Donald Albert ADAMS

Donald Albert ADAMS

New South Wales Police Force

Regd. # 5913

88 old

WW II  Naval Verteran.

Died  13 May 2014

Funeral  18 May 2014

 

Donald Albert ADAMS, 88 old, former Regd. No. 5913, an Unattached Veteran member of the RPA.

Don passed away on 13/05/2014 and his funeral is proposed to be held at 11am on Saturday 18th Instant at Forest Lawn Memorial Gardens, Camden Valley Way, LEPPINGTON.

 

Funeral location:

[google-map-v3 shortcodeid=”c917c0ff” width=”350″ height=”350″ zoom=”12″ maptype=”roadmap” mapalign=”center” directionhint=”false” language=”default” poweredby=”false” maptypecontrol=”true” pancontrol=”true” zoomcontrol=”true” scalecontrol=”true” streetviewcontrol=”true” scrollwheelcontrol=”false” draggable=”true” tiltfourtyfive=”false” enablegeolocationmarker=”true” enablemarkerclustering=”false” addmarkermashup=”false” addmarkermashupbubble=”false” addmarkerlist=”Camden Valley Way, Leppington, NSW{}1-default.png{}Forest Lawn Memorial Gardens” bubbleautopan=”true” distanceunits=”km” showbike=”false” showtraffic=”false” showpanoramio=”false”]




Leonard James MILLER

logoLeonard James MILLER

aka  Len

( late of Hawkesbury Hts )

New South Wales Police Force

NSW Police Academy Class – Redfern – # 146

[alert_yellow]Regd. #  16891[/alert_yellow]

Rank:  Probationary Constable – appointed 10 March 1975

Constable – appointed 10 March 1976

Final Rank = ?

Stations:   ?, Four Wheels ( Transport Section ),

Service:   From  ? ?pre March 1975  to  ? ? ?

Awards:   National Medal – granted 17 March 1992

 

 

[blockquote]

Vietnam Veteran – Service # 2786734
Army – Lance Corporal
Service between 23 April 1968 – 4 March 1969 = 316 days
Royal Australian Army Medical Corps
1st Australian Field Hospital – 1968
8th Field Ambulance – April 1968 – March 1969

[/blockquote]

Born:  13 May 1946

Died on:  11 October 2012

Cause:  Suicide

Age:  66

Funeral date:  Friday  19 October 2012 @ 1pm

Funeral location:   Pinegrove Crematorium (West Chapel), Minchinbury

Buried at:  Cremated

Memorial location:

 

 


MILLER, Leonard James.
13.05.1946 – 11.10.2012
Passed away suddenly.

Late of Hawkesbury Heights.

Beloved husband of Glenda. Proud father of Christopher and Carolene and their partners Ann and Joey.

Len will be sorely missed by his colleagues from the NSW Police Force and those he served with in Vietnam, together with his many other friends.
Aged 66 years.
Finally at peace.

The family and friends of LEN are warmly invited to attend his funeral service to be held at Pinegrove Crematorium (West Chapel), Minchinbury, on Friday (October 19, 2012), commencing at 1 p.m.

Blue Mountains Funerals
4782 2922 4751 6166
blue mountains funerals.
com.au/notices.html

http://tributes.smh.com.au/obituaries/smh-au/obituary.aspx?n=leonard-miller&pid=160464719

 


 




Phillip John CHILD

Phillip John CHILD

( late of Carlingford, NSW )

New South Wales Police Force – Retired

Regd. # 5339

 

Married to Colleen Mildred CHILD, NSWPF P/W 0028 ( Passed in 2023 )

 

Rank:  Commenced Training “possibly” with Class 14 at Penrith Police College on Monday 26 August 1946 ( aged 23 years, 3 months, 2 days )

Probationary Constable  ? ? 1946

Constable – appointed ? ? ?

Detective – appointed ? ? ?

Constable 1st Class – appointed ? ? ?

Senior Constable – appointed ? ? ?

Sergeant 3rd Class – appointed ? ? ?

Sergeant 2nd Class – appointed 1 January 1968

Sergeant 1st Class – appointed 19 May 1973

Inspector 3rd Class – appointed 5 January 1977

Senior Inspector – appointed 1 May 1981

 

Stations:   ?, Liverpool ( 1959 – ? )( Det Cst – Sgt ), Lidcombe Detectives early 1970’s,  Parramatta Detectives ( O.I.C. )( March 1972 – 1974+), ?, Fairfield ( 34 Division )( 1980s ), ?

 

Service:   From   26 August 1946  to   ? ? ?

 

Awards:   ? – NO Find on It’s An Honour

 

Born:  Thursday  24 May 1923

Died on:  Thursday 12 December 2013

Cause:

Age:  90 years, 6 months, 18 days

 

Funeral date:  Tuesday 17 December 2013

Funeral location:  St Michael’s Chapel, Rookwood Cemetery, Lidcombe, NSW

Buried at:

 

 

Phillip John CHILD, 90 old, former Regd. No. 5339, an Unattached Member of the RPA of Carlingford, NSW.

Phillip passed away on 12/12/2013 and his funeral has been held.


CHILD, Phillip John.
(NX165122)
Aged 90
24/03/1923 – 12/12/2013
Dearest husband of Colleen, brother in law of Marie, Ken and Joan.
Uncle and Great Uncle.
Phillip was a man who loved and fought for his country.
Family and Friends are invited to attend PHILLIP’S Funeral service to be held at St Michael’s Chapel, Rookwood Cemetery, on Tuesday 17th December 2013 Commencing at 11am.
RIP

 

Published in The Sydney Morning Herald on Dec. 14, 2013

– See more at: http://tributes.smh.com.au/obituaries/smh-au/obituary.aspx?pid=168514320#sthash.StlYUuyi.dpuf


 

 

 

 

 




Gregory John EARLE

Gregory John EARLE   

aka  ‘ Toes down ‘ ( due to his riding style ) & ‘Earle of the Forest’

 

New South Wales Police Force

NSW Redfern Police Academy Class 127

Uniform # 3037

Regd. #   14691   

 

Rank:  Commenced Training at Redfern Police Academy on Monday 17 May 1971 ( aged 22 years, 7 months, 25 days )

Probationary Constable – appointed 28 June 1971 ( aged22 years, 9 months, 6 days )

Constable – appointed 28 August 1972

Constable 1st Class – appointed 28 August 1976

Senior Constable – appointed 28 August 1980

Senior Constable – Death

 

Stations?, North Sydney HWP, Frenchs Forest HWP ( 14 Division ) – Death

 

Service:   From 17 May 1971   to  21 June 1987 = 16 years, 1 week, 4 days Service

Age at Retirement / Leaving:  38 years, 8 months, 30 days

Time in Retirement:  0 years, 0 weeks, 0 days

 

[blockquote]

NASHOS   

Service name:  Army  – 4th Field Regiment, Royal Australian Artillery  

Service number:            2791952

Rank:                               Gunner

Served at:                        Vietnam  1970

Date of intake:              ?   

NS Training:                 ?   

Follow Up Training:   ?   

Basic Training:            ?   

Next of Kin:                 ?   

Medals                       ?   

4 Field Regiment, Royal Regiment of Australian Artillery
4 Field Regiment, Royal Regiment of Australian Artillery

[/blockquote]

 

Police Awards:  National Medal – granted 4 October 1988 ( posthumously )

 

Born:  Wednesday  22 September 1948 – Hobart, Tasmania

Died on:  Sunday 21 June 1987

Cause:  Motor vehicle accident – Police motor cycle – Urgent Duty

Event location:  The Strand, Dee Why, NSW

Age:  38 years, 8 months, 30 days

 

Funeral date:  Wednesday  24 June 1987

Funeral location?   

 

Buried at:  Mona Vale General cemetery, Fazzolari Ave, Mona Vale, NSW.

Grave location:  Roman Catholic, Section C, Grave 081

GPS: Lat:  -33.67456851936532    Long:  151.28723368269925

 

Memorial location: Frenchs Forest Police Stn

Memorial type: Plaque inside of Frenchs Forest Police Stn

approximate location of grave:  [codepeople-post-map]

 

Gregory John EARLE

 

Greg IS mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance

 

Shortly after 5.50pm on 21 June, 1987 Senior Constable Earle was riding a police motor cycle towards Palm Beach to assist in an urgent search for three missing lifesavers. While he was riding along The Strand at Dee Why the senior constable began to overtake a number of cars when the cycle hit a damaged part of the road surface causing the cycle to veer to the left where it hit a gravel patch. The cycle then cart-wheeled, throwing Senior Constable Earle into a parked car. He sustained severe head and internal injuries and was conveyed to the Mona Vale District Hospital where he was found to be dead on arrival.

 

The constable was born in 1948 and joined the New South Wales Police Force on 28 June, 1971. At the time of his death he was attached to the Frenchs Forest Highway Patrol.

 


 

Greg was travelling south through Dee Why on his way to Freshwater to meet, and escort, a surf rescue Jet Boat being towed, north, by road to launch from Palm Beach to join the search & rescue efforts for the missing Life Savers when this accident occurred.

But other sources say that they were NOT Surf Life Savers who were missing but two or three young blokes who were reported missing.  Trouble was, that the blokes reportedly missing – had actually returned to shore, safe and well but had failed to tell anyone of their return – thus prompting a Search and Rescue effort.

Another recollection of the incident is that the two or three ‘lads’ had taken a rubber duck boat from Newport or Palm Beach surf club and were actually at the Arms Hotel, drinking whilst the Search and Rescue ( for them ) was initiated.

‘Earle of the Forest’ is was also locally renowned for having a moustache painted on the tank of his police motor cycle – to represent the handle bar moustache he sported on his face.


 

The Canberra Times     Monday  22 June 1987      p 3

Police death

SYDNEY: A police motorcyclist died in hospital after falling off his machine in Dee Why last night. An ambulance spokesman said the policeman, 38, had been escorting a police rescue vehicle.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/118299446


Class 127 at Redfern Police Academy - 1971
Class 127 at Redfern Police Academy – 1971


 

First published on 22 September 2013.

Updated 8 February 2026.

 




John Thomas COLBERT

John Thomas COLBERT

 

AKA  ?  

* Nickname: 

Late of  ?  

 

Relations in ‘the job’:

“possible” relation in ‘the job‘:   R.J. COLBERT, NSWPF # 16090 ( Born 1946 ) ?

 

NSW Police Training Centre – Redfern  –  Class #  ? ? ? 

 

New South Wales Police Force

 

Regd. #  5981  

 

Rank:  Commenced Training at Redfern Police Academy on Monday 19 January 1948 ( aged 26 years, 11 months, 30 days )  

Probationary Constable – appointed Monday 2 February 1948 ( aged 27 years, 0 months, 13 days )  

Constable – appointed ? ? ? 

Constable 1st Class – appointed ? ? ? 

Detective – appointed ? ? ?  

Senior Constable – appointed ? ? ?

Leading Senior Constable – appointed ? ? ? ( N/A ) 

Sergeant 3rd Class – appointed 20 December 1964

Sergeant 2nd Class – appointed 1 March 1972 

Sergeant 1st Class – appointed 10 June 1976

 

Final Rank: = Sergeant 1st Class  

 

Stations ?, Kingsgrove ( 31 Division ) – Death  

  

Time employed ( Paid ) with NSW PoliceFrom: 19 January 1948   to  11 March 1979 = 31 years, 1 month, 20 days

Service ( From Training Date ) period: From  19 January 1948   to  11 March 1979 =  31 years, 1 month, 20 days Service

 

 

Retirement / Leaving age: = 58 years, 1 month, 19 days

Time in Retirement from Police:  0

 

[blockquote]

World War II

Australian Imperial Force

Regiment:                                      Royal Australian Navy

Enlisted:                                        3 January 1941  ( Aged 19 years, 11 months, 14 days ) in Port Adelaide, S.A.

Service #                                        PA1978

Rank:                                             Signalman

Embarkation:                              ?

Age at embarkation:                  ?

Occupation:                                 ?

Address:                                       Riverton, Clare and Gilbert Valleys, South Australia

Next of kin:                                 Agnes COLBERT ( Mother )

Religion:                                      ?

Single / Married:                       ?

Returned to Australia:             ?

Date of Discharge:                    26 March 1946

Posting at Discharge:              HMAS Moreton

Awards:                                       ?

https://vwma.org.au/explore/people/508203

https://nominal-rolls.dva.gov.au/veteran?id=1095453&c=WW2

[/blockquote]

John Thomas COLBERT 04 - NSWPF - 5981 - Died 11 March 1979

Awards:  No Find on the Australian Honours system – which is obviously wrong from looking at his uniform

 

Sergeant 1st Class John Thomas COLBERT
Sergeant 1st Class John Thomas COLBERT

 

 Born:  Thursday 20 January 1921 in Kilkenny, Scotland

Died on:  Sunday 11 March 1979 

Age: 58 years, 1 month, 19 days

Organ Donor:  Y / N /

 

Cause: Motor Vehicle Collision – Pedestrian

Event location:   Morgan St, Kingsgrove, NSW

Event / Diagnosis date: 11 March 1979 

 

Funeral date ? ? ? 

Funeral location ?

LIVE STREAM    N/A

 

 

Wake location??? 

Wake date??? 

 

 

Funeral Parlour: ?

 

Buried at:  Woronora Memorial Park, 121 Linden St, Sutherland, NSW

Grave LocationSection:  General Plaque Lawn 5        Row?         Plot: 478

Grave GPS?,       ?

John Thomas COLBERT 02 - NSWPF - 5981 - Died 11 March 1979

Memorial / Plaque / Monument located at

Dedication date of Memorial / Plaque / Monument: Nil – at this time ( September 2024 )

 

John Thomas COLBERT 03 - NSWPF - 5981 - Died 11 March 1979

JOHN 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


 

May they forever Rest In Peace

https://www.facebook.com/groups/AustralianPolice.com.au/ 

https://www.facebook.com/groups/NSWFallenPolice/ 

Australian Police YouTube Channel


 

At 11pm on 10 March, 1979 Sergeant Colbert commenced duty as the supervising sergeant in the Hurstville Division. Following an inspection of the Kingsgrove Police Station the sergeant set out for the Peakhurst Police Station. About 1.20am he parked behind a panel van in Morgan Street, Kingsgrove where he spoke to the occupants. The sergeant then returned to the police car and as he opened the driver’s door he was struck by a passing vehicle and killed instantly.

 

The sergeant was born in 1921 and joined the New South Wales Police Force on 2 February, 1948. At the time of his death he was stationed at Kingsgrove.

 


 

* Story behind any Nickname:

 


 

Nothing further, than what is recorded above, is known about this person at the time of publication and further information and photos would be appreciated.

**********

 

Cal

15 September 2014

Updated:  23 September 2024


 

Wife = Kathlyn Marie COLBERT.  Died 12 August 2002.

Loved wife of John.

Dearly loved mother of Helen, James, Stephen, Elizabeth & Andrew.

Grave:  Woronora Memorial Park, 121 Linden St, Sutherland.

General Plaque Lawn 5, Grave 478.

Kathlyn Marie O’Connor Colbert (unknown-2002) – Find a Grave Memorial


 

 




Paul BURMISTRIW

Paul BURMISTRIW

The FIRST Terrorist act in NSW

NSW Police Academy, Redfern – Class 128

New South Wales Police Force

Regd. #:   14872

Rank: Commenced Training at Redfern Police Academy on Monday 9 August 1971 ( aged 25 years, 1 month, 4 days )

Probationary Constable – appointed 20 September 1971 ( aged 25 years, 2 months, 15 days )

Constable – appointed 20 October 1972 ( loss of 1 month Seniority possibly failing an exam or physical )

Constable 1st Class – death

Stations: ?, Regent St ( 2 Division ), Central Police Stn ( 1 Division – A District ) – Death

Service:   From 9 August 1971  to  22 February 1978 = 6 years, 6 months, 13 days Service

Awards: No find on It’s An Honour

Born:  Friday 5 July 1946

Event date:  Monday  13 February 1978

Died on:  Wednesday  22 February 1978

Cause:  Bomb Explosion – Terrorist Act – Murdered

Event location:  outside of Hilton Hotel, George St, Sydney, NSW

Age:  31 years, 7 months, 17 days

Funeral date:  Monday  27 February 1978

Funeral location: Russian Orthodox Church, Strathfield, NSW

Buried at: Rookwood Cemetery

Zone H  Remembrance Lawn 1  Grave 456

Memorial location:  outside of Hilton Hotel, George St, Sydney

Hilton Bombing memorial plaque to Alec Carter, Arthur Favell & Cst 1.C Paul Burmistriew
Hilton Bombing memorial plaque to Alec Carter, Arthur Favell & Cst 1/C Paul Burmistriw

Cst 1st Class Paul Burmistriw - Bomb explosion - 13 Feb 1978 - Roadside memorial - 02

PAUL IS mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance


 

Constable Burmistriw was fatally injured in a bomb explosion outside the Hilton Hotel, George St, Sydney, on 13 February, 1978. At the time the Regional Conference of Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting (CHOGM), a regional off-shoot of the biennial meetings of the heads of government from across the Commonwealth of Nations. was taking place at the hotel.

