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Martin
John BRYANT
The Court Transcript
Appearances:
MR. D. BUGG Q.C. and MR. N.
PERKS for the Crown
MR. J. AVERY for the Accused
MR. BUGG Q.C. (Stating facts):
Your Honour, Martin Bryant has pleaded guilty to all counts in the
indictment which was filed in this Court on the 5th of
July.
On the 28th of April
of this year he travelled to Port Arthur. He drove there in his
Volvo sedan which at the time had a surfboard placed on the roof
racks on top of the car. The Crown’s case is that at the outset of
that journey he intended at least some form of violent confrontation
with Mr. And Mrs. Martin of the Seascape tourist accommodation
facility at Port Arthur and in all probability his intentions also
extended to actions which had the devastating impact on the
community and the people of Port Arthur on that day.
Page 51.
I say this because on the Crown
case he had made preparations which were inconsistent with his
normal behaviour. He behaved deceptively to those close to him, as
to his possession and use of firearms. They were concealed in his
house in the body of two pianos and elsewhere within the house out
of view of visitors to that property. Yet, when he left the
property on the morning of the 28th of April to travel to
Port Arthur he left one semi-automatic firearm and a substantial
quantity of ammunition in the hallway of the house.
His acts of preparation
included buying a sports bag to conceal one of his weapons, he took
handcuffs with him, rope and a hunting knife and three semi-automatic
weapons and a significant quantity of ammunition. He told some
people he met on the way that he was going surfing at Roaring Beach
but on one occasion he let his guard slip and I will tell your
Honour about that later. He followed through a series of actions
which culminated in a hostage and siege situation which had an air
of pre-planning. He clearly intended to embark upon violence and
murderous conduct of the type to which he has pleaded guilty.
Page 52.
Bryant at the time, lived
comfortably in the sense that he didn’t have any money worries but I
will cover that in more detail later. His lifestyle was different
and his behaviour, in the eyes of many, inappropriate.
He owned and drove a motor
vehicle but did not possess a driver’s licence. He owned and on the
28th April 1996, used military style semi-automatic
weapons but did not hold a licence or any form of authorisation to
possess or own those weapons. A search of his house at Clare street
after the shootings at Port Arthur revealed that he had hidden the
firearms in the house and had other weapons and ammunition concealed
there in such a way that his girlfriend and other visitors would not
be able to locate them. He was obviously stockpiling those weapons
and ammunition which had a disturbing killing efficiency. That he
was planning or considering a significant violent act or series of
acts culminating in his conduct in late April 1996 is best
illustrated by his conduct at gun shops in Hobart in the short
period of time leading up to this incident –
Page 53.
He had, in October or November
of 1993, purchased an AR10, also called an Armalite, semi-automatic
rifle through a newspaper advertisement in Tasmania. In early 1996
he enquired at one gun shop about the purchase of a semi-automatic
.233 rifle and at the same time he bought three rifle cases, one of
them with a double carrying capacity. In February to April of 1996,
from another gun shop he purchased cleaning kits for a 30 calibre
and a 12 gauge shotgun. At about this time it is believed that he
bought that semi-automatic shotgun. He later was to tell police
that that weapon, when firing, frightened him. On the 27th
of March, 1996 he bought the AR10 rifle into a gun shop for repair.
At about 10.00 a.m. on the 23rd of April, 1996 he
enquired at one gun shop in Hobart as to the availability of an AR15
semi-automatic weapon.
Page 54.
– told that such a weapon was
available for a price of three thousand dollars however he did not
buy the weapon at that shop although one of the guns he used on the
28th April, 1996 was an AR15 which he had purchased
elsewhere and he provided details of that to the police and your
Honour will hear about that later.
All these transactions and
movements he concealed from his girlfriend, Miss Petra Wilmot.
In stating the facts to you I
will cover those events leading up to the first fatal shootings on
the 28th of April and through to the shooting of Mrs.
Mikac and her two daughters on Jetty Road at Port Arthur.
My junior, Mr. Perks, will then
deal with Bryant’s actions from the Toll Booth at Port Arthur
through to the siege and his arrest at Seascape the next morning.
He will also cover the police interview of Bryant in early July,
1996, the video film of which will be played to the Court. At the
conclusion of the playing of that film I will then provide your
Honour with Victim Impact details and background information on
Bryant detailing information in my possession and expert opinion
obtained by my office which I will be submitting to assist your
Honour in the sentencing process.
Before proceeding further and
in fairness to Bryant and his counsel I consider that it is proper
that I inform your Honour as to the Crown’s position concerning
sentence.
The Crown in this State is
authorised to make submission on sentencing pursuant to Section 386,
sub-Sections 11 and 12 on the Criminal Code and I propose to follow
that authorisation, particularly under Section 386, sub-Section 12B
and C –
Page 55.
--- in this case and make
submissions in due course to your Honour about the matter. I will,
because of the substantial number of murders committed by this man,
be submitting that in relation to the counts of murder to which he
has pleaded guilty the sentence of life imprisonment is the only
appropriate sentence on those convictions and that your Honour’s
discretion under The Parole Act should be exercised by orders
under Section 12B (a) that he is not eligible for parole in respect
of that sentence. I will address your Honour in more detail on this
in due course but I do make those comments to put the defence on
notice as to my position on that.
On the 28th of April,
Martin Bryant, who was born on the 7th May 1967, had been
living at 30 Claire Street, New Town, for a number of years having
obtained ownership of that property on the death of its previous
owner, Miss Helen Harvey. On her death on the 20th
October 1992, Bryant inherited her estate which included a share in
the profits of the estate of the late George Adams, the founder of
the Tattersall’s lotteries and he also of course acquired a sole
interest in the house in Clare street. Insofar that this is
relevant, further comment will be made about this aspect of Bryant’s
life later.
In early 1996, Bryant
advertised in “The Mercury” newspaper for a gardener’s position at
his home in Clare street. That advertisement was answered by,
amongst others, Miss Petra Wilmott. She was employed. After a
short time of being employed by Bryant, Miss Wilmott became friendly
with him, ceased working for him and then started to go out with him
on a regular basis and often stayed overnight at his house. She
stayed at his house for four successive nights up to and including
the 27th April 1996,
Page 56.
the night before Bryant
committed these crimes.
On the 15th of April,
1996 Miss Wilmott accompanied Bryant in to Hobart to go shopping,
less than two weeks before this incident. She was in the Myer store
in Hobart with Bryant when he purchased a Prince sports bag, having
first measured that bag with a tape measure he had taken with him.
It’s the crown case that he was obviously measuring that bag to
determine whether or not it had the capacity to carry the semi-automatic
weapon he carried in that bag with him when he entered the Broad
arrow Café on the 28th of April. He turned to Miss
Wilmott and said was the bag big enough and when she asked him what
for he told her that he was going to use it for T’ai Chi. However,
in an aside conversation with the shop assistant he told the shop
assistant that the bag had to have strong handles as it would be
used to carry ammunition which would be heavy. This bag was later
to provide Bryant with an element of surprise and as an illustration
of his pre-planning for what he did on the 28th of April.
Miss Wilmott states that
after seeing that bag at the time of purchase she did not on any
other occasion see it either at Bryant’s home or in his possession.
It was most likely hidden with his firearms and ammunition.
On the 25th of April,
Anzac Day, Bryant travelled to Richmond with Miss Wilmott ostensibly
to test out his camera for which he had purchased new batteries. At
Richmond Bryant spoke to one shopkeeper and asked her how busy it
was in Richmond on Sundays.
On Saturday, the 27th
of April Bryant spent the day in the company of Miss Wilmott and in
the evening had dinner at his mother’s home with Miss Wilmott. On
this occasion Miss Wilmott said that Bryant appeared
Page 57.
to consume more alcohol than
his usual practice, he became talkative and aggressive in a make
believe way towards his mother.
After leaving his mother’s home
they travelled to a local nightclub and then returned to the Clare
Street property where Bryant set his alarm clock for 6 a.m. the
following day.
Page 58.
Miss Wilmott said to Police
when later interviews by them that this was out of keeping in the
sense that in the time she had known Bryant he had never used an
alarm clock nor had he risen that early before. He did not work and
he had no commitments. She had never seen any firearms either in
the home or in Bryant’s possession in the time she had known him.
She left the home at about eight a.m. and whilst Bryant had said
that he wanted to take Miss Wilmott to Port Arthur she had never
been there with him. He didn’t tell where he was going that day and
she was certainly unaware of him ever having been surfing in the
time she had known him, although he did tell her that he was a good
surfer. Information gathered by the Police after this incident
seemed to indicate the contrary was the case. Miss Wilmott later
assisted the Police in identifying Bryant'’ voice from the audio
tape recordings of the hostage negotiations, which occurred later in
the evening of the 28th of April.
At the time Bryant was the
registered owner of a yellow Volvo 240GL sedan which he had
purchased in September, 1995. He also had at the Clare Street
property a blue Honda Civic station wagon which was out of
registration. The only other registered owner of that vehicle had
been Miss Harvey. The vehicle had passed to Bryant on her death.
Bryant had never held a driver’s licence and had one conviction
against his name for being an unlicenced driver of an uninsured,
unregistered motor vehicle following his interception by Transport
Department Officers on the 6th of July 1994. The car he
was driving was the Honda Civic which had remained unregistered
after the death of Miss Harvey.
Miss Wilmott in statements
provided to the Police after the 28th of April said that
Bryant would often speak about Japanese tourists and wasps, and in
fact raised both topics with the woman he spoke to in Richmond on
Anzac Day.
Page 59.
Bryant’s home in Clare Street
is fitted with an electronic alarm system. In attending, the police
late in the day of the 28th of April, the Police in
attending those premises the Police discovered that the alarm had
been set, that is engaged, at nine forty-seven a.m. on Sunday the 28th
of April. So obviously that was the time at which Bryant left his
home. He left driving his yellow Volvo sedan and carrying with him
at that time the AR15 semi-automatic .223 calibre rifle and FN,
commonly called an SLR military style semi-automatic .308 calibre
rifle and a semi-automatic Daiwoo twelve gauge shotgun.
Page 60.
He also had with him two sets
of handcuffs, sash-cord rope and a hunting knife and a number of
containers of petrol.
The times that I will give your
Honour now are approximate because they are estimates given by
witnesses who came forward to assist the police with their inquiries
following the horrific events of the 28th of April.
At approximately 10.30 a.m.
Bryant arrived at the Midway Point Newsagency and purchased a
cigarette lighter from the proprietor, Mr Angelo Kessarios. The
owner recognised Bryant because he used to call in at the newsagency
on a regular basis approximately 18 months previously. The usual
time of his arrival was 6.00 a.m. The proprietor said that he had
had, at that time the assumption that Bryant had an early work
commitment to be arriving at his shop at such an early hour of the
day. But, in fact, Bryant’s real reason for doing so was that he
was living in the Copping District, he did not have a driver’s
licence and he therefore drove at a time, at that time in an attempt
to avoid police detection. When he had been in the shop on previous
occasions he would giggle inappropriately but was always outgoing in
his manner. But on this occasion the proprietor noticed that his
demeanour was quite different. He didn’t pass any pleasantries. He
didn’t show any recognition of the proprietor, although they had
obviously exchanged conversation on a number of occasions, and he
purchased the cigarette lighter leaving more money than was
necessary to pay for it and departed quite abruptly.
Bryant then travelled to the
township of Sorell where he stopped at the local supermarket and
purchased a bottle of tomato sauce. The proprietor of the
supermarket, Mr. Diamantis, noticed that he had with him a large bag
which was a sports type bag. He therefore watched his movements in
the supermarket closely.
Page 61.
When he left he paid for his
purchase with a large quantity of small coin, small denomination
coin.
Your Honour, the list of
witnesses names has been provided to the transcribing typist so
there is no problem with spelling.
Bryant then travelled further
south to the village of Forcett, arriving there between 11.00. and
twelve midday. He stopped at the Shell service station and spoke to
the proprietor, Mr Gary King, and requested a cup of coffee. He
told the proprietor that he had been there earlier in the week and
had enjoyed the cup of coffee he had on that occasion, but he said,
‘On this occasion would you boil the kettle for less time.’. He
paid for the coffee in five and ten cent coins and told Mr King that
he was going to Roaring Beach to surf. The service station
proprietor thought that was strange because it was a very calm day
and he certainly didn’t expect that the sea conditions would be
conducive to surfing.
Page 62.
Your Honour, there were a
number of other sightings of Bryant, the car was distinctive, and
those sightings occurred in the Eaglehawk Neck area and at some of
the tourist attractions near Eaglehawk Neck. Clearly he moved on
from Forcett through Eaglehawk Neck and then down to the Peninsula
at Taranna and there he stopped at the service station-convict
bakery and purchased fifteen dollars worth of petrol. From there he
drove on to Port Arthur.
Mr. Christopher Hammond, a long
time resident of the Peninsula and proprietor of the service station
said that when he served Bryant the petrol he stood looking out
across Norfolk Bay with Bryant and he said the water was mirror calm
and he was rather surprised to see someone with a surfboard
travelling down there in those weather conditions.
Clearly Bryant travelled on
from there towards Port Arthur and the Crown case is that he stopped
at the Seascape guest accommodation at that time owned by Mr. And
Mrs. David Martin.
There were two interesting
observations made late in the morning and at about midday by two
people who reside in the area, one Mr. Simmons, heard at about 11
a.m. two shots. He knew the Martins well and he knew on that day
that it was Mr martin’s birthday. Further down towards Port Arthur
and near the boat ramp a Mr Doug McCutcheon heard a series of
rapidly fired shots and his best estimate of the time of that was
about twelve o’clock to twelve thirty. He estimated that the
calibre of the rifle used was larger than .22. He has some
experience with firearms and some sensitivity about it, being
involved in the operation of a fish farm. He claimed that whenever
gun shots went off in the district he was blamed for shooting
Page 63.
seals. But he estimated that
in that volley of shots there would have been six, at the most
twelve shots. Later in the day he heard further shooting when
Bryant was in Port Arthur. In that late morning how many shots were
fired and precisely when is difficult to determine but these two
residents heard shooting on that day in the pre-lunch period and the
Crown case is that Bryant shot Mr. And Mrs. Martin at about that
time.
Page 64.
Further details will be given
by Mr. Perks.
Tourists to Tasmania at the
time, Donald and Stephanie Gunn, had spent the night at “The
Seascape”. They departed at about 11.15 to 11.20 a.m. and at that
time David and Sally Martin were in residence, all the other guests
had departed, the Gunns stayed chatting to Mr. & Mrs. Martin and
then later when they departed they noted that both of the Martins
were engaged in chores about “The Seascape”, so at about 11.20 a.m.
the Crown case is that Mr. & Mrs. Martin were at the premises on
their own. At about 11.45 a.m. a Peninsula resident, Mr Copping,
drove past “Seascape” on the Arthur Highway. He had known the
martins for a number of years, and when he looked towards “The
Seascape” building he observed a yellow Volvo sedan backed up into
the front door of the main home with the driver’s door open. There
was a surfboard on the rack and he took particular notice of this
because being a person who had surfed in the area some many years
before he knew that the weather was not good for surfing and he
recalled that when he spoke to the police because he said he thought
to himself at the time that a lot of surfers had improved somewhat
since his day of surfing if they could afford to stay overnight when
the weather was like that. He drove through past Port Arthur
township and then returned at about 12.40 p.m., in other words he
was driving back towards “The Seascape”, and as he did so he noticed
the yellow Volvo being driven towards Port Arthur about two hundred
metres south of the general store at Port Arthur itself.
The Crown case is that in that
intervening time, that is, between 11.45 and 12.40, Martin Bryant
shot and killed Mr. & Mrs. Martin, and I say this because not only
were shots heard by the residents I have mentioned but on the same
day Victorian tourists, Maureen and John Mason, who had visited Port
Arthur and were returning to catch
Page 65.
a flight from Hobart, called in
to look at “The Seascape” premises on their way out of the Peninsula
at about 12.30 p.m.
page 66.
So noticed the property on the
way into Port Arthur and they were attracted by it and thought that
they might come back and visit the premises on a future holiday.
On later hearing of the events
at Port Arthur Mrs. Mason was to describe to the Police what
occurred when she and her husband drove onto the Seascape property.
She said that her husband stopped the car, they both alighted from
the vehicle and started to walk towards the house. She has a vague
recall of a squarish shaped vehicle near the house but didn’t take
any particular note of it. She then told the police “Suddenly a
young man appeared in front of us out of nowhere, he appeared
agitated, he was making jerking movements with his hands and wasn’t
still, moving about nervously. My husband said to him ‘I wonder if
we could have a look at one of the apartments?’ and he said ‘No, my
mother and father are out for ten minutes’ He said, ‘I can’t show
you around because I’ve got my girlfriend inside’” Mrs. Mason
described his manner of speech as strange and “I opined that he was
speaking as if something was wrong”. She said his manner of speech
was not natural and she said that he appeared quite rude and she
became uneasy about him. She told the Police that at this time all
she wanted to do was just get away from the property as quickly as
possible and she asked her husband to do so by saying “Come on let’s
get out of here”. Both Mr. and Mrs. Mason then re-entered the car,
drove away from the property, back along the Highway. Mrs. Mason
looked back over her shoulder as the car travelled onto the Highway
and she said that the person she had spoken to was standing in front
of the house looking in their direction. Their time of departure
was about twelve thirty-five p.m.
Shortly after this your Honour
Bryant left the Seascape and drove towards Port Arthur in his
Volvo. He had
Page 67.
with him at the time the keys
to the Seascape properties which had obviously been locked following
his killing of Mr. and Mrs. Martin. These keys were later recovered
from the Volvo sedan when he abandoned it near the Toll Booth.
On his way to Port Arthur he
stopped to speak with two persons whose motor vehicle had over-heated
and was stationary on the roadside. That was just past the Seascape
property. Bryant chatted to them briefly and was asked if he was
going surfing because of the surf board on the roof racks.
Page 68.
He replied, “No, I’m going to
the Isle of the Dead to get rid of some wasps”. He then suggested
that they meet later at the café at Port Arthur when he said, “You
can shout me a cup of coffee.” From there Bryant travelled past
Port Arthur, or through Port Arthur, and past the historic site, to
Palmer’s Lookout Road. That’s on the southern side of the historic
site. And there he stopped his car and spoke with a long term
resident, Mr. Roger Larner, whom he had known for a number of years.
Bryant’s parents had owned a seaside holiday property and
approximately fifteen years previously Mr. Larner had met Mr. and
Mrs. Bryant and their son Martin.
Your Honour, it’s important
that I read to you the account given by Mr. Larner of his
conversation with Martin Bryant because on the Crown case this
conversation took place approximately one half of an hour after he
had murdered Mr. and Mrs. Martin. He asked Mr. Larner how his
health was – I am referring to page 43 of volume1, part A of the
crown papers, your Honour. Mr. Larner replied that it was good. He
asked after Martin Bryant’s health and he said, “I don’t drink much
anymore and I don’t smoke. I’m down here surfing.” Mr. Larner then
asked where he was living and Bryant said that he had bought a place
just out of New Norfolk, called ‘Fogg Lodge’. He said that he had
sold his farm at Copping for about a hundred and forty five thousand
dollars and said that he was looking for some Murray Grey cattle to
buy. Mr Larner responded that he had some to sell and asked him
what he was looking for and Bryant said, “A couple of heifers and a
young bull.” Mr. Larner said that he had a heifer for sale and
indicated where they were in the paddock. Bryant then said he
didn’t want to look at them right away. He said to Mr Larner, “I
wouldn’t mind buying Martin’s place.” That is Mr David and Mrs Sally
Martin. And that reference Mr Larner took to be the next door
property because Mr. and Mrs. Martin also owned property further
Page 69.
down the peninsula, next door
to Mr. Larner.
He then asked Mr. Larner if his
wife was at home and Mr. Larner said, “Yes, she’s up at the house.”
And he then asked if it was all right if he could go up to the house
to see her and Mr. Larner responded, “Yes, that would be all right
and I will come up.”
Page 70.
Bryant then responded that he
might go to Nubeena first and then come back later in the afternoon
if that was all right. The background to that, your Honour, is that
some time previously, and after the death of Martin Bryant’s father,
Bryant had met Mrs. Larner accidentally at New Town and after that
meeting he had made a nuisance of himself and rung Mrs. Larner on a
number of occasions and those phone calls Mr. Larner described in a
term which could commonly be called nuisance calls. As a
consequence he asked his wife to report the matter to the police,
which she had done. Certainly with what had already transpired and
with what later transpired Bryant’s refusal of the invitation to
travel up the path to the home in company with Mr. Larner we say is
somewhat significant. He certainly showed composure in behaving in
the way in which he did, not only in the presence of Mr. Larner but
also with the people to whom he spoke on the roadside when clearly
at that particular time he intended, on the Crown case, to embark
upon his murderous and violent conduct at Port Arthur.
Bryant then travelled back from
Palmer’s Lookout Road to the entrance to the historic site. His
vehicle was observed entering the site by tourists following him and
he was also seen by a member of the historic site staff operating
the toll booth on that day. That person estimates that at
approximately 1.10 to 1.15 p.m. she observed a yellow Volvo sedan in
a line of vehicles waiting to enter the site. She noticed the
surfboard on the roof racks and she noticed the sudden backwards
movement in the vehicle whilst it was in the queue. When the
vehicle arrived at the toll booth window Bryant complained that the
driver in front of him had reversed without warning towards him.
This witness made a full statement to police not only of Bryant’s
entry to the site but also of later events which occurred near the
toll booth and they will be covered in detail by Mr. Perks later in
this hearing.
Page 71.
Your Honour, Bryant then drove
down Jetty Road towards the carpark near the broad Arrow café, and
in due course we will make available some plans of the area so that
a geographie orientation can be achieved but I won’t do that at the
moment.
At about 1.25 p.m. the security
manager at the site, Mr. Ian Kingston, was directing people in the
carpark when he saw Bryant, who indicated that he wanted to park his
vehicle near the water’s edge. Mr Kingston directed him away from
that area because it is normally reserved for campervans and the
carpark area was quite busy o that day. Bryant became argumentative
but drove off in his car and parked it near the information centre.
