (28), of Bonbeach, would stand trial at the Criminal Court, next Monday on a charge of having murdered Police Constable George Howell at Caulfield early this year, a Crown Law official said, last night.

The trial judge was expected to be Mr. Justice Coppel.  The Solicitor-General ( Mr. H. A. Winneke, Q.C. ) would be the Crown Prosecutor, and his assistant would be Mr. F. R. Nelson; The defence counsel would be Mr. J. Maloney.

The Crown law official said that about 50 Crown witnesses would be called during the trial, which would be one of Victoria’s longest for 10 years,

O’Meally is being held in the remand section of Pentridge gaol awaiting trial.

Constable Howell died on February 1 in Prince Alfred Hospital after being shot in the stomach outside the Crystal Palace picture theatre at Caulfield on January 30.

The coroner ( Mr. J. Burke, S.M. ) committed O’Meally for trial several weeks ago.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/190450620


 

The Argus ( Melbourne )     Wednesday  6 February 1952     p 1

SHOOTING OF CONSTABLE

Arrest today likely

Homicide detectives expect to end the hunt today for the killer of Constable George Howell.

Late last night they had been questioning a man for l6 hours.

The man, a 30 year-old Australian laborer, was detained early yesterday at a seaside house.

Detectives got one of their most valuable leads in the case early yesterday when a man identified the hat found at the scene of the shooting as one recently stolen from his house.

He was taken to a house in a southern suburb where he identified property stolen with the hat.

In line-up

The suspect was placed in an identification lineup at Russell st. last night.

Two women and a man alleged to have been near the murder scene attended the lineup.

State Cabinet last night decided against offering a reward for information leading to the arrest of Constable Howell’s killer.

Mr. Dodgshun, Chief Secretary, said Cabinet was satisfied it would be contrary to the public interest to offer a reward at this stage.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/23161368

 


 

 

The Argus ( Melbourne )     Wednesday  13 February 1952     p 3

HOWELL MURDER CHARGE LAID

A MAN charged in the City Court yesterday with having murdered Constable George Howell at Caulfield on January 30, declared from the dock that he was innocent.

“During the whole of my interrogation by police I have maintained my innocence, and I still do,” said William John O’Meally, 28, laborer, of Bonbeach.

“I am innocent of any such crime, and hope to prove such innocence at the trial. I wish the public to know this.”

Only six policemen and two pressmen were in the court during the 10-minute special sitting.

Folded arms

O’Meally folded his arms across his chest as the charge was read. He was remanded to February 21. Bail was refused.

Detective-sergeant W. Tremewen said that while on duty at the Crystal Palace Theatre, Caulfield, Constable

Howell disturbed a man interfering with cars outside the theatre.

He chased the man, and later fell with a gunshot wound in his stomach. He died in the Alfred Hospital on February 1.

 

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/23162678


 

The Argus ( Melbourne )     Wednesday  20 February 1952     p 12

RACV appeal for constable

The Royal Automobile Club yesterday appealed to its 120,000 members to support the fund for a memorial to Constable George Howell, who was fatally shot on January 30.

The club started the appeal with £50.

Members should send donations to the secretary, R.A.C.V., 94 Queen st., city.

The money will be sent on to the secretary of the Police Provident Fund.

 

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/23164013


 

 

The Age ( Melbourne )     Thursday  11 September 1952     p 4

Queen’s Medal for Constable Howell

Constable George Howell, the young policeman who was murdered at Caulfield in January while pursuing a suspected thief has been posthumously awarded the Queen’s Police Medal for bravery.

This is the first time a Queen’s Medal has been awarded a member of the Victorian police, and the second occasion in which a similar award has been made. Howell, aged 26, was fatally shot at point-blank range near the Crystal Palace picture theatre at Caulfield on January 31 by a man whom he had suspected of interfering with parked cars. A 28-year-old laborer, William John O’Meally, was sentenced to death in May for Howell’s murder, but has intimated that he will appeal in the High Court. An appeal by O’Meally heard by the Court of Criminal Appeal in July was dismissed. The Commissioner of Police ( Mr, A. M. Duncan ) announced the award yesterday in a special circular issued to all police stations and broadcast to patrol cars. The citation states that

the award was made ” for conspicuous gallantry in attempting the arrest of a criminal. ” Mr. Duncan said that the medal would most likely be presented to Howell’s parents at the next State investiture. He said that the Queen’s approval had been published in the London “Gazette.” He had requested the State Government several months ago to forward a recommendation to Buckingham Palace.