The bomb, planted in a rubbish bin, exploded when the bin was emptied into a garbage truck outside the hotel at 1:40am. It killed two garbage men, Alec Carter and William Favell, and a police officer, Paul Burmistriw, guarding the entrance to the hotel lounge, who died of his injuries on the 22 February 1978.

 

The blast also injured eleven others. Twelve foreign leaders were staying in the hotel at the time, but none were injured. Australian prime minister Malcolm Fraser immediately called out the Australian Army to guard the remainder of the CHOGRM meeting.

 

Also seriously injured in the blast were:-

Sergeant Edward Hawtin ( Regd # possibly 8264 ),

Senior Constable Rodney Wither ( Regd # 16376 ),

Senior Constable Terry Griffiths ( Regd # 13390 ).

 

Two council employees killed:-

William Arthur Favell,

Alec Carter.

 

The constable was born in 1946 and joined the New South Wales Police Force on 20 September, 1971. At the time of his death he was stationed at Central Police Station.

The scene of the Hilton Hotel bombing on George Street, Sydney. SUPPLIED.

160135-chaos-in-the-wake-of-the-sydney-hilton-bombing549804-hilton-hotel-bombing

793715-sydney-hilton-hotel-bombing

Hilton Bombing - Army guard

Hilton Bombing

158582-forensic-search-of-the-hilton-bomb-site

hilton_old_140208_wideweb__470x319,0


 

Startling book unpicks story behind Australia’s first major terrorist attack

ONCE upon a time, Australia was truly the carefree, “lucky country” of our imagination. Now, we walk around on edge, knowing we are by no means protected from people who would do us harm.

If you thought that started with the Sydney siege, you’d be wrong. What is seen as the first major act of terrorism on Australian soil took place 30 years ago, and it remains unsolved to this day.

Author and award-winning filmmaker Dr Rachel Landers has dived into the archive documents on the Hilton bombing, trying to make sense of all the contradictory testimony surrounding that black day.

On February 13, 1978, a bomb was planted in a rubbish bin outside the Sydney Hilton, which was hosting a Commonwealth meeting of Asia Pacific heads of government.

The device exploded when it was loaded into a garbage truck, blowing the vehicle to pieces, along with two rubbish collectors, Alec Carter and William Favell. A police officer guarding the entrance to the hotel lounge, Paul Burmistriw, died later. Eleven more were injured.

It was a day that left people physically and mentally scarred, tore families apart and was a devastating blow to the happy-go-lucky Australian psyche. It triggered years of finger-pointing, conspiracy theories and saw several innocent men locked away.

Dr Landers’ book, Who Bombed The Hilton?, takes us back to an event that helps explain our nation today.

CONSPIRACY THEORY

As with terrorist attacks like 9/11, shocking claims emerged soon after the tragedy that Australian security forces had planted the bomb themselves.

One of the most vocal conspiracy theorists is policeman Terry Griffiths, who was badly mutilated by the blast, and questions the authorities’ story to this day.

The allegations, which have gained enough credence to be recorded in meticulous detail across the internet, centre on what some see as suspicious aspects of the story, including: why police outside the hotel didn’t see a bomber, why didn’t they search the bins, why they allegedly stopped garbage trucks emptying the bins, why a bomb squad was waiting, why a “warning call” wasn’t relayed to police outside the hotel and where the truck was dumped afterwards.

Dr Landers accepts that police made mistakes, and that the New South Wales police force had a problem with corruption at the time, but she says nothing she found in documentary evidence backed up Mr Griffiths’ claims.

She decided early on to eliminate witnesses’ recollections and instead focused on a forensic analysis reams of archival material made public 20 years ago. “Memory is an unreliable thing,” she said. “People misremembered basic facts. There was a huge discrepancy in what they recalled.

“There were appeals and counter-appeals. They tell a story about a miscarriage of justice that is not untrue, but covers up the question of who is actually the most likely person to have planted the bomb.”

MAKING THREE MURDERERS

Days after the bombing, a man named Richard Seary approached police and offered to infiltrate an Indian socio-spiritual organisation called Ananda Marga, who were demonstrating against the outside the hotel at the time.

In June, Seary told police that members Paul Alister, Tim Anderson and Ross Dunn had confessed to the bombing, and it was assumed Indian Prime Minister, Morarji Desai, was the target.

Seary said they were planning another attack on Neo-Nazi National Alliance leader Robert Cameron. The mole led police to the trio, in a car packed with explosives, and they were arrested. They were never convicted of the Hilton bombing, but were given 16 years each for conspiracy to murder Cameron.

It later emerged that Seary was a paranoid schizophrenic and drug addict, who had planted the explosives in the car. Alister, Anderson and Dunn were released after seven years in prison. It remains one of Australia’s worst miscarriages of justice.

While they received compensation, Alister told the Sunshine Coast Daily in 2008 he was sick of being referred to as a Hilton bomber.

Most officials now believe an Ananda Marga member named Abhiik Kumar, living in Israel, is behind the bombing. But the trail has long since gone cold and is “besieged by contradictions and evidentiary problems.”

The authorities failed to share their plans with international colleagues working on possible related bombings and attempted attacks and “it was catastrophic for the case, it totally derailed it,” according to Dr Landers.

“Special branch, for understandable reasons, went rogue,” she said. “People were so shocked, they’d been thrust into the international age of terrorism. People do irrational things in that vortex of fear.”

LONG FIGHT FOR TRUTH

Like today’s acts of terrorism, carried out in the name of Islamic State or other jihadi groups, the Hilton bombing didn’t take place in a vacuum.

“A lot of things I thought I knew turned out to be untrue,” said Dr Landers. “I always thought it was a really Australian story, I didn’t realise we were at the centre of an international reign of terror.

“There was a huge mountain of evidence linking this with Stockholm, New York, Malaysia … There are letters from Afghanistan threatening India. It quickly stopped being about Australia.”

The bombing was politicised so early on, it is hard to dig down to what really happened, but it’s a story that needs to be told without the agenda.

Dr Landers has conducted a thorough investigation, and she believes she has some answers, but she wants those touched by the tragedy to have the public inquiry they deserve.

As the threat of terrorism looms ever larger, we have a real chance to learn from our past.

Who Bombed the Hilton? is officially launched on Wednesday April 20.

http://www.news.com.au/entertainment/books-magazines/books/startling-book-unpicks-story-behind-australias-first-major-terrorist-attack/news-story/1e602043ab42bd65c1f63e37a315390c


 

http://forum.prisonplanet.com/index.php?topic=88905.0

The Warning Phone Call

The Hilton Operation ran strictly according to plan up until 12.30AM on the Monday morning. Two garbage pick-ups were prevented by the NSW police. Whoever planted the bomb was well aware of the garbage collection times. Another garbage collection was due at 1AM Monday morning. At 12.30AM the warning phone call was made. (Terry Griffiths says another police officer told him the warning phone call was made by a Sergeant in Special Branch who had been observing the scene outside the Hilton in a red torana, a police observation car. The warning phone caller rang the police switchboard and asked to speak to Special Branch. It was 12.30AM Monday morning. Normally, Special Branch would not be there at that hour, though the phone caller seemed to believe they would be. (Indeed, the same person called back an hour later at 1.30Am and again asked to speak to Special Branch.) After the phone rang a few times, the police telephonist transferred the call to the sergeant in charge of the CIB, Cec Streetfield. The Hilton Operation had begun to unravel.

What Streetfield did on being informed of the bomb, is one of the mysteries of the Hilton. What he did not do is notorious: he did not warn the police outside the Hilton over the police radio. Streetfield testified before the Hilton Inquest in 1982. According to Terry Griffiths, he told a pack of lies. According to Streetfield, the phone caller said: “Dere is a bomb in der bin outside der Hilton Hotel.” The phone caller then rang the Sydney Morning Herald and told them they might be interested in what was about to happen outside the Hilton Hotel. The Hilton Operation continued to fall apart. The garbage collection truck was running twenty minutes early that night. They arrived outside the Hilton at 12.40AM before the bomb was found.


 

City of Sydney Re-dedicates Plaque Commemorating Hilton Hotel Blast Victims

The City of Sydney is re-dedicating the plaque commemorating the victims of the Hilton Hotel bombing on the occasion of the 30th anniversary of the event.

The bombing at the Hilton Hotel occurred in the early hours of 13 February 1978. The bomb was concealed inside a garbage bin and exploded when that bin was loaded into a City of Sydney Council garbage truck compactor.

Three people were killed (Alec Carter and Arthur Favell, City Council workers, and a NSW Police Officer, First Class Constable Paul Burmistriw) and seven more were wounded. At the time, Malcolm Fraser, the Prime Minister and eleven visiting heads of state were staying at the hotel for a Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting.

Lord Mayor, Clover Moor MP said that the anniversary of the bombing served as a time to remember those whose lives were cut short and those who still bear the scars today.

“This terrible act killed three decent and dedicated men, two of whom were working for the City of Sydney. But now we can re-dedicate this plaque so that future generations remember them and remember the shocking crime that took their lives.”

Commissioner of Police Andrew Scipione APM said it was important that Australians not forget the terrible incident.

“This was the death of a policeman killed as he helped guard world leaders in Sydney. Constable Paul Burmistriw was a fine officer. That he and City Council workers Alec Carter and Arthur Favell should die doing their job was a terrible tragedy.”

The original plaque had stood on the site of the garbage bin but had been moved due to a City streetscape upgrade and the recent upgrade of the Hilton Hotel. The new plaque will stand at the original spot on the George Street footpath.

 

Hilton Hotel Bombing History

In February 1978, Prime Ministers and other heads of State and senior political figures from Commonwealth countries gathered in Australia for a Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, known as CHOGM, held at Sydney’s Hilton Hotel.

In the early hours of 13 February 1978, a City of Sydney garbage truck compactor set off a bomb that had been placed in a bin immediately outside the Hilton Hotel on George Street.

At the time Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser and eleven visiting heads of state were staying at the hotel.

Three people were killed by the blast: two City of Sydney Council workers, Alec Carter and Arthur Favell and First Class Police Constable Paul Burmistriw.

Seven people were wounded by the blast, including police officer, Terry Griffiths.

The then Indian Prime Minister, Morarji Desai claimed that the blast was the work of a group known as Ananda Marga, protesting the imprisonment in India of their spiritual leader, Shrii Shrii Anandamurti.

In 1989, Evan Pederick came forward and claimed responsibility for the bombing. He accused a one-time member of Ananda Marga, Tim Anderson of helping to plant the bomb. The only other main witness against Anderson was notorious criminal Raymond John Denning. Anderson went on trial in 1990 and was initially found guilty.

Anderson appealed to the NSW Court of Appeal. On 6 June 1991 the court led by then Chief Justice Gleeson quashed the conviction, based on the inappropriate and unfair action by the crown prosecutor. His Honour noted: “It is well established that a Court of Criminal Appeal may treat a jury’s verdict as unsafe or unsatisfactory even if satisfied that it was, on the evidence, reasonably open to the jury to convict … The inherent strength or weakness of the crown case may be a factor relevant to such a conclusion. In the present case, for reasons just given, I do not regard the crown case as presented at trial as a strong one, and for the reasons discussed in relation to the first ground of appeal, there was one important respect in which, in my view, the proceedings miscarried. The crown was permitted, in an unfair manner, to obscure a major difficulty concerning the reliability of the evidence of its principal witness by raising an hypothesis that was not reasonably open on the evidence.This was compounded by what I regard as an inappropriate and unfair attempt by the crown to persuade the jury to draw inferences of fact, and accept argumentative suggestions, that were not properly open on the evidence. I do not consider that in those circumstances the crown should be given a further opportunity to patch up its case against the appellant. It has already made one attempt too many to do that, and I believe that, if that attempt had never been made, there is a strong likelihood that the appellant would have been acquitted.”

There has been controversy about the motives for the planting of the bomb and the handling of the case that surrounded it. Terry Griffiths has claimed that the bombing was a conspiracy and called for an inquiry. There have been persistent suggestions of ASIO involvement in the bombing.

Anderson subsequently lodged 52 complaints of professional misconduct with the New South Wales Bar Association against Mark Tedeschi, QC. All but one of the complaints by Anderson against Tedeschi were dismissed by the NSW Bar Association. The remaining complaint was dismissed by the NSW Administrative Decisions Tribunal.

In 1991, Peter Collins, the then NSW Attorney-General led a campaign to demand a joint State-Federal inquiry which culminated in a unanimous resolution by both houses of the NSW parliament. Mr Collins said in parliament: “The Hilton bombing cannot simply be relegated to the yellowing pages of history until we know the truth, however unpalatable it may turn out to be. It must also be said that we owe this to the memory of the three who perished, their families, and to those who survived… This issue, this weeping sore transcends political, constitutional and geographical boundaries. The answers may be alarmingly simple. But, whatever the truth, the people of Australia are entitled to nothing less.”


 

Hilton Hotel bombing victims remembered with plaque

 

Australian terrorism born in the Sydney Hilton bombing

It was also reported a warning phone call was made to police minutes before the explosion, in the first hint that there was more to the story.

[blockquote]We will never be stopped. Ananda Marga will cleanse the world[/blockquote]

And so began the controversy.

Overnight, Sydney went into lockdown amid the biggest manhunt in Australia’s history.

Mr Fraser and the NSW Premier Neville Wran demanded support from the armed forces, and almost 2000 troops descended on the city for protection.

CHOGM progressed with armed forces and even a decoy train employed to protect heads of government on their way to a pretty NSW town, Bowral.

Mr Coster recalls Bowral was “transformed into a war zone” with helicopters flying overhead through the night and armoured personnel carriers along the road into town.

Police were now hunting three men “swarthy in appearance and in their early 30s”.

Within hours, suspicions emerged that a previously ignored religious sect known as Ananda Marga appeared to have played a role in the bombing.

Margis -as the sect’s members were known- had already been involved in worldwide protests for some years, demanding the Indian government release their spiritual leader Pabhat Ranian Sarkar who was serving a life sentence for murder.

But the breakthrough came after the three main suspects were charged in another political conspiracy four months later.

On June 15, Ross Dunn, 24, Paul Alister, 22, and Timothy Anderson, 26, were charged with conspiring to murder the NSW leader of the National Front – a professed Nazi – Robert Cameron.

All were members of Ananda Marga’s Australian branch.

The trio were sentenced to 16 years’ jail without parole.

But the trials also unearthed police informer, Richard Seary, 26, who implicated them in the Hilton bombing.

Mr Seary, a reformed heroin addict, revealed he had joined Ananda Marga as a paid police informer in March 1978 to discover any links between the sect and the bombing.

The men told him they had “fixed” the Hilton bombing, and Anderson had also declared: “You’ve got to be willing to die for your ideology.”

An arresting detective said Dunn had also told him: “We will never be stopped. Ananda Marga will cleanse the world.”

But despite a $100,000 reward and a team of 100 full-time detectives, no charges had been laid for the Hilton bombing a year after the blast.

Three early leads had been discounted, including a theory that a woman was suspected of trying to harm the New Zealand prime minister because she opposed the abortion laws.

Three years after the bombing, new evidence suggested a cover-up.

On March 30, 1981, newspapers reported that the NSW Attorney-General had received fresh information.

Among the new claims was that an army bomb disposal squad had been on its way to the Hilton when the bomb exploded. Another allegation was that the police hadn’t searched the garbage bins the night before the blast, in an otherwise comprehensive search.

Enter the Hilton bombing’s most vocal conspiracy theorist.

Retired senior constable Terry Griffiths had been just six metres from the blast and suffered extensive injuries.

The father of two, who had been battling for worker’s compensation for over two years, believed he was the victim of a cover-up involving Australian security forces.

Mr Griffiths said the NSW Government had deliberately blocked his efforts to seek compensation.

“I’m suggesting there is enough evidence for any person who wishes to go into the matter honestly to believe that there may well be a cover-up in this matter.”

Some evidence appeared to support his theory.

It emerged that three garbage trucks were diverted from the bin by police officers, despite the fact that it was overflowing with rubbish.