Mr Kingston attended other matters and then later noticed that
Bryant had moved his car back to the water’s edge. He saw Bryant
alight from the car carrying a bag, a sport’s type bag, a video
camera, and he then walked towards the Broad arrow café. It is the
Crown’s case that that bag that he then had with him contained the
AR15 semi-automatic rifle and ammunition and it was the bag which he
had previously measured, which I’ve referred to. At this stage, Mr
Kingston didn’t take any further notice of Bryant.
During the mid-lunch time busy
period at the Broad Arrow café on the 28th April, there
were at least sixty customers either seated within the Broad Arrow
café or waiting to be served for takeaway meals which could be eaten
away from the café at outside eating areas in front of the café and
others were browsing in the souvenir and giftshop area. Bryant
entered the Broad Arrow café at about 1.30 p.m. He stood at the
servery and obtained food and drink, a fact which was noticed by one
of the witnesses consisting of a cup of fruit juice and also a can
of fruit juice. He left the café to take a seat outside and as he
left the door was held open for him at his request by Mrs. Carol
Pearce and Mrs. Carmel Edwards members of a party of ten who were
just entering the
Page72
café. Comments were made to
Bryant about the size of his meal which he was taking out with him
and he responded saying that he had been surfing all day. He walked
on to the balcony and seated himself at one of the tables –
and, your Honour, I would ask,
I say so in this amount of detail because there are two other rooms
at court and there are people assisting me in those rooms who will
place on the screen plans of the area, and I would ask Mr. Perks if
he wouldn’t mind helping as well, to place firstly the floor plan of
the broad Arrow café on the board.
Page 73.
I’ll spend some time referring
to this your Honour because obviously I need to go through this in
some detail and I’d ask that Mr. Perks stay there and perhaps assist
the Court by indicating certain locations. By way of explanation
your Honour I should say that the plan has been prepared by the
Police to assist. It is a floor plan of the café after Police
investigators were called to examine the scene and record what they
observed. What has been done to the plan in addition is to make
faint red outlines of the Locations of the tables in the arrangement
which existed at the time and was the place at which the tables were
located on the afternoon to Bryant entering the café with his
firearm. So the plan also depicts the location of bodies left in
the café after Bryant’s departure and their location at the time the
Police attended, so clearly there has been probably some movement of
the bodies for medical attention and examination.
But when Bryant left the café
he left by the doorway which took him out onto the balcony and then
seated himself at a table, on the edge of the second last table
before the gap on the balcony. When he sat down at that table he
commented in a rather loud voice that there were a lot of wasps
about. One person who was dining on the balcony at that time, Mrs.
Sullivan, said that she hadn’t seen any and made a comment to that
effect to Bryant.
Page 74.
Bryant then spoke to people at
or near the table he had seated himself at and he questioned them
about parking problems. Did they have any difficulty, and so on,
and stated that he had had problems but that he had parked where he
wanted to anyway. Seated at the table next to him was a Melbourne
couple, Michael Beekman and Rebecca McKenna. And, your Honour, I
will be taking you through some photographs and I tender a bundle of
photographs for your assistance.
EXHIBIT P 1 –
BUNDLE OF PHOTOGRAPHS – Taken in
HIS HONOUR: Thank you.
MR BUGG QC (RESUMING)
If your Honour turns towards the back of that folder of photographs
there is Photograph 1,039 – that shows part of the balcony,
obviously after this incident, and the area which we are now talking
about. That’s one zero three nine. Mr. Beekman and Miss McKenna
said that Bryant appeared to be talking to himself. He mentioned
‘wasps’ and spoke to Miss McKenna. He also said that there were not
many Japanese tourists at the site that day. The couple tried to
ignore him. Mr Beekman noted that he was eating his food quickly,
they observed him gather up his bag, tray and other possessions and
go back into the café. Mr. Beekman said that someone opened the
door for him again.
There are two entrance doors –
one off the balcony into the café to the left of – if you could just
show that, please? There is that entrance doorway and there is
another entrance doorway there. That last entrance doorway, the one
on the right, is the one through which Bryant walked when he went
back into the café.
HIS HONOUR: That’s immediately
below the sign, “The broad Arrow Café”, is it, on the photograph?
Page 75.
MR BUGG QC: I’m sorry, your
Honour.
HIS HONOUR: If you look at the
photograph?
MR BUGG QC: Yes, you’re looking
at that. You can see the doorway from the photograph in 1039.
HIS HONOUR: Yes.
MR BUGG QC: It’s the doorway
you can see just to the right of the person walking along in front
of the balcony.
HIS HONOUR: That door has
opened out in that photograph, has it?
MR BUGG QC: Yes.
HIS HONOUR: Yes.
MR BUGG QC: (RESUMING)
Someone opened the door for him again and Mr Beekman said that he
himself saw wasps there when Mr Bryant was mentioning wasps but he
said that Bryant’s speech was a little difficult to understand but
he certainly articulated the problem that he’d recently experienced
with Mr Kingston over parking because he said, ‘Fuck him. I parked
there anyway.’ He was described as appearing to be anxious with
quick hand movements and looking at the carpark and into the café
quite regularly.
Page 76.
Another couple, Mr. and Mrs.
Williams, on a coach tour, also sat outside. He spoke to them in
similar terms. They later went on to their coach, a coach which
Bryant was later to shoot at. Mrs. Iris Williams when the shooting
had finished, noted the registration number of Bryant’s vehicle as
he was driving out of the car park.
Another couple, Mr. and Mrs.
Kelly, entered the café shortly after Bryant. They had been at the
outdoor tables and had entered to leave their cups and look for
souvenirs.
Bryant then walked in to the
dining area of the café and placed his bag on a table in the north-western
corner of the café. That’s being indicated on the plan now, so he’s
walked through a good two thirds of the café area towards the north-western
corner. The table that he placed the sports bag on was not occupied
and he immediately took out the AR15 rifle which was fitted with a
thirty shot magazine, although the Crown case is that there were
approximately twenty six live rounds of ammunition in the magazine
at that time.
Your Honour, the bag was left
by Bryant in the café after he departed and I would tender that,
along with a towel which was found to be in it. There was also some
clothing but I won’t tender that, your Honour, the Crown places no
relevance on that. There was a towel, a hunting knife – sash cord
rope in two lengths. While they are being tendered, your Honour, I
will just say that subsequent DNA analysis of the hunting knife and
deposits that were observed on it disclosed that there was blood on
the knife of a DNA type matching Mr. David Martin. A very refined
test undertaken, the results of which only came to my office on
Friday, has disclosed that there was also a DNA sample which was
unable to be
Page 77.
identified initially but it has
now been identified as being consistent with that of Martin Bryant,
but obviously from his plea there is no dispute about that now.
EXHIBIT P2 – BAG AND CONTENTS
OF A ROPE, - TAKEN IN
KNIFE
and JUMPER
Page 78.
Your Honour, on the plan there
has been marked faintly in red table numbers to indicate table
numbers and their location in the restaurant on that day. Seated at
table number two were four visitors to Port Arthur Mr. Michael
Sargent, his girlfriend Kate Scott, Mr. John Riviere and Miss Carol
Villiers. Mr. Sargent stated that he had been seated at the table
for about ten minutes when he noticed that an Asian couple were
seated at a single table near the western side of the building.
That’s now being indicated. They were eating a meal and Mr. Sargent
noticed Bryant near the table with a large sports bag and he was
staring at them. Mr Sargent returned the stare briefly and then he
turned to the other members of his group and continued the
conversation he was having with them. Mr. Sargent then heard two
shots in quick succession. He looked up and saw Bryant holding a
gun in a position indicating that he had just fired it at the Asian
couple and was turning the gun on him. He started to move forwards
and downwards and the gun was fired in his direction the bullet
striking the top of his head as he fell to the floor. Shortly after
and whilst on the floor he realised that Miss Scott, his companion
had also fallen to the floor. His first thought was that she was
alive and that she had escaped serious injury but then he realised
that she was deceased after he observed the horrific head injury
caused by the direct shot to the back of the head. She was sitting
with her back to Bryant.
Whilst on the floor
he could still hear shots being fired in the room. Your Honour, the
first two shots fired killed Mr. Moh Yee Ng and Miss Sou Leng Chung,
visitors to this state from Malaysia.
Page 79.
The third shot
struck Mr. Sargent and the fourth shot killed Miss Scot. The single
shot which killed Mr. Ng struck him in the neck and death was
instantaneous.
I will comment
about the suddenness of this incident later, but, your Honour,
police investigators who attended the scene later were to observe
that Mr. Ng still had his dinner knife in his hand after death.
Examination of his body disclosed that the muzzle of the firearm was
close to him when fired because there was gun powder stippling
around the entrance wound. And, your Honour, just by way of
explanation, that observation is a process used by ballistic experts
to try and determine the distance between the muzzle of the firearm
and the object or body which the firearm has been fired at. The
range used by Bryant to cause the injuries and murder people in the
café was in most cases at very close
Quarters and the
terms used by the ballistics experts who examined the injuries of
the persons who sustained injury and the bodies of the deceased gave
three ranges of shots – close or contact, being either contact or
within a few centimetres of the body – intermediate, being within a
few centimetres out to about one to one point five metres – and then
distant, being one to one point five metres and beyond. Certainly
within the intermediate range and in the close or contact range
there is, with a firearm such as the one used by Bryant on this day,
a residue of unburnt propellant which is discharged from the muzzle
of the gun which causes a stippling or tattooing effect around the
entry wound.
Miss Chung died
when the bullet fired towards her struck her left ear and continued
towards the base of the brain and the skull causing lethal traumatic
disruption to the base of the brain and skull. Assessment of the
range of this shot was distant because of the lack of gunpowder
stippling or searing.
Page 80.
An examination of
the scene indicates that Miss Scott who was sitting with her back to
Bryant, probably first slumped to the table and then fell to the
floor. As I said previously she was shot in the back of the head.
Page 81
Your Honour, I
won’t take you through in any detail the photographs but you have
before you that bundle of photographs, I refer you to photographs 52
to 57. But if you turn to photograph 52, what you are looking at
there, yout Honour, is in fact the table with the Prince bag on it,
as left by Bryant, and to its immediate left you can see with back
to the camera the body of Mr. Ng slumped against the wall and Miss
Chung leaning against the window and you can see just to the right
of the bag, the right hand corner of the bag on the floor, further
in to the back of the café, the body of Miss Scott on the floor.
And those photographs 52 to 57 will then take you through the closer
photographs of the three deceased.
The injuries caused
by the use of this firearm were to say the least, horrific. There
is no indication from an examination of the body of Miss Scott as to
the range of that shot but he would have been quite close to her at
the time of firing the gun.
There were five
spent shells located near the bag, all fired from the AR15 semi-automatic
rifle which was later recovered from Seascape and admitted by Bryant
in interview with the police as belonging to him. The Crown case is
that Bryant fired those four shots in a north-westerly direction
towards the couple at the table on the western wall and then in a
northerly direction towards Mr. Sargent and Miss Scott. He then
turned and commenced firing the weapon at people further down the
café on the western wall of the building, Mr. Perks indicating that
south-western corner of the café.
Mr Sargent
sustained an injury to his head which creased the top of his skull
and which was described as a scalp laceration and, your Honour, the
first two counts in the indictment, the murder of Mr. and Mrs.
Martin I have briefly touched upon, they will be covered later when
Mr. Perks deals with the examination of the scene
Page 82.
of the Seascape.
But I have just dealt with counts 3,4,5 and 6, count 5 being an
attempt murder charge to which the accused has pleaded guilty and
the Crown case is that the forward movement of mr. Sargent in all
likelihood avoided him sustaining a full blast of the weapon to his
head.
Page 83.
When Bryant
started shooting, the other male at that table, Mr. Riviere, who had
been going back to the counter of the servery – and that can be seen
on the plan, the servery counter – jumped the counter and from
behind the counter he observed Bryant firing his rifle. He later
described to the police his observations and said that Bryant was
not saying anything but he appeared to be laughing in an aggressive
way rather than in an amused way. He said that Bryant walked from
table to table shooting people in the head, he said he saw Kate
Scott slumped over the table and he saw Mr. Sargent, who was calling
out “Keep down, keep down”. He then observed Bryant moving towards
the other end of the café, meaning the south-western corner, still
shooting people in the head.
The Crown case is
that having fired the four shots in the area where he had placed the
bag, Bryant turned in the south-westerly direction, down the
westerly wall of the café towards table 8, which is being indicated,
9, 10, 11 and 12 – and so that your Honour understands what happened
thereafter I will describe the locations of persons at tables so
that you can better understand what followed.
At table No. 8 a
visitor to this State, Mr. Anthony Nightingale, was seated by
himself facing towards Bryant, so in other words he was looking in a
northerly direction. From the evidence of one of the witnesses in
the café who survived, Mr. Nightingale stood up when the shooting
started and called out “No, no, not here”, he was then shot, a
single shot to the neck area causing fatal injuries with extensive
damage to the larynx, thyroid larynx complex and the cervical spine.
The path of travel of that bullet was downwards indicating that Mr.
Nightingale was probably leaning forward as he was shot.
Page 84.
He was then seen to
fall against the window by people outside the café whose attention
had been drawn to it when they heard the shooting. That is count
seven in the indictment your Honour, and I refer you to photographs
48, 50 and 51, and your Honour will see the nature of the injuries
by examining photograph 51 that this firearm inflicted upon the
people shot at in the café.
HIS HONOUR:
48 shows two bodies.
MR. BUGG:
Yes.
HIS HONOUR:
Mr. Nightingale is the –
MR. BUGG:
Yes, 48 your Honour by way of description 48 shows Mr.
Nightingale, he is the ---
HIS HONOUR:
The one in the blue jeans is he? With coloured jumper?
MR. BUGG:
That’s – no, he’s the person who is next to the wall
your Honour.
HIS HONOUR:
Yes.
MR. BUGG:
There were many people in the café that day who were
members of groups touring the Port Arthur site, one such group, ten
persons in all, consisted of Mervyn and Maureen Schadendorf, Maree
and Gary Broome, John and Gaye Fidler, Kevin and Marlene Sharpe, Ray
Sharpe and Mr. Walter Bennett. They had arrived at the Port Arthur
site in separate vehicles, six of them moving to the café to eat
shortly after their arrival. They were awaiting the arrival of the
other four but seated themselves at table nine and commenced eating
their meal. They almost finished their meal when the others, Kevin
and Marlene Sharpe, Ray Sharpe and Wally Bennett arrived
Page 85.
and stood at the
northern end of the table, being indicated by Mr. Perks, with their
backs towards the position that Bryant was in when he placed his bag
on the table. And they were standing when Bryant started shooting.
Having shot Mr.
Nightingale Bryant moved at close quarters to shoot Kevin Sharpe,
Wally Bennett and Ray Sharpe. The precise order in which these
three men were shot is not clear. They were crowded towards the
corner of the café with their backs towards Mr. Bryant. Mr.
Schadendorf who was seated at the table believed that he saw Mr. Ray
Sharpe shot in the side of the head by a close or near contact shot,
saying that he heard Mr. Sharpe say “That’s not funny” as the noise,
the significant noise of this weapon being discharged was heard at
close range by these people.
Then Mr. Bennet was
shot in the neck, once again by a near contact shot. So in other
words by now the Accused is at their bodies standing behind them
pointing the gun and touching them almost with the barrel of the
weapon.
Page 86.
That shot which
struck Mr. Bennett in the neck in the right side left an exit wound
on the left and medical and ballistic evidence indicates that on
exiting that bullet then struck Mr. Ray Sharpe, also killing him.
Mr. Kevin Sharpe
was shot twice, once in the arm and once in the top of the head, the
head wound was fatal. Mr. Ray Sharpe died of massive head injuries
and Mr. Bennett died from injuries caused when he was shot in the
neck. That’s counts 8, 9, and 10.
And, your Honour, I
refer you to photograph 38 and your Honour can then see Mr.
Nightingale over against the wall. As you come towards the
photographer there are other bodies, and I’ll come to that in a
moment, but Mr. Bennett and Mr. Sharpe, one of the Mr. Sharpes, is
seen in the middle ground of that photograph. And then photographs
44 to 49 give a closer indication of those persons.
Mr. Gary Broome,
who was also in the party and was seated at the table, was struck in
the left side of his face apparently by bullet fragment which had
struck another person, probably Kevin Sharpe. He was admitted to
the Royal Hobart Hospital. And, your Honour, that is count 11.
Your Honour, I don’t want to create any confusion about the order in
which this occurred but some people who attended the café on that
day and survived probably have a vision of what occurred and a state
of mind of the order in which things occurred. What we have tried
to do is present an account which places as near as can be
determined the order in which people were injured or shot at or
killed and obviously there will be some discrepancies in terms of
people’s recall and their memory of this incident but this account
is given based on assistance from both forensic evidence, ballistics
evidence and examination of the bodies at
Page 87.
the scene. Mr.
Broome underwent surgery on the 29th of April for left
side lacerations to his face caused by the passage of the bullet and
there was removal of metallic objects from his face and some bony
fragments.
Page 88.
That your Honour,
as I said was count 11. Mrs Gaye Fidler, another member of the
party, received shrapnel wounds to her back after a bullet fragment,
having struck one of the four people mentioned, passed on to hit her.
Mr. John Fidler who was also seated at this table at that time was
struck in the forehead by shrapnel fragmentation and he also
sustained a small injury to his back with metallic fragments
believed to be from another bullet which had fragmented on striking
one of the deceased persons. He was treated for these injuries at
the Royal Hobart Hospital and discharged. That’s counts 12 and 13.
Your Honour, Mr.
Kevin Sharpe’s injuries indicates first of all a gunshot injury to
the head which was fatal and towards the left side of his face. He
also sustained another injury to his left arm. Because on the Crown
case Bryant was aiming his shots at peoples heads it is highly
likely that the left arm injury, because Mr Kevin Sharpe was
standing at the end of the table, was caused by a shot aimed at one
of the other persons seated towards the rear of the table and that
Mr. Sharpe had turned, facing Bryant, at the time he was shot.
Bryant then turned
towards table number twelve and seated at that table were visitors
from Sydney, Mr. and Mrs. Tony Kistan and Mr. Andrew Mills. Mr.
Mills and Mr. Kistan both stood up when the shooting started. Mr.
Kistan pushed his wife towards the door, Mr. Mills was shot in the
right rear of his head behind the ear at an intermediate range
gauged on the basis that there was no tattooing or powder burning
from the muzzle glass. This shot caused significant head injury
which was immediately fatal. Mr. Kistan was also shot whilst
standing up and the estimated distance of the muzzle of the gun from
him at the time of shooting was two to three metres. He was shot in
the left rear of the head. He had moved
Page 89.
slightly away from
the table in moving his wife towards the door. The photographs
dealing with those incidents your Honour are photographs 38 to 43.
Page 90.
And that’s counts
14 and 15. Photographs 40 and 41 are of Mr. Kistan and 42 and 43
are of Mr. Mills.
Bryant then quickly
moved towards the front central portion of the café in an easterly
direction moving in the space between the tables at the front of the
café and those located in the centre. Your Honour probably can’t
see it at that distance but if Mr. Perks could just indicate – on
the day at this time there were tables in what now appears to be an
open space and the tables were quite crowded together – but they
have been pushed aside and you can see the tables to the left and
right of that area that he is now indicating.
At table number 13,
on the immediate left of Bryant as he turned and started to move
eastwards along the café, there were eight members of a party of
ten. The other two were seated at table number 16. The eight
persons were Faye Richards, Carol Pearce, Fred and Pat Barker, Ron
and Carmel Edwards and Robert and Alyece Elliott. The other two
members of the group, Lindsay Richards and Ken Pearce. Were seated
at table 16. At table number 14 there was a party of three, Mr.
Graham Colyer, Mrs Carol Loughton and her fifteen year old daughter,
Sarah. They were just preparing to leave the table, having finished
their meal, and they were standing up to put their coats and jackets
on. Shortly prior to that four other visitors to the historic site
had been seated at this table but they had, a short time previously,
finished their meal and left the café. I will mention their names
later – as they moved up Jetty Road with Mrs Mikac and her two
daughters.
At table number 15
Mr. Peter Crosswell was seated with Thelma Walker and Pamela Law.
To the right of
Bryant as he moved eastwards were two tables against the front
window of the café. The first on, table number 18 was occupied by
Mr. Mervyn and Mrs. Mary Howard.
Page 91.
They were seated
having their meal. At the other table was a party consisting of Mr.
Jason Winter and his wife, Joanne, their one year old son, who had
been brought there in a pusher, and Mrs. Winter’s father, Mr. Ron
Fowler, who had visited from New Zealand.
Page 92.
When Bryant first
started shooting, Mr. Winter wasn’t at the table, he’d gone back to
the servery area – if that could be indicated – in a position
somewhere behind that fireplace which is marked almost in the centre
of the café, the fire place, and he was returning the plates and
trays because the party had finished its meal. When Bryant shot Mr.
Kistan and Mr. Mills he was to their west, to the west of them, and
his gun was therefore pointed in an easterly direction placing the
people at tables 13, 14, 15, and 16 in his firing line. Thelma
Walker and Pamela Law at table 15 were struck with shrapnel or
fragments from the shots which killed Mr. Kistan and Mr. Mills. Mrs.
Walker sustained shrapnel wounds to the right temporal region, to
the back and right ankle. Mr. Crosswell pulled both women at that
table to the floor and as Mrs. Law was being dragged to the floor
she felt a graze to the rear of her head and while on the floor felt
stinging sensation to her right side. It appeared at the time that
she had been shot directly but further examination revealed that the
injuries were also shrapnel caused; that’s counts 16 and 17. Both
women and Mr. Crosswell sheltered under the table while Bryant
continued through the café shooting at people.
Page 93.
People were now
starting to realise that what was happening was a real life drama
and that what had first appeared to be a re-enactment – and, your
Honour, that was the response or the reaction of many people who
were in the café and at the site on that day, a lot of them were
seasoned travellers who had visited other historic sites such as
Sovereign Hill where there had been re-enactments and that was their
immediate assumption when they heard the gunfire, and they were then
starting to realise that this was not a re-enactment and that their
lives were in danger. They had little or no opportunity to react,
your Honour, let alone escape, they certainly did not have any
opportunity or means to retaliate.