The only other occasion on which a similar award was made took place in 1934 when former Detective Chris Coe in May, the same year, was given the King’s Medal ( Police and Firemen-Bravery Division ) for arresting two gunmen at the Highett railway station. Coe was seriously wounded.

Constable Howell joined the force in May, 1948, and spent most of his service at the East Malvern station.

 

 

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/205419814


 

The Argus ( Melbourne )     Friday  12 December 1952     p 7

The. Governer, Sir Dallas Brooks, yesterday presented 65 awards, one posthumous, at an investiture at Government House.

Mr. Ernest Howell, father of the late Constable George Howell, was overcome with emotion when he received a posthumous award for his son’s heroism at Government House yesterday.

The citation said that Constable Howell died In the course of duty while attempting to arrest a criminal.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/23212733


 

The Argus ( Melbourne )     Monday  9 February 1953     p 2

 The O’Meally storey, No. 2

 

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/23226682?searchTerm=%22george%20howell%22,%20%22constable%20howell%22%20%22kings%22&searchLimits=l-decade=195|||sortby=dateAsc


 

The Argus ( Melbourne )     Tuesday  10 February 1953     p 2

 The O’Meally storey, Part 3

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/23226853?searchTerm=%22the%20omeally%20story%22&searchLimits=l-decade=195|||sortby=dateAsc


 

The Argus ( Melbourne )     Tuesday  10 February 1953     p 2

 The story of a social rebel

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/23226877?searchTerm=%22the%20omeally%20story%22&searchLimits=l-decade=195|||sortby=dateAsc


 

The Argus ( Melbourne )     Wednesday  11 February 1953     p 2

 Concluding the O’Meally storey

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/23227070


 

Barrier Miner ( Broken Hill, NSW )    Saturday  14 February 1953     P 1

No Appeal for O’Meally

Melbourne. — Insufficient money will stop William John O’Meally appealing to the Privy Council, his wife ( Mrs. Lois O’Meally ), said today.

She said there was now no chance of raising the money to finance the appeal. But O’Meally still wanted to appeal and would probably continue to try to get the money.

O’Meally was sentenced to death, for the murder of Constable George Howell. An appeal to the Governor failed, but later the sentence was commuted to life imprisonment without remissions.

The Cabinet decided that it would not pay the cost of a Privy Council appeal.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/49253589


 

Mirror ( Perth, W.A. )     Saturday  25 September 1954     p 13

Pentridge – where hate smoulders

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/75795439?searchTerm=%22george%20howell%22,%20%22constable%20howell%22%20%22kings%22&searchLimits=l-decade=195|||sortby=dateAsc


 

 

 




Shane William HILLAS

 Shane William HILLAS

Victoria Police Force

Regd. #  ?

Rank?

Stations?

ServiceFrom  ? ? ?  to  ? ? ? = ? years of Service

Awards? – No find on It’s An Honour

Born?

Died on:  Thursday  19 May 2016 at Ballarat, Vic.

Cause?

Age:  55

Funeral date:  Friday  27 May 2016 @ 1pm

Funeral location:  Mount Clear Church of Christ, 1185 Geelong Road, Mount Clear

Buried at:  Cremated

 Memorial at?

 

 

SHANE is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance  *NEED MORE INFO

 


 

FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal


HILLAS,  Shane William (Late Victoria Police)
Taken from us unexpectedly at Ballarat on May 19, 2016 aged 55 years.
Cherished and adored father of Matthew, Damian, Benjamin, Keele, Jack and Olivia.
Loved and precious ‘Blood’ to Megan.
Treasured son of Bill (dec) and Marie.
Loved big brother of Karen and Peter, Donna and Chris and Uncle ‘Grumpy’ to Mitchell, Michaela, Mackenzie, Georgia and Emma.
Our heart aches with sadness. Our secret tears flow for what it means to lose you. No one will ever know.
Funeral details will appear in a later edition of the Courier.

