Colin McLaren is an Australian documentary filmmaker, crime writer, and former police detective sergeant. His 2013 book JFK: The Smoking Gun, based on his theory about the assassination of U.S. president John F. Kennedy, was made into an award-winning documentary film. A feature-length telemovie Underbelly Files: Infiltration about his life, starring Sullivan Stapleton in the title role, aired in 2011.
McLaren joined the police academy in New South Wales at the age of 24 and worked in law enforcement during the 1980s and 1990s. [1] When asked to join a covert surveillance unit, he began spying on drug importers and the ringleaders of organised crime, before going undercover and organising a covert sting operation. [2]
As a member of Australian task forces, [3] McLaren worked as a suit-and-tie detective. He contributed on the Walsh Street murders of police constables Steven Tynan and Damian Eyre, [4] the Mr Cruel child rapes, the murder of thirteen-year-old Karmein Chan, [5] and the bombing of the National Crime Authority offices in Adelaide, where he was task force leader. [3] McLaren then went undercover, where for two years he infiltrated Australia's mafia in the guise of a money laundering art dealer. [3] Eleven Mafia bosses received sentences of up to 13 years each for major drug trafficking and racketeering. [5] He also went undercover for another year to gain evidence on the mafia responsible for the NCA bombing. [3]
He ended his police career as a permanent lecturer at the detective training school, his subjects being 'crime scene management' and 'field investigations'.[ citation needed ]
McLaren began writing in 2005, commencing on his first book, which became a best seller. [3] McLaren's first book, Infiltration, is a non-fiction book detailing his efforts as a suit and tie detective and undercover agent who infiltrated the Mafia. [6] McLaren followed this up with On the Run, a non-fiction book about McLaren as his Mafia alias, Cole Goodwin, which was adapted to a screenplay. [3] McLaren's third book, Sunflower, is a historical work depicting the experiences of his grandfather, one of Australia's longest-serving foot soldiers in the First World War. [7]
McLaren's book JFK: The Smoking Gun was based upon Howard Donahue's theory that United States president John F. Kennedy was accidentally shot by a secret service agent in the car behind Kennedy's limousine. [8] McLaren's investigation was a continuation of Bonar Menninger's earlier book about Donahue's theory, Mortal Error: The Shot That Killed JFK . [8]
From 2016 to 2018, McLaren researched the case of the murder of Bob Chappell in Hobart, Tasmania, where Susan Neill-Fraser was convicted of killing her de facto husband on their yacht. For two years, McLaren spoke to hundreds of people, witnesses and police and produced a book called Southern Justice, to be released in 2019. It details an alternative view of the murder and shows that other persons may have been involved and that Neill-Fraser may be innocent. He was called to give evidence at the Supreme Court in early 2019. [9] [10]
McLaren's police career has been the focus of various television documentaries and the Underbelly Files: Infiltration telemovie series screened on Channel 9. [11] [12] [13] [14]
McLaren is a technical advisor for many [15] TV series and films in the crime genre, among them the Screentime Films trilogy of Tell them Lucifer was Here, The Man that Got Away and Infiltration. Also the TV series Squizzy about Squizzy Taylor, a gangster from the 1920s, for which McLaren wrote storyline material. McLaren also contributed to Killing Time, the television mini-series based on once corrupt lawyer Andrew Fraser's life, produced by Fremantle Media, TV1 and Film Victoria. McLaren has narrated episodes on Crimes That Shocked Australia and many other one-hour TV episodes about crime families, gangs and his knowledge of them.