THEN FOLLOWED THE
MORNING ADJOURNMENT
THE COURT RESUMED
HIS HONOUR: Yes, Mr.
Bugg?
MR. BUGG:
Thank you. Before I continue, your Honour, if I could just correct
one matter in what I’d – about the material I put before you before
the adjournment and that is, if I could take you to the photographs
near the window of Mr. Nightingale and Mr. Sharpe. I believe in
taking your Honour through those photographs I have incorrectly
identified Mr. Sharpe. The photograph 48, Mr. Nightingale is the
body – it is his body which is the closer one to the camera.
Page 94.
I hadn’t formally
tendered that plan but there’ll be three plans briefly referred to,
your Honour, and I’ll tender all three as a bundle, being a
statement of facts on a plea of guilty I would seek leave not to
have to follow the strict requirements.
HIS HONOUR:
Yes. There’s no objection from the defence.
MR. BUGG Q.C.:
Your Honour, proceeding on from the location we were at the
adjournment, Patricia barker and her companions were at table number
13 and they reacted and took cover under the table on the floor,
Mrs. Barker received shrapnel wounds to the right upper arm, left
hand and left cheek. These injuries were sustained by fragments of
shrapnel most likely from the fatal shots towards Mr. Kistan and Mr.
Mills. She sustained those three injuries before she was able to
get to the floor. That’s count 18.
It’s now that the
events taking place in the café become quite confusing. People
concerned for their safety and the well being of their companions
were taking evasive action and observations become quite
understandably confused and affected by the urgency of the situation.
Whilst it is important to try to place in a correct time frame the
sequence of the events which took place in the café it is, for the
purposes of these proceedings, important that the basic ingredients
of the crimes are detailed and the relevant particulars placed
before your Honour.
Page 95.
Many people, not
only in the café but elsewhere, observed some of the happenings of
the afternoon. They have all made statements to the police. Those
statements, coupled with ballistics and forensic evidence, have been
used to try and piece together as accurately as possible the events
of the day.
At this time it is
believed that Mr. Bryant shot Mr. Colyer who, along with Mrs.
Loughton and her daughter you will recall, were getting ready to
leave the table. Mr. Colyer was shot from about six to eight feet
away. He sustained a gunshot injury to the neck near his jaw and
the bullet exited at the right back of Mr. Colyer’s neck. His
serious injuries were treated in emergency surgery at the Royal
Hobart Hospital. When he fell to the floor he remained conscious,
almost suffocating on his own blood. He could see Sarah Loughton on
the floor in front of him and knew that she was dead. He was later
airlifted to the Royal Hobart Hospital. That, your Honour, is Count
21.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard
were seated at their table near the front window of the café. He
shot Mr. Howard when he was still seated. Later his body was found
to be on the floor but that’s understandable bearing in mind the
attention and treatment that people tried to give and administer to
the dead and dying in the café on that afternoon.
The Crown contends
that Bryant had not moved from the position he was in when he shot
Mr. Colyer, and he merely swivelled to shoot Mr. Howard. The bullet
struck Mr. Howard in the head, killing him instantly. He fell
forward onto the table. The bullet continued on its way through the
window of the café and that bullet passed the table at which Mr.
Beekman and Miss McKenna had been seated.
Page 96.
That, following the
shooting, caused – the noise of the shooting caused Mr. Beekman to
immediately depart the balcony of the café and seek refuge. Miss
McKenna had already moved off the balcony when she heard the first
shots fired.
Bryant then moved
closer to that table,
Page 97.
and he fired a
further shot striking Mrs. Howard in the neck. That was a non fatal
injury. He then at some time shortly after that, changed position,
leaned over the vacant pusher belonging to Mr. and Mrs. Winter and
placed the muzzle of the gun near Mrs. Howard’s head and shot her a
second time. The massive fatal head injuries that caused can be
observed your Honour from the photographs 66 to 70.
Your Honour, as I
have said, the sequence of these shots is difficult to discern but
most likely, relying on the evidence of Mr. Lindsay Richards, they
occurred in this sequence; Mr. Richards was at table number 10, no
I'’ sorry, sixteen.
MR. PERKS:
That’s a sixteen.
MR. BUGG:
Sixteen, thank you Mr. Perks, closer to the print. And he thought
that Bryant, when he leant forwards with the gun, was going to shoot
into the pusher. But in fact at that time Mrs. Winter had taken
cover on the floor under the table together with her son and her
father.
Page 98.
Mrs. Winter was
trying to placate her child who was distressed and crying at what
was happening, and obviously alarmed that any noise would attract
Bryant’s attention towards them. Clearly, Bryant intent on shooting
Mrs. Howard did not observe the three persons taking cover under the
table. Whilst not relevant to the question of criminal
responsibility, your Honour, it is important to understand how
confusing the situation must have been. People who survived
describe their feelings of utter helplessness and almost a
fatalistic acceptance that they were likely to be the next to be
shot.
Carol Loughton and
her daughter Sarah who had been with Mr. Colyer were separated by a
short distance but Sarah ran towards her mother and they both fell
to the floor together with Mrs Loughton covering her daughter. Mrs.
Loughton described the noise of the gun being discharged as very
loud. She in fact has a ruptured eardrum caused by the explosion of
that firearm. Whilst Mrs Loughton and her daughter were on the
floor, Bryant shot Mrs Loughton in the back and shot Sarah in the
head. It is most likely at this time that the close proximity of
the shot to the back of Sarah’s head caused the explosive noise
which ruptured Mrs. Loughton’s eardrum.
Page 99
They are counts 23
and 24 and I refer your Honour to Photograph 63 to 66 which depict
the injuries sustained to the deceased, Sarah Loughton.
The injuries caused
to persons by this firearm were, as your Honour can see, horrific.
Mrs. Loughton sustained a wound to her back which was ten
centimetres in diameter. She was later evacuated by helicopter and
did not know until she had been operated on and come out of surgery
the next day that her daughter had been murdered. Sarah Loughton
appears from the medical evidence and ballistic examination to have
been lying on the ground with her right hand under her head when she
was shot. Her right hand was injured as well, suggesting that she
had fallen to the floor with her mother and then shot.
Your Honour,
perhaps it is appropriate at this stage that I tender - well, I
suppose it is not necessary to tender it in evidence - and I would
seek that direction. I don’t know whether my learned friend has any
submissions about that, but I would certainly prefer the
availability of the police safe to remove this firearm and the other
firearms that were at Port Arthur on that day. Does your Honour
have any problem about that?
HIS HONOUR:
Well, I think the firearm should be retained in that custody. As
far as other exhibits are concerned they should be retained in the
custody of the court.
MR. BUGG QC:
Yes, well, perhaps maybe they could be marked for identification and
then later returned to the custody of the police. Your Honour, that
is the AR15 semi-automatic .223 rifle which was used by Bryant in
the café and at other locations on that day. It is the weapon which
the Crown says he purchased shortly before this incident. It is the
same as the weapon he enquired about at another gun shop in Hobart.
Page 100.
The magazine which
Mr. Mace has with him was the magazine fitted to the gun at the time
Bryant entered the café. It is a thirty shot magazine. The weapon
is very light, it is semi-automatic, not fully automatic, and there
is apparent damage to it because it was recovered by the police from
the Seascape ruins the next day.
FIREARM and
MAGAZINE – MFI A
Page 101.
MR. BUGG Q.
C.: A –
HIS HONOUR:
Yes, it’s marked “A”.
MR. BUGG:
Thank you, your Honour. Bryant was now moving towards the gift shop
area of the café, which can be seen to the eastern end and the whole
eastern wall of the café was devoted to the sale of souvenirs, gifts
and craftware and part of the craft display came down to the
southern end of the café towards the front window. And your Honour
will see that there is an exit door shown out on to the balcony
though that display area. At the time of this shooting that door
was locked and was unable to be opened either internally or
externally without the appropriate key. As Bryant moved towards the
gift shop area he passed table 13 and Mr. Robert Elliott at that
table stood up and in the confusion of the moment, he later told
police he is just not certain why he did so. He certainly didn’t
have any spare room to conceal himself under the table as the area
was now fully occupied, most of the people at the table had tried to
take some sort of cover underneath the table. He states that in
the confusion of thought in the time that he had to think he felt
that his movements may distract the gunman and he felt that he had a
reasonable chance of making it to the fireplace and safety. Mr.
Elliott was shot twice as he moved, once in the left upper arm and
once in the head. The head injury left some metallic fragments
external to his skull, causing a head injury as well which resulted
in some loss of vision due to swelling of the brain. He underwent
surgery and plastic surgery on the 28th of April, 30th
of April, 2nd of May. Your Honour, I haven’t gone into
all the detail of some of the injuries and the treatment received
for them but it has been a common experience for some of the people
who suffered more severe injuries to have had as much as ten visits
to surgery as a result of the injuries they sustained.
Page 102.
He was discharged
from the Royal Hobart Hospital on the 4th of May and
transferred to the Monash medical Centre. Your Honour, if you look
at photograph 62 you will see just towards the hearth of the
fireplace and clothing and bloodstaining on the floor that’s where
Mr. Elliott fell. That’s count twenty-five in the indictment your
Honour.
Your Honour, it’s
appropriate at this stage that I ask your Associate to play a
portion of a video tape which is a compilation. I will ask her to
stop the tape at a particular point but I do so your Honour for the
simple reason of illustrating to the Court and to the members of
this community the short period of time in which the incident that
I’ve just been talking about occurred. It’s my estimation that at
that point at which Mr. Elliott was shot Bryant had been shooting
for fifteen seconds. And this video tape may illustrate that.
EXHIBIT P.3 – VIDEO TTAPE – TAKEN IN
This first tape was
filmed by Mr. and Mrs. Wilkinson from Corio who were attending the
site on the day. It’s start filming across the roof of the Broad
Arrow Café. Across the car park area and towards the ruins of the
historic site, the penitentiary area. If that could be played now,
thank you.
VIDEO PLAYED TO COURT
Page 103.
VIDEO STOPPED
Mr. BUGG Q.C.:
Your Honour, that shows just to the right of the frame in the middle
of the picture the yellow Volvo with the roof rack. That was filmed
some time after the initial piece of filming and that is Bryant
entering his car and about to reverse his car out and leave the
carpark area. If the film could be played on now.
PLAYING OF VIDEO
CONTINUED
Mr. BUGG Q.C.:
This is a second film taken at the critical time from the
penitentiary area and it is significant because of the noise level
which can be heard of the gunfire from the café some hundred and
fifty –two hundred metres away. If that could be played.
SECOND VIDEO PLAYED
TO COURT
Mr. BUGG Q.C.:
This was filmed by a Mr. Barry Turner. The four buses that can be
seen will become relevant later when I deal with Bryant’s conduct in
the carpark.
VIDEO CONTINUING
Mr BUGG Q.C.: By
then he’s moved away from the site and shots can be heard in the
distance, which I’ll comment about later.
VIDEO CONTINUING
Mr. BUGG Q.C.:
Just near that little guardhouse you can see just below the fence
two people, one of them is Miss Brigid Cook who was shot and was
sheltering there.
PAGE 104.
Mr. BUGG Q.C.:
If that could be stopped now and played forward to the next spot.
The rest of that is really not relevant to your Honour’s
consideration but it does film the arrival of one of the Emergency
Services helicopters and part of the evacuation process.
TAPE TURNED OFF
Mr. BUGG Q.C.:
Your Honour, what you heard from those two sections of video film
which recorded the gun shots was in fact a recording of the shots
fired from the moment Bryant picked the gun out of the bag and
started shooting in the café.
PAGE 105.
The first tape, the
Wilkinson tape, stopped after fifteen seconds and it recorded
seventeen shots. The second tape, the Turner video, as far as the
sound of shots in the café is concerned, stopped after twenty-five
seconds and recorded twenty-one shots. I tender for your honour an
audio response chart recorded off both films and your Honour will
see the sharp, wide, white markings illustrating the timing of each
shot and attributed to each tape. But if one goes back to the
Wilkinson tape, which stopped recording sound after fifteen seconds,
in those fifteen seconds twelve people were dead, one had suffered
grievous bodily harm, five were wounded and four had suffered
significant injuries in Bryant’s attempts to murder them.
EXHIBIT P4 – CHART
– TAKEN IN
HIS HONOUR:
And all of this was caused by the seventeen shots?
Mr. BUGG Q.C.:
Seventeen shots.
You will remember,
your Honour, that the five wounded people suffered shrapnel wounds
which were the by-product of hitting an intermediate target and then
fragmenting so that what you have are seventeen shots resulting in
twelve deaths and subsequent wounding and four attempted murders and
one caused grievous bodily harm. I will come back to the numbers of
shots fired and what occurred at the end of an examination of the
criminal behaviour of this man in the café that afternoon.
Bryant continued
eastward towards the souvenir shop area of the building. Working in
this area of the shop on that day were Nicole Burgess and Elizabeth
Howard. I will describe the placement of people in that area of the
shop – Mr. Perks has just indicated a counter area which was a
serving counter at the gift souvenir shop section and below it,
depicted in sketch form the bodies of both Nicole Burgess and
Elizabeth Howard. But there are a number of persons as I said at
the outset, your Honour, who had moved to this area of the café,
they were examining souvenirs, some of them waiting
Page 106.
for other members
of their group to either finish a meal or return plates and trays to
the servery area.
Page 107.
In the gift shop
area was Sandra Vanderpeer, an Army Major, who had travelled to
Tasmania with her aunt Jenny Moor, and they had been looking at the
displays for about ten minutes when the shooting started. Miss
Vanderpeer realised immediately what was happening and moved quickly
to the display table right at the back of the souvenir shop. She
sheltered behind that table along with Beverley and Peter Kelly.
You will remember I mentioned Mrs. Kelly having seen Bryant on the
balcony at lunchtime. And Mr. Kelly had moved to the gift shop area
of the premises to wait for his wife while she returned a coffee cup.
Ron Neander and his
wife Gwen were also in the gift shop. Mr. Neander had noticed
Bryant in the meal queue earlier in the day. When he heard the
shooting he saw Mrs. Howard shot and then took cover behind a
display table in the souvenir area. That table is the square table
which Mr. Perks is now indicating and he was hiding behind the table
on the northern portion of the floor. If you look at photograph 79
that photograph your Honour is taken looking down towards the water,
in other words the front windows of the café, and you can just see
in the foreground a red garment which is on the display table,
behind which Mr. Neander was sheltering. It gives a better idea of
the close proximity of everything in this area of the souvenir shop.
His wife was near
the steps into the front part of the display area. If that could
perhaps be indicated. The steps, the step down is that line going
east to west marked by Mr. Perks. In the gift shop area were four
friends who had been travelling together, Coralee Lever and her
husband Denis, and Vera Jary and her husband Ron. They heard the
shooting start and Mr. Jary thought
Page 108.
it was an re-enactment
and said so. And as I said this unfortunately was the response of
many of the people in the café, although I guess arguably a
realisation of the correct situation would probably have not made
any real difference on the day.
Page 109.
Mrs. Lever, Mrs.
Jary, Mrs. Moor, the auntie of Sarah Vanderpeer, hid behind a
hessian screen. That’s the slight triangulated section that Mr.
Perks is indicating. And if you turn to photograph 80, your Honour,
that is the screen with the jumpers hanging on it – and that was
moved out to enable the three ladies to get in behind it and it was
then drawn back behind them. I have little doubt that act saved
their lives.
Another couple,
Peter and Carolyn Nash, were also in this area of the premises.
They moved to the door out of the gift shop area – if that could be
indicated- but, unfortunately, that door was locked. Mr. Nash told
his wife to get down and covered her. Near them was Pauline Masters,
she had travelled to Tasmania with her sister and mother and had
left them outside the café to enter the premises and look at things
in the gift shop. Bryant moved towards the souvenir area, he shot
Nicole Burgess, she was standing near the counter. He was standing
some distance from her when he shot her and the shot struck her in
the head. She fell forwards and the shot – the injuries caused were
immediately fatal. He then shot Elizabeth Howard through the right
arm and chest, this was probably because she had turned to her right
away from Bryant. She received a further gunshot wound through the
chest, probably as she had fallen to the floor or was actually on
the floor with Bryant moving further into the gift area to fire that
second shot at her. Both wounds caused to Elizabeth Howard were
fatal. That’s counts 26 and 27, your Honour. And I take you to
photograph 72 through to 75 showing the bodies of the two deceased
behind the counter in the gift shop area and the injuries sustained
by them depicted in photographs 74 and 75.
At this point
Bryant turned the gun on Mr. Lever and shot him in the head.
Page 110.
I refer you to
photograph 76.
Mr. Lever had
obviously moved from the area where his wife was to take some cover
and you can just see it on the plan behind a pillar. But that is
more evident in the photograph, your Honour. And his body fell just
near that pillar.
Bryant was most
likely still at this stage on the far side of the service counter
when he shot Mr. Lever.
Page 111.
Whilst it appears
some distance from that plan, in reality when you look at the
photograph it wasn’t very far at all. That was the count – yes,
I’ve covered that. Bryant then fired towards Mrs. Neander who was
on the step near the wall behind the counter, he struck her in he
left lower side of the face and she was killed instantly – I refer
you to photograph 79 through to 82, and that your Honour is count
29.
Bryant then appears
to have been distracted by movement in the café area back towards
the west and somewhere near the fireplace because he turned and
moved back in the direction from which he had come to a point near
the table at which Mr. Colyer and Mrs. Loughton had been seated.
Some people described Bryant moving backwards and forwards through
the café. When one considers that we are probably now talking about
him being in the café shooting for about, at the outside, thirty
seconds, the one movement backwards and forwards is on the estimate
of the ballistic experts and people who closely examined the scene
the likely interpretation that people had. He fired into the café
injuring Mr. Crosswell who was still under the table with the two
women – that’s count 30 – the shot struck him in the buttock.
Jason Winter, who
you will remember had gone through to the servery area, who must
have heard a pause in the firing after he had shot Mrs. Neander,
thought Bryant had left the café going out that way. He was
sheltering along with two other people and he made a comment to that
effect, and I will come back to that in a moment, but he obviously
started to move and it’s probably his movement that attracted Bryant.
He was probably in an almost upright position coming out from behind
the area in which he was sheltering, he was heard to call out “No,
no” and Bryant fired twice at Mr. Winter, the first shot struck him
as he was getting up, injuring his hand, neck and chest, and the
second shot struck Mr. Winter in the head. He died from the head
and chest injuries sustained from these two gunshots
Page 112.
and his body fell
partially under a table being identified by Mr. Perks with the
pointer just to the western side of a brick fireplace.
Page 113.
That’s count 31 and Mr.
Winter’s position in the café is shown in photographs 58 through to
60 and injuries shown in 61.
He was sheltering with Mr.
Dennis Olson and his wife, Mary, and after that pause in the
shooting he was heard by the Olsons to say, He’s gone.”, and then he
started to move and it was at that time that he was shot. Shrapnel
from those shots struck Mr Olson in the hand, head, left side of the
chest and left eye. He was treated at the Royal Hobart Hospital
that night and was discharged the next day for the follow up with
his regional medical officer on his return home.
Having fired those shots Bryant
then returned to the gift shop area. And, your Honour, it becomes a
little confusing at this stage as to just what Bryant did in terms
of the firearm because the position is that the Crown suggests that
he had twenty-six rounds in the 30 shot magazine when he entered the
café because at some stage some considerable time after this event
he is attributed as having said that to put thirty shots in the
magazine jams the spring clip so he normally put twenty-eight in it.
But he fired two shots before he went to Port Arthur, leaving twenty-six.
Twenty-nine spent shells were retrieved from the café, and each one
of those is marked on that plan ‘FCC’ – Fired Cartridge Case, which
will be in evidence, your Honour. The thirty shot magazine was
discarded when empty by Bryant near the servery counter and that’s
actually shown on the plan which your Honour will have in due course.
Why I say there is some confusion about this – I will now explain
what occurred: Having returned to the gift shop area he found Mr.
Jary, Mr. and Mrs. Nash and Pauline Masters and an unidentified
Asian gentleman all crowded together towards the locked door near
the gift shop.
Page 114.
He shot Mr. Jary through the
right side of the neck at close range. They had no where to go. He
then shot Pauline masters to the right cheek in a downward direction
at intermediate range.
Page 115.
I say that because the
ballistics people who examined the body of Miss masters could not
detect any powder burning or tattooing.
He then shot Mr. Nash, possibly
not moving any closer than the position from which he had stood in
when he shot Pauline Masters. You will recall I said that Mr. Nash
was covering his wife’s body with his. He was also shot in the head
near the left ear. All those injuries were immediately fatal. That
your Honour, is counts 32, 33 and 34 and the position of the bodies
of the deceased and the injuries they sustained are shown in
photographs 83 and onwards. And you will see just how close,
closely confined, those people were in the position they were
trapped in when Bryant re-entered that part of the café. 83, 84 and
through to 89 in fact your Honour.
HIS HONOUR: What
count number relates to Mr. Olson’s wounding?
MR. BUGG: That your
Honour you must come back through the indictment, it’s earlier in
time, and re-assessment by the ballistics experts have Mr. Olson, I
think it’s count 19, I’ll just check.
HIS HONOUR: Yes, it
is.
MR. BUGG: It was
thought at one stage that he may have been injured by shrapnel
fragments from the eastward shot which killed Mr. Kistan and Mr.
Mills, but in fact a re-examination of that indicates that he was
hit at the time Mr. Winter was being killed. Why I said there was
some uncertainty about the changing of the magazine your Honour is
that there was in that area, you will recall I mentioned just a
moment ago, an unidentified Asian gentleman. And the best
construction
Page 116.
which can be given to all the
evidence, or which could have been given to all the evidence
gathered, up until about three days ago was that Bryant had tried to
shoot him but his gun had either misfired or struck empty because
the magazine had run out. And why we say that is because another
witness in another part of the historic site shortly after this saw
an Asian gentleman who had blood splatters on him who said that he
had been sheltering in this area of the shop and a shot had been,
well the gun had been pointed at him and the trigger pulled, but the
gun didn’t fire.
Page 117.