Published in The Courier on May 23, 2016

http://tributes.thecourier.com.au/obituaries/thecourier-au/obituary.aspx?n=shane-william-hillas&pid=180074337&fhid=8024&eid=sp_ommatch&eid=sp_ommatch




Mark Alexander WYLIE

Mark Alexander WYLIE   VA

Victoria Police Force

Regd. # ?

Rank:  Detective Senior Sergeant – retired

Stations?, Armed Robbery Squad

ServiceFrom  to  ?

Awards:  National Medal – granted 7 September 1990

No find on It’s An Honour in relation to his VA

Born?

Died on:  Monday  14 July 2014

Cause:  Suicide

Age:  61

Funeral date:  Tuesday  22 July 2014 @ 2pm

Funeral location:  Chapel of the Victoria Police Academy, View Mount Rd, Glen Waverley

Buried at:  Macedon Cemetery, Bent St, Macedon

 Memorial at?

 

 [alert_red]MARK is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance[/alert_red]  * BUT SHOULD BE

 

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 Funeral location ?

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FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal

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WYLIE, Mark Alexander

WYLIE. A Funeral Service celebrating the life of Detective Senior Sergeant (Ret. ) Mark Wylie will be held in the Chapel of the Victoria Police Academy, View Mount Rd, Glen Waverley on TUESDAY (July 22, 2014) commencing at 2 p. m. Mark’s Burial will be held in the Macedon Cemetery, Bent St, Macedon on WEDNESDAY (July 23) at 10.30 a. m. POLICE HONOURS In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation to beyondblue in memory of Mark. Envelopes at the Service.
Funerals
Published in Herald Sun on 18/07/2014

http://tributes.heraldsun.com.au/notice/56462057/view#sthash.fEoCgqrH.dpuf

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This is how his daughter Fiona would like everyone to remember him.

Broken pieces.
The warrior still fights on.
Travelling into the cosmos at lightning speed.
The universe will cuddle you.
Deep. Transcendental.
Unrelenting in the pursuit to eradicate the pain.
Your heart is glowing.
Surrounded by radiant beacons to heal the open wounds that still remain.
Singing along with Barry White.
The eclectic superstar dancing into the light.
Transformative. Pure essence. You are unfolding at a rapid pace.
I pray to God that you find a majestic and beautiful place.

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Russell Street Bombing claims last victim

Date 

John Silvester

It is surprisingly easy to break into a hospital, even one filled with cops.

Detective Sergeant Mark Wylie was recovering after he was badly wounded in a gun battle with a suspect in the 1985 Russell Street bombing that killed policewoman Angela Taylor and wounded another 21 people.

Shot through the chest, Wylie nearly died at the scene and again on the operating table, but his elite fitness and stubbornness helped him defy the odds.

Detective Sergeant Mark Wylie (inset) was shot in 1986 during a police operation targeting a man suspected of being involved in the Russell Street bombing. Photo: Ian Riley Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/victoria/russell-street-bombing-claims-last-victim-20140718-3c6k4.html#ixzz48q7l4Hkd Follow us: @theage on Twitter | theageAustralia on Facebook
Detective Sergeant Mark Wylie (inset) was shot in 1986 during a police operation targeting a man suspected of being involved in the Russell Street bombing. Photo: Ian Riley

He was sent to the old St Kilda Road Police Hospital to recuperate and his visitors were suppose to be vetted. So the thought of a couple of stray reporters wandering in was out of the question.

So we took the back door. There were allegations that we ( police reporter Jim Tennison and myself ) wore doctors’ coats and borrowed stethoscopes to gain access, but that would be unethical, outrageous and possibly true.

I had a standing joke with the good-looking and perpetually tanned Wylie, suggesting he had a ray lamp in his office, a sunroof in his police car and spent his leave playing French cricket on a Bahamas beach.

With Wylie out for therapy we ”decorated” his room with tropical fruits and summer props so it looked like a set out of Gilligan’s Island. Wylie returned and immediately got the joke. In between profanities he laughed so much he claimed his stitches were about to burst.

