Whiskey Au Go Go fire

Last updated

Whiskey Au Go Go fire
Australia location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Fortitude Valley
Fortitude Valley (Australia)
Date8 March 1973;51 years ago (1973-03-08)
VenueWhiskey Au Go Go
Location Fortitude Valley, Brisbane, Australia
Type Fire
Cause Firebomb
Deaths15
Convicted
  • James Richard Finch
  • John Andrew Stuart

The Whiskey Au Go Go fire was a fire that occurred at 2:08 am on Thursday 8 March 1973, in the Whiskey Au Go Go nightclub in Fortitude Valley, Brisbane, Australia that killed 15 people. [1] [2]

Contents

The building

The Whiskey Au Go Go nightclub occupied the first floor of a building which still exists on the corner of Amelia Street and St Paul's Terrace. The space was previously occupied by another club called the Celebrity Cabaret which closed due to financial pressures. [3] Seeing an opportunity, band manager John Hannay approached the Little brothers (Brian and Ken) and suggested they rent the vacant space for a new nightclub. They did so in March 1972 and named the new cabaret the Whiskey Au Go Go. [3]

Extortion threats

John Andrew Stuart, a career criminal, was sent to jail in 1966 for the attempted murder of fellow criminal Robert Steele. [4] After his release from prison in New South Wales in July 1972, he returned to his hometown of Brisbane and immediately started vague rumors of criminals from Sydney wanting to extort nightclubs in Brisbane. He told this both to reporter Brian Bolton and Detective Basil Hicks. [5] At the end of 1972, he gave specific intelligence to Bolton stating an empty club would be firebombed first and then a second, Whiskey Au Go Go, would be firebombed when it was full of people. [6] Bolton wrote numerous newspaper articles and personally notified the police commissioner and police minister of the threat. [7]

Building fire

Stuart's warning was verified when an empty club, Torinos, was destroyed by arson on 25 February 1973. [8]

The Whiskey Au Go Go was firebombed in the early hours of 8 March 1973 with fire begun by the ignition of two drums (four and five gallons) of petrol in the building's foyer. [9] When ignited, the burning petrol sent carbon monoxide up to the club's main room on the first floor. The only escape route was the rear stairs which were poorly signposted and cluttered with crates of bottles. [10] The club has been described as a deathtrap. [11]

About 50 patrons, bar staff, and entertainers had been in the club at the time of ignition. [12] Some escaped by jumping from broken windows onto an awning and dropping 4.5m to the ground. [13] [14] Others escaped via the windows in the men's and women's changing rooms. [15]

Patrons had difficulty escaping due to the large quantities of grease that covered the escape path and the 1.8m high fence which blocked the side alley. The persistent rumors that the escape was deliberately greased by the arsonist(s) are untrue. The practice at the club was to place used cooking oil containers against the wall of the escape route. These were upended in the stampede and the fats spread by foot as the patrons fled. [16]

Victims

The fire resulted in the deaths of 15 people. [17] They had died of carbon monoxide poisoning and were dead before firefighters arrived. [18] Of the six person band Trinity, two musicians were killed. [19] Three staff members and ten patrons also lost their lives. [20]

Investigation

On the Saturday after the fire the Queensland Government had offered a $50,000 reward for information on the bombing. Based on Stuart's foreknowledge of the fire, he was the number one suspect. As the police had insufficient evidence to arrest him, as he had an alibi at the time of the fire, the police fabricated evidence that he threatened someone with a knife. [21] He was duly arrested. James Richard Finch was subsequently arrested at the suburban Jindalee shopping centre.

In 1966, Finch had been sentenced to 14 years prison after being found guilty of malicious wounding with a firearm and carrying an unlicensed pistol. Finch had fired two shots during an altercation near a petrol station in Oxford Street, Paddington, Sydney, injuring two men. Finch gave Stuart the offending firearm post shooting and the two career criminals had known each other for at least seven years before. [22] At the trial, Finch was described by police as "an active young criminal and associate of the most violent criminals in Sydney." [23] Finch had been paroled after serving seven years of that sentence.