Only three days ago the police
were able to track him down and obtained a statement from him but
that would appear to have been the situation, that he luckily found
himself confronted with certain death and the gun either misfired or
struck empty. It’s unlikely that it misfired because there were
live rounds found in the café area. In any event, your Honour,
twenty nine shots in all were fired in the café and the point of
which the magazine was removed, as far as Miss Vanderpeer is
concerned and she, as I said, has Regular Army experience, was at
the end of the shooting when she could hear the sound of the
magazine being changed. It’s a plastic fabric and would make a
fairly hollow noise, obviously, when being changed over. Having
reloaded his firearm Bryant then left the café.
Your Honour, it is hard to
express in any finite terms the precise period of time Bryant was in
the café but I would put to this court that he was in there for
approximately one and a half minutes to, at the outside, two
minutes, whilst he was firing his gun. In that time he killed
twenty people, attempted to kill four, wounded six, and caused
grievous bodily harm to one. He fired twenty-nine shots, very few
of them missed a target, and most of them struck targets when fired
at either point blank or close range. There is absolutely no doubt
as to his intent and his desire to cause maximum carnage.
Mr. Perks and I were discussing
an appropriate term for his conduct and wondered about the
appropriateness of execution and concluded that it was appropriate
to term what he did in that café as ‘slaughter’.
It is difficult to describe in
unemotional terms the scene which Bryant left behind. Many of the
people who were in the café at the time and survived to talk about
it spoke of little other noise than gunshot.
Page 118.
Few of them heard screaming or
sounds of panic and as I say speak only of the oppressive noise of
the rapid fire of this gun.
Page 119.
People had been separated from
their companions and loved ones, facial injuries gave the appearance
of being fatal and in other instances gave the appearance of being
non fatal whereas the reverse applied. People wanting to find their
companions and loved ones were torn between the hazard of showing
themselves and the anguish of fearing the worst. Some people were
able to flee from the café area whilst Bryant moved further
eastwards in the building, they were unaware of the well-being of
the people who remained inside. When the shooting started there
were obviously staff employed at the café working in the food
preparation and serving area who were confronted with Bryant’s
conduct. They hastily ran from the serving area into the kitchen
area of the café, which is, of course at the northern end of the
plan.
Miss Brigid Cook who was
working in the kitchen area at the time was warned by the other
staff that someone was shooting in the café. She, along with three
other staff members, then ran from the café and out the back of the
café and Miss Cook then ran – the other three ran to gain shelter in
the trees and shrubbery behind the café whereas she ran in a
westerly direction towards the Information Centre to warn others as
to what was happening. She first of all spoke to people near the
Information Centre who appeared to be moving towards the café and
then she made her way down from the café towards the carpark area
and the tour coaches, again warning people to keep clear. She
describes her feelings at the time as being uncertain and possibly
making a big fool of herself because she had not in fact seen any
shots fired and she wondered whether she was pressing a false alarm
button.
Your Honour, perhaps it’s
appropriate at this time if the plans could be changed, I’d ask Mr.
Perks to assist
Page 120.
on that. I’m hoping our
assistants in the other two rooms are moving with the same speed
that Mr. Perks is but I’ll pause for a little longer whilst your
Honour examines that plan. These facts are moving a little more
quickly –
Page 121.
Can your Honour now make out
the red outlines of the tables in their original locations?
HIS HONOUR: Yes I
can thank you.
Mr. BUGG: I seek
leave now to tender that plan your Honour as a plan of the interior
of the café at Port Arthur.
EXHIBIT P.5 – PLAN of BROAD
ARROW CAFÉ – TAKEN IN
The plan which is now being
put on the wall your Honour is a plan of the Broad Arrow Café drawn
as one would see it from an aerial view, and that’s the large square
building which Mr. Perks is now indicating. To its left you can see
tarmac markings which make up part of the car-park and directly
above those car-park markings is the Information Centre to which
Miss Cook moved to make the warning that she did to the people
coming towards the café. Your Honour will remember that I pointed
out in the video film four tour coaches, they can be seen drawn into
the plan down towards the waters edge. The cars which could also
be seen parked along the waters edge are also drawn into the plan.
What is shown on that plan is as near as can be re-constructed by
the Police Investigative team the movements of Bryant which can be
shown in a dotted line moving from the front steps of the café down
towards the buses, along down towards the waters edge, and then his
movements which I will describe as we now move through this part of
the incident.
HIS HONOUR:
Whereabouts was the prisoner’s car parked initially and then
subsequently?
MR. BUGG: It was
always, it was initially parked further up to the north-western
corner of the carpark but then he moved it back to the waters edge
after he had spoken to Mr. Kingston and it was about the fifth
Page 122.
car along from the buses.
HIS HONOUR: Yes
thank you.
MR. BUGG: That
becomes relevant because some people sheltering on the bus observed
him go to the rear of the car and change firearms. At the next
phase of the shooting Bryant changed from the A.R.15 armalite to the
Fabre Nationale S.L.R. rifle which he had also taken with him.
Page 123.
As I said, Miss Cook moved
towards the tour coaches, there were four parked in the area, and
she moved to the rear driver’s side of the trans-Otway coach, and
there were a number of people obviously gathering there. At about
this time, Bryant was leaving the café, he stood on the balcony and
discharged his gun towards the ruins on the other side of the bay
and he also fired near the sports ground and the coaches. People
were by now departing the area on foot. He also fired one shot
towards the Visitor Information Centre. The crown case is that he
was clearly firing indiscriminately at people without perhaps
selecting specific targets – certainly the weapons he used were
capable of hitting people at the range he was firing. He was using
a full metal jacket ammunition.
The Crown case is that at the
time he fired towards the visitor Information Centre he was
intending to hit people who were near the centre. One of those
persons, Mr. Ashley Law, is an employee at the Port Arthur historic
Site and he was at the Information Centre trying to move people away
when he fired, Bryant fired, towards the Centre. The shot could be
heard going through the trees behind where Mr. Law was standing.
That, your Honour, is count 35, and Mr. perks is indicating the line
of that shot which is in fact marked on the plan.
Page 124.
HIS HONOUR: Would
you demonstrate that again, Mr. Perks? Thank you
MR BUGG QC: It is not
quite clear, obviously, at that distance, your Honour, but with some
assistance we will make it clear through Mr. Perks. Bryant then
moved off the balcony down towards the carpark and that’s the dotted
line that we showed your Honour previously. What occurred in the
carpark area was observed by many people, some of whom were able to
view part of what occurred, whilst the observations of others is
subject to the qualification that their observations were made under
stress of being in close proximity to this horrifying violent
situation. A sudden series of incidents had occurred without
warning and in many instances people were taking evasive action and
moving to obtain or try to obtain cover or protection from Bryant’s
murderous behaviour. Likewise, of course, your Honour, there are
some people who still at this stage were thinking that what was
occurring was a re-enactment, so their observations of people around
them were fairly, shall we say, fleeting, in the senses that they
were focussing their attention on the café.
Page 125
The area of the buses, and
of course they didn’t remain there indefinitely, your Honour, is
shown in one of the photographs in that bundle, photograph 222, and
that’s only one of the buses remaining at the scene and that’s the
Trans Otway bus which can be shown on the plan which is now on the
screen as the one at the most eastern end of the four coaches that
were parked there. Your Honour will see, and I’ll come back to that
later at photograph 236, that shots were fired obviously at that
bus.
I indicated that Miss Cook
had run across the front of the four passenger coaches. She warned
people and then stood with some others at the rear of the Trans
Otway coach, in other words, near the water. Bryant walked towards
the front of the coaches from the Broad Arrow Café whilst a number
of people, following Brigid Cook’s warning, were moving between the
Redline and the Tigerline coaches towards the rear of the buses. So
they were moving quickly down between those two buses towards the
water’s edge.
Page 126.
Also one of the coach
driver’s Mr. Royce Thompson, was half way along the passenger’s side,
that is the outside side of that bus when he was shot in the back by
Bryant. That caused Mr. Thompson to fall to the ground and he then
staggered or crawled to the rear of the coach where he then rolled
underneath the coach. He died from that gunshot wound to the back,
which caused significant internal injuries to his chest. We’re
dealing now with count 36 in the indictment, your Honour, and I take
you to the location after the buses or the coaches had been removed
of Mr. Thompson. You can see his body in photographs 27, 28 and 29.
Bryant then walked across
the front of the buses to the front of the Trans Otway coach,
shooting at the group of people which by now had arrived at the rear
of that coach. One of the persons in that group was Miss Cook and
one of the shots fired towards them struck her in the right thigh.
The bullet passed through her right leg and entered her left leg,
causing significant injury to her right thigh and leaving a
substantial portion of the bullet in her left thigh.
Page 127
Later she was admitted to
the Royal Hobart Hospital and has undergone surgery on the Twenty-eighth
of April, First of May, Third of May, Sixth of May, Ninth of May and
Thirteenth of May.
Miss Cook together with
another coach driver, Mr Ian McElwee, she had suffered bone injury
from these shots, then ran across the back of the coaches and later
took shelter near a small wooden guardhouse, which Mr Perks is
indicating. And you will recall your Honour I pointed that out.
HIS HONOUR: Saw
that in the film.
MR. BUGG: In the
film, that’s it. And she remained there until obviously this
incident had passed through the historic site car park and moved on
to other areas. Yvonne Lockley, a visitor from South Africa, was
amongst a group of twenty-one persons travelling by coach on a visit
to the ruins. Also included in this group was Miss Winifred Aplin.
They were standing in the group which also included a Melbourne
family Mr and Mrs Roganovic. Bryant pointed his rifle towards this
group and shot Mrs Aplin in the right side at a distance of about
six to eight metres. She fell to the ground and died where she had
fallen. She had been running to the coach with Yvonne Lockley when
she was shot. A further shot fired towards them grazed Mrs Lockley
to her cheek, however, she was able to enter the coach and shelter
there until the shooting had stopped.
Page 128
The murder of Mrs Aplin is
count thirty-seven and the shooting of Mrs Lockley is count thirty-nine.
Mrs Aplin’s body is shown in photographs 32, 33 and 34 and 34 will
give you some idea of the location relevant to the Trans-Otway coach.
THE COURT ADJOURNED UNTIL
2.15 P.M.
Page 129
THE COURT RESUMED AT 2.15
P.M.
MR. BUGG QC (Resuming facts):
Yes, thank you your Honour, when the court rose for the luncheon
adjournment I was dealing with the accused’s conduct in the car park.
Near the coaches, which were being pointed out by Mr Perks, at that
time was a couple from the East Coast of Tasmania, Neville and
Janette Quin, together with two other people who had travelled with
them on that day to Port Arthur. They started to move along towards
the jetty, which can’t actually be seen – actually part of the jetty
can be seen right along the foreshore in an easterly direction –
when the warning was first given. But then they were warned that
Bryant was also moving eastwards along in front of the buses so they
then tried to double back and they were hurrying towards a position
where Brigid Cook was when she was shot. Mrs Quin was shot in the
buttock and fell to the ground and the position where she fell was
almost directly where Mr Thompson, the coach driver, had fallen
earlier.
Page 130
As Bryant walked eastwards
people tried to make their escape along the foreshore. Mr Doug
Hutchinson, who was also a passenger on the Trans-Otway coach along
with his wife Irene, had been called to the coach earlier by the
driver because he was about to drive away, so of course there were
obviously people congregating near the coach. And Mrs Hutchinson,
when the warning was shouted, was able to enter the coach but her
husband was too far away so he ran to the rear of the coach to take
cover. He was shot in the arm and the force of the shot knocked him
to the ground, he was wounded in the right forearm. He then made
his way along the foreshore towards the jetty and sheltered there.
That your Honour, is count 40.
Bryant then walked to the
boot of his vehicle, which was parked five vehicles to the east of
the closest coach. He changed weapons this time taking out of the
boot a semi-automatic point 308 F.N. or commonly called an S.L.R. or
self-loading rifle. This was a military style weapon, he had taken
that with him along with ample ammunition, and he then fired the
weapon across the water towards the ruins and back towards the
café. He then walked to the driver’s door of his car and for some
reason sat momentarily behind the steering wheel of his car and then
walked back towards the coaches.
Page 131
when he fired towards the
ruins it is the Crown’s case that he was firing, once again,
indiscriminately towards people he could see in an endeavour to hit
them. One of the visitors to the site, Mrs Denise Cromer, was on
the historic part of the site near the boardwalk at the rear of the
penitentiary. She heard the shots fired by Bryant and saw some
gravel fly up from the pathway a foot or two in front of her and she
also heard a second bullet pass by in the air. Once again she was
originally lulled into thinking that this and what she was observing
was a re-enactment and, in fact, she was puzzled at how ingenious it
could be that a small explosive device could be implanted in the
path to have such a realistic effect. At about this time Mr Rodney
Horrocks and his wife were at their car, in fact they had sat in the
car to have their midday meal –
page 132
Mrs Cromer was count 41,
your Honour, if you’re looking at the indictment. And when the
shooting started another person who had visited the site with his
family, Mr Dennis Nudd, made his way towards the car to warn them
but they alighted from the car – and Mr Perks is indicating where
that car was parked on the roadway, not down in the carpark area but
the roadway which runs along the front of the verandah area of the
café. Mr Horrocks asked his wife to shelter behind the car at about
the same time as Mr Nudd arrived warning them that they should take
cover. Bryant must have noticed them because at that time he was
towards the rear of his car and they were of course therefore in
full view because there is a slight elevation back up towards where
the Horrocks had parked the car. He then brought his rifle, that is
, the SLR to an aiming position at his shoulder and fired the rifle
towards Mr Nudd and Mr Horrocks as they took cover behind a tree.
He fired at them and the shot struck the tree that they were taking
cover behind.
Page 133
Your Honour, if you turn to
photograph 11.79, towards the rear of that bundle of photographs,
you can see from first of all 11.79 the elevated effect that I was
talking about, the row of cars in which Bryant’s car was parked is
that down near the water’s edge and Mr Horrocks, of course, was on
the upper roadway strip that you can see. Then when you turn to
11.82 you can actually see the wound to the bark of the tree caused
by the passage of the bullet that was fired by Bryant and so that
you have a good idea of the height at which that shot was fired
through you will see that a police officer is indicating with a
ruler through the gouge out of the bark of the tree in photograph
11.92 the height of the passage of that bullet. Those charges are
contained in the indictment under counts 44 and 45 your Honour.
HIS HONOUR: It’s
a one act, Mr. Bugg, is it, that’s claimed to constitute two
separate crimes?
MR BUGG QC: Yes, the
perception was that there was more than one shot fired but only one
hit the tree, Your Honour.
Page 134
HIS HONOUR: Well,
that’s the way it is being put to me – that there is not one single
act, there were actually two acts of firing.
MR BUGG QC: Yes. (Resuming)
In fact one of the people sheltering behind the tree – and I can’t
remember which one it was now – described the impact of the bullet
as it went past the tree as a very resounding thud and a shudder
through the tree. Mrs Pauline Sloane, as well, your Honour, had
visited the site with her husband and she was making her way along
the foreshore with Mr Hutchinson, you remember, the man who was
injured in the forearm. They were sheltering along the front of the
parked cars, gradually making their way towards the jetty. Mrs
Sloane stopped and looked back towards Bryant, he noticed her, and
fired a shot in her direction. That is Count 46. The bullet didn’t
strike her.
Bryant then turned and
walked back towards the coaches and as he passed Mrs Quin, who was
still lying on the ground next to Mr Thompson, disabled from the
previous injury which she had suffered, he shot her in the lower
back causing fatal injuries.
Page 135
---and later died from those
injuries. I will come back to that later, your Honour, but that is
count 42, and the photographs relevant to that count are photographs
30 and 31
HIS HONOUR:
There’s just the one count is there in relation to Mrs Quin although
there were two separate acts.
MR BUGG: Yes,
that’s right, yes your Honour.
Photographs 30, 31. At that
stage, your Honour, Bryant boarded the Red Coach Line bus, that was
next to the Trans-Otway coach which I have previously mentioned.
There were no passengers sheltering on the Red Line coach and Bryant
fired into the Trans-Otway coach – and you will remember I showed
you a photograph of bullet damage to the windows of the Trans-Otway
coach. On the coach at the time was Mrs Eva Gaylard, a South
African person travelling with Mrs Lockley who I have mentioned
previously. Mrs Gaylard was sitting next to Mrs Irene Hutchinson
who had managed to make it onto the bus and her husband was out
sheltering on the foreshore. The shot fired at Mrs Gaylard struck
her in the left arm, past through her arm and entered her chest
causing fatal injuries. She died immediately. That is count 47 and
the photographs relevant to it are photographs 36 and 37, your
Honour.
Mr Gordon Francis and his
wife were also on the bus, the Trans-Otway coach. Mr Francis moved
down the aisle of the coach in an attempt to close the front door to
prevent Bryant from entering the coach. Almost immediately after
Mrs Gaylard had been shot, he felt a sharp pain in his left shoulder
blade. He also had been shot by Bryant from the coach opposite. Mr
Francis sustained a significant injury to the shoulder blade area
and was operated on at the Royal Hobart Hospital on four occasions
before being transferred to the Ashford
Page 136
Private Hospital in South
Australia for ongoing treatment – that’s count 48, your Honour.
Page 137
After shooting Mr Francis,
Bryant walked off the Red Line coach. Mr Neville Quin who had moved
away when Bryant first approached his group near the rear of the
coach had noticed that his wife was not with the group. He saw
Bryant enter the coach, heard the shooting, and when it became quiet
he commenced to search for his wife. He found her, she was lying
next to Mr Thompson. She had by then sustained the second shot
which Bryant had fired at her. She was unconscious and her hands
were cold to the touch. Mr Quin tried to help his wife but was
concerned that she would die. He had been with her a short time
when he realised that a shot had been fired at him. He turned and
saw Bryant. He then ran to the front of the coach to shelter from
Bryant. Realising that Bryant would probably go the other way to
catch up with him he doubled back but then felt the wind of a bullet
passing by his head. He ran further around the coach, one more shot
was fired at him, before he thought that he was clear of Bryant and
could make his escape onto the coach. Unfortunately Bryant saw
him enter the coach and followed him. Mr Quin had moved down the
coach slightly and had sheltered behind one of the seats. Bryant
approached him, stood over him and pointed the rifle at his head.
Mr Quin looked up and just as Bryant was about to pull the trigger
Bryant said to him “No-one gets away from me”. At that moment Mr
Quin ducked instinctively, moved his head forward slightly, the gun
discharged and the bullet missed Mr Quin’s head and struck him in
the neck. The shot did not cause any bony injury but it paralysed
Mr Quin for a short time. He regained movement in his legs and
walked off the coach and back to his wife after about ten minutes.
That’s count 49 and I
realise your Honour is thinking there are a number of acts involved
in that particular matter that the Crown confine this particular
incident to the one attempt.
Page 138
His wife was by this time
just conscious and she died with Mr Quin in attendance fifteen
minutes later. Mr Quin was evacuated by helicopter to the Royal
Hobart Hospital and was treated there and discharged on the fourth
of May but has had a number of followup consultations for his
injuries.
During Bryant’s pursuit of
Mr Quin another tourist at the site, James Balasko, an American
citizen, observed Bryant and tried to capture him on video film. He
clearly placed himself in a position of danger but was able to
briefly film Bryant. During this process Bryant obviously observed
him, took aim towards him, and fired a shot which missed Mr Balasko
but struck a Peugeot sedan, and you can see the location that Mr
Balasko was filming from. He was near a camper-van and there was a
Peugeot vehicle behind him. That is count number 43 and I have
asked your Associate your Honour to remove from the machine the
video tape we had this morning and play that portion of the tape.
EXHIBIT P.6 – VIDEO FILM taken by Mr Balasko – TAKEN IN
VIDEO PLAYED TO COURT
PAGE139
MR BUGG QC: That’s the
attempted murder charge for Mr Balasko, that shot.
VIDEO CONTINUING
MR BUGG QC: The film is
now shortly – a section of the film was prepared in slow motion by
the police, that now follows, your Honour. It’s only a portion of
the film that was just played. It was in an attempt to get a
clearer view of the accused who can be seen just in front of the
farthest bus, at the boot of his car now. Most people described him
as wearing that dark jacket and light grey trousers on the day.
This film did not come into the possession of the police until
September of this year. They were unaware of the existence of it
until a second followup interview with Mr Balasko in early August.
That’s Bryant getting into his car just before he left, his head
appears at level with the surfboard on the roof rack. Still
photographs were taken from that, your Honour, the smaller the
photograph the better the quality of the reproduction. Whilst it’s
not terribly relevant in light of the plea of guilty it was an
additional piece of evidence which came forward but it is direct
proof of one of the counts in the indictment. The Peugeot motor
vehicle, your Honour, is not one which is in the bundle of
photographs but I make available to you from a further set of
photographs, photographs number 11.94, 11.95 and 11.96. Your Honour
will see where the bullet hole about where in many cars the radio
aerial is fitted just directly above the tyre and the significance
of the tear to the fabric of the body of the car is shown in those
photographs.
Page 140
EXHIBIT P 7 – PHOTOGRAPHS (Loose) – Taken in.
MR BUGG QC: I might
also comment, your Honour, that at the start of that film, right at
the start of it, someone could be seen on the ground at the rear of
one of the coaches. That, in fact, was Miss Brigid Cook – before
she moved to the hexagonal guardhouse in the position that she is
later shown.
HIS HONOUR: Yes.
MR BUGG QC: Your Honour,
throughout the incidents that I described to you today most people
who had an opportunity to observe Bryant stated that he appeared
calm, unrushed and not showing any signs of emotion, with the
exception of Mr Riviere’s comments as to his observations of Bryant
at the start of the shooting. He clearly intended to cause maximum
harm and there was no discrimination as to his choice of victims.
It certainly appears that his initial intention may have been to
travel to the Isle of the Dead but certainly the killing of Mr and
Mrs Martin on that day was the starting point of his murderous
behaviour. He clearly purchased the sports bag to conceal the
weapon, he calculated its measurement was obviously planning to
cause harm, and massive harm, with the firearms he had accumulated.