We weren’t the only illegal visitors. One evening Melbourne identity Mick Gatto, whose two-up school had been raided by Wylie, turned up to pay his respects.

The patient thanked him before suggesting he should probably leave. As he turned, Gatto asked what food he missed and the policeman mentioned an occasional craving for a Chinese feed.

( Wylie always enjoyed ethnic food. In recovery his surgeon asked him what he had for dinner the night before the dawn raid. When told it was a Sri Lankan curry, the doctor said, ”That explains it”, before revealing they had removed a seemingly endless number of sesame seeds with tweezers from the patient’s perforated bowel. )

The night after the Gatto visit a taxi turned up with enough food from the Flower Drum to feed the entire ward plus some strays from Prince Henry’s Hospital next door.

It was Anzac Day 1986 when Wylie, who was to lead the raid to arrest bomb suspect Peter Reed in his Kallista home, woke with a sense of dread. The raiding party had not worked together and it was way too late for rehearsals. They had three ballistic vests between 10 and while Wylie was trained to use a shotgun, he had not fired the type assigned for this job.

He familiarised himself by pumping it three times in the Nunawading police station car park at 3am as the team met inside.

As Wylie was to be one of the last through the door he didn’t wear a vest, but as the team fanned through the house, he was the first to see Reed, crouching in a bedroom. ”He’s on his haunches … and he’s pointing a .45 revolver straight at me.

Reed fired two shots and Wylie returned fire with two rounds until his shotgun jammed.

He fired off his third and fourth, and basically I walked into the fourth and it went straight through me … It was bang bang, it was like cracker night, it was just on for young and old. There was lead flying everywhere,” Wylie told ABC documentary Trigger Point, which aired earlier this year.

I knew that I’d been shot. You know, unless you’ve been shot, it’s hard to describe. It’s just a weird, weird feeling.”

Reed, who was also shot and survived, was later acquitted of the Russell Street bombing but convicted of the attempted murder of a policeman.

As the wounded Wylie lay down he started to lose consciousness. ”What I sense is that death, even in violent circumstances, is an extremely peaceful event. A couple of times I was pegging down; I was getting almost peaceful, surreal, elevated. You just drift, you drift peacefully, even in violent circumstances as a result of a gunshot wound; you drift into the big sleep.”

As he drifted he felt another policeman removing his wallet from his back pocket. ”I asked him what he was doing and he said, ‘If you die we will have to put some money on the bar, so it may as well be yours’.” It was that dose of police black humour that brought him back to reality and made him fight to stay awake.

It took months for Wylie to recover physically, but there were deeper scars time couldn’t heal. Sometimes after a few drinks with him you could feel its presence – an invisible cloud that would descend without warning.

While on sick leave he started tertiary studies and when he returned to the armed robbery squad he found there was something missing.

Wylie was always a 100 per cent character: intense, intelligent, meticulous and self-aware. He knew the shooting had changed him and after another armed raid decided he had to leave the squad.

The psychological stuff just hangs all over you; it’s like an ivy; just crawls all over your body. You just cannot beat it sometimes; it just knocks the daylights out of you. It’s awful.”

He was presented with the prestigious Valour Award and promoted, but he had lost his passion for policing and quit.

For a while he withdrew from old copper mates, perhaps seeing them as a reminder of the morning he nearly died. ”I basically wanted to be on my own so I could nut through the challenge that I had before me.”

He found many of the skills he had developed in the police force were in short supply in private enterprise and became a risk management expert, working in Australia, Asia, Africa and Europe.

We kept in touch and he would ring from time to time from Dubai or Hong Kong for a gossip and a laugh. When I was asked to assist in the Trigger Point documentary on police shootings, I wanted Wylie to tell his story. He instantly agreed.

As we sat in a small Carlton motel room ready to film, the soundman wanted the air-conditioner turned off to avoid the distracting hum. Wylie baulked, saying he would sweat buckets if the room was not cold. I thought the stress would be too much, but once the camera rolled Wylie told his story from beginning to end without a break.

Even though it had been nearly 30 years he remembered every detail as if it was yesterday. Which was hardly surprising, as virtually every day he would think about how he ran into that darkened house without a ballistic vest, carrying a shotgun he wasn’t trained to use, and how the bullet ripped through him before ending trapped in his parka lining.