He was also a key expert on a US television show on assassinations called Inside the Evidence which was headed by American anchorman Bill Kurtis. It aired on the Reelz TV channel in the U.S. This was followed by a 90-minute documentary of his findings in JFK:The Smoking Gun. The documentary aired on Australian and American television, [16] [17] [18] Directed by Malcolm McDonald, [19] it features re-enactments, archival footage, and also new interviews with witnesses to the shooting. JFK: The Smoking Gun won a 2014 IPAF ATOM Award for Best Documentary – History.[ citation needed ] A one-hour abridged version of this documentary aired in the United Kingdom, entitled JFK's Secret Killer: The Evidence. [20] In the television special, McLaren argues that the truth was covered-up to hide impropriety on the part of Secret Service agents. [21]
Throughout 2016, McLaren, in conjunction with Bedlam Productions of London, produced the 2-hour documentary Princess Diana's Death - Mystery Solved. The documentary aired globally on 10 July 2016. The documentary relies on forensic evidence gathered by McLaren when he visited the original crime scene in Paris on 31 August 1997. McLaren's documentary indicated that both the French and English investigations into the death of Diana were flawed. McLaren interviewed many of those involved in the investigation, French police and paparazzi included, as well as crucial witnesses, and concluded that a cover-up existed. [22] [23]
Through 2018 Colin McLaren - with English film director Tim Conrad - created a six-part TV series, Mafia Killers with Colin McLaren, for Reelz TV. Each episode examines a notorious mobster who murdered his way to the top, to take control of a New York City Mafia family, before they themselves met death or lengthy jail terms.[ citation needed ]
McLaren followed this series by appearing in a six-part TV series Undercurrent, on Australia's Channel Seven network, aired in 2019. His role was as on-screen narrator and crime expert as the TV series followed him - identifying blunders by police in a murder investigation. During the series, McLaren was adamant that the Tasmanian police wrongly charged the victim's wife - Sue Neill-Fraser, concluding that the murder was the work of a gang of violent thieves stealing from yachts, who broke into the Four Winds yacht, only to disturb the owner who was sleeping. A violent fight occurred and the owner was murdered. McLaren secured admissions from one of the gang members as well as highlighting overwhelming forensic evidence and discovered many new witnesses who were previously ignored. As a result, McLaren was called to give evidence at the Supreme Court. Subsequently, the judge allowed Sue Neill-Fraser to appeal her conviction. [24] [25] Since then, Sue Neill-Fraser has lodged a further appeal to the high court of Australia, [26] [27] [28] expected to be heard later in 2022.
Through 2019–20, McLaren was in New York City working on a recurring podcast series with Endeavor Audio and The New York Post on famous deaths that have attracted global fascination. He also worked with executive producer Eve Ash to help create the 12-part podcast series Who Killed Bob? For Podshape. [29]
In between his TV and podcast work, McLaren continued writing his Italian Mafia book. [30] [31] He was given full access to the historical records on the mafia, housed in eleven of the state archives in Italy. The book, Mafioso took almost four years to write. it was published by Hachette Australia [31] in February 2022. The book was shortlisted to the final 4, out of 174 nominees, for the 2022 prestigious Nib Literary Awards in Sydney. [32] [33]
Throughout 2020-2022 McLaren was a key witness in a Supreme Court trial against the mafia boss Domenic Perre for bombing the National Crime Authority office in Australia. Evidence was heard that Perre had a hatred for police and killed and maimed those he resented. His parcel bomb was made of red phosphorus and destroyed the office. The trial took years to eventuate after McLaren pulled together a team of undercover police to infiltrate Perre's organisation and gained part of the evidence used in the trial. Justice Nicholson found Perre guilty on 30 June 2022. Perre had migrated from Calabria, and was, at the time of the bombing, one of the most dangerous mafia bosses in Australia. [34] [35] In early 2023 Perre appealed his conviction, after receiving a 37-year sentence. However on 8 May he died in prison from a suspected heart attack, thereby ending the appeal. [36] [37]
Contract killing is a form of murder or assassination in which one party hires another party to kill a targeted person or people. It involves an agreement which includes some form of compensation, monetary or otherwise. It is an illegal agreement. Either party may be a person, group, or organization. Contract killing has been associated with organized crime, government conspiracies, dictatorships, and vendettas. For example, in the United States, the Italian- and Jewish-American organized crime gang Murder, Inc. committed hundreds of murders on behalf of the National Crime Syndicate during the 1930s and '40s.
Joseph Dominick Pistone is an American former FBI agent who worked undercover as Donnie Brasco between September 1976 and July 1981, as part of an infiltration primarily into the Bonanno crime family, and to a lesser extent the Colombo crime family, two of the Five Families of the Mafia in New York City. Pistone was an FBI agent for 17 years, from 1969 until he resigned in 1986. The evidence collected by Pistone led to over 200 indictments and over 100 convictions of Mafia members, and some responsible for his infiltration were also killed by other mobsters.
Roger Caleb Rogerson was an Australian detective sergeant in the New South Wales Police Force and a convicted murderer. During his career, Rogerson received at least thirteen awards for bravery, outstanding policemanship and devotion to duty, before being implicated in two killings, bribery, assault and drug dealing, and then being dismissed from the force in 1986.
Donald Bruce Mackay was an Australian businessman and anti-drug campaigner. He disappeared in 1977, but his body has never been found. In 1986, James Bazley was convicted on his murder.
Alphonse John Gangitano was an Australian criminal from Melbourne, Victoria. Nicknamed the "Black Prince of Lygon Street", Gangitano was the face of an underground organisation known as the Carlton Crew. He was also an associate of alleged organised crime bosses Tom Domican (Sydney) and John Kizon (Perth).
Nikolai-Minev Radev, nicknamed The Russian, was a Bulgarian career criminal and mobster who was involved in crime in Melbourne, Australia.