Your Honour, the FN rifle
which I mentioned is here. I would ask that it be marked for
identification as well. It is in a damaged condition. It was
recovered in that damaged condition from the Seascape and obviously
that damage was caused to it – from an examination of it by Sergeant
Dutton of the Ballistics Section in Hobart. That damage was caused
after it had been fired in the carpark and it has obviously been
brought forcefully into contact with some hard object or objects.
FIREARM – FM RIFLE- MFI ‘B’
Page 141
MR BUGG QC: Your Honour,
also at the site on that day the accused had with him this shotgun.
It is a semi-automatic Daewoo shotgun with a 15 round magazine
fitted to it and from memory there were twelve rounds in the
magazine. Later Bryant was to tell the police that the use of this
firearm frightened him.
DAEWOO SHOTGUN – MFI ‘C’
HIS HONOUR: So
that wasn’t used at all on this day?
MR BUGG QC: No, it
wasn’t. It remained in the boot of the Volvo and was retrieved from
the boot when it was abandoned by Bryant at the Tollbooth area at
the entrance point to the historic site.
page 142
Though the loss of life that
he caused was appalling, it could have been worse but as you will
hear later he did not until his plea of guilty acknowledge
responsibility for what he had done nor has he at this stage given
any reason for why he did it. Your Honour, if that previous video
tape could now be placed in the machine, or replaced in the machine
– at this stage, people had clearly started to accept the warnings
which had been given to them and the directions to them to flee,
they started to move away from the café and up the hill on Jetty
Road, and I will come to that in just a moment, but if this film
could be played –
FILM THEN PLAYED
That’s Bryant leaving the
site, the amount of shelter is therefore apparent. The maker of
this film, Mr Ian McLeod, was sheltering with his wife just off
Jetty Road when he took this.
That film needn’t be played
any further, your Honour. Your Honour, I played –
Page 143
Two reasons, one, it shows
the point at which Bryant departed the scene but it also shows that
people were clearly by now accepting the fact that a violent
incident had occurred and were seeking refuge wherever possible and
there wasn’t much of that available. And the totality of the film
that I’ve played today, I think, from a public interest viewpoint is
important to be seen, because I think there has been a lot of
speculation since this incident as to why someone didn’t take some
step to either apprehend or bring to an end Bryant’s behaviour on
that afternoon. But when you look at the time span of what occurred
in that café and take a fifteen second gap to achieve the carnage
that he did it’s quite understandable that there was no violent
physical reaction to curtail what he was doing, the time just wasn’t
there, the opportunity wasn’t there, and there was nothing available
to those people to defend themselves or take any step to stop him.
Your Honour, perhaps if I
pause now and another plan could be put on the wall. I am tendering
these as exhibits and I’d be guided by your Honour but there has
been inquiries about availability of some of this material.
Certainly as far as any plan is concerned I don’t see any objection
to copy material being available but I’m in your Honour’s hands
about that.
HIS HONOUR: Well
the view that I take Mr Bugg, is that any exhibits tendered to the
Court are by the Rules of Court required to be retained in the
custody of the Court until any appeal time expires or if it’s
availed of until the appeal is disposed of. If you have copies of
material which you see fit to release to the public that’s a matter
for your judgment.
MR BUGG QC: Thank you,
your Honour.
HIS HONOUR: There
will, of course, be a transcript
Page 144
of these proceedings
available to the public and to the media.
MR BUGG QC: It would
certainly make that transcript, if I could come back, more
understandable for those who are disseminating today’s proceedings
to a broader community.
HIS HONOUR: Well
it’s a matter for your discretion.
MR BUGG QC: Thank you,
your Honour. Similar plans are being put up in the other two rooms.
HIS HONOUR:
Different considerations may well apply to any record of interview
that you wish to show. There are matters of public interest which
would require that they normally should not be disclosed lest the
disclosure might discourage the use of that in future investigations.
MR BUGG QC: I have a
firm view about that, your Honour, and I regard the restriction of
the caveat that’s imposed upon the extent to which the material will
be published by the Judge’s rule warning at the beginning as being
very limited indeed.
EXHIBIT P8 – CHART- TAKEN IN
PAGE 145
Your Honour, the Plan, P8,
which is now being put on the board shows the Port Arthur historic
site. If we could start with the Broad Arrow Café location. That
is being pointed out. And what is called Jetty Road that I have
mentioned on a number of occasions leaves – you leave by the carpark
and then drive up Jetty Road –
HIS HONOUR: Just
pause for a minute. This apparently is P9. Yes, go on.
MR BUGG QC: Yes, thank
you. Mr Perks could once again trace the marker along Jetty Road
driving out of the site and that is where Bryant’s car was filmed
briefly a moment ago on the McLeod video, leaving the site and then
travelling towards the Tollbooth which is now being indicated by Mr
Perks.
HIS HONOUR:
Whereabouts is the old church site?
MR BUGG QC: That’s back
– further down. Yes.
HIS HONOUR: Yes.
Thank you.
MR BUGG QC: Very few
people realised where the gunman was at this stage because the echo
effect of the gunshots once he got outside into the carpark area.
Statements taken by the police from a number of people there
indicate that in the initial confusion they didn’t know there was
one gunman, two three, whether Bryant was working alone and whether
he was static or mobile, whether he was operating from a concealed
position. Many people fled on foot, as you can see from the
commentary made by Mr McLeod. Some of those included Mrs Nanette
Mikac and her two daughters, Alannah and Madeline
Page 146
--- visited the site on that
day whilst Mr Mikac was playing golf on the course at Port Arthur.
After firing at Balasko, Bryant then walked to a mini-bus fired past
it towards the Commandant’s cottage, and then he walked towards his
car, appeared to shoot out the rear window of the car and then fired
across the water at the ruins again. He then entered his car,
started it and reversed it out of the carpark and drove away from
the scene. On P.9 the plan there is a green line marked on Jetty
Road showing his course of travel out of the site.
Only six cartridges were
recovered from the carpark when clearly many more shots than that
were fired. Subsequent ballistic examination of the shells
recovered from the carpark and the café showed that those shells
were from bullets from live rounds fired from both the F.N. and the
A.R.15, Colt A.R.15.
Some witnesses say that
Bryant on leaving the carpark area was sounding the horn of his car
and waving and other say that he was firing from the car. Neither
is terribly relevant as far as these charges are concerned but it
does not seem likely that he was firing from his car.
Mainland visitors John and
Caroline Boskovic and Peter and Pauline Grenfell had travelled to
Port Arthur that day. They had a brief luncheon visit to the Broad
Arrow Café and sat at the same table as Mr Colyer, Mrs Loughton and
her daughter Sarah. After they finished their meal they left and
walked towards the toilet block which is near, just on from the
Information Centre. So that’s the last building really before Jetty
Road starts to leave the carpark area. Mrs Boskovic was called from
the toilet block by Mrs Grenfell when the shooting started. She
came out of the toilet block and screamed in panic but was then told
to settle down
Page 147
by another person, ‘it was
only a re-enactment’. All four persons then moved quickly along
Jetty Road in the direction of the tollbooth on foot. At one stage
thay ran beside Mrs Mikac who was carrying her younger child
Madeline. Alannah was running beside her mother and to the right of
Mr and Mrs Boskovic. Mr and Mrs Grenfell were some short distance
behind at this stage. So what you had was a group of five, the
three Mikac’s and Mr and Mrs Boskovic, and then Mr and Mrs Grenfell
behind.
Page 148
There were other people in
this area at the same time, all trying to make their way out of the
site. Mrs Boskovic spoke to Alannah to calm her down, Mrs Mikac
then said to her daughter, ‘We’re safe now Pumpkin.’, and the child
appeared to relax and moved closer to her mother. At this time the
yellow Volvo was being driven up jetty Road towards the tollbooth.
Bryant stopped the vehicle opposite Mrs Mikac and she then started
to approach the vehicle. These movements were observed from a
couple of locations. And the position of stopping is shown just
east on that map, its probably almost south on that map, of an
unsealed road which heads off almost in an easterly direction. So
that map is being transversed almost ninety degrees - but that road
heading towards the top of the plan which Mr Perks has just
indicated becomes relevant in a moment.
It was fairly obvious that
Mrs Mikac must have thought that this vehicle would provide some
escape from the area. As I say, she approached the vehicle. That
was certainly Mr Boskovic’s state of mind because he also started to
walk towards the vehicle. He was a little further up the hill. At
this moment Bryant alighted from the car. It is uncertain as to
whether at this very moment he had the rifle in his hand but he had
now, by now, changed back from the FN SLR rifle to the AR15, which
he had used in the café. Witnesses observed Bryant to place his
left hand on Mrs Mikac’s shoulder and people were close enough to
hear him tell her to get down on her knees on three occasions. Mr
Boskovic, who heard this, said that he was reasonable calm in the
way in which he spoke. Mrs Mikac was then heard to say, ‘Please
don’t hurt my babies.’ Mr Grenfell then identified Bryant, realised
who it was and called out, ‘It’s him.’
Page 149
If you will remember, your
Honour, he is now downhill of the car, whereas the Boskovics are
uphill of the car.
Page 150
Mr Boskovic then observed a
gun in Bryant’s right hand as did other people who were in the area.
Mr Boskovic grabbed his wife’s hand and ran further up the hill,
turning right up an unsealed roadway away from jetty Road, and
that’s the unsealed road that Mr Perks is now indicating. As they
were moving away they heard a number of gunshots. Mr and Mrs
Grenfell ran back down the road towards the historic site and hid
behind a tree. Another couple in the area noticed Alannah the elder
of the two children run to hide behind a tree off the roadside. One
of these people, Mr Dutton, looked over his shoulder and saw Bryant
point the rifle at Mrs Mikac and fire once. She fell to the ground.
He turned, saw his wife, that is, Mr Dutton did, and tried to move
away from the scene. He heard another shot, took hold of his wife’s
hand and they hurried onto a dirt road, which was the same dirt road
that Mr and Mrs Boskovic had just moved on to. He heard another
shot and then he and his wife sheltered behind a large tree lying on
the ground.
The Crown case is that
Bryant shot Mrs Mikac in the left side of the head using the AR15
rifle. Death was immediate. Almost immediately after this he has
fired at Madeline, he fired two shots at the child. The first shot
struck the child in the right shoulder causing a non-fatal wound and
the second shot to the chest and abdomen of the child caused fatal
massive internal injuries. The order of the shots cannot be
determined but the shoulder injury appeared as from the gunpowder
stippling to have been a closer range shot whereas there is no
stippling present with the fatal injury to the lower chest and
abdomen.
Bryant then turned his
attention on Alannah – and, your Honour, I hasten at this stage to
seek leave to amend the indictment. I notice that the child’s name
is
Page 151
Spelt without a concluding
‘h’ in the count in the indictment and if I could just take your
Honour to that, it is –
HIS HONOUR: Count
52 is it?
MR BUGG QC: It’s count
52, yes. I would seek leave to amend to record that correctly.
HIS HONOUR:
Granted
MR BUGG QC: It appears,
your Honour, that he fired two shots at the child, she was
sheltering behind a tree off to the side of the road at a distance
of about 5.5 metres and those first two shots were fired from
somewhere near his car. He then moved to the tree and shot her at
near contact point with the muzzle almost pressed against the right
side of the child’s neck.
Page 152
The examination of the body
of the deceased child by both Forensic Pathologists and ballistics
experts showed searing and powder markings consistent with a near
contact injury, and other patterned abraded injury, approximately
six centimetres from the gunshot wound, and that suggested contact
from the flash suppressor around the barrel of the gun, because
there were two concentric circles in that abraded injury, the outer
one having a perimeter of one point five centimetres in diameter,
the inner circle one centimetre in diameter, making this abraded
injury on the neck of the child consistent with the flash suppressor
on the barrel of the gun having been pressed against the child’s
neck, prior to the firing of the gun. In other words the gun was
pushed into the child’s neck and then fired.
Six point two-two-three
cartridge cases were recovered from the scene, five near the car on
the roadside and one near the body of the child Alannah behind a
tree. Your Honour those three shootings make up counts 50, 51 and
52 of the indictment and I take you to photographs 18 through to 26.
The tree behind which
Alannah was shot is the – you can only see in photograph 18 one – a
part of a tree at the far left-hand side of that photograph, it’s
the next tree to the right of that your Honour. There is a better
photograph of that in terms of its overall coverage of the scene and
I will retrieve that later, I won’t take your Honour through that at
the moment.
Bryant then re-entered his
vehicle and drove towards the tollbooth. Mr Perks will continue the
account of Bryant’s activities from this point onwards.
Page 153
I have given some
information to your Honour about the firearms used by Bryant and the
assessment of the matter by the ballistics experts within Tasmania
Police Force.
Your Honour, I will resume
the state of the facts when it comes to the presentation of victim
impact material and a background outline on Martin Bryant. If your
Honour pleases.
HIS HONOUR: Mr
Perks?
MR. PERKS: Your
Honour, just prior to the murders of Mrs Mikac and her daughters a
New Zealand couple, Mr and Mrs Buckley, drove into the historic site
in a red Holden Commodore. After paying the entry fee at the
tollbooth they proceeded about a hundred metres down the entrance
road following behind a gold BMW sedan when they were warned by an
elderly man on the roadway not to go any further as someone was
firing shots. Mr Buckley reversed his vehicle a short distance
before turning and driving back up to the tollbooth, parking just
before it on the left hand verge. And the photograph 162 shows Mr
Buckley’s Commodore in the position in which he’d parked it.
Your Honour, the BMW
completed a similar manoeuvre, also parking near the tollbooth, just
past it, in such a position as to partially block the entry lane to
the site. This vehicle was owned by Mr Ken Nixon and his wife Mary
Rose. The Nixon’s had had friends staying with them for a couple of
days, Mr Robert Salzmann and his wife Helene from Switzerland, and
Mr Jim Pollard, and that morning Mrs Nixon, together with the
Salzmanns and Mr Pollard, had set off to visit Richmond and Port
Arthur. The Buckleys left their vehicle and Mr Buckley spoke to Mrs
Kingston, the tollbooth attendant, to inquire as to what was going
on. As he was standing beside the tollbooth Mr Buckley looked down
the road
Page 154
And observed Bryant standing
beside the open driver’s door of his yellow Volvo, raise a rifle to
his shoulder and shoot Mrs Mikac and immediately thereafter her
youngest daughter.
Page 155
The Buckleys then started
running up the road towards the site turnoff where they were picked
up by Mr Keith Edward and his wife, June, and driven to the Port
Arthur Service Station, just to the north of the entrance to the
site. Your Honour, after slaughtering the Mikacs Bryant re-entered
his vehicle and drove up the entrance road, pulling up just past the
tollbooth on the left-hand verge, approximately level with or
slightly behind the Nixon BMW. Photograph number 5 shows the
position of the Volvo. A few seconds later Miss Debra Rabe turned
left from the Arthur Highway into the site entrance and drove
towards the tollbooth to be confronted by the gold BMW blocking her
path. Miss Rabe and her passengers, Mrs Frida Cheok and son,
Nicholas, observed a woman in the front passenger seat of the BMW we
believe to have been Mrs Nixon, motioning to them with her hands as
if to say, ‘go back’. At the same time they observed two men,
Bryant and Mr Salzmann apparently arguing at the driver’s side door
of the Volvo. It is the Crown case that Bryant then quickly moved a
step or two to the rear of the Volvo and removed the .308 calibre
SLR rifle. A few more words were exchanged and Bryant raised the
rifle and shot Mr Salzmann at point blank range through the neck, a
lethal injury, causing Mr Salzmann to fall straight backwards to the
roadway
Page 156
Mr Salzmann was wearing a
blue jumper, and I refer your Honour to photograph number 15.
Immediately after the murder of Mr. Salzmann Mr. Pollard was
observed by Nicholas Cheok to get out of the driver’s seat of the
BMW and walk around the front of the vehicles towards Bryant.
Bryant thereupon raised the rifle to his shoulder and shot Mr.
Pollard at close range through the right chest causing a lethal
injury. And I refer your Honour to photograph number 12.
By this time another car had
pulled up behind Miss Rhodes’ vehicle, the occupants of this car
having been alerted to the horror of the scene before them by the
urgent signalling of Mrs. Cheok, quickly reversed back towards the
entrance allowing Miss Rabe to do likewise. While Miss Rabe was in
the process of reversing her vehicle Bryant turned his attention to
the two remaining occupants of the BMW. The exact sequence of
events in the next few seconds is not entirely clear but it seems
probable that Bryant went to the rear driver’s side door of the BMW
and pulled Mrs. Salzmann from the vehicle shooting her as he did
so. Mrs. Salzmann sustained a fatal gunshot injury, the bullet
entering her neck and exiting through her left upper back. And I
refer your Honour to photograph number 6.
The Crown case is that
Bryant then walked to the front passenger side of the BMW where Mrs.
Nixon was seated and shot her twice before dragging her body clear
of the vehicle onto the roadway. Mrs. Nixon sustained two gunshot
wounds, one entering her right shoulder and perforating her neck and
cervical spine, the other entering her left shoulder and perforated
the left chest cavity. Both of these wounds were lethal injuries.
I refer your Honour to photograph number 9.
Page 157
Immediately following the
murder of Mrs. Nixon and dragging her body from the car Bryant
commenced to transfer a number of items from the Volvo to the BMW.
These items included the Colt AR15 rifle, a quantity of ammunition,
two sets of Smith and Wesson handcuffs and most probably at least
one container of petrol.
Page 158
At about this time Mr.
Graham Sutherland turned left from the Arthur Highway into the
Historic Site entrance road. He was driving a maroon Magna sedan.
Seated beside him was his son, Thomas, his wife, Stephanie, another
son, Stuart being in the rear seats. When their car was a hundred
to a hundred and fifty metres away from the Tollbooth they noticed
the BMW and the Volvo and three bodies lying on the roadway. Mr.
Sutherland recalls Thomas yelling out, ‘ There’s someone running
back to the other car.’ He immediately put the car in reverse and
accelerated rapidly as two gunshots rang out and Mr Sutherland was
sprayed with small particles of glass. It is the Crown case that
Bryant fired two shots from the .308 calibre FN rifle at the
reversing Magna fully intending to kill the driver of that vehicle.
This conduct constitutes Counts 57 and 58 on the indictment. The
Magna was struck by two bullets, the first striking the windscreen
on the driver’s side, the second penetrating the driver’s side front
door just to the left and above the door handle. And I would refer
your Honour to photographs of that vehicle, numbers 542, 538 and
539.
HIS HONOUR: What
is the first one? 538, 539 and what was the first one?
MR PERKS: 542,
your Honour.
HIS HONOUR: Yes.
MR PERKS: 542
shows a close-up of the first shot that struck the windscreen.
Fortunately, your Honour, none of the occupants of the Magna were
physically injured. Having completed the transfer of material from
his Volvo to the BMW Bryant set off in that vehicle on his
continuing trail of devastation and destruction. He left behind in
the Volvo a number of items of some significance including the 12
gauge Daewoo semi-automatic shotgun that has been marked for
identification. That was fitted with a magazine containing nine
cartridges.
Page 159
Also left in the car were
two magazines for the .308 FN rifle, one empty and one containing
seventeen live rounds.
Page 160
One magazine for the colt
AR15 rifle containing twelve live rounds and a cardboard box
containing four hundred and thirty nine, point three o eight calibre
cartridges. There was a twenty five litre gasoline container
containing twenty litres of petrol left in the Volvo together with a
second ten litre drum containing seven litres of petrol. There were
three packets of Little Lucifer fire starters and a grey video
camera bag which contained, amongst other things, six keys bearing
tags marked Seascape, as Mr Bugg has already mentioned.
Photograph 140 shows the
smaller container of petrol in the rear seat.
150 shows the Daewoo shotgun
in the boot of the car, together with one of the magazines.
Photograph 151 is another
view of the boot of the car which shows a home made target made of
cardboard.
156 shows the front
passenger’s seat of the Volvo and the large container of petrol and
alongside that, your Honour will see one of the packets of Little
Lucifer fire starters and another part partly obscured underneath
the glovebox area.
Photograph 157 shows a
loaded magazine in the glovebox.
736 is another view of the
boot after the car had been removed to Police Headquarters. This
time the magazine from the shotgun had been removed.
740 and 741 show the target
that was removed from the boot. This target contained three bullet
holes.
742 is another view of the
petrol container in the rear of the car. Alongside that is a
cardboard box.
Page 161
743 shows the contents of
the cardboard box, as I’ve indicated, 439 live three 0 eight rounds.
751 shows three packets of
Little Lucifer fire starters after the removal of the petrol
container.
Page 162
755 shows the grey camera
bag, 756 the contents of that bag including the six ‘Seascape’ keys
and 757 a closer view of those keys.
Your Honour, in all eleven
.308 calibre fired cartridge cases were subsequently recovered from
the vicinity of the tollbooth. All had been discharged in the FN
self-loading rifle. As I previously indicated Mr. Keith Edwards and
his wife after picking up the Buckley’s had driven to the Port
Arthur service station just north of the entrance road to the
historic site. Once there, Mr Edwards stood in the roadway in an
effort to flag down approaching motorists to prevent them entering
the site. Photograph 1050 is a view of the entrance to the historic
site taken from the forecourt of the service station.
HIS HONOUR: What
was that number again?
MR PERKS: One
thousand and fifty. It gives your Honour an idea of the proximity
of the entrance road to the service station, certainly not a long
distance. Miss Rabe, after witnessing the carnage at the tollbooth
had driven to the photo shop almost directly opposite the entrance
road and that photo shop is also shown in that photograph I have
just referred your Honour to, 1050, righthand side. She asked the
proprietors, Mr. Laycock and Mr. Kateros to call the police, she
then drove across to the service station to warn the people there.
Mr Sutherland, after being shot at, also stopped briefly at the
service station to warn the people before continuing north along the
Arthur Highway. Mrs Cheok persuaded Miss Rabe to leave also and as
she drove across the forecourt preparatory to driving on to the
Arthur Highway, she observed a gold BMW approaching from the Port
Arthur entrance road and then veer across to the wrong side of the
roadway blocking the exit of a white Corolla hatchback.