Immediately after their arrest, both loudly protested their innocence at their first court appearance. It was reported that there was commotion in the dock when the men were brought before the Brisbane Magistrates court after their arrest for arson and 15 counts of murder. Stuart was restrained by six detectives while Finch was relatively quiet and restrained by one detective. During this hearing Finch claimed he was innocent, that on his arrest police had presented him with a prepared written confession, and had beaten him. [24]

The committal hearing heard that Finch, previously resident of Australia, had been imported by Stuart from his native England for the extortion scheme and had returned to Australia 12 days prior to the bombing. Police claimed Finch had privately confessed to them and had implicated Stuart. The police reported that Finch had willfully set the fire while Stuart had plotted to establish a false lead that "southern criminals" were planning an extortion racket in Brisbane. [25]

Trial and imprisonment

During the supreme court trial Finch and Stuart loudly protested their innocence, claiming they had been "verballed" and convicted based on false confessions. They both pleaded not guilty. [26]

Similar to the committal hearing, the start of the full court trial had been delayed. On 20 August, Stuart told the Government Medical Officer that he had swallowed some pieces of metal. [27] He would repeat the exercise and be absent for most of the trial. Through his incarcerations Stuart underwent a total of five operations to remove foreign objects from his stomach. [28] During the committal trial, Finch had amputated one of his fingers. [29]

On 23 October 1973, both were convicted of the murder of Jennifer Denise Davie. [30] The jury found that the fire was lit as part of an extortion-terror campaign aimed at Brisbane nightclub operators, and they were sentenced to life in prison. [31] Stuart made Australian legal history: he was sentenced despite not being in court. At the time he was in hospital recovering from his third stomach operation as a result of him swallowing wire. [32]

During their imprisonment in Boggo Road Gaol they continued to protest their innocence, fighting a protracted legal battle for release and continuing their self-harm to draw attention to their protest. [33] In one incident Stuart sewed his lips together using wire paperclips. This occurred during a strike by warders when police had taken charge of the prison; Stuart had previously warned warders he would do this to prevent police from questioning him. During this period Finch kept up a tirade of abuse against police in the prison, once emptying his sanitary bucket over them. [34]

Finch's appeals

In February 1984, the High Court of Australia granted a permanent injunction restraining Finch from proceeding with a petition he had lodged with the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, seeking leave to appeal a decision of the High Court. [35]

Finch appealed this decision in order to appeal the decisions of the Queensland Court of Criminal appeal made in 1974 and 1978. Those decisions had dismissed Finch's original appeal and his later application for special leave to appeal. [36]

The Australian Government, with the support of the Queensland Government, sought an injunction to prevent Finch proceeding in London. On 28 June, the High Court of Australia refused this injunction, and the appeal reached the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in London on 6 July 1984. The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council took less than thirty minutes to dismiss the application. The five member bench decided that the matter brought before it by Finch was not a matter that should be heard by the council. [37]

Release from prison

Stuart was found dead on 2 January 1979 in his cell of Boggo Road Gaol after a six-day hunger strike. [38] The cause of death was recorded as an acute heart infection, possibly the result of a virus. Although some believe he was murdered, his self mutilation practices and poor mental health explains his death. [39] At the time it was reported that many police regarded him as Australia's most violent criminal. [40]

In 1986, Finch married Cheryl Cole, a wheelchair-using woman with a terminal illness. [41] Finch won his battle for release in 1988, after almost 15 years in prison. [42] As part of his parole conditions he was deported back to his birth country, England. There, in October 1988, he confessed to the crime. [43] He told The Sun newspaper in a videotaped interview that he had tipped two drums of fuel into the doorway of the nightclub building before the firebombing. He also repeated claims that he had been "verballed" by the original police investigators (i.e. that they lied about words Finch had purportedly said, and that those lies were used as evidence). He also claimed that a policeman named at the enquiry had ordered the bombing. He later recanted the confession. [44]