Mr Griffiths even claimed the explosion was the inadvertent result of a media stunt fabricated by ASIO, the military and the NSW Police Special Branch.

His theory was that the organisations had planted the bomb which they then intended to “discover” to make them look good – and justify broader powers, he told Sydney’s The Sun-Herald.

It was only when the ill-fated fourth truck slipped through and finally emptied the bin that the “plan” went badly awry.

Mr Griffiths suggested that the phone call police received just minutes before the blast was in fact a person involved who saw the truck approach the bin, and panicked.

Mr Griffiths said ASIO had benefited from the blast, gaining “unlimited powers” from legislation introduced in the wake of the blast.

Some politicians gobbled up Mr Griffiths’ allegations of conspiracy, including then-Senator and federal shadow Attorney-General Gareth Evans.

Within a month there were calls for fresh investigations into the Hilton bombing and the reward raised to $250,000.

Then, in 1982, a coronial inquest was announced.

The Sydney Hilton’s night receptionist at the time of the blast, Manfred von Gries told the inquiry he saw three men speaking to police just before the explosion.

Within days, he was approached by a man who threatened to kidnap his son if he spoke to police about what he saw, he claimed.

He later identified the man as Jason Alexander, Ananda Marga’s Australian leader, but there were doubts about his evidence.

Mr Griffiths added to his claims, suggesting a bomb disposal truck was stationed around the corner before the blast, and that several Special Branch officers were watching the police from a vehicle across the road.

He also said he’d been informed that a warrant officer with the armed forces had planted the bomb several days before the blast.

Mr Griffiths also said that Sgt Robert Jackson, his friend and fellow officer who had assisted with the initial murder investigation, had told him that the warning call was made to police 10 minutes before the blast.

Within days, Sgt Jackson denied the conversation.

Sgt Arthur Hawkin, on duty on the night of the blast, appeared to back the theory.

Mr Hawkin said when he arrived for his shift 90 minutes before the explosion he was told to expect trouble and “something about a bomb”.

The inquiry also heard a sergeant before the blast saw Timothy Anderson near the rubbish bin that later exploded, during a demonstration against the New Zealand prime minister.

And another witness claimed Anderson, a regular customer, had picked up a newspaper in her shop the morning after the blast and had said to another man: “We only got three.”

Then the police informant Richard Seary dropped powerful new claims, saying Ross Dunn had told him he’d planted the bomb in the bin an hour before the Indian Prime Minister’s arrival.

Why hadn’t Mr Seary shared this evidence with police earlier?

Initially, he said it was because he was upset with the way police had treated him. Later, he said it was due to concerns that Dunn had lied, confessing out of bravado.

He said on account of his doubts, he had drip-fed his evidence to police instead.

With the latest claims, coroner Norman Walsh decided there was enough evidence to charge Dunn and Alister of three counts of murder, and Anderson with conspiracy to murder.

The court erupted in shock and fury, and even the jury, which gave no official verdict raised lingering questions.

In 1984, the NSW Attorney-General Paul Landa on Crown law advice decided the three men would not be prosecuted.

Instead, a judicial inquiry was announced to investigate the Cameron charges.

This inquiry found Richard Seary to be an unreliable witness, and a psychiatrist diagnosed him as having a personality disorder.

Adding to his fall from grace, the Margis’ lawyer went so far as to accuse Mr Seary of bombing the hotel himself.

In 1985, after seven years in jail, the judicial inquiry quashed the trio’s convictions.

The three men were released in May, pardoned by the NSW government, and awarded $100,000 each in compensation.

Alister and Dunn moved to an Ananda Marga community in Queensland, and Mr Anderson was left to pursue a PhD on Australian foreign debt.

But on May 30, 1989, Anderson was again arrested and charged for the bombing amid new evidence.

Evan Dunstan Pederick, a 33-year-old Brisbane public servant Ananda Marga member admitted he had tried to remotely detonate the bomb when the Indian Prime Minister arrived at the hotel.

He said he was acting as a front man for Mr Anderson, who provided the explosives.

When the bomb failed to detonate, Pederick panicked and ran. He pleaded guilty to conspiring to murder the Prime Minister – but not guilty to causing the three subsequent deaths.

Nevertheless, Pederick was found guilty of three counts of murder, and sentenced to 20 years’ jail. The jury determined he had acted with reckless indifference by leaving the bomb in the bin.

Another prisoner who had met Mr Anderson while he was serving the Cameron sentence revealed Anderson had confessed his role in the Hilton bombing.

In 1990, Anderson was sentenced to 14 years’ jail. Supreme Court justice Michael Grove said Mr Anderson had been “brainwashed” by the Ananda Marga cult when he instigated the bombing.

Seven months later Mr Anderson was acquitted.

But the saga was far from over.

In May 1995, Pederick did a U-turn. After six years in jail for a crime he confessed to, it suddenly occurred to Pederick that he might be innocent.

Pederick accused police of failing to test his evidence and state of mind.

“Is it possible that in 1978, dominated by the influence of the Ananda Marga and yet in conflict with the demands of the sect, I had acquired a deep sense of guilt which expressed itself in an obsession with the cataclysmic events for which Ananda Marga was held responsible at the time? I do not know,” Pederick said in a News Ltd report.

In 1997, the NSW Court of Criminal Appeal dismissed Pederick’s new claims, but six months later he was released on parole.

”As a naive young person, influenced by the teachings of Ananda Marga, I participated in a fatal act of political terrorism,” Pederick said, as quoted in The Australian.

But as he left the jail, Pederick indicated there were six others involved in the bombing, none of whom were ever charged.

More than three decades on, the question mark remains: Who bombed the Sydney Hilton?

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/law-order/the-sydney-hilton-bombing-of-1978/story-fnat7jnn-1226539686853


 

Police-coroner collaboration on Hilton revealed

Wednesday, December 11, 1991

By Dick Nichols and John Tognolini

SYDNEY — In evidence before the New South Wales Independent Commission Against Corruption, it has emerged that state coroner Kevin Waller advised Detective-Inspector Aarne Tees, investigator of the Hilton bombing, on whether the testimony of police informer Raymond John Denning provided a strong enough basis for a prosecution of Tim Anderson.

Anderson was convicted in November 1990. His appeal was unanimously upheld by the NSW Court of Criminal Appeal in May 1991, Chief Justice Gleeson ruling that “a jury, acting reasonably, would give Denning’s evidence little or no weight”.

The involvement of Waller in the Hilton case again highlights the links between the police and the judiciary in this state. In evidence, Tees stated that he didn’t trust crown law officers (who would normally make judgements on the reliability of testimony) and instead sought the opinion of Waller because he was “technically the head of homicide”.

Waller’s view that Denning’s evidence was trustworthy contrasts with his ruling in a previous case involving Denning, once known for his championing of prisoners’ rights.

In 1981-82 Waller heard a case brought by prisoners’ rights activist Brett Collins against certain warders at Grafton Jail. One of the witnesses called by Collins was Denning. In his adjudication, Waller said:

In cross-examination he demonstrated a bizarre attitude to life … Mr Denning has been in institutions, in gaols, committing crimes or on the run for the last 15 of his 30 years and his attitude must have been affected by his life style. At other times he refused to answer questions in cross examination despite warnings that such refusals could reflect adversely on his credit. He was an unreliable witness.”

The revelation that Tees consulted Waller on using Denning also went against Tees’ own evidence to the committal hearing against Anderson, held in September 1989. There Tees denied having been advised by anyone before launching the prosecution.

In other evidence before the ICAC, it has emerged that the prosecution decided not to call five other prisoner witnesses against Anderson, even though all claimed that Anderson had confessed to the Hilton bombing when in jail. A coded message between two of these witnesses, which was intercepted by prison officers, read: “It’s nice to know we can get someone convicted even when he is innocent like Anderson is. They’re all gronks [dags].”

Someone on the prosecution side decided that such people wouldn’t make very reliable-looking witnesses for the prosecution.

Also of interest is the revelation that Anderson’s supposed confession to the five uncalled witnesses revolved around an alleged conflict between Anderson and fellow prisoner Alex Burmistriw, the brother of Constable Paul Burmistriw, killed in the Hilton bombing.

In her notes of an interview with Alex Burmistriw, Anderson’s solicitor wrote: “He said that the police had come to see him and they dared to say that he didn’t care for his brother. He [Burmistriw] asked about whether he is supposed to have got in a fight with Tim — I said in fact yes, that was one of the allegations. He said something like, if he had, Tim would have known about it.”

Little of this has appeared in the Sydney media. They have led with Denning’s challenge to Anderson to undergo a lie-detector test and Tees’ claim that Anderson and the Prisoners Action Group were involved in spiriting prison escapee Ian Steele out of the country in 1986.

Commissioner Ian Temby halted Tees’ evidence on this matter, saying he did not want the hearing to be “used as a vehicle for the bringing forth of material which is of no possible use to me and all it does is to titillate various imaginations“.

In a letter to the Sunday Telegraph, Brett Collins and Ian Fraser replied on behalf of the Prisoners Action Group: “Denning’s accusations elsewhere have been dismissed or totally contradicted by proven facts as in the Hilton bombing case. We regard his actions as sadly exhibiting the destructive influence of heroin, prison hopelessness and corrupt authorities.

In his opening remarks, Tim Anderson said that his questioning of Denning would reveal a “a pattern of constructing evidence to make it incriminate people with the help of Aarne Tees“.

Will the ICAC hearings get to the bottom of the police informer system? Will anyone important be charged? The signs are not very promising. Already Commissioner Temby has refused requests for chief Hilton prosecutor Mark Tedeschi and Kevin Waller to appear before the hearing.

https://www.greenleft.org.au/content/police-coroner-collaboration-hilton-revealed


 

 

 




Ian Donald WARD

Ian Donald WARD

late of Padstow, NSW

 

New South Wales Police Force

 

Joined via NSW Police Cadets on 21 February 1966

Cadet # 2109

Redfern Police Academy Class 114

Regd. # 13174

 

Rank:  NSW Police Cadet – commenced 21 February 1966 ( aged 16 years, 10 months, 9 days )

Probationary Constable – 12 April 1968 ( aged 19 years, 0 months, 0 days )

Constable – appointed 12 April 1969

Constable 1st Class  ( Acting Sergeant in Cyprus )

 

Stations? & Cyprus as part of the 11th Australian Contingent of UN Peacekeeping Mission

UNFICYP AUSCIVPOL

 

Service:  From 21 February 1966  to  12 November 1974 = 8 years, 8 months, 22 days Service

Age at Retirement:  25 years, 7 months, 0 days

Time in Retirement:  0

 

[blockquote]

NASHOS

Service name:              Military Police, National Service  ( Army )

Service number:          ?

Rank:                               Corporal

Date of birth:                12 April 1949

Place of birth:               Ryde, NSW

Date of intake:              ?

NS Training:                  ?

Follow Up Training:   ?

Basic Training:             ?

Next of Kin:                   ?

Medals:                           ?

[/blockquote]

 

Police AwardsPolice Overseas Service Medal with Cyprus clasp – granted 19 October 1992

Dag Hammarskjold Medal – awarded

Awarded the Dag Hammarskjöld Medal. The U.N. Secretary-General established the Dag Hammarskjöld medal for posthumous award to members of peacekeeping operations who lost their lives during service with a peacekeeping operation under the operational control and authority of the United Nations.

 

Born: Tuesday 12 April 1949 at Ryde, NSW

Died:  Tuesday  12 November 1974

Cause of death:  Murdered – Land Mine Explosion

Event location:  near Lefka, Cyprus ( 5 days after arriving in the country )

Age:  25 years, 7 months, 0 days

Funeral date:  26 November 1974

Funeral location???

Grave location:  Rookwood Cemetery, Rookwood

Ian Donald WARD
Ian Donald WARD

Ian Donald WARD

Ian WARD

On 12 November, 1974 Constable Ward was serving with the Eleventh Australian Police Element in Cyprus. Whilst travelling in a Land Rover near Lefka the vehicle hit a landmine in the buffer zone. As a result Constable Ward was killed and Constable 1st Class John Woolcott ( # 11976 ) was seriously injured.

Constable Ward is the 3rd and last Australian to die in Cyprus.

The constable was born in 1949 and joined the New South Wales Police Force on 12 April, 1968. At the time of his death he was stationed in Cyprus and an Acting Sergeant.

John Woolcott ( # 11976 ) recovered from his injuries and ” Wooly ” later retired from NSW Police Force either as an Sergeant at Manly Police Station or an Inspector at North Sydney / Mosman.  This, is yet, to be confirmed.  ( 10 August 2017 ).

John WOOLCOTT 01 - NSWPF 11976 - Served in Cyprus
NSWPF Member John E. WOOLCOTT # 11974 from Redfern Police Academy Class 107


 

1974 - the funeral for Sergeant Ian Ward
1974 – the funeral for Sergeant Ian Ward

 


 

National Police Wall of Remembrance Touch Plate for Ian WARD
National Police Wall of Remembrance Touch Plate for Ian WARD

IAN IS mentioned on the National Police Wall of Remembrance, Canberra


 

17 June 2017 - Malaysia Memorial in Cyprus taken today as Australian Police complete the long mission and are leaving Cyprus.
17 June 2017 – Malaysia Memorial in Cyprus taken today as Australian Police complete the long mission and are leaving Cyprus.

 


 

Ian's memorial at the Goulburn Police Academy.
Ian’s memorial at the Goulburn Police Academy.

 


 

Dag Hammarskjold Medal
Dag Hammarskjold Medal

 


 

Memorial to Ian WARD - unveiled in 1985
Memorial to Ian WARD – unveiled in 1985

 

2003 Police Remembrance Day is marked with a ceremony at the cairn erected in memory of Sergeant Ian Ward.
2003 Police Remembrance Day is marked with a ceremony at the cairn erected in memory of Sergeant Ian Ward.


 

Inscription:<br /> Killed in the service of peane<br /> Sgt Ian Donald Ward<br /> Aust. CivPol
Inscription:
Killed in the service of peane
Sgt Ian Donald Ward
Aust. CivPol

 


 

FURTHER:

Cst 1st Class Ian Donald WARD – NSWPF – Killed in Cyprus – 12 November 1974 – further info

Cst 1st Class Ian Donald WARD – NSWPF – Killed in Cyprus – 12 November 1974 – further info 2

 


 

the Eleventh Contingent

p 105
The closure of Nicosia Airport meant a circuitous route to Cyprus for the second half of the eleventh contingent led by Merv Beck.
Although it was not known at the time, conditions on the Island and consequent reduction in UNFICYP strength would make this the
last November rotation.
The group left Sydney on 6 November and were welcomed some days later at Akrotiri after flying with Qantas to London then busing to
the Brize Norton RAF Base near Oxford and thence via Malta to Cyprus.
RAF flights were ‘dry’ and the seats faced the rear, so the Australians appreciated the traditional welcome at Limassol Headquarters.
The newcomers ‘pumped’ the old hands for news of the war while they themselves were pressed for information about events in Australia.
The new arrivals were soon split up.  Ray Leister was assigned Control Room duties while others went to Ktima and Polis.
After only five days on the Island the unthinkable happened near a road-block approaching Lefka.
Ian Ward, a replacement from New South Wales, was killed and John Woolcott injured when their Land Rover detonated a land-mine in an unmarked field.
The Australians were conveying a Turkish Cypriot family from Ayios Nicolaos to the Turkish Cypriot controlled area at Lefka and one of the four passengers was killed and the other three seriously injured.
The fatality cast a pall over the contingent.
A number of moving ceremonies were held before his body was flown home to Australia.
Twelve months later a cairn was erected to commemorate the tragedy and each twelve months a short service is held near the memorial.
Geoff Baker was a member of the Board of Inquiry convened under British military regulations to investigate the incident.

Land-mines were the major component of fortifications along the confrontation zone.  UNFICYP had lodged a number of protests about mine-laying procedures and the fact that many fields were neither marked nor adequately recorded.  UNFICYP began a special programme to remedy the deficiencies, but two UNFICYP soldiers were killed in similar circumstances during the following twelve months.

https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/Photocopy/94431NCJRS.pdf


 

Canberra Times (ACT : 1926 – 1995),

Wednesday 20 November 1974, page 3

Service

LONDON, Tuesday (AAP). – Representatives of all United Nations peace keeping forces in Cyprus will take part in a memorial service today for Sergeant Ian Ward, 25, a Commonwealth policeman of Sydney, who was killed in landmine explosion last week. His body will later be flown to Sydney for burial.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/110788766


 

Funeral notice. Page 11 of 18 of The Canberra Times Tuesday 26 November 1974 http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/110789746?searchTerm=ian%20donald%20ward&searchLimits=
Funeral notice. Page 11 of 18 of The Canberra Times Tuesday 26 November 1974
http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/110789746?searchTerm=ian%20donald%20ward&searchLimits=

Also:

 

Honour

Located within the Honour Precinct is an original ornate marble tablet featuring early losses of New South Wales Police Officers. The tablet is flanked by the New South Wales state flag and the New South Wales Police Force flag.