Page 163
I refer your Honour to
photograph 395 which is an aerial photograph of the service station
and it shows the white Corolla at the northern exit of the service
station. Your Honour, the occupants of this vehicle were a young
couple from interstate, Mr. Glen Pears, originally from Tasmania,
and Miss Zoë Hall. Although there are some differences in the
description of events as recounted by various witnesses, it seems
almost certain that Mr. Pears was driving the Corolla and Miss Hall
beside him in the front passenger seat. Immediately after bringing
the BMW to a halt Bryant got out of the vehicle armed with the FN
rifle and went straight to the passenger side front door of the
Corolla and it appeared to one witness that he commenced to try and
pull or wrestle Miss Hall from the front seat. She was screaming a
very sharp, loud, high-pitched scream. At this point it is the
Crown case that Mr. Pears got out of the Corolla and moved around to
the passenger side where he appeared to be attempting to placate
Bryant. Bryant responded by raising the rifle to Mr Pears chest and
then pushing him and directing him back towards the rear of the BMW,
the boot of which it seems was already open. Mr. Pears was then
forced to climb into the boot and kneel inside and Bryant then shut
the boot. Bryant then walked from the rear of the BMW back towards
the passenger side front door of the Corolla. As he approached it
seems that Miss Hall moved across from her original position in the
front passenger seat into the driver’s seat. When he reached the
passenger side front door Bryant calmly and deliberately raised the
rifle to his hip and fired three shots in rapid succession, smashing
through the window into Miss Hall. She received an injury to her
neck, an injury which passed through her left forearm through her
chest and into the right arm, and a wound through her back. The
first two of these wounds were lethal injuries and according to the
pathologist the third was most probably so.
Page 164
Photographs 1 and 2 are
photographs of the Corolla and Miss Hall. After murdering Miss
Hall, Bryant was observed by Mr Kateros at the photo shop to run
back to the BMW and then drive off at high speed in the direction of
Seascape. Three .308 calibre fired cartridge cases were
subsequently recovered from the vicinity of the white corolla. All
had been discharges from the same firearm used by Bryant at the
tollbooth, the FN self-loading rifle.
Bryant drove the BMW at high
speed north along the highway pulling into the Seascape driveway, or
just off the roadway adjacent to that driveway. Photographs 794 and
801 show the entrance to the Seascape looking from a northerly
direction and a southerly direction. As Bryant was approaching the
Seascape driveway Mr. John Rooke was approaching in the opposite
direction at slow speed in his Datsun sedan towing a loaded
trailer. Mr Rooke observed the BMW cut straight in front of him and
stop in the Seascape driveway. He then saw a male person, who the
Crown say of course was Martin Bryant, get straight out of the BMW
and point a rifle directly at his approaching car, and from a
distance of about twenty feet fired two shots in quick succession.
Mr Rooke thought that the shots must have been blanks as his
vehicles was not struck but as he drove past Bryant he heard two
further shots and saw in the rear vision mirror the windows of a red
Falcon, following some distance behind, get blown out.
Page 165
The Crown asserts that when
Bryant discharged the two shots at Mr Rooke’s approaching car he
intended to kill the driver. This conduct constitutes count 60 on
the indictment, charge of attempted murder.
It seems that Mr Rooke had
failed to see another vehicle following directly behind his vehicle
and between it and the red Falcon whose windows he’d seen shattered
by gunshots. This other vehicle was a Holden Frontiera four-wheel
drive, an aqua coloured vehicle. It was driven by a young woman
from Melbourne, Miss Linda White. Sitting beside her was her
boyfriend, now fiancé, Michael Wanders. As their vehicle
approached the Seascape driveway Miss White, whose attention had
initially been directed at the beauty of the Seascape cottages and
their tranquil setting noticed the BMW on the left side of the road
and standing by it a young blond haired male. As she drove closer
she noticed he had a long gun by his side. She thought at the time
that he must have been waiting for them to pass so that he could
shoot rabbits or something. She slowed down further. When only a
matter of a few metres separated them Bryant raised the firearm,
pointed it directly at Miss White and fired it, attempting to kill
her. This initial shot struck the bonnet of the Frontiera just
below the windscreen on the driver’s side, part of the projectile
fragmenting and smashing into the edge of the windscreen at head
level and causing glass to strike Miss White’s face. As the
Frontiera drew level with Bryant he fired a second shot followed by
a third and possibly a fourth in quick succession, shattering the
front passenger and driver’s side windows. One of the projectiles
slammed into Miss White’s right forearm, virtually blowing it away
and causing horrific injury. The Crown case is that when Bryant
discharged the second and subsequent shot or shots he intended to
kill Miss White’s front seat passenger Michael Wanders.
Page 166
This conduct is the subject
of count 62 the charge of attempting to murder Mr. Wanders and count
63 causing grievous bodily harm to Miss White. Remarkably Mr
Wanders was not physically injured.
After passing Bryant’s
position the Frontiera continued down the hill and just around the
bend from the Seascape entrance before rolling to a stop. Miss
White at that time believed that this was because she simply
couldn’t drive anymore due to her grievously injured arm. She and
Mr Wanders both got out and swapped seats by running around the
front of the vehicle. Once in the driver’s seat Mr Wanders made
several desperate but unsuccessful attempts to restart it. A later
examination of the Frontiera revealed the fact that the shot that
had penetrated the bonnet had also severed the throttle cable. I
refer your Honour to a series of photographs commencing at 291. 291
is a view taken from just south of the Seascape driveway showing the
position in which the Frontiera finished. 292 is a closer view of
the vehicle. 297 shows the vehicle from a frontal view. 298 shows
the bullet hole in the bonnet. Photograph 300 shows the damage to
the windscreen caused by the first bullet fired. Photograph 301 and
302 and 308 show the front doors of the Holden Frontiera and
photograph 335 shows the damage to the throttle cable caused by the
first projectile.
Page 167
Your Honour, at about the
time Mr Wanders was trying to re-start the Frontiera Mr. Doug Horne
was approaching Seascape driving a maroon Ford Falcon sedan. Also
present in the vehicle was Mr Neville Shilkin in the front passenger
seat. His wife, Helen, was behind him in the rear seat, with Mrs.
Faye Horne beside her. After first noticing the pink buildings of
Seascape Mr Horne observed the BMW parked in or near the driveway as
did the others in the Falcon. As the Falcon drew nearer Mr Horne
saw Bryant standing at what he thought was the front of the vehicle.
Mr Shilkin yelled out, ‘He’s got a gun.’, and at the same instant,
and when the Falcon was but a few metres from him, Bryant raised the
firearm to his shoulder and fired directly at Mr Horne. The bullet
penetrated the windscreen and fragmented, shrapnel peppering Mr
Horne causing multiple wounds to the right side of his chest and his
right shoulder, arm, elbow and forearm. Photograph 505 shows the
bullet hole at head level on the windscreen of the Falcon. 517 and
522 are other views of that vehicle. The Crown asserts that when
Martin Bryant fired he fired directly at Mr Horne intending to kill
him. This conduct constitutes Count 65 on the indictment, a charge
of attempted murder.
Page 168
Fortuitously neither Mrs
Horne nor the Shilkins sustained injury. Mr Horne drove a short
distance, stopping behind the Holden Frontiera and then in a state
of shock got out of the vehicle briefly. Miss White, having noticed
the Hornes’ Falcon, ran towards it and tried to get in via the front
passenger door. Meanwhile Mr Horne, almost certainly not
comprehending the situation or appreciating the desperate plight of
Miss White, got back behind the wheel of the Falcon and drove
forward a short distance around the Frontiera and stopped again just
ahead of it after being told by his wife that he just couldn’t
drive. Mr Horne and Mr Shilkin then both got out of the vehicle and
swapped positions. Miss White and Mr Wanders ran to the Falcon,
Miss White getting in to the rear seat and Mr Wanders the front on
Mr Horne’s knee. Mr Shilkin then drove the group to the Fox and
Hounds and ultimate safety.
Your Honour, travelling a
short distance behind Mr Horne’s vehicle as it approached Seascape
was another red Ford sedan being driven by Mr Simon Williams, a
Canadian Embassy official stationed in Canberra, who was on holiday
in the State with his wife Susan.
Page 169
As they rounded the corner
and the “Seascape” cottages came into view, Mr Williams was struck
by the sight of a white or greyish coloured car in the righthand
lane facing south by reversing at up the road at some speed. This
was in fact a Magna sedan being driven by Mrs Anne Wardle, who I
will come to shortly. Mr Williams then noticed Bryant on the side
of the road in the vicinity of the “Seascape” driveway and almost
immediately thereafter he heard the sound of a gunshot. Having
heard this and seen the Magna reversing, Mr Williams accelerated but
as he drew level with Bryant there was a second gunshot, the bullet
shattering the front passenger and driver’s side windows. Mrs
Williams was struck by the fragmenting projectile which caused an
horrific injury to her left hand completely amputating her little
finger and severely damaging the remaining fingers of that hand.
She also sustained a small laceration to the left side of her
forehead. Mr Williams was also struck by flying shrapnel,
sustaining a serious fracture and bone loss to his left hand.
The Crown asserts that
Bryant fired this shot at Mrs Williams intending to kill her. This
conduct is the subject of count 66, attempting to murder Mrs Carolyn
Susan Williams and count 67, causing grievous bodily harm to Simon
Roger Williams.
Page 170
After being shot Mr Williams
continued to drive south at speed, overtaking Mr Horne’s stationary
Falcon, and thence to the haven of the Fox and Hounds. Photographs
261, 262 and 273 are views of Mr Williams’ vehicle.
Your Honour as I previously
mentioned Mrs Anne Wardle was driving the Magna sedan that Mr
Williams had observed reversing at speed in the wrong lane as he
approached Seascape. Also present in Mrs Wardle’s vehicle were her
friends Sylvia Riley, Mary Warburton and Joyce Maloney. As Mrs
Wardle rounded the corner and Seascape came into view she noticed
Bryant standing near the BMW on the side of the roadway. She
noticed too almost immediately that he had a rifle that he was
holding to his shoulder apparently aiming at the vehicle in front of
hers. This vehicle no doubt being the Horne’s. On seeing what was
occurring ahead Mrs Wardle promptly stopped her car and then
commenced reversing back up the roadway, changing over to the wrong
lane so as to avoid a potential accident with any vehicle
approaching, such as for example the William’s car. As she was
reversing she heard a shot fired and at the same time realised her
car had been struck. Mrs Wardle continued to reverse until she had
rounded the corner and was out of view. She then drove a short
distance in a northerly direction before stopping the vehicle and
flagging down all cars that approached to warn them against
proceeding further.
Page 171
While Mrs Wardle was
reversing the other occupants of her car watched Bryant firing at Mr
Williams’ vehicle from point blank range and glass shattering and
spraying from its right hand side. Your Honour, the driver’s side
lower corner of Mrs Wardle’s Magna was struck by the bullet fired by
Bryant and photographs of that vehicle are numbered 553 and 554.
The Crown asserts that when
Bryant fired at this vehicle he did so with the intention of
applying force to its occupants. This conduct constitutes count 64
on the indictment, the charge of aggravated assault. Fortunately
none of the occupants of Mrs Wardle’s Magna sustained injury.
Your Honour, after firing
the last two shots which struck Mr Williams’ Ford and the reversing
Magna containing Mrs Wardle and her companions, Bryant returned to
the BMW and drove down the Seascape driveway and across a grassed
area bordering the southernmost cottage, pulling up alongside a line
of poplar trees. There’s an aerial photograph showing the position
of the BMW in relation to Seascape numbered 401.
Page 172
I just pause to observe that
subsequently nine fired .308 calibre cartridge cases were recovered
from the vicinity of the Seascape driveway, all had been fired in
the FN self-loading rifle.
Your Honour, after bringing
the BMW to a halt Bryant got out of the vehicle, removed Mr Pears
from the boot, and took him inside the main Seascape cottage, the
residence of Mr and Mrs Martin. Once inside, using the two sets of
handcuffs he had brought with him, he handcuffed Mr Pears’ wrists
behind his back. The second pair of handcuffs were linked to the
handcuff on the left wrist with the free cuff being closed and
secured around move immovable object within the house. After
securing Mr Pears inside the house it is the Crown case that Bryant
returned to the BMW, splashed petrol liberally over the interior of
the vehicle and set it alight. He had removed from the vehicle both
the Colt AR15 and FN rifles together with ammunition for each weapon.
Page 173
At about 1.30 p.m. the
Nubeena Police Constable, Paul Highland, who at that time was in the
Saltwater River area in company with Constable Garry Whittle,
received a radio message to attend the Port Arthur site. Constables
Highland and Whittle, travelling in separate vehicles, stopped
briefly at the Nubeena Police Station. They received a further
radio message to be on the lookout for a yellow Volvo with a
surfboard on roof racks and decided to head for Port Arthur in
different directions. Constable Highland travelled to the Taranna
turnoff on the Arthur Highway. En route, he received a further
message to be on the lookout for a gold BMW sedan. On reaching the
turnoff, he received a further message that people had been shot and
were at the Fox and Hounds Hotel. Constable Highland then drove
south on the Arthur Highway to the Fox and Hounds, at considerable
speed, observing Linda White’s abandoned Frontiera on the roadway
about a hundred metres south of the “Seascape” entrance.
Page 174
On his arrival at the Fox
and Hounds he spoke briefly with Mr Williams and others and then
drove back in the direction of Seascape. About five hundred metres
prior to Seascape he slowed when he noticed Constable Whittle’s
vehicle behind and they then proceeded slowly in convoy to the
Seascape entrance.
Both police officers then
observed the BMW on the grassed area beside the Seascape buildings.
By this time it was on fire and there was heavy black smoke
billowing from the vehicle. The rear half of the vehicle had not
caught fire at this stage. The time was now approximately 2 p.m.
Constable Hyland decided to
drive further north up the road to stop any traffic from coming down.
As he did so he caught a brief glimpse of a figure running past one
of the cottages towards the entrance of the main residence of
Seascape. Constable Hyland stopped his vehicle across the roadway
about four hundred metres north of Seascape and remained in this
position for some time.
Constable Whittle meanwhile
had positioned his vehicle at forty-five degrees across the highway
outside the Seascape entrance to block northbound traffic.
Page 175
After hearing a loud
explosion coming from the direction of the burning BMW Constable
Whittle took cover at the rear of his Police vehicle. The
particular vehicle and the position it was parked is shown in
photograph 343 and 336. 343 is a close view of Constable Whittle’s
vehicle.
A short time later your
Honour, Constable Pat Allen reversed his Police vehicle from the
direction of Port Arthur towards Constable Whittle’s vehicle. As he
did so Constable Whittle heard three very loud shots from the
direction of Seascape and bullets passing over Constable Allen’s
vehicle hitting bush or shrubbery to his right. Constable Whittle
moved from his position to a culvert at the rear of his vehicle and
was then joined in that position by Constable Allen.
Page 176
-
the culvert is shown at Photograph number 380.
Your Honour, those initial
shots fired in the direction of Constables Whittle and Allen
constituted Counts 69 and 70 on the indictment, the charges of
aggravated assault. Constables Whittle and Allen remained in the
culvert until approximately nine o’clock that night when they were
joined by two members of the Special Operations Group and were
subsequently evacuated from that point at about 11.00 p.m. by
crawling along the ditch, a distance of about two hundred metres.
During their time in the culvert a large number of shots were fired
in their general direction from several different weapons. As well
as his own firearms Bryant now had access to a considerable number
of firearms owned by members of the Martin family. And a bullet
that struck Constable Whittle’s vehicle, a close-up view of that at
Photograph 352, was later determined by ballistics evidence to have
been fired from an SKK semi-automatic rifle.
Page 177
MR PERKS: Your
Honour, I’m just about to go on to a new area, it may be a
convenient time.
HIS HONOUR: Yes,
very well.
THE COURT THEN ADJOURNED
UNTIL 10.00 A.M. ON WEDNESDAY, THE 20TH DAY OF NOVEMBER,
1996
Page 178
THE COURT RESUMED AT 10.00
A.M. ON WEDNESDAY, THE 20TH DAY OF NOVEMBER, 1996
THE QUEEN v. MARTIN BRYANT
(Part
heard)
HIS HONOUR: Mr
Bugg, in the light of your recitation of the facts to me yesterday I
have some concerns about the form of this indictment, having regard
to section 11 of the Criminal Code which provides that persons are
not to be punished twice for the same act, same unlawful act, not
the same offence but the same unlawful act. At page 86 of
the transcript you told me that the shot that struck Mr. Bennet, who
is subject of count 9 in the Indictment, exited to cause the death
of Mr. Sharpe, who is the subject of count 10 in the Indictment.
Now it may be that that problem would be resolved by an amendment to
count 9 in the indictment to allege the murder of Mr. Bennet and Mr.
Sharpe and count 10 would simply then be squashed.
The same problem, however,
arises in relation to a number of the wounding charges which I was
told were really the by-products of fatal shots hitting intermediate
objects – well not intermediate objects, they were –
MR. BUGG QC:
Shrapnel fragmentation.
HIS HONOUR:
Shrapnel fragments from a lethal wound. So once again, you see, you
have a single unlawful act which had two consequences, one a fatal
consequence, and the commission accordingly of the crime of murder,
but you have charged in addition a further consequence in relation
to other persons from that single unlawful act.
Page 179
HIS HONOUR: It
would seem to me as presently advised that that offends section 11
of The Code and without of course minimizing the seriousness
of conduct which causes a wound, in addition to any other fatal
consequences, it may well be that this indictment from a technical
point of view would be erroneous if it were allowed to remain in
that form and indeed the whole sentencing process might accordingly
be jeopardised. I don’t want you to respond immediately, I simply
draw it to your attention and give it some thought and perhaps we
could discuss it before the conclusion of the matter.
MR. BUGG: Thank
you, your Honour.
HIS HONOUR: Yes,
Mr Perks?
MR. PERKS: May it
please your Honour.
Your Honour, at the close of
the afternoon session yesterday I dealt with the shots fired in the
direction of Constables Allen and Whittle. This occurred shortly
after their arrival at “Seascape” just after 2 p.m.
Page 180
At about 2.10 p.m. that day
Alison Smith, an ABC reporter left Hobart headed towards Port Arthur
with a camera crew after hearing of the shooting incident. While
travelling south Miss Smith made a series of telephone calls on her
mobile ‘phone to various businesses in the Port Arthur area to try
and glean some further information. Between 2.30 and 2.40 p.m. she
telephoned the Seascape number and Miss Smith gives this account of
what occurred: A male person answered the telephone and I said,
‘Hullo, hullo.’ . The male person was laughing hysterically and I
again said ‘Hullo’ and he then said, ‘Hullo.’. I then asked this
person if I had the right number for Seascape and he laughed again
and said, ‘Yes.’. I said, ‘Who am I talking to?’, he laughed again
and said, ‘Well, you can call me Jamie.’. I then said, ‘It’s the
ABC calling. What’s happening?’. He then replied, ‘What’s
happening? What’s happening is I’m having lots of fun.’. There was
a pause and he said, ‘But I really need a shower.’, another pause,
‘If you try to call me again I’ll shoot the hostage.’.
Page 181
Miss Smith could hear
breathing into the ‘phone for a few seconds and then it cut out. I
mentioned yesterday your Honour, Constable Paul Hyland, the Nubeena
Police Constable, who arrived at Seascape at approximately 2. p.m.
to see the BMW ablaze. At 3.08 p.m. Merrin Craig, the girlfriend of
Constable Paul Hyland, answered the telephone at the Nubeena Police
Station residence. The caller was a male person who spoke in a very
calm voice. Immediately after the call Miss Craig made notes of the
conversation that occurred. The first words spoken by the male
caller were “Am I speaking with the policeman’s - ?” Miss Craig
could not make out what was then said because the dog was barking.
She told the caller to “Excuse me a minute while I quieten the
dog.” After she had done that she heard the male caller say “Is
that your dogs barking?” and she replied, “Yes.” The male caller
then said, “Do you know where your husband is?” Miss Craig then
said, “Who is this?” The male person replied, “Jamie, you can just
call me Jamie.” There was a pause, he then said, “Do you know if he
is okay?” Another pause, and then the male caller said, “I know.”
When the caller said that Miss Craig expected the male person to say
“Do you wish to speak to him?”
Page 182
-in other words, Constable Hyland. And she believed at that
moment that her boyfriend, Paul, had been taken hostage by the male
person. She was aware of what had been happening at Port Arthur and
when the male caller said, “I know where Mr Hyland is.” She felt
like she’d collapse on the floor. She just stood there for a few
seconds trying to remain calm without saying anything. The male
then spoke again in a mocking tone, a different tone, saying,
“Playing with yourself, are we?” Miss Craig held on to the ‘phone
for a few seconds and then it was hung up. It is the Crown case
that the person who made the telephone call to Merrin Craig was the
accused, martin Bryant.
Your Honour, as the scale of
the massacre became known a massive police and emergency services
operation was swung into action. A police forward command post was
established at the Tasmanian Devil Park at Taranna and members of
the Tasmanian Special Operations Group were deployed to various
suitable observation points around the Seascape property.
Page 183
They were joined later that
night by members of the Victoria Police Special Operations Group.
During the afternoon of the
28th of April police managed to contact Bryant by
telephone and by about 4.30 p.m. Telstra had established a secure
telephone line permitting a member of the Police Hostage Negotiation
Team to communicate directly by telephone with Bryant. From that
time until about 9.30 p.m. when the telephone link failed, due
probably to Bryant leaving the Seascape portable telephone off its
charging cradle, the police hostage negotiator made contact with
Bryant on seven separate occasions. A transcript of the
conversations which were recorded is contained for your Honour’s
reference at pages 43 to 99 of volume 2 of the Crown
papers.
During the course of these
conversations with the hostage negotiator Bryant identified himself
as Jamie. Throughout he maintained the pretence that the hostages
were alive, claiming that he’d cooked them something to eat, made
cups of tea and given them orange juice.
Page 184
As has been indicated it is
the Crown case that Bryant had murdered Mr and Mrs Martin during the
morning of the 28th of April prior to the killings at the
Broad Arrow Café. It is highly likely that Bryant murdered Mr Pears
within a relatively short time of removing him from the BMW to the
Seascape dwelling. However, the contents of the hostage negotiation
tapes reveal that before killing him Bryant had obviously questioned
Mr Pears and obtained some personal details from him, including the
fact that he and Miss Hall were lawyers, that they were from
Melbourne, but that Mr Pears’ family lived in Tasmania.