Jana Wendt interviewed Finch on A Current Affair by satellite to further discuss that admission. Wendt says that "When I suggested to him that his admission might mean that he could also be extradited to Australia to face other murder charges, his behaviour suddenly changed dramatically. He said he was now confused and could not recall murdering anybody. He claimed he had been brainwashed." [45] Finch was unaware he had been only charged for one murder and fourteen other charges were outstanding. [46]

Coronial inquest reopened

Recently, Vincent O'Dempsey was charged with the murder of a woman and her two daughters. [47] [48] On 2 June 2017, following the conviction and sentencing of O'Dempsey and Garry DuBois for the McCulkin murders case, Queensland Attorney-General Yvette D'Ath announced that the government would re-open the coronial inquest into the fire.

Bibliography

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ronald Ryan</span> Australian murderer

Ronald Joseph Ryan was the last person to be legally executed in Australia. Ryan was found guilty of shooting and killing warder George Hodson during an escape from Pentridge Prison, Victoria, in 1965. Ryan's hanging was met with public protests by those opposed to capital punishment. Capital punishment was abolished in all states by 1985.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Roger Rogerson</span> Australian disgraced detective sergeant and convicted murderer (1941–2024)

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.

The Bali Nine were a group of nine Australians convicted for attempting to smuggle 8.3 kg (18 lb) of heroin out of Indonesia in April 2005. The heroin was valued at around A$4 million and was bound for Australia. Ringleaders Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran were sentenced to death and executed on 29 April 2015. Six other members, Si Yi Chen, Michael Czugaj, Tan Duc Thanh Nguyen, Matthew Norman, Scott Rush and Martin Stephens, were sentenced to life imprisonment whilst another, Renae Lawrence, received a 20 year sentence. She was released after the sentence was commuted in November 2018. The Indonesian authorities reported on 5 June 2018 that Tan Duc Thanh Nguyen had died of stomach cancer. In November 2024, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese sought the repatriation to Australia of the remaining five members of the Bali Nine. On 15 December 2024, the five remaining members of the group were repatriated to Australia, and their life sentences were commuted with immediate effect.

Peter Falconio was a British tourist who disappeared in a remote part of the Stuart Highway near Barrow Creek in the Northern Territory of Australia on the evening of 14 July 2001, while travelling with his girlfriend Joanne Lees.

Joanne Rachael Lees is a British woman who was attacked and subjected to an attempted abduction while travelling in Australia with her partner Peter Falconio. Lees escaped her attacker, but Falconio was never found. The attacker was identified as Bradley John Murdoch, and in 2005 he was convicted of Falconio's murder. Lees was the chief crown witness in the murder trial, which was conducted in Darwin. She later wrote a book about her experiences, which was made into a television film.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bradley John Murdoch</span> Australian murderer

Bradley John Murdoch is an Australian criminal serving life imprisonment for the July 2001 murder of English backpacker Peter Falconio in Australia. He will be 74 when eligible for parole in 2032. Murdoch is being held in Darwin Correctional Centre in Darwin, Northern Territory. He has lodged two appeals against his conviction, both of which were unsuccessful. The High Court of Australia refused special leave to appeal on 21 June 2007. He is forbidden to talk to the press.

This is a timeline of major crimes in Australia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">History of Brisbane</span>

The recorded history of Brisbane dates from 1799, when Matthew Flinders explored Moreton Bay on an expedition from Port Jackson, although the region had long been occupied by the Yugara and Turrbal aboriginal tribes. The town was conceived initially as a penal colony for British convicts sent from Sydney. Its suitability for fishing, farming, timbering, and other occupations, however, by 1838, pressure from free settlers led to Brisbane's designation as an area for free settlement in 1842, opening it to non-convict immigrants and beginning its transformation into a commercial and agricultural hub. The town became a municipality in 1859 and a consolidated metropolitan area in 1924. Brisbane encountered major flooding disasters in 1893, 1974, 2011 and 2022. Significant numbers of US troops were stationed in Brisbane during World War II. The city hosted the 1982 Commonwealth Games, World Expo 88, and the 2014 G20 Brisbane summit.