We spoke to many police involved in shootings and Wylie was perhaps the keenest to have his story told.

Sometimes people say things publicly they can’t bear to say in private. He watched the episode with one of his sons, who held his hand as the story was told. It was a simple act of love which seemed to say, ”Now I understand”.

When he went to bed his son put on his father’s favourite music and just lay with him in silence. As Wylie told me that story his voice cracked with a father’s sense of pride.

Old mates contacted him after the show. Bridges that hadn’t been burnt but had fallen into disrepair were rebuilt.

In the aftermath he decided to use his terrible experience to help another generation of police and wanted to work as a mentor at the Police Academy and with the Police Association.

The last time we spoke he said, ”You don’t know what this means to me. I love you. You’ve saved my life.” And he wanted a long lunch with the police who told their stories on Trigger Point.

At the end of last week he had a chat with an old armed robbery squad mate. ”He seemed in a good place.”

Mark Wylie, 61, took his own life last weekend, leaving a wife, three sons, a daughter from a previous marriage and a thousand questions.

He never recovered from the shooting. He is another victim of the Russell Street bombing as far as I’m concerned,” a former colleague said.

Chief Commissioner Ken Lay knew Wylie struggled with his demons. ”He was a good man and a much loved police officer.”

There are many critics of the old-style crime squad mentality, but no one can doubt that ingrained sense of loyalty. They backed each other up in armed raids and now back each other up in retirement. They were there for him, but for Wylie it wasn’t enough.  On Tuesday they will be there for his funeral.

http://www.theage.com.au/victoria/russell-street-bombing-claims-last-victim-20140718-3c6k4.html

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Our condolences on the passing of Mark Wylie

by Charlie Walker

The Moonee Valley Cricket Club joins with the Moonee Valley Football Club in passing on our condolences to the Wylie family on the passing of Mark.

Mark and Louise’s three sons, Daniel, Nick and Sam played a combined 60 games of junior cricket at Moonee Valley.

Mark was a regular at the junior cricket games, particularly the Friday night home matches when there was an opportunity to relax at the end of the week with other parents.

Our Club is saddened by his passing.

Below is a tribute written for the Football Club by our MVCC Fourths captain Brett Curran – a close friend of Mark.

*************************************************

Moonee Valley Football Club is sad to announce the passing of Mark Wylie who died on Monday 14 July 2014.

Mark had a long association with the Football Club.

Over the last decade Mark was fixture at junior matches watching his sons Sam, Nick and Daniel play for our juniors.

His wife Louise and he have been stalwarts of the junior club with Louise pioneering a professional approach to our junior training volunteers.

Mark was renowned for his sharp mind, good humour and company. Mark held a number of senior executive positions in various organisations and was an expert in security systems.

Earlier Mark had an extensive and successful career with Victoria Police and was the recipient of the Valour Award, the highest award for bravery.

We pass on our deepest sympathies to Louise, Sam, Nick and Daniel.

http://www.mooneevalleycricket.com.au/article/our-condolences-on-the-passing-of-mark-wylie

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Hate was the motive. Innocence was the victim

Author: JOHN SILVESTER
Date: 19/03/2011
Words: 1353
Source: AGE
Publication: The Age
Section: News
Page: 28
SOMETIMES life and death can be decided by something as simple as the toss of a coin.Twenty-five years ago, a young policewoman named Angela Taylor was working in the watchhouse at Russell Street when she lost the toss over who would do the staff lunch run.

It was March 27, the Thursday before Easter, and the last day before she would go on leave.

Just on 1pm she was crossing the road as she headed down Russell Street to the northern door of the police canteen.

She was only a metre away when a car bomb, containing around 60 sticks of gelignite, exploded at 47 seconds past 1pm. She was caught in the fireball, suffered horrendous injuries and died 24 days later.

While Melbourne was shocked, those who made the bomb were disappointed with the level of devastation. While they killed one and left another 21 injured, they expected a much greater death toll.