The Peacekeeping Display honours all members of the NSW Police Force who have served in peacekeeping operations throughout the world and houses the Dag Hammerskjold medal belonging to the late SGT Ian Donald Ward who died in UNFICYP. This was donated to the NSW Police College on the 29th May, 2010 from Mr Ken Ward, OAM, father of SGT Ward.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_South_Wales_Police_Academy


 

On the 12th November, 1974, a member of this Force, Constable 1st Class I. D. Ward, who had arrived in Cyprus a few days before, and Constable 1st Class J. Woolcott, also of this Force, were carrying out humanitarian work transporting refugees. The United Nation’s land rover in which they were travelling struck a land mine on a road between Limassol and Lefka resulting in the death of Constable 1st Class Ward and severe injuries to Constable 1st Class Woolcott, Constable 1st Class Ward was posthumously awarded the United Nations Medal, Cyprus Division.

https://www.opengov.nsw.gov.au/viewer/517e982c7fa2d2c5b8c06d530ab240e7.pdf


 

Peacekeeping Veteran Honoured at the NSW Police College:

PEACEKEEPING VETERAN HONOURED AT THE NSW POLICE COLLEGE
– Author,
Mr Denis Percy – National President – UNPAA.
INTRODUCTION:
On the 14th November, 1974 Sergeant Ian Ward, a member of the New South Wales
Police Force, who had been seconded to the then named Australian Commonwealth
Police, (later named the AFP), for 12 months service with the United Nations Force in
Cyprus, (UNFICYP). Ian died as a result of a land-mind explosion whilst travelling in a
Land Rover.
He and Sergeant John Wolcott, the vehicle observer, also on attachment from the NSW
Police, were conveying four Turkish refugees from the Greek Cypriot sector village of Ayios
Nicolaos to the Turkish sector in Lefka District. One of the Turkish refugees was killed and
three were seriously injured in the explosion. The Land Rover was completely demolished
by the anti- tank mine. Sergeant John Wolcott survived the explosion; however, he
received serious facial and other injuries.
Sergeant Ward had been in Cyprus for only five days on his 12 month secondment to the
United Nations Police Force in Cyprus (UNFICYP). Ironically, Ian had previously served
and survived as a Military Policeman, whilst performing his National Service during the
Vietnam War.
Lieutenant-General Bedrettin Demirel, Commander of the Turkish Peace Forces in
Cyprus, in a heart felt expression of sympathy wrote to Sergeant Ward’s Family and stated, “
Your son, who was making every effort to assist in the humanitarian activities indiscriminate of
race, religion and language, is a martyr of duty.
His memory and service live in the hearts of all personnel of the Turkish Peace Forces in Cyprus ”
.
HANDOVER AND BLESSING OF THE DAG HAMMARSKJOLD MEDAL.
On the 29th May, 2009 in Goulburn at the NSW Police College, 35 years after his death on
a lonely village road and a world away from Cyprus, we remembered our Police colleague.
The service held at the NSW Police College demonstrates that Australian Police do not
forget those who die in the line of duty, either in Australia or whilst serving overseas.
In a highly symbolic ceremony, the Australian Federal Police officially handed-over“
on-loan” for a five year period, the Dag Hammarskjöld Medal awarded to the late Sergeant
Ian Donald Ward.
That medal had been in the custody of the Australian Federal Police as
Ian died as a Federal Police Officer on attachment from the NSW Police for his UN Service.
That medal is awarded by the United Nations to those of its members who are
killed whilst performing duty with the United Nations. It is named after the now deceased
and former Scandinavian leader of the United Nations at its headquarters in New York.
The day’s proceedings commenced in Goulburn with a moving march of a group of United
Nations Police veterans who had served in Cyprus, the Middle East, East Timor, the
Solomon Islands and other multinational peacekeeping operations.
The veterans march was preceded by combined ceremonial support elements of the NSW Police Force and the
Australian Federal Police the marching band of the NSW Police Force, a combined NSW
Police Force Mounted Unit and the Australian Federal Police Ceremonial Mounted Cadre
and a combined New South Wales Police Force and Australian Federal Police flag party.
The Parade Commander UNPAA President Denis Percy instructed the parade to an “eyes
left” towards the NSW Police Eternal Flame, which honours all those members of the NSW
Police Force who have died in the service of their state and their country.
POLICE COLLEGE CHAPEL CEREMONY:
Upon arrival at the NSW Police College Chapel, the flags of the United Nations and the
Australian Federal Police were laid up by the Senior Police Chaplain, Reverend Peter
Robinson.
Gathered in the Chapel were a number of representatives of the Australian Defence Force,
the Untied Nations Information Centre, the Senate, the Parliaments of the Commonwealth
of Australia and New South Wales. The Mayor of Goulburn mingled there with senior AFP,
NSW Police Force and Victoria Police officials and members of the United Nations Police
Association of Australia, (UNPAA), the Australian Peacekeepers and Peacemakers
Association, the Australian Bravery Association, the National Executive of the RSL and the
NSW Police Force Sub Branch of the RSL.
Sergeant Jeff Little, NSW Police and a peacekeeping veteran from East Timor and Cyprus
read the invocation.  Guests in the Police Memorial Chapel joined in singing the United
Nations Anthem, ‘The song of All Nations”, followed by another peacekeeping veteran,
NSWPF Sergeant Dave McCann, OAM reading the Beatitudes.
Police Chaplain read a prayer and then came the official handover, which involved the signing of the temporary
loan agreement by AFP Commander and former peacekeeping veteran Shane Connelly –
performing the duties of National Manager, International Deployment Group and Chief
Superintendent Gregory Moore, APM the Principal of the NSW Police College.
Due to its’ national significance, the AFP Museum are the current custodians of the late Sergeant
Ward’s medal and have entrusted its’ safekeeping with the NSW Police College for the
next five years.
From the rear of the Chapel and carrying the Dag Hammarskjöld medal belonging to the
late Sergeant Ian Ward AFP Sergeant Dale Cooper, RFD a former UN Cyprus
peacekeeper slow marched towards the front of the chapel, and from the left side of the
chapel NSWPF Senior Sergeant Mark Elm a former UN East Timor peacekeeper slow
marched to the front of the Chapel where the physical handover took place between the
two guardians of the medal.
This symbolic gesture, of respect to a fallen Sergeant indicated the deep regard both forces
have to their departed colleague and fellow peacekeeper.
Chief Superintendent Gregory Moore, APM has indicated that he is honoured for the NSW
Police College to be entrusted by the AFP to be guardians of the Dag Hammarskjöld Medal
belonging to the late Sergeant Ian Donald Ward. He went on to state: “Sergeant Ian Ward
and Sergeant Patrick Hackett who were killed while on international policing service with
the United Nations are role models for NSW Police recruits passing through this college
and the great tradition of service that we given an ongoing basis to the people of NSW.”
DEDICATION OF THE PEACEKEEPING DISPLAY
The display is designed to honour those members of the NSW Police Force who have
contributed to United Nations Peacekeeping Operations as United Nations Police Officers.
As such it fits well within the ‘Honour Precinct’ of the NSW Police College.
Visitors to the NSW Police College are invited by the Principal; to inspect the newly
dedicated display located in the hallway areas of the College building next to the College
Library Out of ten Australians who have died whilst on UN peacekeeping operations, the
NSWPF has lost two members with the United Nations Force in Cyprus (UNFICYP),
namely Inspector Patrick Hackett in a motor vehicle accident (29.8.71) and Sergeant Ian
Donald Ward (land mine explosion). A third Australian Police Officer from the South
Australia Police Sergeant Lew Thomas has also been killed in Cyprus (26.7.69) also in a
motor vehicle accident.
The Peacekeeping display was made possible with a grant from the Australian
Government, Department of Veterans Affairs ‘Saluting Their Service’ upon a submission
made to them by the UNPAA .That grant is a Government initiative which honours the
contribution of Australia’s servicemen and women in war, conflicts and peace operations.
Senior Sergeant Mark Elm was the Project Manager for the display which was funded by
contributions from the Australian Federal Police; the NSW Police Force; United Nations
Police Association of Australia and its NSW Branch, the Police Federation of Australia; and
the Police Credit Union.
Ceremonial arrangements were made possible with assistance of the AFP Recognition and
Ceremonial team and the Professional Standards Unit of the Office of the Principal, NSW
Police College.
UNITED NATIONS ARTEFACTS DONATED TO DISPLAY:
In putting the exhibition together, Snr Sgt Elm collected historic artefacts donated by
Australian police peacekeepers who served in Cyprus, the Middle East and East Timor
Said Sergeant Elm: “
Police officers by their very nature are peacekeepers in their home towns, cities here in
Australia, and it is a natural progression to take these skills to war torn areas, to build the
capacity of local authorities to act against a humanitarian backdrop.” Said Snr Sgt Elm.
“This day has been on the cards since I arrived at the College in February of 2007.
Much like all the other proud traditions displays, most of the work undertaken on this display has
been conducted on days off so it is really gratifying to see the final results, which I think all
peacekeepers will feel proud.
I think we got the symbolism right and I think our future members of the force will come to
know of the service and the sacrifice of our members who contributed.”
In a fitting tribute to Australia’s police peacekeepers whether they hail from the AFP, state
or territory police force, the Minister for Home Affairs, The Hon. Bob Debus, and MP kindly
donated the Australian Coat of Arms, which was presented by Senator the Hon. Ursula
Stephens and dedicated by Reverend Peter Robinson at the ceremony.
SNRSGT Elm summed up the magnitude of this when he said.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS:
Assistance was provided to Senior Sergeant Elm in this project from the Australian Federal
Police; the NSW Police Force; United Nations Police Association of Australia and its NSW
Branch, the Police Federation of Australia; and the Police Credit Union.
This ceremony was made possible through the assistance of the AFP Recognition and Ceremonial team
and the Professional Standards Unit of the Office of the Principal, NSW Police College.

Cst-1st-Class-Ian-Donald-WARD-NSWPF-Killed-in-Cyprus-12-November-1974-further-info

 


 

First published on 14 November 2013.

Updated 3 August 2025 with photo of Cst Woolcott and Registered number of Ward.

 

 

 




Patrick Mark HACKETT

Patrick Mark HACKETT

New South Wales Police Force

[alert_yellow]Regd. #  10548[/alert_yellow]

Rank: Probationary Constable – appointed 25 February 1963

Constable 1st Class – appointed 25 February 1968

1968 – Constable 1st Class ( Acting Inspector in Cyprus )

StationsWarrants & Summons at Eastwood, Civilian Police Contingent – Cyprus – part of Australia’s 8th Contingent deployed in 1971.

ServiceFrom  Pre 25 February 1963 ( as a Trainee )  to  29 August 1971 = 8+ years Service

AwardsPolice Overseas Service Medal – Clasp CYPRUS – granted 19 October 1992 posthumously

Dag Hammarskjold Medal – awarded posthumously

United Nations Service medal – posthumously

Born: 27 May 1940

Died on:  Sunday  29 August 1971

Cause: Motor vehicle accident ( news paper indicates he may have been “blown up by a land mine” )

Event location: Stroumbi, Cyprus

Age: 31

Funeral date? – possibly  6 September 1971

Funeral location? – possibly Field of Mars, Cressy Rd, Ryde, NSW

Buried at? – possibly Portion:  Anglican, Row: Gen Lawn 1, Plot: 558

 

Patrick Mark HACKETT
Patrick Mark HACKETT

[alert_green]PATRICK IS mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance[/alert_green]

Touch Plate at the National Police Wall of Remembrance, Canberra, for Patrick Mark HACKETT
Touch Plate at the National Police Wall of Remembrance, Canberra, for Patrick Mark HACKETT

Constable Hackett was killed in Cyprus while on special duty in that country with the United Nations Civilian Police Force (UNCIVPOL). On the 29 August, 1971 he had driven to Episkopi and Paphos before setting out to return to Polis. Whilst negotiating a number of very sharp and dangerous hairpin bends, his vehicle left the roadway, crashed down an escarpment and overturned several times. Constable Hackett was killed instantly.

 

The constable was born in 1940 and joined the New South Wales Police Force on 25 February, 1963. At the time of his death he was attached to the Civilian Police Contingent in Cyprus.

 


 

17 June 2017 – Malaysia Memorial in Cyprus taken today as Australian Police complete the long mission and are leaving Cyprus.
17 June 2017 – Malaysia Memorial in Cyprus taken today as Australian Police complete the long mission and are leaving Cyprus.

 

 


 

 

27 May 1940 – 29 August 1971
Patrick Hackett was a member of the NSW Police Force. He commenced as a Trainee in 1963 and was confirmed as a first class constable in 1968.
Patrick was sworn in as a Special Commonwealth Police Officer at the rank of inspector when he was selected to be part of Australia’s Eighth Contingent to Cyprus. The contingent, part of the United Nations Peacekeeping Mission to Cyprus, was deployed to Cyprus in 1971.
Inspector Hackett was tragically killed in a car accident near Stroumbi when his vehicle left the road on a sharp corner.
He was posthumously awarded the Police Overseas Service Medal with Cyprus clasp, the United Nations Service Medal and the Dag Hammarskjöld Medal.
 


 

The Age       1 September 1971     page 2 of 23

Canberra:  An Australian policeman serving in Cyprus has been killed in a traffic accident.  He was Constable Patrick Mark Hackett, of the NSW Police force.

https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1300&dat=19710901&id=t44QAAAAIBAJ&sjid=u5ADAAAAIBAJ&pg=2931,19596&hl=en

 


 

 

In 1997 the Dags Hammarskjold Medal is established by the United Nations to honour those who lost their lives whilst on a UN peacekeeping mission.

The family of Inspector Patrick Hackett receives the Dags Hammarskjold Medal in 2010.
The family of Inspector Patrick Hackett receives the Dags Hammarskjold Medal in 2010 from Sergeant Mark Elms, NSW Police Academy.

 

Dag Hammarskjold Medal
Dag Hammarskjold Medal

 

 


 

The Sydney Morning Herald        Tuesday  25 October 1988      page 12 of 64

Patrick HACKETT - Mother at Cenotaph - 1988
Patrick HACKETT – Mother at Cenotaph – 1988

 


 

 

 

POLICE KILLED OR WHO DIED FROM INJURIES RECEIVED IN THE EXECUTION OF THEIR DUTIES

On 13th August, 1971, Senior Constable William Edward King, who was then the officer-in-charge of police, East Gresford, was shot dead at East Gresford Police Station by a man who fired upon him with a rifle.

On 29th August, 1971, Constable 1st Class Patrick Mark Hackett died from injuries received in a motor accident at Polis, Cyprus, whilst performing duty with the New South Wales Police component of the Australian Police Contingent of the United Nations Peace Keeping Force.

On 30th September, 1971, Sergeant Second Class William Watson Riley and Senior Constable Maurice Raymond McDiarmid, both then attached to Blacktown Police Station, were shot dead in a house at Toongabbie which they had entered to arrest a man who a short time before had murdered his brother and raped a woman in the same house.

A police funeral with full ceremonial honours was accorded these deceased officers at which appropriate tributes were paid.

In recognition of their outstanding courage Sergeant Riley and Senior Constable McDiarmid were posthumously promoted by me to Sergeant 1st Class and Sergeant 3rd Class respectively. In addition, I submitted recommendations to the Premier for favour of consideration of Royal Awards being granted in both cases.

To assist the widows of the deceased police the Premier approved the payment to each of them of the sum of $12,500 as a gratuity. This payment did not in any way affect their entitlements to payments under the provisions of the Police Regulation (Superannuation) Act.

Report to the Police Department for 1971 – printed 7 September 1972

 


 

 




Clarence Roy PIRIE

Clarence Roy PIRIE

AKA CLARRIE

Late of Capertee, NSW

Husband to widow Frances Josephine PIRIE who died 12 October 2019 ( see below ) 58 yrs 11 mths 29 days after Clarrie

 

NSW Penrith Police College Class # “possibly” 005

New South Wales Police Force

Regd. #  5824

 

Rank: Probationary Constable – appointed 15 September 1947

Constable – appointed ? ? ?

Constable 1st Class – appointed ? ? ?

Senior Constable – appointed ? ? ?