The Moran family is an infamous Melbourne, Australia-based criminal family notable for their involvement in the Melbourne gangland killings. Family matriarch Judy Moran lost two sons, Jason and Mark, estranged husband Lewis, and brother-in-law Des died in an underworld feud that resulted in the deaths of over 30 criminals from January 1998 to August 2010.

Rupert Maxwell (Max) Stuart was an Indigenous Australian who was convicted of murder in 1959. His conviction was subject to several appeals to higher courts, the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, and a Royal Commission, all of which upheld the verdict. Newspapers campaigned successfully against the death sentence being imposed. After serving his sentence, Stuart became an Arrernte elder and from 1998 till 2001 was the chairman of the Central Land Council. In 2002, a film was made about the Stuart case.

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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of Daniel Morcombe</span> Murder of an Australian boy

Daniel James Morcombe was an Australian boy who was abducted from the Sunshine Coast, Queensland, on 7 December 2003 when he was 13 years old. Eight years later, Brett Peter Cowan, a former Sunshine Coast resident, was charged with Morcombe's murder. In the same month, DNA tests confirmed bones in the Glass House Mountains were Morcombe's. On 13 March 2014, Cowan was found guilty of the murder, and was sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder, indecently dealing with a child, and interference with a corpse.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Childers Palace Backpackers Hostel fire</span> Arson attack in Queensland in 2000

The Childers Palace Backpackers Hostel fire on 23 June 2000 killed 15 backpackers – nine women and six men – at the former Palace Hotel in the town of Childers, Queensland, Australia, which had been converted into a backpacker hostel. Robert Paul Long was arrested for lighting the fire and charged with two counts of murder and one count of arson. He was later sentenced to life imprisonment.

Matthew Condon is a prize-winning Australian writer and journalist.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lutwyche Cemetery</span> Australian cemetery in Brisbane

Lutwyche Cemetery is a cemetery located at Kedron, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. It opened in 1878 and saw its first burial in the same year. It is located at the corner of Gympie and Kitchener Roads, approximately ten kilometres north of Brisbane.

The McCulkin murders were the murders of Barbara McCulkin (34) and her two daughters, Vicki (13) and Leanne (11), in Queensland in 1974.

Notorious is a former gang that was based in Sydney, Australia. They claimed to be an outlaw motorcycle club; however, not all members ride motorcycles. A large percentage of its membership consisted of petty criminals, with no real history of bikers among their ranks. Its emblem features a skull with a turban brandishing twin pistols and the words "Original Gangster" beneath it, along with the motto "Only the dead see the end of war". Labeled as one of Australia's most dangerous gangs, they had been feuding with larger and well-known motorcycle gangs including the Hells Angels and the Bandidos. It was thought that as of March 2012 the gang no longer existed as an organised structure after being dismantled by a police operation arresting key members and with other members choosing to quit the gang life. This served to reinforce claims by established MCs that Notorious wasn't a genuine club.

The Bandidos Motorcycle Club is classified as a motorcycle gang by law enforcement and intelligence agencies in numerous countries. While the club has denied being a criminal organization, Bandidos members have been convicted of partaking in criminal enterprises including theft, extortion, prostitution, drug trafficking and murder in various host nations.

The Hells Angels Motorcycle Club (HAMC), an international outlaw biker gang, has been involved in multiple crimes, alleged crimes, and violent incidents in Australia. The Hells Angels are legally classified as a criminal organisation in the Australian state of Queensland, and there have been attempts to classify them as such in New South Wales. The Hells Angels have been linked with drug trafficking and production, as well as a host of violent crimes including murder, in Australia.