That is why they set the bomb inside the stolen Commodore to explode just after 1pm, reasoning the street would be crowded with police from Russell Street and court staff spilling from the Melbourne Magistrates Court opposite as it broke for lunch.

But it was unusually quiet as the courts were winding down for Easter. On an average weekday a school bus would have been parked in front of the bomb car as up to 40 children visited D24 on excursion. “Luckily the bombers picked the wrong day,” taskforce investigator Gary Ayres reflected this week.

The bomb detonated in one huge blast simultaneously scarring Russell Street and community confidence. The explosion hurled debris hundreds of metres: some landing on the Queen Victoria Hospital roof three blocks away.

Before the smoke cleared there was one giant suspect. His name was Phillip Grant Wilson, a 200-centimetre tall businessman and neo-Nazi. (Although he didn’t have the last bit on his business card.)

He was an explosives expert who had vowed to kill police after his mate, Tom Messenger, died during a raid in Wantirna in January, 1985. Messenger fired shots at police, hitting one in the bullet-proof vest. This was a serious tactical blunder as he was being raided by the Special Operations Group who immediately returned fire, shooting him dead.

Wilson was in court the day of the bombing on firearms charges and his case was adjourned at 11.30 because a shorthand writer was sick. If it had proceeded to lunch, the police witnesses against him would have been crossing the road when the bomb discharged.

Fearing he would go the way of Messenger, he contacted your correspondent to publicly declare his innocence. “I am not a terrorist. I’ll take a lie detector test or truth serum to prove I am not involved.”

This time he was right. It wasn’t him.

Not that it did him much good. He was shot dead outside a South Yarra chiropractic clinic 17 months later.

Another red-hot suspect was armed robber and police hater Claudio Crupi.

Consider the circumstantial case.

Taskforce Russell learned Crupi had built a bomb on his kitchen table  the day before the explosion  intending to attack a police station. Tick.

As if this wasn’t good enough, he was known to have shot at police. Tick.

Two of the taskforce’s best investigators, Ayres and Gordon Davie, interviewed him. Crupi admitted he built a bomb but claimed it was a fake to frighten Flemington police. Answering the second last question on the formal record of interview, he admitted to hating police. He was asked where those police worked. He replied: “Russell Street.” Double tick.

Both investigators believed they had their man, but were concerned they couldn’t link him to the bomb car. Senior police, keen on a quick result, glossed over the details and told them to charge Crupi.

They refused as they both had nagging doubts.

Just as well, as Crupi didn’t do it, although Ayres maintains he probably would have been convicted if the case had gone to a jury. Again it was a toss of the coin. He could have been charged and convicted and no one would have ever listened to his claims of innocence.

Meanwhile, experts carefully reconstructed the stolen Commodore wreck, and it would be the eye of a veteran that would provide the breakthrough.

Stolen car squad Sergeant Arthur Adams noticed the bomb car and a second one used later that day in a Donvale bank raid had the chassis numbers drilled off the same way. To Adams, it was as good as a fingerprint and he nominated car thief Peter Reed as the offender.

The theory was Reed was recruited to steal the bomb car for Crupi. In reality, he was one of the key planners. A brooding, vicious gunman, he blamed police for his mother’s mental illness and wanted to kill as many as possible.

The raid on Reed‘s Kallista house was carried out on Anzac Day, 1986, by a team recruited from the armed robbery and stolen car squads.

It wasn’t his investigation, but Detective Sergeant Mark Wylie was selected as one of the 10-man raiding party. The trouble was there were only three ballistic vests and, as he was to be the second last through the door, it was decided he didn’t need one. Wylie was given a shotgun. The trouble was he was not trained to use one.

In the pitch black they filed in through the back door. Wylie found himself opposite the suspect. Reed immediately opened fire, hitting Wylie in the body before the gunman was shot by another policeman. For Wylie the distance between life and death could be measured in centimetres. He survived and is now a successful consultant in private industry.

Police quickly linked Reed to the bombing and to another young crook  Craig Minogue  then considered to be just another fat thug.

The taskforce found the puppet-master was Stan Taylor, a full-time criminal and part-time actor, who turned his young followers from a gang of car thieves to a professional armed robbery unit.