 

Final Rank = Senior Constable

 

Stations: Parramatta ( 18 Division 1947 – ? ), Young – Lock-Up-Keeper ( ? – 1958 ), Capertee ( 1958 – 1960 ) – Death

Service: From ? pre September 1947 ? to 13 October 1960 = 13+ years Service

 

 

C.M.F.                                1 October 1941 – 28 April 1943

A.I.F.                                  29 April 1943 – 6 August 1946

World War II                    Australian Imperial Force

Regiment:                         2 Aust. Ord. Port Detachments

Enlisted:                            28 June 1943

Service #                           NX171227  ( N210415 )

Rank:                                 Private

Embarkation:                   Duntroon for Pt. Moresby 12 July 1943

Next of kin:                       Mrs Henrietta PIRIE, 50 Meehan St, Granville – Mother

Religion:                            C of E

Single / Married:              Single

Returned to Australia:    ?

Date of Discharge:           6 August 1946

Posting at Discharge:       HQ 6 A B S A

WWII Honours & Gallantry:  None for display

POW:                                  No

Occupation upon joining:     Mill Hand – Process Operator

War Service In Au:           195 days

Active Service outside Au: 553 days

Active Service in Au:        1017 days

 

 

Police Awards: No find on Australian Honours

 

Born: Sunday  22 August 1920 at Paddington, NSW

Died on: Thursday  13 October 1960

Age: 40 yrs  1 mth  21 days

Cause:  Shot – Murdered

Event location: Jews Creek, Capertee, NSW

Event date: Thursday  13 October 1960

 

Funeral date: Monday  17 October 1960

Funeral location: ?

Wake location: ?

Funeral Parlour: ?

 

Buried at: Rookwood Cemetery, NSW

Grave Location:  Zone E, Section 19, Grave 3661

 

Memorial located at: 1/  Glen Davis Rd, Capertee – the Clarence Pirie Memorial Park

Lat: -33.143736
Long: 149.983791

 

2/ a Wall Plaque at Chifley L.A.C.

 

SenCon Clarrie Pirie ( 1960 )
SenCon Clarrie Pirie ( 1960 )

Clarence Roy PIRIE

 

Clarence Roy PIRIE
Clarence Roy PIRIE – Touch Plate at the National Wall of Police Remembrance, Canberra

 

CLARENCE IS mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance


Grave location:  Rookwood Cemetery, NSW

Zone E, Section 19, Grave 3661

INSCRIPTION: In Loving Memory of my dear husband and our dear father Clarence Roy PIRIE died 13th October 1960 aged 40 years. Erected by the New South Wales Government in Memory of Senior Constable Clarence Roy PIRIE who was shot & killed in the Execution of his Duty at Jew's Creek on the 13th October 1960 Police Crest.
INSCRIPTION:
In Loving Memory of my dear husband and our dear father Clarence Roy PIRIE died 13th October 1960 aged 40 years.
Erected by the New South Wales Government in Memory of Senior Constable Clarence Roy PIRIE who was shot & killed in the Execution of his Duty at Jew’s Creek on the 13th October 1960.
Police Crest.

INSCRIPTION:<br /> In Loving Memory of my dear husband and our dear father Clarence Roy PIRIE died 13th October 1960 aged 40 years.<br /> Erected by the New South Wales Government in Memory of Senior Constable Clarence Roy PIRIE who was shot &amp; killed in the Execution of his Duty at Jew's Creek on the 13th October 1960.<br /> Police Crest.

 


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

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal


May they forever Rest In Peace


 

Senior Constable Clarrie Pirie was the Officer-in-Charge of the Capertee Police Station from 1958 until his death on 13 October, 1960. On that day he was informed by Lithgow Police that two male offenders had abandoned a stolen car at Cudgigong, north of Capertee.

While patrolling the area Senior Constable Pirie found two fourteen year-olds with a vehicle at a roadside camping area at Jews Creek, ten miles south of Capertee. These however were not the two offenders the police were searching for and as such Constable Pirie did not know that on the previous day the pair had escaped from the Yasmar children’s detention centre ( Lidcombe ) and had broken into a dwelling where they stole several items of property and the vehicle before driving to the Jews Creek area.

As the constable was talking to the young offenders one of them suddenly produced a .22 rifle and shot Constable Pirie. He died a short time later. Both youths were captured the following day.

 

The senior constable was born in 1920 and joined the New South Wales Police Force on 15 September, 1947.

At the time of his death he was stationed at Capertee.

 

 

Source:  Beyond Courage

 

As an aside – Clarence PIRIE was the cousin of Victor AHEARN who was also shot and murdered in 1946 aged 40.


( 2019 )
Knew Clarie well when I was at Cowra and Clarie was LUK at Young, I was transferred on the PSB at Lithgow and Clarie was transferred to Capertee so I used to see a lot him as the Highway Patrol done daily runs to Capertee.
I took the phone call at Lithgow from a chap from Cullen Bullen to say Clarie had been shot, then drove Insp. Eli Hanson and Det S/Cst Jimmy Foster to the Scene at Jew’s Creek.
Never will forget that day.
His Youngest son John was a Police Support Officer and KAC Manager at Orange.

( Eli HANSON, NSWPF # 2207, Retired in 1962 and died in January 1973 ( aged 71 years, 0 months, 2 days ) )

 


Police Remembrance Day – 29 September 2022

A message received from one of the daughters of Roy & Frances PIRIE on 21 September 2022:

Dear Greg, Not sure if you are the right person to find out some info on Police Memorial Day Services in the Young area.

I live near Young & would really like to be able to pay my respect to my Dad who was killed on duty in 1960. It’s my only way to keep my memory going & now my Mum has passed, I’m feeling the sadness even more.

My Dad was Constable Clarence Roy Pirie who was shot & killed at Capertee.

I usually find out after the event that there had been a service around Young so what I’m hoping is that someone could let me know beforehand so I could attend.

Sorry to trouble you but just reaching out.

Yours respectfully,

Francine Pirie.

/////////////////////

Hello Francine.

Good choice picking me. lol.

I have tried to phone Young ( without success ) but I have just spoken with the District Commander, Supt. Paul Condon, and he confirms that there WILL be a Service in Young.

He is now on the phone to obtain the ‘where and when’ for us.

/////////////////////

omg, bless you & thank you x

I am on NSW Fallen Police ( FB Group ) so that’s how I got you so; thanks again.

////////////////////

There is a Service at Young Police Station ( only a small Service though ) at 11am on Thursday 29 September. The troops there will be expecting you.

////////////////////

Greg thank you from the bottom of my heart.

I’ll be there

x

////////////////////

You are very welcome Francine.

xoxox

Cal

///////////////////

 

Dear Greg,

Thank you so much for organising my attendance yesterday.

The staff at Young Police Station were amazing. The young Police Officers were so interested in my family’s story.

Thank you for the link as I read through the article I read things I didn’t know about. Many tears have been cried but I still believe it’s been a healing time for me even though it’s been 62 years.

Sometimes you need a reason & yesterday was a good reason to grieve, not only for my Dad but for all the other families who have lost their loved one.

Again Greg, thank you from my heart as this would not have happened if you hadn’t gone to the trouble to organise this for me.

 

God bless you

Francine Pirie

xx

 

 

The Result

Young Police - Remembrance Day - 2022 - Francine Pirie - Daughter of Clarence Pirie - killed 13 Oct 1960
Young Police – Remembrance Day – 2022 – Francine Pirie – Holding picture – Daughter of Clarence Pirie – killed 13 Oct 1960

 

Great effort from Young Police and Supt. Paul Condon, Goulburn


 

Mrs Frances Josephine PIRIE sadly passed away last night ( Friday 12 October 2019 ) aged 94 years – 5 days shy of her 95th birthday.

Wife of Senior Constable Clarence Roy PIRIE of the Capertee Police.

Almost 59 years to the day, Frances and Clarey are together again.

May they both, forever, Rest In Peace.

 

Clarence Roy PIRIEs wife - Frances PIRIE
Clarence Roy PIRIEs wife – Frances PIRIE

 


 

Gordon Weaver ( Monday 15 July 2019 )
Knew Clarie well when I was at Cowra and Clarie was LUK at Young, I was transferred on the PSB at Lithgow and Clarie was transferred to Capertee so I used to see a lot him as the Highway Patrol done daily runs to Capertee.
I took the phone call at Lithgow from a chap from Cullen Bullen to say Clarie had been shot, then drove Insp. Eli Hanson and Det S/Cst Jimmy Foster to the Scene at Jew’s Creek.
Never will forget that day.
His Youngest son John was a Police Support Officer and KAC Manager at Orange.

 


Capertee HERITAGE

http://caperteeheritage.blogspot.com.au/2013/09/the-tragic-death-of-clarie-pirie.html

Friday, 20 September 2013

The tragic death of Clarie Pirie

Almost all visitors to Capertee will notice the large memorial park in the middle of the village close to the Glen Davies turnoff. This recreational area, which includes a car park, childrens’ playground and toilets, is officially named after Clarence Pirie a notable policeman who was stationed in the community during the late 1950s and early 60s. While many police have served the Capertee district well over the years Pirie deserves lasting recognition as he gave his life to protecting the community.
Senior Constable Clarence (Clarie) Roy Pirie was born in Paddington, Sydney, in 1920. During World War 2 he joined the army and served in New Guinea. After the war, in 1947, he joined the New South Wales Police Force, and from 1959 to 1960 he was the Officer-in-Charge at Capertee Police Station
On the 13th October 1960 he was asked to look out for two male offenders who had abandoned a stolen car north of Capertee.While patrolling the area the following day, Pirie found two 14 year-olds with a vehicle at a roadside camping site at Jews Creeks south of Capertee. According to police records, these were not the suspects who had abandoned the vehicle the previous day but two escapees from the Yasmar juvenile detention centre in Haberfield, Sydney. While interviewing the youths one of them suddenly produced a stolen .22 rifle and shot the officer twice. The Senior Constable died of his wounds at the scene a short time after. The two youths were arrested the following day and were later imprisoned. Pirie was survived by his wife Frances and four young children.
The memory of Clarie Pirie as well as the many other police who have been killed in the line of duty is commemorated each year on Police Memorial Day which is held near the end of September.
1 comment:

Mum often talked about him, said he was a good man and never carried a gun.


Clarence Pirie Memorial Park Rest Area

INSCRIPTION:<br /> This plaque has been erected to perpetuate the memory of Senior Constable Clarence Roy PIRIE in recognition of his ultimate sacrifice when he died as a result of gunshot wounds sustained when arresting two juvenile car thieves at Jews Creek on the 13th October 1960.<br /> "to everything there is a season and a time for every purpose under the heaven"
INSCRIPTION:
This plaque has been erected to perpetuate the memory of Senior Constable Clarence Roy PIRIE in recognition of his ultimate sacrifice when he died as a result of gunshot wounds sustained when arresting two juvenile car thieves at Jews Creek on the 13th October 1960.
“to everything there is a season and a time for every purpose under the heaven”

Clarence PIRIE Mmemorial Park

Clarence PIRIE Mmemorial Park


 

The Canberra Times  Friday

14 October 1960  page 1 of 28

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/136940872

Constable Shot Dead In Chase

SYDNEY, Thursday: – Police were to-night conducting one of the largest manhunts ever in the Central Western district for two youths who are alleged to have shot dead Senior Constable Clarence Roy Pirie, 40, of Cullen Bullen.

The constable was chasing two youths on the Capertee Cullen Bullen Road early to- night.

Pirie, a father of four, was believed to have been killed with a .22 rifle.

Police from Lithgow, Bathurst, Mount Victoria, Kandos, Rylstone, Katoomba, Oberon, Orange and other centres are searching dense bush near Jews Creek.

Police from other Central Western stations and from Sydney will join the searchers to-morrow.

The searchers are heavily armed with rifles and riot guns.

Other specialised weapons will arrive from Sydney to-morrow.

At 9 a.m. to-day a stolen car was found abandoned at Cudgegong.

Two youths were seen to leave the car and police in the area were alerted.

Constable Pirie sighted two youths in a second stolen car on the Lithgow-Mudgee Road near Jew’s Creek.

Overturned

The stolen car overturned at high speed about a half mile farther on.

Two youths scrambled from the wreck and fled into the bush.

Constable Pirie followed them.

Police believe that the elder youth, realising that Pirie was following them, turned and fired the shot which fatally wounded the policeman.


 

The Canberra Times  Wednesday

19 October 1960  page 29 of 33

Murder Charge Remand For Boy

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/103107227

LITHGOW, Tuesday:- A 14-year-old Sydney boy was remanded in Lithgow Children’s Court to-day on a charge of murdering a policeman.

He was remanded till November 1 without bail and will be detained in custody until that date.

The boy was charged with having murdered Constable Clarence Roy Pirie at Jews Creek camping reserve on October 13.

Police prosecutor Sergeant J. S. Smith said the youth charged with murder had   escaped from a Sydney boys’ home on October 12 and together with another boy had stolen a car.

The car was allegedly parked at Jews Creek’ Camping reserve the next day.

When Const. Pirie approached the vehicle he was allegedly shot dead.


 

The Canberra Times  Tuesday  7 March 1961  page 3 of 20

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/103115285

Boy, 15, Goes To Gaol For 15 Years

SYDNEY, Monday: — Christopher Lindsay, 15, went to gaol to-day for 15 years for killing a policeman last year.

Mr. Justice Else Mitchell described the fair-haired, well-dressed boy as a “young gangster.”

Lindsay, of Alice Street, Newtown, did not appear to be emotionally upset at the sentence.

He turned to court officials who led him from the dock to the cells below.

The sight of the boy being led away brought an outburst of sobbing from the public gallery.

Lindsay last week had pleaded not guilty to having murdered Constable Clarence Roy Pirie, 39, at Jews Creek Camping Reserve off the Mudgee Road near Cullen Bullen on October 13 last.

The Crown accepted Lindsay’s plea of guilty of man slaughter.

Lindsay – standing in the dock of Central Criminal Court with hands clasped in front of him – heard Mr. Justice Else Mitchell say that the deposition and Lindsay’s own signed statement left slender ground for the lesser offence.

“Before committing this crime, you had shown a refusal both in England and in this country to conform with the laws which are made for the good of society.

“From the record, it is clear that the processes of the habitation and reform which are provided by the country here have made no impact on your attitude or conduct.

“In pursuit of this anti-social conduct you twice escaped from Yasma shelter, where you were being detained awaiting trial for various charges, and on the second occasion in company with a confederate, younger than yourself, stole a rifle, food, other goods and then a motor car in which you travelled to the scene of the crime.

“When you were in fear of apprehension by a constable of the police for the theft of the car you did not hesitate to shoot him because as you said ‘You did not want him to catch you with the car.’

“Your subsequent conduct and your attempt to evade capture though perhaps natural do not appear to have been accompanied by any manifestation of c0ntrition or remorse, a fact which seems to me all the more serious in view of Dr. McGeorge’s conclusion that you are not suffering from any mental or psychiatric disorders.

“A substantial sentence appears to be necessary not only for the reasons I mentioned but as the only possible way in which you may begin to understand your obligations to society.”

 


The Canberra Times  Saturday
12 August 1961  page 23 of 28

Boy Killer’s Appeal Fails

SYDNEY, Friday:— The Full Supreme Court to-day dismissed a school boy’s appeal against a 15-year sentence for the manslaughter of a policeman.

The boy, Christopher Lindsay, 15, appealed against the severity of the sentence.

Mr. Justice Else-Mitchell, in Central Criminal Court, had sentenced Lindsay to 15 years gaol for the manslaughter of Constable

Clarence Roy Pirie, at Jew’s Creek, last October.

Pirie was questioning Lindsay on a car theft at the time.

Lindsay to-day conducted his own case before the Full Bench — comprising the Chief Justice, Mr. Justice Evatt, Mr. justice Herron and Mr. Justice Hardie.

He handed the bench a written statement, headed —’ “No Discourtesy.”

The statement read: “I respectfully submit that His Honour, at the time of imposing the severe sentence for manslaughter, regarded the offence as tantamount to murder.

“I further most respectfully submit the crime was not premeditated.

“The whole tragedy took place in a matter of seconds.

“At no time did I intend this man’s death.

“I respectfully submit that a 14-year-old youth to be sentenced to 15 years imprisonment for a crime he did not intend, is too severe.”

Mr. Justice Else-Mitchell, reported to the Full Court, that Lindsay’s offence was hardly distinguishable from murder.

However, he had felt that he was bound by the Crown’s acceptance of the manslaughter plea.

Lindsay originally had been charged with murder.