Throughout the conversations
between the hostage negotiator and Bryant---
HIS HONOUR: Well
what makes it probable that he was killed at that stage Mr Perks, is
there forensic evidence to that effect or pathological evidence?
MR PERKS: No.
HIS HONOUR: Or is
it simply an estimate by the Crown?
MR PERKS: During
the course of the negotiations there is simply no other evidence
apart from Bryant’s word that any of the hostages were alive, no
other movement could be detected by Special Operations Group
officers.
HIS HONOUR: Well
it appears that Mr Pears was manacled and with the second set of
handcuffs he was tethered to some immovable object. I don’t know
there is any significance one way or the other but I must say from
what you tell me it doesn’t seem to me that there is any probability
one way or the other.
Page 185
---wish to urge it upon me
but –
MR PERKS: Well,
we can’t – really, only the accused Bryant knows when Mr Pears was
murdered. Your Honour, throughout the conversations between the
police negotiator and Bryant he consistently demanded to be provided
with a helicopter to take him to Hobart airport and then to be flown
to Adelaide, threatening to kill his hostages if these demands were
not complied with. He said that when the helicopter arrived he
intended to take Mrs Martin with him as a hostage and release the
others. The “Seascape” siege continued throughout the night and
apart from a lull between the hours of 4 a.m. and 6 a.m. on the 29th
April, Bryant continued to discharge firearms in various directions
from the upper floor of the residence. Several different weapons
were used and in excess of one hundred and fifty shots were fired.
At no stage did any of the SOG police return fire because of the
obvious risk to the hostages even though as I have said there was
never at any stage any evidence apart from Bryant’s comments to the
hostage negotiator that anyone was alive in “Seascape” apart from
Bryant himself.
At about 7.45 a.m. on the 29th
April, smoke was observed to be coming from an upper storey window
of the “Seascape” cottage on the side of the building facing Long
bay. Within minutes large flames were fairly visible in the window
and ammunition could be heard exploding as the fire progressed. By
7.55 a.m. the fire had taken hold at ground level. At that time an
SOG officer, position at approximately one hundred and seventy
metres to the west of the “Seascape” cottage observed movement at
the ground floor door and at about 8 a.m. several more shots were
heard. By 8.15 a.m. the majority of the cottage was ablaze apart
from the northern side and the south-west corner at ground level.
Page 186
At about 8.25 a.m. Bryant,
wearing dark clothing which appeared to be on fire in the back
region, was seen moving away from the south-west corner of the
cottage. He disappeared from sight of the observing SOG officers
for a short time before re-appearing, naked and staggering for a
little way before dropping to his knees. The police rapidly moved
in and placed Bryant under arrest and he and two escorting police
officers were subsequently conveyed to the Royal Hobart Hospital by
ambulance.
The fire at Seascape
continued to blaze out of control for some considerable time, fire
services were unable to approach because of the continuing danger
created by exploding ammunition. However, on the afternoon of the
29th of April a meticulous search of the burnt cottage
and surrounding outbuildings was commenced resulting in the location
within the ruins of the bodies of Mr and Mrs Martin and Mr Pears.
All three bodies were burnt beyond recognition, identification was
confirmed by means of dental records and DNA analysis.
In the case of Mr David
Martin an examination of the body in situ and at the subsequent post
mortem revealed a cloth gag tied around the neck and covering the
mouth and chin. There was appeared to be a gunshot entry wound just
beneath the right ear, the wound track running downwards through the
neck muscles into the chest. A second probable gunshot exit wound
was located 1.5 centimetres beneath the base of the neck. No
corresponding entry wound could be located due to severe tissue
destruction caused by the fire. Examination of the trachea showed
no evidence of carbon deposition and toxicology results confirmed a
conclusion that Mr Martin had died as a result of two gunshot wounds
inflicted by Bryant before the fire started. I refer your Honour to
Photographs number 983 and 997.
Page 187
Sorry, 983 and 997.
Your Honour, it is likely
that Bryant also stabbed Mr Martin. The results of DNA profiling
carried out on a blood stain on the knife recovered from the prince
bag Bryant left behind at the Broad Arrow Café indicates a high
probability that Mr Martin or Mr Martin’s blood was a contributor to
the stain.
In the case of Mrs Noelene
Martin her body had been severely incinerated by the fire. The
autopsy revealed five lacerations over the back of the head and an
associated depressed skull fracture, indicating blunt force trauma
of considerable force to the back of the head. A number of small
fragments of lead shrapnel were located in and around the left
shoulder area and chest cavity, indicating a gun shot injury to this
area, although injury caused by exploding ammunition during the
blaze could not be ruled out as the cause of that. Again toxicology
results confirmed the conclusion that Mrs Martin had died before the
fire, most probably as the result of the combined effect of severe
blunt force head injury and probably a gunshot wound to the chest
area. I refer your Honour to photographs 999 and 1008.
Your Honour, the body of Mr
Glen Pears was found with the hands secured behind the body with a
pair of Smith and Wesson handcuffs. A second pair of handcuffs was
linked to the handcuff on the left wrist, both sides of the second
handcuffs were closed. At the left front of the neck was located a
gunshot wound extending upwards from right to left, fracturing the
second cervical vertebra. There was a second gunshot in the right
abdominal wall, the bullet track perforating the small intestine,
stomach and left diaphragm, exiting the left lateral chest, the path
of the bullet being from right to left and upward. There was no
evidence of smoke inhalation,
Page 188
Confirming the conclusion
that Mr Pears had been shot dead prior to the fire. I refer your
Honour to photographs 1013, 1016 and 1018.
Page 189
Your Honour, the point two-two-three
calibre Colt AR15 semi-automatic rifle that Bryant had used to
murder most of his victims was recovered from the wreckage of the
Seascape cottage. I refer your Honour to photographs 655 and 656.
The FN rifle was discovered on the balcony roof of the small cottage
to the south of burnout main residence. That cottage is shown in
photograph 401 and 610.
HIS HONOUR: Where
do you say it was found?
MR PERKS: On the
roof of a small cottage to the south of the main residence. If I
refer your Honour to photograph 410, sorry 610, the firearm can be
seen on the roof of the balcony.
HIS HONOUR: Oh I
see, yes.
MR PERKS:
Approximately in the centre of the photograph. Yes, that’s it just
to the left corner. A large quantity of burnt and exploded
ammunition was also recovered from the ruins of the main residence.
On the twenty-ninth of April and the third of May, 1996, police
conducted an extensive search of Bryant’s house in Clare Street New
Town. In the hallway of the residence, lying open, were two plastic
gun cases, two gun cleaning kits, a third canvas gun case, together
with a point two-two-three calibre Australia automatic arms self-loading
rifle. Also recovered from this location was a large quantity of
point three-o-eight calibre and point two-two-three calibre
ammunition. I refer your Honour to photographs 448, 449, 450 and
451.
Page 190
In an upstairs bedroom, and
in one of the lower front rooms, secreted in the bottom of two
pianos were located two leather ammunition belts containing
respectively 2 308 calibre cartridges and thirty .223 calibre
cartridges together with a number of boxes of ammunition and two
magazines along with several other items – and I would refer your
Honour to photograph 471 which shows the inside of one piano, and
476 contents of the second piano. Your Honour, in all one thousand
four hundred and ninety one .308 calibre and two hundred and forty-six
.223 calibre live rounds of ammunition were seized from Bryant’s
home.
On Monday the 29th
April, 1996, at about 6.30 p.m., Detective Inspector John Warren,
the officer in charge of the CIB within the eastern police district,
unsuccessfully attempted to interview Bryant in his room at the
Royal Hobart Hospital. At that time, Bryant was sedated. Inspector
Warren returned the following morning. Bryant’s response to the
allegation that he was responsible for the shootings at Port Arthur
was that he didn’t know anything and he was a long way from Port
Arthur surfing. He also said “I’ve been unjustly accused”. Bryant
declined to participate in a video recorded interview and Inspector
Warren then formally arrested him for the murder of Kate Elizabeth
Scott.
On Monday the 6th
May, 1996, the Port Arthur Task Force was established under the
overall command of Superintendent Jack Johnston with Detective
Inspectors Warren and Ross Paine maintaining control of the ongoing
investigation into the events of the 28th April, 1996.
On the 4th July,
1996, after obtaining the permission of Bryant’s then defence lawyer,
Mr Gunson, Inspectors Warren and Paine conducted an interview with
Bryant at Risdon Prison.
Page 191
During the course of this
interview which was electronically recorded Bryant admitted
ownership of the Colt AR15 rifle. He further admitted to kidnapping
a male person and ordering him at gunpoint into the boot of the BMW
and to then driving the vehicle to Seascape and subsequently setting
it on fire. However, at all times throughout the interview Bryant
maintained the denial that he had ever entered the Port Arthur
Historic site on the 28th of April or that he had shot
any person. And his account of the kidnapping of Mr Pears and the
taking of Mr and Mrs Nixon’s BMW was at total variance to the facts
as we know them to be.
Your Honour, we propose to
play to the court an edited version of this interview, not because
the Crown relies on any part of it- because we consider that it is
important that your Honour gains a proper appreciation of the
accused’s ability to field questions from two experienced police
officers and secondly because his response and demeanour are
demonstrative of his complete lack of remorse.
Your Honour, if I could take
you to Volume 3 of the Crown papers a transcript of that
interview commences at page 19 and if I could refer your
Honour to the actual page numbers of the interview I will give and
indication as to which parts of the interview have been deleted for
the present purpose. Pages 1 to 9 are deleted in their
entirety, Page 10 is deleted save for the last few questions
and answers on that page, th interview will continue until page
17 when another deletion will occur at the last question and
answer, the whole of page 18 is deleted, the interview
recommences at is deleted, the interview recommences at page 19
and goes until page 22,page 23 is deleted and it
commences again at page 24 –
Page 192
And continues until page 31
and the last, the background voices and answer on that page are
deleted. Pages 32 to 35 are deleted as well as the first question
and answer on page 36.
HIS HONOUR: “Oh,
right generous” that’s deleted is it?
MR PERKS: Yes
your Honour.
HIS HONOUR: That
all?
MR PERKS: No.
The interview then continues.
HIS HONOUR:
That’s the only deletion on 36 though is it?
MR PERKS: Yes.
Interview then continues until page 39 when from “Warren” downwards
on that page there is the deletion. The whole of 40 is deleted and
that part of the transcript above “pain” is deleted on page 41. The
interview then continues until page 43 when all that part of the
interview below the word “Warren” is deleted as is page 44, 45, and
46, and the first half of 47, the interview recommencing below the
word “pain”. The interview then continues until page 74 whereas
that on page 34, that part of the interview between the words
“Warren” and “pain” are deleted. The interview then recommences and
continues until page 78 where there is a further deletion from where
it says “Inspector Warren leaves the room”. All of 79 is deleted,
all of 80 is deleted, all of 81. The interview then recommences at
page 82 through to 90.
Page 193
All of page 91 is deleted
save for the question which commences “Martin, going back to the
BMW” and the fourth answer on that page “Oh, it just came to me to
take - take this car – get hold of this car and take it for a drive,
it just felt good.”
HIS HONOUR: That
stays in, does it?
MR PERKS: That
stays in. The rest of that page is deleted, as is the next –
HIS HONOUR: So
the first question and answer goes out, does it?
MR PERKS: Yes.
HIS HONOUR: And
the third and the fifth following?
MR PERKS: Yes.
Page 92 is deleted through to page 98.
HIS HONOUR:
Deleted?
MR PERKS: Deleted.
And it recommences on page 98 at the word “Warren”. It continues
then through until 115 where there’s a further deletion from the
second “Warren” on that page and –
HIS HONOUR: To
the end of the page?
MR PERKS: Yes, to
the end of the page and the remainder of the interview is deleted
until we reach page 142.
HIS HONOUR: So
116 to 141 is out, is it?
MR PERKS: Yes.
It recommences at page 142 from “Paine” downwards so it’s just the
last two questions
Page 194
And answers on that page.
Continues through 143, 144 and finishes at the top of 145, question
“Not on this scale, no.” Answer “No, suppose it happens, doesn’t it.”
The rest of the interview is deleted from then onwards.
Your Honour, the quality of
the sound and vision on this interview are not particularly good,
there was some breakdown with the recording facility and the tape
has been reconstructed using the audio from an audio tape which was
recorded at the same time as the original video, so there is some
lack of synchronisation at times and the vision is not particularly
good but I would now seek your Honour’s leave to have this interview
played to the court. It goes for approximately two hours and at its
conclusion the learned Director of Public Prosecutions will complete
the Crown presentation of facts.
HIS HONOUR: Yes.
You’ve got no submissions, I take it Mr Avery, in view of the
editing and the substitution of some of the audio tape?
MR. AVERY: I was
not aware of it but I am not troubled by what’s proposed, your
Honour.
HIS HONOUR: Yes,
thank you. Is it all on the one tape, Mr Perks, or is there a gap?
MR PERKS: Yes.
RECORD OF INTERVIEW PLAYED
TO COURT
Q. Look Martin, you've
obviously got a, a, an interest in firearms as well?
A. Well, I have had an
interest in firearms.
Q. How many guns do you own?
A. I own umm, a shotgun and a
semi‑automatic and another semi‑automatic. Three altogether.
Q. Where'd you get those guns?
A. Oh, umm, I can't really
say, I haven't got my lawyer here so.
Q. Well we have spoken to
your lawyer and he knows that we're talking to you.
A, He knows, he knows.
Q. And aah, has no problem
with that so aah.
A. Yeah I got umm, one ooh,
off a gun dealer and also I got two of 'em umm, got two off...(inaudible)
Q. Did you?
A Yeah.
Q. We have got some of your
guns here.
A. Yeah.
Q. Mr Warren might hold them
up aah, and we'll perhaps talk about each one individually. That
might be the best way, better'n we.
A. It's big, isn't it. Is it
loaded?
WARREN
Q. No it's
PAINE
Q. No, it's not loaded.
WARREN
Q. Definitely not loaded
Martin I can tell you.
A. Yeah.
PAINE
Q. This is a Daiwoo 12 gauge
shotgun.
A. Ohh sorry, yeah I bought
that one off umm, Hill, do you know Terry Hill?
Q. You bought that one off
Terry Hill?
A. Yeah, yeah.
Q. That's, ahh, what's his
business name?
A. I bought, I paid three
thousand for it.
Q. Three thousand dollars?
A. Yeah. Guns and Ammo.
Q. Guns and Ammo.
Q. Three thousand dollars.
A. But I mean it's a rare
bird isn't it really.
PAINE
Q. Yeah very. How long ago
did you buy it?
A. I never, the funny thing
is, I never umm, got round to using it. Even though I bought it, but
it scared me the thought of it not working, and probably ricocheting
out.
Q. Yeah.
A. 'Cos ... (inaudible) ...
and
Q. Mmm
A. And so I never got to use
that one.
Q. So you've never used it at
all?
A. No, not that one but used
the other one.
Q. Martin, how long ago did
you get that one, can you remember?
A. Umm, that one. I bought
that one about four months ago.
Q. About four months ago?
A. Mmm.
Q. Thank you. You're right,
it's certainly a big and ahh, strange‑looking thing isn't it?
A. She's burnt that one.
Q. Now this is a ahh, point
two two three Remington.
A. It's a mess isn't it.
Q. Or a Colt AR15.
A. Yeah, Colt. Been burnt.
Q. Do you remember where you
bought that one?
A. Yeah Terry Hill, Terry
Hill.
Q. At Guns and Ammo?
A. Mmm.
Q. How long ago?
A. Month after, ahh before
that one, five months ... (inaudible)
Q. Could you speak up again?
A. Five months ago I bought
that one.
Q. Five months ago. And you
can remember how much you paid for that one?
A. Ahh, five grand with the
scope.
Q. Five.
A. Five thousand dollars with
the scope on it. It was gonna be four and a half thousand
without the scope but it was
five thousand with the scope and strap and also got, got some
ammunition thrown in.
Q. So that scope that's on it
now was on it when you purchased it?
A. Yes. But it was a
different color, it was darker.
WARREN
Q. Is that a ahh, special
scope?
A. Has it been burnt, must've
been burnt, yeah.
Q. Is that a special scope?
A. Yes, it was a Colt or a
special.
Q. Alright, what, what's
sort of special about it bearing in mind I don't know too much about
firearms Martin but?
A. Can I just look through it,
am I allowed to have a look through the scope. Yeah. That's a
special one for the gun itself.
Q. Right.
A. Especially made for it.
PAINE
Q. Did you have it especially
made for the gun or was it in stock and just came with the gun?
A. Terry Hill said umm,
there's extras with that AR15, and I said well I'd be interested in
some extras, but he said it'll cost you more. He said there's a
scope, little Colt scope that goes with it and he said a strap and
some ammo and he said it'll cost you five hundred dollars more.
Q. Ohh right.
A. So.
Q. Alright. How many rounds
of ammunition did you get with that, can you remember?
A. Ohh, about eighty rounds.
Eighty to a hundred rounds.
Q. Eighty to a hundred
rounds?
A. Mmm.
Q. Thank you.
WARREN
Q. Have you purchased any
more rounds umm, since you know you've bought the firearm itself?
A. Umm, yeah I've probably
purchased eight packets of, be twenty rounds in each.
Q. And that's since you've
bought this?
A. Since I've bought it.
Q. From Terry.
A. Terry, yeah. Terry's, have
you met Terry before?
Q. Yes, know Terry.
A. Still in business is he?
Q. Yes, he's still in
business.
A. Yeah ... (inaudible).
Q. Now the next one, why do
you ask that ahh, Martin, if Terry's still in business?
A. Ahh, 'cos I didn't have a
licence. I had no gun licence.
Q. Sorry I didn't hear you.
A. I had no gun licence and I
thought.
Q. So, just let me get this
straight. You didn't have a gun licence?
A. No.
Q. Did you make out you had a
gun licence when you purchased them?
A. No, I never discussed it,
I never, I just said I had the cash on me and he said that's alright.
Q. Did he ever, did he ask to
see if you had a gun licence?
A. No, never.
Q. Do you know Terry Hill
like as a friend?
A. No, not really. Except
when we were living, umm, he, I can still remember when you were
young, small and he said you used to come in here and just look
around after you'd finished school, I said yeah, so I knew him.
Q. So Guns and Ammo's been in
New Town Road for
A. For a while.
Q. Quite a long time?
A. Yeah.
Q. Ohh right I see.
A. I think they were further
down the road near the K‑Mart at one stage.
Q. No I don't, of course I
don't know anything about guns so I wouldn't know.
A. You, you don't own any?
Q. No, I don't own any
firearms.
Q. Mr Paine and myself are
about the same, we've got really no, well limited knowledge of
firearms.
A. Yeah.
Q. Don't like them personally.
A. Yeah.
PAINE
Q. Did you always deal with
Terry when you went to the Guns and Ammo or did you deal with the
staff as well?
A. Ohh there's only that
other person, other man there, he dealt, he passed me the bullets, I
used to just give Terry the money.
Q. But when you got the guns,
you always dealt with Terry?
A. Ohh yes.
Q. Ohh right.
A. I bought some out of the
paper.
Q. Yeah. Alright, the next
one we'll look at is a ahh, a three 0 eight ahh, calibre, FN weapon.
A. Mmm.
Q. Do you remember where?
A. I've never seen that one
before. Never. That's not one of mine.
Q. You sure?
A. No definitely not, never
seen that in my life. It's nice though.
WARREN
Q. Have you ever had a three
0 eight?
A. Three 0 eight, yes. Had a
three 0 eight.
Q. Mmm.
A. That was one Terry Hill
was repairing.
Q. I’ll just ask Mr Warren to
pick up a scope we have there on the floor because that might be
causing the confusion. I believe that that scope was probably fitted
to that gun before we got it. Now does that.
A. No I've never seen that
scope before in my life. Never. No. No I've never. Never seen that
scope in my life.
Q. Now you say you've never
seen that three 0 eight before but you did in fact own a three 0
eight?
A. Yeah, definitely.
Q. Right.
A. ... (inaudible) ..., AR10.
Q. Just a sec, before I go
onto that. Where did you get the three 0 eight that?
A. I bought the three 0 eight
about, this is going back six, seven years now.
Q. Yes.
A. Out of a paper, out of the
Mercury.
Q. Out of the Mercury?
A. Yes.
Q. Right. And where did you
buy three 0 eight ammunition?
A. Umm, I managed to get that,
a load of it, about six, seven boxes with twenty in each box, ohh
about four or five years ago but I had it stored away, been stored
away, I never got to use that and, and it's only recently that I got
to use it but, but they were the wrong bullets. So I went over to
Terry Hill for the first time for years and he said you're using the
wrong bullets Martin, you should be using the military hard, hard
top bullets. He said the only ones I've got in stock, I've got a
case of three thousand rounds and he said it'll cost you nine, think
it was nine hundred and thirty dollars. And I said I'll think about
it, I'll get back to you on Monday. So it was on the Friday, I
phoned him up a few hours later, I said I've got the money, I'll
come over and buy the rounds.
Q. So you bought three
thousand?
A. Rounds. I couldn't buy
anything smaller off him because that's all he had at the time and.
Q. And when was that?
A. That's going back five
months.
Q. Ohh right.
A. Four or five months ago.
Q. And is that ammunition.
A. That.
Q. Difficult to buy. You
can't can you buy it sort off any gun dealer?
A. Umm, yeah you can buy it,
I think you can buy hard top from other gun dealers but it's
fairly hard to get hold of.
Q. Alright, we'll have a look
at the last gun which is on the floor. And this is a point two two
three calibre self‑loading rifle.
A. Yep. I've never seen that
one before. Mmm.
Q. Well we recovered that
one.
A. It's nice isn't it.
Q. Ahh, from ahh, I believe,
ahh, from a repairer, being repaired.
A. Mmm.
Q. Does that ring any bells?
A. Repairer. I've.
Q. Have you got any guns at
the moment or did you have any guns.
A. That one was repaired for
me, that other one, the AR10. That, I took over to Terry Hill.