References

  1. Australian Nightclub Fire Kills 15. The Bryan Times : 8 March 1973, p.3. The fire started at 2.08 and not 2.10 as often reported in the press and on the Whiskey Au Go Go plaque which was laid on the footpath in front of the building. This was confirmed in the fire department dispatches (see Plunkett 2018, p. 29).
  2. Plunkett 2018, p. 29.
  3. 1 2 Plunkett 2018, p. 10.
  4. Plunkett 2018, p. 69.
  5. Plunkett 2018, p. 88.
  6. Plunkett 2018, p. 111.
  7. Plunkett 2018, p. 113.
  8. Plunkett 2018, p. 125.
  9. Plunkett 2018, p. 25.
  10. Plunkett 2018, p. 315.
  11. Plunkett 2018, p. 27.
  12. Plunkett 2018, p. 16.
  13. Australian Nightclub Fire Kills 15. The Bryan Times : 8 March 1973, p.3.
  14. Plunkett 2018, p. 37.
  15. Plunkett 2018, p. 35.
  16. Plunkett 2018, p. 177.
  17. Emergency Management Australia, Disasters Database
  18. Plunkett 2018, p. 45.
  19. Gawenda, Michael. 'Mad bomber' planned club deaths: police. The Age : 9 March 1973, p.4.
  20. Geoff, Plunkett (5 May 2018). The Whiskey Au Go Go massacre : murder, arson and the crime of the century. Newport, NSW. ISBN   9781925675443. OCLC   1041112112.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  21. Plunkett 2018, p. 193.
  22. Plunkett 2018, p. 201.
  23. Gunman gaoled 14 years. The Sydney Morning Herald : 14 October 1966, p.10.
  24. Charged pair fight police, shout their innocence. The Age : 13 March 1973, p.3.
  25. Charged pair fight police, shout their innocence. The Age : 13 March 1973, p.3.
  26. Privy Council will not act on appeal. The Age : 7 July 1984, p.4.
  27. Plunkett 2018, p. 221.
  28. Brisbane jail prisoner sews lips with wire. The Sydney Morning Herald : 9 May 1974, p.3.
  29. Plunkett 2018, p. 258.
  30. Prison probe urged. The Age : 7 January 1974, p.3.
  31. Privy Council will not act on appeal. The Age : 7 July 1984, p.4.
  32. 'Whiskey' murderer dead in cell. The Age : 2 January 1979, p.1.
  33. "Nightclub terror" by Russell Grenning as quoted in the Brisbane Courier Mail
  34. Brisbane jail prisoner sews lips with wire. The Sydney Morning Herald : 9 May 1974, p.3.
  35. Appeal to Privy Council approved. The Sydney Morning Herald : 10 February 1984, p.9.
  36. Baker, Jill. Government seeks to stop Privy Council Appeal. The Age : 6 June 1984, p.18.
  37. Privy Council will not act on appeal. The Age : 7 July 1984, p.4.
  38. GNT on ABC Television, Broadcast 6.30pm on 13th Sept 2004
  39. Plunkett 2018, p. 234.
  40. 'Whiskey' murderer dead in cell. The Age : 2 January 1979, p.1.
  41. Prisoner to wed. The Age : 19 February 1986, p.4.
  42. Finch released. The Age : 17 February 1987, p.3.
  43. One year ago. The Age : 30 October 1989, p.2.
  44. Finch facing possible extradition and further charges. The Sydney Morning Herald : 24 November 1988, p.4.
  45. Steve Dow (7 October 2005). "Interviewing the interviewers". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 4 July 2009.
  46. Plunkett 2018, p. 239.
  47. "The Queensland Cabinet and Ministerial Directory". Ministerial Media Statements. Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  48. "Vincent O'Dempsey found guilty of triple murder in 1974 cold case". Twitter - 7NewsBrisbane. Retrieved 29 December 2021.