Mr. Justice Else-Mitchell said it had been submitted he should not impose a crushing sentence.

He also was mindful of the danger with a youthful offender — that the imposition of a heavy gaol sentence often could produce more harm than good.

The Full Court ruled unanimously against Lindsay’s appeal.

It added that Lindsay’s crime called for the greatest condemnation.


Police remember fallen

http://www.centralwesterndaily.com.au/story/767925/police-remember-fallen/

PERSONAL LOSS: Inspector Greg Pringle and police administration manager John Pirie have personal experience of the loss of someone close on Police Remembrance Day. Photo: JUDE KEOGH 0926police2
PERSONAL LOSS: Inspector Greg Pringle and police administration manager John Pirie have personal experience of the loss of someone close on Police Remembrance Day. Photo: JUDE KEOGH 0926police2

 

REPRESENTATIVES from Orange Police Station will today attend a national memorial in Canberra for Police Remembrance Day.

For Inspector Greg Pringle and Canobolas Local Area administration manager John Pirie, the day bears a special significance.

John Pirie was just coming up to his fifth birthday when his 40-year-old father Senior Constable Clarence Roy Pirie was shot at point-blank range and killed near Capertee.

It was on October 13, 1960, that Mr Pirie’s father was patrolling when he came across a stolen vehicle. He stopped the vehicle and spoke to two youths inside, but one of them pulled a gun on Snr Const Pirie and shot him.

Inspector Pringle’s experience is in contrast, but he agrees the grief that comes with losing a colleague on the job remains for many years.

“I was with highway patrol working out of Cootamundra in 1988. I had a cup of tea with a fellow officer Constable Kurt Schetor before we headed off to patrol in separate directions,” Insp Pringle said.

Ten minutes later the then Constable Pringle received a call to respond to a crash and he arrived to find his friend and colleague was in involved in a head-on crash with a truck.

“I did my best but I couldn’t revive him,” he said.

Insp Pringle said many police officers carried a burden of grief with them for colleagues who died on the job.

“In many ways it is harder to deal with your own grief,” he said.

“When you are a police officer your ‘tank’ is full of other people’s grief because that’s part of the job. But it doesn’t leave much left.”

Officers from Canobolas Local Area Command will not be marking Police Remembrance Day in Orange this year.

Instead, this year’s service will be held at Cowra which is part of the Canobolas Local Area Command.


Family honours a dad’s sacrifice


Slain policeman remembered

15 Oct, 2010 08:40 AM

When Senior Constable Clarence (‘Clarrie’) Roy Pirie went to work on the morning of the October 13, 1960, he fully expected to go home to his wife Frances and their four young children at the end of the day.Sadly, 40-year-old Senior Constable Pirie lost his life that day at Jews Creek, when he was shot by one of two escapees from a juvenile detention centre.

Senior Constable Pirie’s family returned to Capertee this week to remember the events that turned their lives upside down for all time.

On Thursday morning Senior Constable Pirie’s wife Frances, with her children, grandchildren and some great-grandchildren, joined senior police including Deputy Commissioner Dave Owen, Assistant Commissioner Steve Bradshaw, Chifley Area Command Superintendent Michael Robertson, Member for Bathurst Gerard Martin, and many members of the police force at Clarrie Pirie Memorial Park in Capertee to mark the 50th anniversary of his death.

A service was conducted by Police Chaplin Mark Jenkins from the Anglican Diocese of Bathurst and was addressed by the Superintendent Robertson, Mr Martin and Detective Superintendent Jim Foster who investigated Senior Constable Pirie’s death.

Senior Constable Pirie paid the ultimate sacrifice and was the sixth of eight police officers [in the Chifley command] to lose their life upholding the law,” Superintendent Robertson said.

“Those who follow [in the police force] serve to do his memory proud and he lives on through this park, which was named in his honour.

“The debt owed by society to Senior Constable Pirie cannot be measured and we will always ensure that he is remembered.”

Member for Bathurst Gerard Martin related how Clarrie Pirie served with the Australian Armed Forces in New Guinea during World War II and how he met his wife in military service.

“He undertook a very challenging front line career, which can be extremely dangerous,” Mr Martin said, speaking on behalf of Police Minister Michael Daley.

“His loss will always be a tragedy and compares to the recent death of trainee detective William Crews, the former Glen Innes who lost his life in the line of duty last month.”

Detective Superintendent Jim Foster told how Senior Constable Pirie had joined the police force in 1947 and served at Parramatta and Young before being transferred to Capertee in 1958.

“Those were difficult times with no two-way radios or mobile phones, but the community spirit was evident as we investigated the case,” Detective Foster said.

“The Postmaster at Cullen Bullen kept the phone lines open after the 6pm regular closing time so that we had communications.

“The only police photographer was hours away and a local chemist took the photos we needed to record evidence.

The offenders were arrested at 3am on October 14 as they were attempting to board the Mudgee Mail train at Capertee.”

Detective Superintendent Foster said Senior Constable Pirie was faithful to his duty as a police officer and earned the respect of the Capertee community and the police in the then Lithgow sub-district.

Mrs Pirie said her husband’s attention to detail in his work as a police officer was incredible.

“He knew just about every car that passed through town,” she said.

“Strange cars always attracted his attention.”

Perhaps that attention to duty led him to investigate the stolen vehicle driven by the two escapees, that he saw at Jews Creek that day 50 years ago.

Mrs Pirie, now in her 80s, said her husband’s death changed her life forever as she struggled to raise four children.

“At the time of Clarrie’s death Ron was 8, John 5, Mary Anne 3 and Francene 2,” she said.

“I received a small police pension but had to go out and work to be able to raise and educate them.

“I had to remove our personal effects from the police house at Capertee soon after Clarrie’s death and we moved to Young.”

The ceremony concluded with wreaths being laid by Mrs Pirie and family, Assistant Commissioner David Owen, Superintendent Michael Robertson and the students from Capertee Public School.

 

John Pirie‎Wall to Wall - Ride for Remembrance I was immensely proud, felt hugely honoured and felt very humbled that the Wall to Wall riders from the Western Region led by Geoff Mckecknie stopped at Capertee today. I would also like to express my gratitude to Pual Bousfield and the Capertee Community, especially the school children and those that help with providing lunch for the riders.
John Pirie  ‎Wall to Wall – Ride for Remembrance – 2014
I was immensely proud, felt hugely honoured and felt very humbled that the Wall to Wall riders from the Western Region led by Geoff McKecknie stopped at Capertee today. I would also like to express my gratitude to Paul Bousfield and the Capertee Community, especially the school children and those that help with providing lunch for the riders.

Glen Davis Rd, Capertee, NSW

Lat:  -33.143736  Long:  149.983791

 

"INSCRIPTION: This plaque has been erected to perpetuate the memory of Senior Constable Clarence Roy PIRIE in recognition of his ultimate sacrifice when he died as a result of gunshot wounds sustained when arresting two juvenile car thieves at Jews Creek on the 13th October 1960.<br />"to everything there is a season and a time for every purpose under the heaven"

 

December 2010

Police News

by Det. Supt. ( Retired ) Jim FOSTER ( R.I.P. 9 July 2019 )

Clarence Pirie - NSWPF - Murdered 1960 - 50 years on - page 22 - Policenews - Dec 2010

 

Clarence Pirie - NSWPF - Murdered 1960 - 50 years on - page 23 - Policenews - Dec 2010


 

( 2014 )  The offender, Christopher Lindsay ( assuming he served the full 15 years, would have been 30 years of age when released from gaol in 1975.  Assuming he is still alive today, he would now be around 69 years old.
I did a cursory search for him, via Google, but it is a common name and pursued it no further.
Cal

Clarence Roy PIRIE's Daughter, Maryanne - July 2014 in the park dedicated to her father killed 54 years earlier.
Clarence Roy PIRIE’s Daughter, Maryanne – July 2014 in the park dedicated to her father killed 54 years earlier.

[blockquote]Stopped at my Dad’s park and had a cuppa a few days ago, often wonder how different our lives would have been if he hadn’t been killed. I will, in my elderly mother’s honor, ride the Wall to Wall ( of Remembrance ) this September.[/blockquote]


Clarence Roy PIRIE 13.10.1960 Wall Plaque, Chifley L.A.C.
Clarence Roy PIRIE 13.10.1960
Wall Plaque, Chifley L.A.C.


 

 

 

 

 




Kenneth Desmond COUSSENS

Kenneth Desmond COUSSENS

New South Wales Police Force

Regd. #  ????

Rank:  Constable 1st Class

Stations:  ‘Safety Bureau’, Sydney, Kogarah, Cooma, Bega

Service:   From 18 October 1948  to  29 July 1957 = 11 years Service

[blockquote]

World War II

Australian Imperial Force

Regiment:                                  Royal Australian Navy

Enlisted:                                     30 June 1944 at Rockdale, NSW

Service #                                     32875

Rank:                                           Able Seaman

Embarkation?

Next of kin:                                Edith COUSSENS

Religion?

Single / Married?

Returned to Australia ?

Date of Discharge:                   12 October 1948

Posting at Discharge:             HMAS Penguin

[/blockquote]

Awards:  Nil

Born:  2 July 1926 – Hastings, England

Died on:   29 July 1957

Cause:  Murder – Bomb Attack

Event location:  Bega

Age:  31

Elizabeth COUSSENS nee McCampbell nee Gowing
34 old

Bruce James COUSSENS
7 months old

 

Funeral date:  31 July 1957

Funeral location

Buried at:  Bega Cemetery

Anglican, Section 7, Row A, Grave 3

 

Constable Kenneth Coussens ( 1957 )
Constable Kenneth Coussens ( 1957 )

 

Kenneth Desmond COUSSENS grave

Kenneth Desmond COUSSENS grave

Kenneth Desmond COUSSENS touch plate in Canberra
Kenneth Desmond COUSSENS touch plate in Canberra

 

[alert_green] KENNETH IS mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance[/alert_green]

 

The constable, his wife Elizabeth and baby son Bruce were murdered by the offender Kelly who had placed a bomb on the front verandah of the constable’s home at Bega. The offender had become incensed at being spoken to by the constable regarding traffic offences and on 29 July, 1957 he placed a metal dairy container packed with over 200 sticks of stolen gelignite at the constable’s home. About 2am the offender lit the fuse to the bomb and the dwelling was almost obliterated in the resultant explosion.

Constable Coussensstepson, eight year-old Roger McCampbell, was the sole family survivor of the explosion. The offender Kelly was arrested after a major police investigation and was later sentenced to life imprisonment.

The constable was born in 1926 and joined the New South Wales Police Force on 18 October, 1948. At the time of his death he was stationed at Bega.

 

OBITUARY


Senior Constable Kenneth Coussens; wife – Elizabeth Coussens; infant – Bruce Coussens 7 months old.

Killed by a bomb blast on July 29, 1957.

Senior Constable Ken Coussens moved to Bega in 1954 where the officer took up motor cycle traffic duties for the Public Safety Bureau (now known as the Highway Patrol).

He married a local girl Elizabeth who came from a well known local family and they had two children, Roger nine (from Elizabeth’s first marriage) and an infant son Bruce, seven months old.

Constable Coussens performed his police duties in a conscientious and professional manner in the Bega area attending to traffic duties, attending the scene of motor vehicle accidents and performing other police and community duties as required of a country police officer.

About 1956, in the course of his traffic duties Constable Coussens came into contact with a local man named Myron Bertram Kelly, 32.

The officer had cause to speak to Kelly regarding traffic offences and issued traffic fines to the man on a number of occasions.

Kelly appears to have become enraged when Constable Coussens issued fines and defect notices to Kelly’s tractor and rotary hoe.

As a result Kelly formed a grudge against Constable Coussens.

After this event Kelly went to a silica mine at Rock Flat between Nimmitabel and Cooma in his truck and removed five cases of gelignite and took it to Nethercote where he buried it.

He then stole a six gallon cream can from Curtis Brothers Creamery and took that to Nethercote.

He later built a home made bomb by placing 240 sticks of gelignite and a fuse into the cream can.

In the late hours of July 28, 1957 Kelly sneaked to the officers home while he was asleep in the house with his wife and young family.

He set the bomb at the front of the fibro and iron home situated in Girraween Crescent, Bega and ignited the fuse a few hours later.

Kelly left the scene and went home and at about 2am the bomb detonated causing a huge explosion which completely demolished the house.

The bomb also caused extensive damage to other homes and windows in the vicinity, up to a mile away.

More than 100 windows at Bega Hospital were shattered by the blast.

Constable Coussens and his wife and young baby were killed instantly.

The 9-year-old son Roger survived the blast as he was sleeping at the rear of the house.

Shocked neighbours saw him emerge from the wreckage dazed and confused.

Local residents did not know what had happened and due to the enormity of the blast rumours quickly spread that the gas works had exploded or a Navy plane from HMAS Albatross Nowra had accidentally bombed the town.

However, when it was learned a police officer had been killed by a bomb, police quickly recognised it had all the hallmarks of an assassination.

A criminal investigation swung quickly into action with detectives from Sydney travelled to Bega.

Forensic evidence from the crime scene indicated the explosion was caused by a home made bomb and fragments of a dairy can were located at the scene.

An intense investigation followed, lead by crack homicide squad detectives. Subsequently Kelly was identified as the prime suspect when his hatred of Constable Coussens became known as a motive.

Investigators later searched Kelly’s home and found explosives, fuses and gelignite and a demolition hand book.

Kelly was subsequently arrested and charged with the murder of Constable Coussens and his wife and baby.

He was also charged with the theft of six cases of gelignite, 800 detonators, 1000 feet of fuse, an army .303 rifle, 50 rounds of ammunition and possessing an unlicensed pistol.

The trial was conducted in Central Criminal Court and Kelly was convicted by a jury on the murder charges.

On December 6, 1957 he was sentenced to life imprisonment by Mr Justice McClemens who said at the time: “One could only hope for the sake of common human nature that a crime as terrible and devilish as the Bega bombing on July 29 sprang from some deep seated mental derangement. It is not a case where in the interest of the community one could recommend or hold out any hope for mercy”.

Constable Coussens was also a returned serviceman having served in the Royal Australian Navy.

(Research courtesy of David Gardner Australian Police Journal March 2005.Vol 59 No 1.)

Sergeant Ken Cousins (sic) and Family

Address: 167 Auckland Street, Bega Police Station, Bega, 2550

State: NSW
Area: AUS

Please Note: GPS Co-ordinates are approximate.

Latitude: -36.676667
Longitude: 149.839722

View Google Map

Monument Type: Plaque

Theme: People

Sub-Theme: Crime

Description:

Plaque commemorates a local policeman and his family who were murdered in 1957.

 

Senior Constable Ken Coussens, his wife and seven-month-old son were blown up by 240 sticks of gelignite. It was discovered that local man Myron Kelly had held a well-known grudge against the constable and in the absence of other leads this seemed worth following up. The offender had become incensed at being spoken to by the Constable regarding traffic offences and placed a metal dairy container loaded with the stolen gelignite outside the front door of the Constable’s home.

 

When Kelly’s house was searched, four and half sticks of gelignite, 20 feet of safety fuse and 58 detonators were discovered. The offender was arrested after a major Police investigation and later sentenced to life imprisonment. Myron Kelly was released from jail in 1980 and returned to the district. He died in Cooma in July 2007 aged 83.

Actual Monument Dedication Date: 29 July 2007

http://monumentaustralia.org.au/australian_monument/display/20280

 

 

 NSW Births, Deaths, Marriages:

 Kenneth Desmond COUSSENS, born to Albert James & Edith Mabel COUSSENS.

NSW Deaths Registration number 34296/1957

 

 

National Archives of Australia:

 Merchant Navy & Royal Australian Navy

Service # 32875

Born:  Hastings, England     Trade:  Ex Apprentice Fitter & Turner

He reported for Duty on the 30 June 1944 as a ‘Ordinary Seaman II’ and Served upon the H.M.A.S. Cerberus as of the 3 July 1944.

He was described as being 5′ 10 1/2″, with brown hair and brown eyes with a scar on his right thigh.

It appears as though he was still ‘Serving’ with the R.A.N. on 12 June 1947.

He was ‘Rated’ as a ‘Ordinary Seaman’ on 2 July 1944

‘Rated’ ‘Able Seaman’ on 1 June 1945

Was transferred to Royal Australian Navy for 2 years from 4 October 1946.

On his ‘Blue card’ of the R.A.N. it appears, in the Medals, Clasps, etc. section, that the date of May 1958 appears with Const. Police Station Bega NSW.