Taylor recruited brothers Craig and Rod Minogue and Peter Reed. As soon as he was arrested Taylor dobbed in his followers, but he was too late to cut a deal. Another member of the gang, Paul Hetzel, had already signed up and became the prosecution’s star witness.

Taylor got life with no minimum, Reed beat the bombing charge but was convicted of a series of offences, including the attempted murder of Mark Wylie. He was released in 1994 only to return to prison.

Minogue, an angry, obese, illiterate, was sentenced to a minimum of 30 years. Exactly two weeks after his July 12, 1988, conviction, he killed multiple murderer Alex Tsakmakis inside Pentridge Prison by hitting him with a pillowcase filled with gym weights (perhaps illustrating the dangers of vigorous exercise for those with homicidal inclinations).

Then something strange happened: he has since become a model prisoner, losing weight and gaining knowledge. Through hard work he completed a series of academic qualifications and is now studying for his PhD in applied ethics at La Trobe University.

His earliest release date is 2016 and he will provide members of the Parole Board with many sleepless nights before then. He committed a murderous terrorist act and many of us would like him to rot in jail. And yet he has done all we could ask in the past 20 years and could be the pin-up boy for rehabilitation.

Angela Taylor didn’t get a second chance. At 21, she was already seen as a rising star who had duxed her academy class. If she stayed in the job you wonder what she would have achieved. Would she now be an officer marked for higher posts or would she be an experienced street copper mentoring juniors and doing her best to deal with conflict and crisis?

They stole from all of us the day the bomb went off. Police became a little more cautious, a little less open and more inclined to unholster their guns. Their training changed and they became more inclined to see the person in the shadows as a threat to be confronted rather than a victim to be helped.

All on the toss of a coin.

http://newsstore.fairfax.com.au/apps/viewDocument.ac;jsessionid=07AB2300ED432B70A34C82F52E3A813D?sy=afr&pb=all_ffx&dt=selectRange&dr=1month&so=relevance&sf=text&sf=headline&rc=10&rm=200&sp=brs&cls=177&clsPage=1&docID=AGE1103191A7FM7MQINB

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Alan Thomas WARREN

 Alan Thomas WARREN

( late of Ringwood North )

Victoria Police Force

Regd. # 12181

Rank:  Chief Superintendent – retired

Stations?

ServiceFrom  to  ?

Awards:  National Medal – granted 28 May 1990

Born:  15 August 1933

Died on:  Saturday  16 January 2016

Cause?

Age:  82

Funeral date?

Funeral location?

Buried at?

 Memorial at?

 


[alert_yellow]ALAN is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance[/alert_yellow]  *NEED MORE INFO

 

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FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal

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  • Greg Callander lit a candle for Alan Thomas Warren
    • Always in our hearts and memories, Joanne Warren
      Joanne lit a candle for Alan Thomas Warren
      • 2 months ago
      • Beck posted a message for Alan Thomas Warren
          •  Beck gave a flower for Alan Thomas Warren
            • With all of my Love & Prayers to my Dad Walter whom I know loved his brother very much. To my cousin Graeme whom I know gave so much unconditional love and support to his father and to my Aunty Topsy, who always carried her brother Alan close to her heart.
              May Jehovah God strengthen & comfort you all.
              xxx
              Always Family, Always together in heart & memory,
              Love from Rebecca Warren
              [ with My husband Steven & son Jaiden ]Beck signed the Guest Book

             

            https://www.heavenaddress.com/Alan-Thomas-Warren/1414930/#post_panel

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            Stanley James PARFREY

            Stanley James PARFREY

            Victoria Police Force

            Regd. # 10770

            Rank?

            Stations?, Port Melbourne, Horsham, Kew,

            ServiceFrom  to  ?

            Awards:  National Medal – granted 1 September 1982

            Born:  29 January 1925

            Died on:  Wednesday  24 February 2016

            Cause?

            Age:  91

            Funeral date:  Monday  29 February 2016 @ 11am

            Funeral location:  St. Bridget’s Catholic Church, 48 Sweyn St, Balwyn North (Greythorn), Victoria

            Buried at?

             Memorial at?