Christopher Dale Flannery, nicknamed "Mr Rent-a-Kill" is alleged to have been an Australian contract killer. Growing up in a working class background in a culture that was suspicious of police, after leaving Melbourne he entered a life of crime and gang warfare that ended with his disappearance.
Rachel Jane Nickell was a British woman who was stabbed to death on Wimbledon Common in south-west London on 15 July 1992. The initial police investigation of the crime resulted in the arrest in controversial circumstances of an innocent man, who was acquitted. Her killer, Robert Napper, was identified by a later police investigation and convicted in 2008.
Jessica Napier is a New Zealand-born actress based in Australia. She has appeared in a number of feature films, including Love Serenade, Blackrock, Cut, City Loop, Angst, The Illustrated Family Doctor and Ghost Rider, and is well known for her role of Becky Howard in the Australian TV drama series McLeod's Daughters.
A smoking gun is an object or fact that serves as conclusive evidence of a crime or similar act.
The first series of Australian crime television drama series Underbelly originally aired from 13 February 2008 to 7 May 2008 on the Nine Network and is loosely based on the real events of the 1995–2004 gangland war in Melbourne. It depicts the key players in Melbourne's criminal underworld, including the Carlton Crew and their rival, Carl Williams. The series is based on the book Leadbelly: Inside Australia's Underworld, by journalists John Silvester and Andrew Rule, and borrows its name from the successful Underbelly true crime anthology book series also authored by Silvester and Rule. An alternative and significantly updated tie-in novel, Underbelly: The Gangland War, was released as their 13th book in the series. The series is produced by the Australian Film Finance Corporation, in association with Film Victoria. The executive producers are Des Monaghan and Jo Horsburgh.
Judith Maryanne Moran is the matriarch of the Moran criminal family of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, involved in the Melbourne gangland killings.
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Underbelly: A Tale of Two Cities, the second series of the Nine Network crime drama series Underbelly, originally aired from 9 February 2009 to 4 May 2009. It is a thirteen-part series loosely based on real events that stemmed from the marijuana trade centred on the New South Wales town of Griffith. The timeline of the series is the years between 1976 and 1987. Underbelly: A Tale of Two Cities primarily depicts the Mr. Asia drug syndicate and its influence on crime in Australia. Among the characters presented are real-life criminals Robert Trimbole, Terry Clark, George Freeman, Christopher Dale Flannery, Alphonse Gangitano and the Kane Brothers. The mini-series is a prequel to the 2008 production Underbelly, which was about the Melbourne gangland killings and forms part of the Underbelly series.
Underbelly is an Australian television true crime-drama series which first aired on the Nine Network between 13 February 2008 and 1 September 2013, before being revived on 3 April 2022. Each series is based on real-life events. There have been six full series, with season 7 being a miniseries. A 2014 series titled Fat Tony & Co is a sequel to the first series but is not branded under the Underbelly title.
Underbelly: The Golden Mile, the third series of Nine Network's crime drama series Underbelly, originally aired from 11 April to 27 June 2010. It is a thirteen-part series loosely based on real events that stemmed from the mile-long nightclub/red light district in the Sydney suburb of Kings Cross, also known as the "Golden Mile", between 1988 and 1999. It primarily depicts the organized crimes in Kings Cross and the police corruption leading up to the 1995 Wood Royal Commission. It is a prequel to Underbelly, which was about the Melbourne gangland killings, and a sequel to Underbelly: A Tale of Two Cities. Among the characters presented are John Ibrahim, Kim Hollingsworth, George Freeman, Lenny McPherson and MP John Hatton. Some of the characters, particularly those of the NSW Police, reprise their roles from A Tale of Two Cities.
Underbelly Files: Tell Them Lucifer was Here is an Australian made-for-television movie that aired on 7 February 2011 on the Nine Network. It is part of the Underbelly franchise and is the first of four television movies in the spin-off series Underbelly Files, the other three being Infiltration, The Man Who Got Away, and Chopper.
Underbelly Files: Infiltration is an Australian made-for-television movie that aired on 14 February 2011 on the Nine Network. It is the second of four television movies in the Underbelly Files series, the other three being Tell Them Lucifer was Here, The Man Who Got Away, and Chopper.
Underbelly Files: Chopper is an Australian 2-part mini-series that screened on the Nine Network, premiering on 11 February 2018 and concluding the next day. It is part of the Underbelly franchise and continues the Underbelly Files spin-off tele-movies. It was preceded by Tell Them Lucifer was Here, Infiltration, and The Man Who Got Away.
The murder of Bob Chappell occurred on 26 January 2009 in Hobart in Tasmania. Robert Adrian Chappell, the de facto partner of Susan Blyth "Sue" Neill-Fraser, disappeared from their yacht, Four Winds. Neill-Fraser was found guilty of his murder in 2010. Various appeals have all been dismissed.