In the area of the ‘Blue Card’ of the R.A.N. it appears, in the Good Conduct Badges, he was ‘Granted’ a ‘Penguin’ in July 1947.

Other data, written in pen and pencil, on his R.A.N. Service cards is hard to decipher.

http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/DetailsReports/ItemDetail.aspx?Barcode=4411454&isAv=N

 

  


 

 CONSTABLE AND FAMILY KILLED

FATAL BLAST AT BEGA STILL PUZZLE

The Canberra Times  Tuesday  30 July 1957  page 1 of 12

SYDNEY, Monday. – Mystery still obscures the cause of the explosion which killed a police constable, his wife and their six-month-old son when it shattered their Bega home early to-day.

Police said to-night it would be several days before they could sift and examine the wreckage to determine the cause of the explosion, but they have found fragments of metal which appear to be from the casing of a high explosive shell.

Victims of the tragedy   were: Constable Kenneth Desmond Coussens, 31, his wife Elizabeth, 34, and their son, Graham.

Their bodies were hurled from their beds and thrown 50 yds. into a neighbour’s garden. The sole survivor of the tragedy was Roger, 9, a son of Mrs. Coussens by a former marriage.

Detectives of Sydney Arson Squad were to-night uncertain of the cause of the explosion.

Fragments of metal which may be from the casing of a high explosive shell, will be examined by an R.A.N. explosive expert called in from Nowra Fleet Air Arm Base.

The explosion, shortly after 3 am. rocked Bega, damaging other houses and breaking 100 windows in Bega Hospital, almost half a mile away.

Awakened by the explosion, terrified neighbours rushed into the   streets, which were   blanketed by heavy fog.

Thick smoke hung over the Coussen’s house, which was shattered.

As horrified neighbours watched, young Roger Coussens staggered from the ruins, screaming, and slowly walked past torn down electricity and telephone wires which crackled and sparked.

He collapsed into the arms of a neighbour, dazed but uninjured.

The bodies of Constable Coussens and his wife were found near each other in a neighbour’s garden, 50 yards away.

It was almost five hours before the shattered body of the baby boy was found, behind a tree in the backyard.

Panic

As the explosion shattered windows of the four storey Bega Hospital, panic broke out among patients.

Men and women screamed and jumped from their beds as nurses ran through the wards, soothing patients.

Ambulanceman Keith Beresford said the house was like a scene in war time.

“Dense fog and hovering smoke hung over the wrecked building with sparkling electric wires on the ground,” he said.

At dawn, hundreds of people had gathered and Superintendent Mijch, officer in charge of the   South Coast District Police to cordon off the area.

Pieces of furniture and personal possessions of the Coussens family were strewn over hundreds of yards.

The mattress from the bed on which the couple were sleeping together with bloodstained children’s clothing, were hurled many yards.

Supt. Mijch ordered that nothing be touched until Sydney. C.I.B. detectives, Sergeants Behrens and Bateman, and Det. Bradbury of the Arson Squad   arrived.

Explosives expert, J. Parsons of the N.S.W. Mines Department and Det. Sgt. Ray Kelly of the C.I.B. Homicide Squad, were also rushed from   Sydney.

Detectives are working on theories that the Coussens were the victims of a bomb plot perpetrated by a madman with a grudge, or that the explosions may have been caused by a war souvenir collected by Constable Coussens, who had served in the R.A.N, for a short time.

Bomb Theory

The theory of the bomb plot was strengthened this afternoon when police   found a tunnel had been dug under the Coussens’ bedroom.

Police say the explosive could have been placed in the tunnel.

They have ruled out the possibility of a gas explosion.

Police are mystified at the escape of Roger Coussens.

Dazed and terrified, the boy said the only thing he remembered was a large piece of timber falling across his bed.

It was the boy’s second escape. His father, an American businessman, was killed in a car crash in the United States when Roger was still a baby.

Roger and his mother, then Mr. McCampbell, who were in his car, escaped unhurt.

Police said the only thing that saved Roger to-day was the fact that he was sleeping in a separate bedroom.

Under Room

The explosion apparently occurred in or beneath the bedroom where his mother, step-father and step-brother lay sleeping.

Residents told police that after the first tremendous explosion, shock waves spread across the district.

Mr. Kevin Barham, a neighbour, said he rushed into the street and heard screaming.

“I saw Roger staggering towards me, dressed only in his pyjama top.

“He was bare footed and crying and had dirt in his hair.

“He kept screaming ‘The house is ruined – the house is ruined.’

“When Roger walked towards me, he was stepping through live wires brought down by the explosion,” Mr. Barham said.

Barham said there was a strange smell about the Coussens’ home after the explosion, but he could not identify it.

Constable Coussens had been attached to Bega for about three years.

He had been a member of the police force for 11 years and was attached to the Safety Bureau in Sydney before being sent to Bega.

He had been stationed at Kogarah and also Cooma.

Police to-night placed a guard over the wreck of the home.

They said it would “be several days before they could sift and examine the debris to determine the cause of the explosion.

Earlier to-day a giant mobile crane was used to lift huge blocks of reinforced concrete which had been scattered over a wide area.

Police to-night appealed to residents to examine their gardens for any strange fragments of metal which may have come from the seat of the explosion.

They said even the smallest fragment could play an important part in solving the mystery.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/91594680?searchTerm=coussens&searchLimits=sortby=dateAsc|||l-decade=195#pstart7146877

 

 


 

Grudge Theory On Cause Of Bega Explosion

The Canberra Times  Wednesday  31 July 1957  page 1 of 12

SYDNEY, Tuesday. – Detectives are carefully investigating the background of a constable, who with his wife and seven-months-old son, was killed in a bomb explosion at Bega yesterday.

Detectives will also inquire into his activities and arrests since he joined the police force, about 10 years ago.

Those killed were Const. First class Kenneth Desmond Coussens, 31, his wife, Elizabeth, 34, and their son, Graham.

The trio were killed when a mysterious explosion wrecked their home at Bega and smashed windows throughout the town, a half mile away. Coussens step-son, Roger, escaped unharmed.

Detectives to-day discovered metal casings, which strengthens a theory that a maniac with a grudge against the constable, placed a bomb under the house.

They are also interviewing the hoodlum element in the town, for the constable, despite his unblemished police record, was described as a “hard man” by certain sections of the public.

His application to duty had earned him a number of “threats.”

With this in mind, a team of detectives headed by Detective Superintendent Norman Mitch, are investigating his local arrests.

The State Police explosives expert, Mr. S. W. Parsons, has established that the blast was not caused by gelignite.

No traces of a detonator been found.

A theory, described as “doubtful,” is that Coussens became involved in the fishing war on the South Coast.

Detectives have established that Coussens had purchased a £1,500 fishing launch 12 months ago and had engaged a crew of three to fish commercially.

The launch, registered in his wife’s name, was sold two weeks ago.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/91594774?searchTerm=coussens&searchLimits=sortby=dateAsc|||l-decade=195#pstart7146889

  


 

Metal May Give Clue To Cause Of Tragedy

The Canberra Times  Thursday  1 August 1957  page 4 of 16

BEGA, Wednesday. – Fragments of metal found at the site of the fatal explosion which killed a police constable, his wife and his young son on Monday, were sent to the C.I.B. to-day.

The fragments will be examined by the Scientific Bureau and metallurgists in the hope of identifying them.

Police are now certain that the explosion occurred from a container which was under the front verandah of the house. However,  it is not yet known if it was a war souvenir or a home-made bomb planted by a maniac.

Victims of the blast were Constable Kenneth Coussens, 32, his wife, Elizabeth, 32, and his son, Graham Bruce, 7 months.

They were buried at Bega to-day. More than 1,500 people attended the funeral service and many wept at the cortege passed through the crowded main street. Shops and businesses were closed as a mark   of respect.

Fifty police from all parts of the South Coast formed a guard of honour and police who had worked with Constable Coussens acted as pall-bearers.

The couple and their child were buried in a family grave two miles out of Bega.

Sole survivor of the explosion was Mrs. Coussens’ son by a former marriage nine-year-old Roger.

Roger’s father, a U.S., businessman, was killed in a car crash when Roger was a baby.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/91594888?searchTerm=coussens&searchLimits=sortby=dateAsc|||l-decade=195

 


 

Arrest In Bega Murder Case

The Canberra Times   Friday  9 August 1957  page 1 of 20

SYDNEY, Friday.- Late last night, C.I.B. detectives arrested a man for the murder of a Bega policeman, his wife and son.

They died when their home was blasted to pieces in the early hours of Monday July 29.

The victims, were Constable Kenneth Desmond Coussens, 31, his wife Elizabeth, 33, and infant son Graham.

The man will appear at Bega Court to-day.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/91595509?searchTerm=coussens&searchLimits=sortby=dateAsc|||l-decade=195#pstart7147013

 


 

PROSECUTION CLAIMS

Hatred Motive To Bega Explosion

The Canberra Times   Saturday  10 August 1957  page 1 of 16

BEGA, Friday. – Hatred had led a man to make a milk can bomb which exploded killing a police constable, his wife and baby son, police alleged in Bega Court to-day.

Before the court was Myron Bertram Kelly, 32, agricultural contractor, of Gipp Street, Bega.

Kelly has been charged with the murder of Const. Kenneth Desmond Coussens, 31, his wife, Elizabeth Coussens, 34, and their son, Bruce Coussens (7 months), of Girrawheen Crescent, Bega, on July 29.

Police Prosecutor Det. Sgt. J. Behrens told Mr. W. Cobcroft, J.P., that Coussens, his wife and son were killed after a violent explosion near the front door of their home.

Sgt. Behrens said police alleged Kelly made a bomb by stacking stolen gelignite into two milk cans and detonating them with a home-made time fuse.

Inquiries, he added, had shown that the milk cans had been stolen from Bega and the explosives from Nimmitabel.

“The explosion was sufficiently violent to catapault their bodies out of the house on to the adjacent vacant allotment,” Sgt. Behrens said.

Metal Found

“A scientific examination was made and a large number of pieces of metal were recovered embedded in woodwork and in the ruins of the house.

“Pieces were collected in various positions in the vicinity, approximately 400 yards away.”

Sgt. Behrens said Kelly was a native of Nimmitabel

and had an intimate knowledge of the places from where the explosives were stolen.

Kelly had been questioned by police about his knowledge of explosives, Sgt. Behrens said.

“He has had experience of explosives and when questioned he denied that he had any explosives in his possession.

In Bedroom

“This was found to be false, as a search of his home revealed a quantity of gelignite and detonators stored in his bedroom.

“During the search, identical nameplates from the missing milk cans referred to were found at his home.

“He has not offered any explanation of their presence there,” Sgt. Behrens said.

The prosecutor said Kelly had put forward an alibi for his movements on the night before and the morning of the explosion, but this alibi would be disproved.

He said, “We contend that the defendant had the strongest motive, which is hatred.”

”Differences”

“Evidence will be given,” Det. Sgt. Behrens said “that the defendant had had differences with the late Constable Coussens in connection with traffic matters over a lengthy period.”

Mr. Cobcroft remanded Kelly to Bega Court on September 4. He refused bail.

Immediately after Kelly had been remanded, Mr. Cobcroft opened the Coroner’s Court inquest into the death of Coussens, his wife and son.

On a request from Sgt. Behrens, he adjourned the hearing to a date to be fixed.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/91595595?searchTerm=coussens&searchLimits=sortby=dateAsc|||l-decade=195#pstart7147035

 


 

Inquest On Bega Home Blast

Victims Opens

The Canberra Times   Tuesday  15 October 1957  page 1 of 12

BEGA, Monday: A 9 year-old boy told the Bega coroner’s Court to-day that a blast which killed his mother, stepfather and baby stepbrother, had caused his house “to come down on top of him.”

The boy, Roger Clinton McCampbell, said he thought he was dreaming and called out to his mother, but she did not come to him.

The District Coroner, Mr. W. Cobcroft, opened the inquiry into the deaths of Constable Kenneth Desmond Coussens, 31, his wife, Elizabeth, 34, and his 7-months-old son Bruce.

All three died in an explosion which wrecked Constable Coussen’s home in Girrawheen Crescent, Bega, on July 29.

Before the court, charged on three counts of murder, was Myron Bertram Kelly, 34, agricultural contractor, of Gipps Street, Bega.

He was also charged with stealing six cases of gelignite, 800 detonators and 1,000ft of fuse.

The hearing was adjourned till to-morrow.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/91239997?searchTerm=coussens&searchLimits=sortby=dateAsc|||l-decade=195#pstart7147920

 


 

Bega Coroner Told Of Alleged Confession

The Canberra Times   Wednesday  16 October 1957  page 3 of 12

BEGA, Tuesday.—A man allegedly told police he planned and lit a home-made bomb which later exploded, killing a police constable, his wife and baby son, Bega Coroner’s Court was told to-day.

In a statement allegedly made by Myron Bertram Kelly, 32, of Gipps Street, Bega, Kelly said he and the policeman were “bitter enemies”.

Kelly has been charged with the murder of Constable Desmond Kenneth Coussens, 31, his wife, Elizabeth Coussens, 34 and their eight-months-old son, Bruce James Coussens.

The three died when an explosion rocked, their home in Girawheen Crescent, Bega, on July 20.

The statement alleged to have been made by Kelly was handed to the Coroner, Mr. Cobcroft, S.M., by Detective Sergeant C. Behrers.

Not Particular

It read “The first trouble I had with Constable Coussens was about three years ago. That was a series of defect notices about a Howard tractor and rotary hoe.

“Coussens was not very particular what he did.

“The first real trouble was two years ago when he overtook a taxi I was travelling in and arrested me for riding an unregistered motor cycle and then  carried out a search of my premises, where I am now living.  “I was fined £5 for that offence.

“The next incident was a collision in front of the Bega Police Station on April 13, 1956.

Collision

“I had been working on the river bank below the town. On my way home I saw him on the corner of Auckland and Bega Streets. I was driving a rotary hoe.

“He then followed me a fair way behind along Bega Street and up Gipps Street.

Opposite the police station, he closed in and collided with the tractor.

“He then charged me with everything, he could think of, although the accident was of his own neglect.

“I appeared before the Bega Court and I was fined a total of about £40.”

The statement also alleged several other traffic incidents between Coussens and Kelly, but no charges were laid.

“From these incidents, we were bitter enemies,” the statement said.

It continued: “About the middle of June this year, I went in my truck to Rock Flat and I took five cases of gelignite from there.

Stole Can

“A week before the tragedy when Constable Coussens was killed, I stole a six-gallon milk can from the platform at the Bega butter factory. It had ‘Curtis Bros.’ on the can.

“I took the labels off the can, dug up the gelignite and made a bomb out of the milk can and brought it back in my car to my home in Bega.

“That week I fitted it up with about 20ft. of fuse and a detonator and sealed it up with mud.

“About midnight that night, I put the bomb in the back of my car and drove into Auckland Street.

“I took it out of the car and put it on the verandah of Constable Coussens’ house, near the front door.

“At about 2 o’clock in the morning, I walked up to Constable Coussens’ house and lit the fuse on the bomb.

“After that I went back to bed. Not being a strong container, I expected very little damage to be done and a lot of noise.

“I thought it would go no further than to break some fibro off the walls and give the constable a bad fright, causing the Police Department to move him.

“I did not think that it would kill him, his wife and his child.

“It was the last thing in the world that I wanted to happen.

“I have all the regrets in the world.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/91240059?searchTerm=coussens&searchLimits=sortby=dateAsc|||l-decade=195#pstart7147934

 


 

BEGA INQUEST ADJOURNED

The Canberra Times   Thursday  17 October 1957  page 5 of 20

BEGA, Wednesday: The inquiry into the deaths of Constable Desmond Coussens, his wife and baby son in an explosion which wrecked their home, was adjourned to-day till tomorrow.’

The hearing was adjourned because some witnesses could not attend.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/91240173?searchTerm=coussens&searchLimits=sortby=dateAsc|||l-decade=195#pstart7147948

 


 

Saw Milk Can Bomb, Farmer Tells Coroner

The Canberra Times   Friday  18 October 1957  page 18 of 20

BEGA, Thursday: A farmer told the Coroner’s Court to-day that he had believed a milk can filled with explosives was to be placed on a police constable’s verandah as a practical joke.

The farmer, Edward Morris Williams, said he had been a close friend of Bartram Myron Kelly, 32, contractor, of Bega, who has been charged with murder.

The inquiry is being held into the deaths of Constable Kenneth Coussens, 31, his wife, Elizabeth, 34, and his son, Bruce, 8 months, at Bega on July 29.

The three died when a bomb wrecked the house.