             


            [alert_yellow]STANLEY is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance[/alert_yellow]  *NEED MORE INFO

             

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            FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

            PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal

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            Stanley James Parfrey

            Funeral notice

            PARFREY
            Requiem Mass for the Repose of the Soul of Stanley James Parfrey will be held at St. Bridget’s Catholic Church, 48 Sweyn St, Balwyn North (Greythorn) on MONDAY (February 29th, 2016) at 11.00 am.

            Graveside Service will take place at Templestowe Cemetery 263 Foote St Templestowe (cnr Church Rd) on TUESDAY (March 1st, 2016) at 10.00 am.

            No flowers by request, in lieu donations to Doncaster View Club would be appreciated. Envelopes will be available at the Church.

            logo

             

            Published in The Age on Feb. 26, 2016

            – See more at: http://tributes.theage.com.au/obituaries/theage-au/obituary.aspx?n=stanley-james-parfrey&pid=177844456#sthash.2Es4usB9.dpuf

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            Report of the Board of Inquiry into Allegations of Corruption in the Police Force in connection with Illegal Abortion Practices in the State of Victoria.
            Presented 31 August 1971
            http://www.parliament.vic.gov.au/papers/govpub/VPARL1971-72No3.pdf
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            The Age ( Melbourne )  Sat. 25 June 1960    p 9
            The detective, Stanley James Parfrey, stationed at Kew, was the Informant in the case. He alleged he had been assaulted by Conor John Morrow, survey engineer, at Barnsdale on June 11. Mr. O’Connor, S.M., said It was a painful thing to say that he did not-believe  ……..
            https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/122337285/
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            The Horsham Times ( Victoria )  Tuesday  26 June 1951  p 2
            Constable Stan Parfrey, formerly of Port Melbourne, has been transferred to Horsham Police Station, He took up his new appointment on Friday.
            http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/72793397
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            The Advertiser ( Adelaide, S.A. )  Sat. 10 Jan. 1948
            Stan PARFREY - VICPOL“Possibly the same Stan Parfrey pre VicPol”
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            Glyn Robert ELLISS

            Glyn Robert ELLIS

            ( late of Werribee )

            Victoria Police Force

            Regd. # 16060

            Rank?

            Stations?

            ServiceFrom  ? ? ?  to  ? ? ? = ? years of Service

            Awards:  National Medal – granted 22 September 1987

            1st Clasp to National medal – granted 26 June 1996

            Born?

            Died on:  Monday  28 March 2016

            Cause?

            Age:  65

            Funeral date:  Friday  1 April 2016 @ 9am

            Funeral location:  Chapel of Repose, Altona Memorial Park, Doherty’s Road, Laverton North, 3026
            Buried at?

             Memorial at?

             


            [alert_yellow]GLYN is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance[/alert_yellow]  *NEED MORE INFO

             

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            FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

            PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal

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            ELLIS, Glyn

            ELLIS Glyn
            My darling husband, no words are needed.
            Love Carol
            Obituaries
            Published in Herald Sun on 30/03/2016

            Supporting Notices

             

            ELLIS. Glyn.
            Sincere condolences to Carol, Glenn, Kim and family.
            Gone but not forgotten
            Ian and Roselle.
            Obituaries
            Published in Herald Sun on 31/03/2016
            ***

             

            ELLIS. Glyn.
            A big man, a big heart, greatly missed Dave and Sue Sharpe.
            Obituaries
            Published in Herald Sun on 31/03/2016
            ***

             

            ELLIS. Glyn.
            The Members and Committee of Victoria Police Bowling Club mourn the loss of their respected member Glyn.
            Condolences to the family.
            Obituaries
            Published in Herald Sun on 31/03/2016
            ***

             

            ELLIS. Glyn.
            My brother-in-law, you have always been there for us.
            Now I wish you love and peace forever. Vivian.
            Obituaries
            Published in Herald Sun on 31/03/2016
            ***

             

            ELLIS. Glyn.
            President John and members of the Williamstown Bowling Club mourn the passing of Life Member and past President Glyn.
            Our condolences to Carol and family.
            Obituaries
            Published in Herald Sun on 31/03/2016
            http://tributes.heraldsun.com.au/notice/269342009/view
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