Williams said Kelly had shown him a milk can containing gelignite, at the back of Kelly’s home, and said he was going to put a burnt-out fuse in it and leave it on the patio to frighten Coussens.

Williams said he had not reported the matter to the police because he had understood it was a practical joke by Kelly.

The hearing was adjourned until to-morrow.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/91240238?searchTerm=coussens&searchLimits=sortby=dateAsc|||l-decade=195#pstart7147981

 


 

Contractor For Trial For Family’s Death

The Canberra Times   Saturday  19 October 1957  page 6 of 16

BEGA, Friday,— An agricultural contractor was committed for trial to-day by the Bega District Coroner on a charge of having murdered a police constable, his wife and baby son.

The coroner, Mr. W. Cobcroft, found Constable Kenneth Coussens, 31, his wife, Elizabeth, 34, and son Bruce James, 8 months, died from injuries received on July 29 in an explosion, in their home in Girrawheen Street, Bega.

The explosion had been feloniously and maliciously brought about by Myron Kelly, he said.

He committed Kelly for trial at Central Criminal Court.

Mr. Cobcroft said a bomb had been placed on the patio of the constable’s home near his bedroom and detonated. The bomb had been housed in a cream can. It has been established that the cream can was stolen from the Bega Butter Factory shortly before the explosion and that the can was in the possession of Kelly.

Kelly was also found to be in possession of a quantity of gelignite, detonators and a fuse.

Mr. Cobcroft said he was not satisfied with the evidence of one of the 40 witnesses who appeared at the inquest, Edward Morris Williams, farmer, of Pambula, who said that he had seen and handled the bomb made by Kelly.

One would have expected that in these circumstances Williams would have gone to the police and volunteered information which probably would have led to the “frustration of Kelly’s intention,” said Mr. Cobcroft.

“I don’t believe Williams’ evidence where he stated he thought the whole affair was to be nothing more than a practical Joke,” he added.

Had Williams acted as a prudent man, the tragedy might have been averted.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/91240386?searchTerm=coussens&searchLimits=sortby=dateAsc|||l-decade=195#pstart7147989

 


 

Contractor Sentenced To Gaol For Life

The Canberra Times   Saturday  7 December 1957  page 1 of 16

SYDNEY, Friday: An agricultural contractor found guilty of setting off a bomb which killed a police constable, his wife and child, was sentenced to life imprisonment by Mr. Justice McClemens in the Central Criminal Court to-day.

The contractor is Myron Bertrand Kelly, 32, of Gipps Street, Bega.

Kelly pleaded not guilty to the murder of Constable Kenneth Desmond Coussens, 31, of Girraween Crescent, Bega.

Coussens, his wife Elizabeth, 34, and their baby son, Bruce, 9 months, were killed when an explosion wrecked their home on July 29.

The Crown alleged that Kelly confessed to placing a home-made bomb under the patio of Coussens’ home and lighting the fuse.

The bomb was a milk can filled with gelignite.

In a statement from the dock yesterday Kelly said he had no intention of harming the Coussens’ family.

“I have thought the matter over day and night and still cannot believe that the explosive I had did that damage and killed three people,” he said.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/91252148?searchTerm=coussens&searchLimits=sortby=dateAsc|||l-decade=195#pstart7148682

 


 

Bega District News

Bega bombing – 50 years on

By JUSTIN WELSFORD

July 23, 2007, 11:38 p.m.

TRAGIC incidents litter the Bega Valley’s long and proud history – fire, homicides and accidents cutting lives far too short.

However, very few incidents stir emotions, ignite debate and were more widely reported than a bombing that claimed the lives of a local police constable, his wife and infant son.

This coming Sunday (July 29) marks the 50th anniversary of this tumultuous event in 1957 when the town was rocked by the monumental explosion about 2.10am on that fateful day.

The cold air of the winter’s night was pierced by the noise of the explosion that woke everyone in town and many in the surrounding farming districts.

Hundreds of windows were smashed by the concussion, more than 100 in the hospital alone, and some up to a mile away from the explosion site.

Residents initially were confused as what exactly had blown up.

The obvious culprit, the gasworks, was still standing as were Slater’s fuel depot and the various service stations.

As emergency service personnel fumbled for their boots and warm clothing the initial cacophony was replaced by an eerie, yawning silence.

It took several minutes of fruitless searching before the source of the blast was identified.

It was the two-year-old home of Constable Kenneth Coussens and his family on the northern side of Girraween Crescent that had borne the brunt of the explosion.

The entire front of the house had been blown away, with the remainder barely standing.

Vast sections of the roof were missing and supporting wooden tresses had fallen into the void.

Such was the force of the blast, that Constable Coussens, his wife Elizabeth (nee Gowing) and infant son Bruce, who had all been sleeping in the front bedroom at the time, were flung large distances through the air.

All three sustained devastating injuries and were killed instantly.

Horrified and instantly sickened by the war-like scene they found when arriving at the house, those who converged were stunned when, incredibly, Mrs Coussens’ elder son Roger (9) crawled physically unscathed from the hotchpotch of metal and wood that only minutes earlier had been his family’s home.

While the cloak of night may have hampered emergency workers in their efforts, it enabled neighbours to shield the boy from the horrors that lay only metres away.

As daylight greeted investigators, reminders of the horror of the incident continued to emerge, with soiled children’s books and bloodstained booties among the items that littered the lawn and street.

The investigation

Superintendent Mitjch of Wollongong, along with detectives Bevan, Bateman, Clark and Davenport, arrived in Bega shortly before noon on the day of the blast to commence investigations.

The chief explosive expert of the Department of Labour and Industry, Mr Parsons, followed shortly after.

Accident or murder?

The house had been destroyed and apart from a vast hole and the devastation there were precious few leads.

With inquiries leading nowhere, speculation an innuendo continued to mount throughout the community.

One popular story (which was quickly disproved) was that planes from the Nowra naval base had mistakenly dropped a bomb during a flyover.

The subject of gossip also turned to Constable Coussens who had served in the Navy during World War II prior to joining the force.

The story went that he was a souvenir hunter and had stored a mortar bomb on the landing – this theory was also kyboshed.

It wasn’t until detective Bob Bradbury suggested: “I wonder if those bits of metal could have come from a cream can which might have been used as bomb” that things started to fall into place for the investigative team.

A number of checks were made and the investigators scored a hit: the Bega Creamery Society confirmed that a six-gallon cream can had been stolen from the factory recently.

The owner of the can, the Curtis family, was contacted and it was ascertained that the stolen item was one of two bought years previously.

The second can was subsequently examined and the metal was found to be identical to that located at the explosion site.

Further investigation revealed that a substantial quantity of gelignite had been stolen from a mine at Rock Flay (between Nimmitabel and Cooma).

The detectives continued to pore over Constable Coussens’ life in an attempt to discover a reason for such a malicious act and it was quickly discovered that local man Myron Bertrand Kelly, 32, had held a well-known grudge against the constable.

In the absence of other leads it seemed worth following up.

So on August 7 a search was made of Kelly’s house and a safety fuse and an unexploded detonator in a tobacco tin were found in a tool shed on the property.

Also located was an empty landmine, and brass nameplates bearing the name ‘Curtis Bros, Brogo’ – the plates from a dairy cream can.

In a cabinet in the main bedroom four and half sticks of gelignite, 20 feet of safety fuse and 58 detonators were discovered.

There was also an empty hand grenade, powder tins and equipment for loading rifle and gun cartridges, together with a demolition handbook.

A search of Kelly’s Dodge vehicle revealed a circular marking on the floor mat in the back that matched up perfectly with the identical cream can the police had procured from the dairy.

Two weeks later, upon receipt of further information, five cases of gelignite were located under a rock on a property at Nethercote frequented by Kelly.

The grudge

Constable Coussens had been stationed at Bega since 1954 on motorcycle traffic duties for the Public Safety Bureau (now known as the Highway Patrol).

He was praised by his fellow officers and a large proportion of the local community for his vigilance in dealing with hoodlums and ‘hoons’, but it was his zeal that had him offside with some – including Myron Kelly.

Kelly had been booked of a number of occasions by the constable and harboured palpable ill-will towards him.

In an interview at Bega Police Station on August 14, Kelly outlined his dealings with Constable Coussens.

He said he had received a number of defect notices on his tractor and rotary hoe and had been stopped frequently for licence checks by the officer.

He also made the accusation that Constable Coussens had instigated a collision between the pair in order charge him with a number of offences.

“It was April 13, 1956… I saw him on the corner… I was driving the rotary hoe. He followed me and opposite the police station he closed in to collide with the tractor. He then charged me with everything he could think of, although the accident was mainly of his own neglect. I appeared before the Bega Court and was fined a total of 40 pounds,” Mr Kelly said.

Minor incidents also had occurred in May and July 1957 (just before the bombing), no breaches were issued but there were words between the pair.

There remain some people in the community who are sympathetic to Kelly and who speak of the constable “having it in for him”.

The bomb

In the same interview with police, on August 14, Kelly also outlined how he made the bomb.

On Sunday, June 16 he had gone to Rock Flat in his truck, entered a silica mine and removed five cases of gelignite. He then returned to a property at Nethercote and buried it.

Then about a week before the bombing he stole the six-gallon cream can and also took that to Nethercote.

Kelly told investigators, “A few days after, instead of going to work, I removed the labels from the can and dug up the gelignite. I packed 240 sticks into the can like cigarettes and made a bomb. I took in my car home and put it in my shed. Later, I fitted it with about 20 feet of fuse and a detonator and sealed it with mud.”

Then, just before midnight on July 28, he sneaked over to the Coussens residence and set the can down on the front landing, then hurried home to bed.

Two hours later he returned, lit the fuse and walked away – he was at his home again by the time the blast shook Bega.

Court proceedings

After being charged with the murders of Constable Coussens, Elizabeth and Bruce on August 9, Kelly appeared in the Bega Local Court of Petty Sessions before being remanded to reappear at a later date.

The coroner’s inquiry into the three deaths began on October 14 before William Cobcroft, JP.

During the lengthy inquiry, Mr Cobcroft heard evidence from a large number of witnesses, including the detectives involved in the case, family members of the deceased, and Kelly, among others.

During his time in the stand, Kelly reiterated his accusations that the constable had unfairly targeted him and that his intention had been simply to frighten the officer after his requests to councillors and high ranking police for Constable Coussens to be transferred fell on deaf ears.

“I have all the regrets in the world for what happened,” Kelly said.

The following is an extract of Mr Cobcroft’s findings, handed down on October 15:

“Kenneth Desmond Coussens, Elizabeth Mary Hamilton Coussens and Bruce James John Coussens died from injuries received on July 29, 1957, in an explosion felonously and maliciously brought about on that date by Myron Bertrand Kelly, and I further find in the manner aforesaid that the said Myron Bertrand Kelly did felonously and maliciously murder them.”

Mr Cobcroft committed Kelly to the Central Criminal Court, Sydney.

After five days of evidence the jury retired and after just one hour they returned with a guilty verdict.

Justice McClemens asked Kelly if he had anything to say. Kelly shook his head and said loudly, “No!”

In sentencing the then 32-year-old farming contractor to life imprisonment on December 6, 1957, Justice McClemens said: “One could only hope for the sake of common human nature that a crime as terrible and devilish as the Bega bombing on July 29, sprang from some deep-seated mental derangement.

“It is not a case where in the interest of the community one could recommend or hold out hope for mercy.”

When being led away Kelly turned to his elderly father, waved his hand and simply said in a loud voice: “Goodbye!”

The miracle boy

Amazingly, this hideous event was not the first time that nine-year-old Roger’s (the sole survivor) life had been touched by tragedy.

Eight years earlier his American father (Elizabeth’s first husband) was killed in car accident in the United States.

The youngster had been in his mother’s arms in the car at the time and somehow, miraculously, both had survived.

Upon returning to Australia and the Bega Valley, Elizabeth met, fell in love with, and married Constable Coussens.

Roger, who now lives in Sydney, has a family of his own and is returning to Bega this weekend for the memorial service.

Myron Bertrand Kelly

After being sentenced to life imprisonment on December 6, 1957, Kelly was released in 1980 and returned to the district.

In the ensuing years he lived a quiet life at Austral Farm, Nimmitabel, before moving to the Sir William Hudson Memorial Centre in Cooma where he died, aged 83, on July 4 this year. He never re-offended.

Kelly was married to Viola and the father of two sons – David (dec) and John – and a daughter, Jeanette.

There are still some in the community who believe Kelly was provoked and others who believe his version of events that he didn’t intend to physically harm Constable Coussens or his family.

Senior Sergeant, Garry Nowlan, of Bega Police disputes this.

“It is easy to see from the evidence the man had a fixation with explosives,” Mr Nowlan said.

“He knew what they could do. You don’t use 240 sticks of gelignite to scare somebody. You don’t murder a family because you got a few traffic tickets.

“Kelly was judged by a jury of his peers and they got it right. He was a cold, reckless killer.”

Whatever the truth is, there is no doubt Myron Bertrand Kelly will always hold an infamous place in the history of Bega.

http://www.begadistrictnews.com.au/story/1070073/bega-bombing-50-years-on/

 


 

Grave site:  Anglican, Section 7, Row A, Grave 3

[codepeople-post-map]

 


 

30 July, 2007 4:00PM AEDT

Bega bombing 50 years on

Kenneth Desmond COUSSENS - NSWPF - Murdered with his family - 29 July 1957

Around 150 people gathered alongside police officers in Bega to remember the tragedy that claimed the lives of Constable Kenneth Coussens, his wife Elizabeth and baby son Bruce, who were murdered by Myron Kelly, who had placed a bomb outside the Constable’s home in Bega.

Fifty years ago a policeman, his wife and baby were murdered in Bega in south-east New South Wales.

Around 150 people gathered alongside police officers to remember the bombing tragedy that claimed the lives of Constable Kenneth Coussens, his wife Elizabeth and baby son Bruce, who were murdered by Myron Kelly, who had placed a bomb outside the Constable’s home in Bega.

NSW Police Commissioner Ken Moroney stated, “This was a very important occasion, not only for the Coussens family who had gathered from as far as Adelaide and Sydney. It was important for people in the Bega Valley to come together, with members of the NSW Police Force to acknowledge the 50th Anniversary of when Senior Constable Ken Coussens his wife Elizabeth and their seven month old son Bruce were murdered in Bega.”

“It’s was an occasion to reflect, to remember but also acknowledge that which is good about this community. These are always occasions for sadness and reflection but they also give you optimism for the future, said Commissioner Moroney.”

He continued, “Mr Coussens is one of 280 officers in NSW who have lost their lives in the execution of their duties. It’s a reflection on the legacy that people like Ken Coussens leave us and on the proud history and traditions of the NSW Police.

Locals recall the enormous explosion at about 2am as hundreds of windows were smashed close to the Constable’s home and some up to a mile away from the explosion site.

The home was almost obliterated by the explosion with the entire front of the house being blown away and the remainder barely standing. Much of the roof was missing and Constable Coussens, his wife Elizabeth and infant son Bruce, who had all been sleeping in the front bedroom at the time, were flung through the air and killed instantly.

I can think of no greater breach of civil liberty than the taking of another life 

In search of a suspect, detectives intimately examined Constable Coussens’ life in an attempt to discover why such a violent act had occurred in the usually quiet town.

It was discovered that local man Myron Kelly had held a well-known grudge against the constable and in the absence of other leads this seemed worth following up.

The offender had become incensed at being spoken to by the Constable regarding traffic offences and placed a metal dairy container loaded with over 200 sticks of stolen gelignite outside the front door of the Constable’s home.

When Kelly’s house was searched, four and half sticks of gelignite, 20 feet of safety fuse and 58 detonators were discovered. The offender was arrested after a major Police investigation and later sentenced to life imprisonment.

Myron Kelly was released from jail in 1980 and returned to the district. He died in Cooma in July 2007 aged 83.

Commissioner Moroney said, “This was a terrible act of evil…from my reading of the historical documents, Mr Kelly stated he only ever intended to frighten the constable. However, I can think of no greater breach of civil liberty than the taking of another life.”

Incredibly, Mrs Coussens’ elder son Roger who was 9 years old at the time was physically unharmed by the attack.

For the Commissioner, being able to meet Roger who was the sole survivor from that day was very inspiring.

Commissioner Moroney said of Roger, “He had a bit of a tear in the eye as he reflected on his mother, brother and step-father. I think it was also an opportunity for him to catch up with family and to reflect what I believe was the honour that his step-father holds in terms of service Kenneth Coussens gave to the NSW Police Force and the community.”

http://www.abc.net.au/local/stories/2007/07/30/1992004.htm