Q. Ohh, so I've got them
confused.
A. Yeah.
Q. That one was okay but the
AR10 you had over at Terry Hill's being repaired?
A. Yes. Yes.
Q. Right, I see.
A. Yes.
Q. Alright. Where did you
ahh, develop your love of umm, using firearms?
A. Umm, ohh I just, just
loved the thought of owning them.
WARREN
Q. How long have you owned
firearms for Martin?
A. Umm, going back six, seven
years. This was the first one I bought, the one out the paper.
Q. Right. So.
A. I've owned air rifles when
I was younger.
Q. Did your Dad sort of
encourage you to ahh, use firearms?
A. No, no, definitely not.
Q. He was against it was he?
A. Mmm.
Q. Did Mum know you had those
guns?
A. Yeah my, ahh, Mum never
knew, no. But the funny thing is umm, my Dad said if, when we used
to go over to Richmond, he used to point it out, he said if you ever
go over there Martin, to that prison anytime, I'm not gonna ever
come and visit you, he said. So stay away, stay out of trouble. This,
I mean, it's wrong isn't it. I shouldn't be in here.
WARREN
Q. You shouldn't be in here?
A. No.
Q. Why do you say that Martin?
A. There you go, I don't know
PAINE
Q. So Martin.
A, Shouldn't be here.
Q. Where did you use these
guns, did you practise shooting?
A. I only used them about
four or five times altogether.
WARREN
Q. How many rounds do you
reckon you would've practised, you know, any idea?
A. Altogether, probably,
probably twenty or thirty rounds out of that AR10 and probably
twenty rounds out of that
AR15 and that's about it, mmm.
Q. Did you ever go shooting
with anyone else in the bush or anything like that?
A. No one.
Q. Just on, just on your own?
A. Mmm.
Q. What sort of car do you
have Martin?
A. Ahh, I own a Volvo, a
seventy nine model Volvo and a Honda Civic.
Q. Good cars?
A. Mmm. Great cars.
Q. How long have you owned
the Volvo?
A. Ohh four years I've owned
the Volvo for, mmm.
Q. Any ahh, specific reason
or preference you chose a Volvo?
A. Ohh my Dad owned Volvos.
Q. Mmm.
A. That's probably why.
Q. Right.
A. They're all good cars.
PAINE
Q. What about the Honda?
A. That was a great little
car.
Q. Where'd you get the Honda
from?
A. Ahh, that was inherited.
Q. Ohh right.
A. Mmm.
Q. And where did you get the
Volvo from?
A. That was bought privately
out of the paper.
Q. So you went and, you
answered the ad?
A. Umm, answered the ad, yes.
Q. And went and saw it?
A. Yeah and bought it.
Q. Hey Martin, how come you
never got about, got around to getting a driver's licence?
A. Ahh, I didn't think I'd
ever pass or get through the courses 'cos I'm not that bright.
Q. Did you ever get ahh,
stopped by the police or anything like that?
A. Well on the way back from
Kingston I did, one day with the Honda Civic for, for not
having it registered. And
then he's asked for some ID, I said I haven't got, he asked for ID.
He said what about your driver's licence. I said I haven't got a
driver's licence. Ohh he said, that makes things difficult. So then
like I didn't appear in court 'cos I didn't have to 'cos I got a
fine of about two hundred dollars.
Q. Right. So you, you, how
old are you now?
A. So umm, how old am I,
twenty nine.
Q. And when did you start
driving?
A. Umm, I started, what would
it be, twelve months or so ago.
Q. Right, So you've had a
pretty good run?
A, Mmm. Pretty good run.
Q. You've only been driving
twelve months?
A. Ohh over twelve months,
probably two years.
PAINE
Q. And you were living in
Clare Street?
A. Yeah. Lived there for
quite a while now. Mmm. Mmm.
Q. Just going back to your
diving ahh, for a minute Martin ahh, you say you did have lessons
with driving or did someone train you?
A. Umm, yes I did.
Q. Right.
A. Paddy. Paddy instructor.
Q. Now you mention you were
diving ahh, when you went overseas there?
A. Yeah, in Sweden. A couple
of times.
Q. In Sweden.
A. 'Cos they speak English
the Swedes.
Q. Right.
A. Mmm.
Q. Where did you do most of
your diving?
A. Umm, ohh mainly down Port
Arthur.
Q. Ohh right.
A. 'Cos my parents owned a
shack down there.
Q. Ohh, whereabouts?
A. Safety Cove.
Q. Ohh right.
A. Mmm.
Q. Was it good down there?
A. Yeah great, great down
there. Catch a crayfish and have a ... (inaudible)
Q. Martin, just be, while,
before I forget it, can we have a look at the three 0 eight again
please Mr Warren. The one
with the scope. I'd like you to have a closer look at, look at it.
WARREN
Q. If I hold it up with the
scope, you might.
Q. If Mr Warren holds it like
that.
A. Yeah. No, no, I've never
seen that one before. Never.
Q. Thanks Mr Warren.
A. ... (inaudible). I wish I
had that AR15 in here, then I could probably get out. Jump part of
the window, I could probably
jump through the window and escape because of this. I don't
like being locked up, it's
not very nice.
Q. No.
A. ... (inaudible)
Q. I’m not surprised, that'd
be a fairly common reaction I suppose.
A. Yeah. Yep.
Q. Martin, do you remember
the twenty eighth of April, Sunday the twenty eighth of April this
year?
A. Aah, no I don't. Was that
the day I suppose everyone's talking about. Ohh, about the drama of
me being in Royal Hobart Hospital, I think.
Q. That was when you were in
the hospital on.
A. On the.
Q. Twenty ninth.
A. Mmm, twenty ninth. Sunday
the twenty eighth. Well was that when I was in here or.
Q. Perhaps if I make it
easier. Do you recall going to ahh, your mother's place on Saturday
night with Petra and having a meal?
A. Ohh yes. Mmm.
Q. How'd the night go?
A. Ohh. That was the day
before I got burnt I think. Ohh, the night went well. Went really
well.
Q. Have a couple of drinks?
A. Couple of drinks, yeah.
Couple of quiet drinks.
Q. Did you drive back to your
place?
A. Yeah. Spent the night at
my place, yeah.
Q. Who drove, you or Petra?
A. Umm, I drove. I think I
had the Honda Civic.
Q. You had the Civic did you?
A. Yeah.
Q. Left the Volvo at home?
A. Yeah, left Petra's car at
home, yeah.
Q. Ohh right.
A. Left, the Volvo wasn't, I
didn't use the Volvo very much, once I sold the boat, the boat. You
see that's how I got, I had an inflatable Zodiac. Did you hear, have
you heard. And that's how I paid for my AR15s 'cos I got about four,
a bit over four thousand dollars for my.
Q. So.
A. ... (inaudible) ... motor
because it's brand, it's brand new and I paid nearly nine thousand
for it, and it was only three months old. I almost gave it away.
Q. Why'd you sell it?
A. I got sick of diving,
scuba diving and I nearly lost me life through a boating mishap with
my other girlfriend. I was down past the South East Cape.
Q. Right.
A. And it was just, it was
just luck that a fishing boat came along otherwise I wouldn't be
here, me girl, me girlfriend wouldn't be, definitely because she
didn't have a wetsuit on.
Q. What happened there?
A. The motor actually stopped.
Went through one tank of petrol, put the other tank on the hose and
one, it was the connection inside the motor had fallen off. I kept
on trying to start it, it just wouldn't start, it wasn't until a
fishing boat picked us up that actually ... (inaudible) ... such and
such was off. And it was ... (inaudible) ... connective something
and it was nearly dark and we actually had a couple of flares and
that helped alright. That saved us.
Q. That would certainly.
A. I would've been dead. I
would've had a, ahh my girlfriend would've been dead the next
morning.
Q. That would certainly turn
off anyone, anyone off boating I'd reckon Martin.
A. Yeah I'll say.
Q. So you're.
A. And I was starting to get
cold feet, my feet were starting to freeze up and, I was shaking, my
girlfriend was shaking.
WARREN
Q. Weather fairly rough was
it or?
A. It wasn't that rough, no,
but it was cold, it was cold.
Q. How far.
A.
It was right up near Hen Island, past South East Cape there, 'cos we
launched the boat at Research Bay, went right round there 'cos the
weather was good you see and the weather was, we were just coming
back, halfway back and it stopped ... (inaudible) ...
WARREN
Q. How big was your, your
boat?
A. Eleven foot six Zodiac,
with a twenty five horsepower Evinrude on it.
Q. Mmm.
A. Brand new it was.
PAINE
Q. Do you go surfing as well?
A. Yeah, surfing.
Q. Do you?
A. Mmm. I've been once.
Q. Where's your favorite
spots?
A. I've been once or twice
now. Well usually at Roaring Beach.
Q. Ohh. A, I've, I went
surfing not so long ago round there.
Q. What was it like?
A. Good.
Q. Be cold this time of year.
A. Mmm.
WARREN
Q. Wear a wetsuit?
A. But I forgot to wax me
board up that was the only damn trouble.
Q. What difference does that
make?
A. It's difficult if you
don't wax your board. You can't really stand up on it.
WARREN
Q. You can't get, you can't
get a grip.
A. Yeah. I done a bit of
bodyboarding instead on it. Mmm.
Q. Well do you own a wetsuit?
A. Do I, ohh an old one
upstairs but I never use it 'cos it, just take all me clothes off
and.
Q. Take all your clothes off?
A. And just go in there. I
was only in the water for about twenty minutes.
Q. Good God, it'd be
freezing.
A. Mmm. The funny thing is, I
forgot to take a towel with me so, mmm, I was looking for a towel in
the Volvo but I couldn't find one.
WARREN
Q. When, when are you sort of
talking about now Martin, when's this latest incident, your surfing?
This is the last time you went.
A. Last time I went, yeah.
Q. Right.
A. Mmm. Before I came into
the prison.
Q. Have you ever had a
wetsuit or?
A. Ever had a wetsuit.
Q. (inaudible)
A. Ohh yes, I've owned
wetsuits.
Q. Yeah.
A. Sold my other wetsuit not
so long ago, me new wetsuit.
PAINE
Q. Where do you get your
money to umm, you know buy things like boats?
A. Where do I get my money
from, it was left for me through an estate.
Q. Ohh right, I see.
A. Dad left this money and,
yeah, mmm.
Q. Do you handle your money
carefully?
A. Pretty carefully, goes
pretty quickly. I like spending money.
Q. Do you?
A. Mmm. I'd rather spend it
than keep it.
Q. You've certainly spent it
on those overseas trips.
A. Yeah, spent a little bit.
Unfortunately I couldn't go on any more otherwise I would've gone
away in May. I was informed nicely that I wasn't able to go away for
a long time, for about twelve months, which upset me greatly.
WARREN
Q. Why's that?
A. 'Cos maybe once or twice a
year because I only have to accumulate and, and just couldn't go
away on any more trips for a while, but that upset me a lot, yeah.
PAINE
Q. Martin, if you'd excuse
me, I'd just like to leave the room for a second.
A. Alright.
Q. If that's okay with you,
Mr Warren will be here with you and I'll ... (inaudible) ..
Inspector PAINE leaves the
room.
Q. When you say it upset you,
what umm
A. Mmm, just threw me back
'cos I didn't have anything to do.
Q. Mmm. Right. Who, who
actually told you that? A, I wasn't able to go on a trip probably
for six months and that was ohh, the people, Perpetual Trustees, a
lady that looks after my money.
Q. Right. Did you have a
regular contact with her?
A. Yeah, we phone up whenever
I, I needed something to talk about. Ohh, here's me court case is
it?
Q. Gees I'll say. Hey Martin,
what, sorry I keep going back to these guns. What did you, ahh, you
know you said you went a couple of time to practise shooting, where
did you go?
A. I used to only go to one
spot, between Dunnalley and Eagle Hawk Neck, there's a turnoff
there, just past Mundunna there on the left, there's a road, a
couple of roads as you just go.
Q. So.
A. To shoot at trees, see if
the guns like a.
Q. Just let me get this
straight, you go through Dunalley?
A. Yes.
Q. Towards Eagle Hawk Neck?
A. Through Mundunna, so you
go past Mundunna, between Mundunna and Eagle Hawk Neck, there's a
forestry place there.
Q. Ohh yeah.
A. A couple of roads.
Q. And just turn up to the
left and.
A. Used shoot a few tin cans.
Q. Ohh right. Bottles?
A. Bottles, no not bottles
'cos they break and they could injure animals and.
Q. Did you ever make.
A. I never used to shoot the
animals.
Q. Sorry about that. Did you
ever make your own targets to shoot?
A. I had a couple of targets
on boards.
Q. Did you.
A. Cardboard usually.
Q. And how many times would
you have shot 'em?
A. Ohh four or five times,
then I used to put the gun back in the car and used to leave and go
home.
Q. And did you take the
targets with you?
A. Yes.
Q. Ohh right.
A. But they were just
home‑made targets out of cardboard.
Q. Yeah. What did they, what
did you draw on them?
A. I used to draw circles.
Q. Circles. And umm, when you
practised your shooting, did you, where did you hold the gun?
A. Up like this, on my left.
Q. So you're left‑handed?
A. Umm, I write with this
hand.
Q. Ohh that's right, sorry,
yeah.
A. I, but this is me finger.
Q. So if you held a gun, you
would pull the trigger with your, a finger on your left hand?
A. Yeah that's right, yeah.
Q. Ohh right. And aah, did
you ever practise shooting from the hip?
A. No never.
Q. Never?
A. Uhh uhh.
Q. Ohh right. And did you get
pretty accurate?
A. No not really 'cos like I
said I only used that AR15 about twenty rounds in that one and, and
not many round, more rounds in the AR10. So, and I, I never got
round to using the shotgun because of it ... (inaudible) ... I heard
from Terry that it had a bit of power to it.
WARREN
Q. Mmm.
A. So.
PAINE
Q. Just getting back to Terry
Hill, where, did you think it was strange that he didn't ask you for
a gun licence?
A. Yeah, he never got round
to asking me for one, I was gonna let him know though.
Q. Did you think flashing the
cash in front of him?
A. Ohh yeah, I was gonna let
him know I had one if he asked.
Q. Yeah.
A. Maybe because he knew me
when I was that small he knew me and.
Q. So he saw you grow up
basically coming into the shop.
A. A couple of times, yeah.
Q. Over several years?
A. Yeah.
Q. Yeah. Ohh, alright.
A. I s'pose it helps you,
when you got the money it helps. People pass things over if you've
got the cash.
WARREN
Q. If you've got the cash.
What was the set‑up when you wanted, wanted cash for something
Martin, did ahh, you have to contact someone at the?
A. Ahh, yeah, I used to go
intlo the account once every three months for money.
Q. Your accountant?
A. No account, my bank
account every three months.
Q. Ohh right.
A. It's managed by Perpetual
Trustees.
Q. Right. So you just had to
go and see them and ahh, tell them what you wanted the money for?
A. Only see them before the
three months, if I've spent that money, had to, I had to live on
within three months I would go in and see them.
Q. Mmm.
A. If I needed a, the boat
fixed, they help me with the boat or an overseas trip but
unfortunately I went through the money a bit too quick and.
Q. Did you, have you got a
credit card?
A. Never.
Q. Never owned a credit card?
A. No, never.
Q. Ohh, you wanna get one,
they're the best things out.
A. Do you reckon I could've
gone for extra trips and they wouldn've known?
Q. Ohh well you've eventually
got to pay.
A. (inaudible)
Q. The money back but ahh.
A. Ohh would've, would've
been more of a benefit for me.
PAINE
Q. Did you have a cheque
book?
A. Never. No.
Q. So only ever used cash?
A. I only used cash.
Q. So when you bought the
guns from Terry Hill, you paid in cash, was that correct?
A. Yeah, just money in an
envelope, I said here's the money Terry. I didn't, didn't bother
asking him to count it or not, he just trusted, just trusted each
other and passed, passed me over the gun.
Q. Did he ever give you
receipts?
A. No, I didn't want any.
Never asked for one.
Q. And did, were you ever
served by his wife?
A. No, last time I saw his
wife was when I was about this high, when I was about sixteen,
seventeen.
Q. Ohh right. Ohh.
A. But she's a nice lady,
have you met?
Q. No I haven't met her. And
what's your favorite drink, you know, with your meals?
A. I like the old can of
Guinness.
Q. Guinness?
A. Yeah.
WARREN
Q. There's a man after my own
heart.
A. Are you a Guinness man?
Q. I'm a Guinness man, yeah.
A. Where's a can of Guinness,
I'd love a can of Guinness.
PAINE
Q. What about wine, like wine
or?
A. Yeah wine's good.
Q. Australian wines or?
A. Yeah, Aussie wine, red
wine. I can't, don't want to talk about this, alcohol.
Q. Ohh right, we won't.
A. It's getting to me.
Q. Aah. Ahh.
A. Wish you could get me out
of this place, or even if you could let me mix outside with the
other prisoners, be good.
Q. Do you know why you're
here?
A. Know why I'm here, well
Inspector Warren was saying in the Royal that I was on one murder
count.
WARREN
Q. That's correct.
A. Is that correct.
Q. Mmm.
A. God, I wish that wasn't
the case.
Q. We all do Martin.
A. Mmm.
Q. We all wish that.
A. There you go.
PAINE
Q. Martin, I'm gonna just get
Mr Warren to pick up that ahh, sports bag on the floor and show it
to you.
A. It's a nice one isn't it.
Q. It's a very nice bag.
A. Mmm.
Q. Seen that before?
A. No never, never seen that
before.
Q. Well I believe you.
A. I've got a couple of
sports bags. I've got a rubber black one upstairs at Clare Street I
bought ...(inaudible) ...
Q. Well I believe you bought
that in Myers or Fitzgeralds or somewhere in town, accompanied with
a, a young women earlier this year.
A. Earlier with a young
woman, I don't recall buying that.
Q. You sure?
A. No, not at all. If I said
that that was mine, I'd say that was mine but.
Q. Ohh.
A. No.
WARREN
Q. have you ever had a bag, a
bag like that?
A. Bag like that, I've got a
couple of sports bags. I've got a red one, I can't, ohh a bit like
that and a blue one, just all blue at home but.
Q. Do you recognise the brand
name there?
A. No.
Q. It's a Prince brand.
A. Ugh ugh, no.
Q. Because it's funny, you
said, did you say you liked playing tennis?
A. Tennis. I haven't played
tennis for about 12 months or so with Mum.
Q. Yeah. 'Cos Prince make,
principally make tennis equipment, shoes and gear and racquets and.
A. Mmmm.
Q. Did you know that?
A. No I didn't.
Q. Ohh.
A. No.
Q. Thanks Mr Warren.
A. Ohh with my girlfriend you
reckon I bought that.
Q. I'm sorry, I didn't hear
you.
A, You, you said that you
think I bought that bag in Myers. You said the.
Q. I said I believe you
bought that in Myers or Fitzgeralds in the company of ahh, a young
woman, yeah. And you said.
A. No.
Q. Do you think you might,
you could have done and you just can't remember or you?
A. No I don't recall having a
sports bag, at the last time I bought a sports bag was, like this
one I bought in Franklin.
PAINE
Q. Well I'm sorry I honestly
believe you bought that bag.
A. Mmm.
Q. Martin. I'm sorry about
that.
A. That's alright.
Q. I believe you bought that
bag.
A. That's okay. Mmm.
WARREN
Q. Martin ahh, Mr Paine asked
you before about you recalling the night you had dinner at your
mother's and, what happened that night when you came back home?
A. Oh well I forgot what I
had that night for tea at my Mum's but I think we went out to the
pictures, I'm not quite sure. But we went out, that's right went
out, sat, went out dancing and stuff. Went to the Cadillac Club for
a couple of hours because Petra is my girlfriend umm, her cousin
used to go there.
PAINE
Q. Could you speak up Martin,
I can't hear, I'm sorry.
A. Ohh we went to the
Cadillac Club that night with me girlfriend.
Q. After dinner at Mum's?
A. Mmm. Went back, I think we
went back to my place for a while and then went out and umm, but her
cousin wasn't there but we spent a few hours there. Then we went to
Hadleys, had a drink at Hadleys and left and went home.
Q. What time would you have
got home?
A. Ohh must've been about
eleven, twelve o'clock that night.
Q. Did you set the alarm
clock when you went to bed?
A. Umm, no, never usually set
the alarm clock.
Q. What time did you wake up?
A. Ahh about seven, eight
o'clock.
Q. What did you do then?
A. We had breakfast like we
used to do and then, ohh have, had a shower together. Had breakfast,
then I said to Petra, well I'll see you on Monday. She usually goes
home on the Sunday a lot, likes to go home to her parents on the
Sunday and just, 'cos she doesn't get to see her parents very much.
Q. And what'd you do?
A. I went surfing. It got me
surfboard and went surfing.
Q. Did, what time did you
leave the house, can you remember?
A. Ahh, must've been about
eleven o'clock I reckon.
Q. Eleven o'clock?
A. Yeah, when the sun came up
and it got a bit warm. Mmm.
Q. And whereabouts did you go
mate?
A. Whereabouts did I go, I
went round to Roaring Beach, surfing.
PAINE
Q. Do you remember setting
the alarm when you left home?
A. No.
Q. Sure?
A. No, definitely not. Ohh
right.
A. Last time I set the alarm
was when I went away to Melbourne. Mmm.
Q. And did you travel
straight to Roaring Beach?
A. I travelled straight to
Roaring Beach, yeah.
Q. Stop anywhere on the way?
A. I think I stoped and got a
cappuccino, yes, at Sorell. Mmm.
Q. You didn't stop at Midway
Point?
A. Midway Point, no.
Q. Get petrol anywhere?
A. Get petrol, no, didn't
need to get petrol. 'Cos I got some petrol a couple of days
beforehand. Filled up the tank and, mmm.
Q. Buy any tomato sauce on
the way down?
A. No, no tomato sauce.
Q. Ohh.
A. Why would I want tomato
sauce for.
Q. Well I don't know.
A. Things, funny things. I
only, I only as you know the things I know, apart from that, that's
all I can let you know. Mmm.
Q. Do you know.
A. If I can help anymore.
Q. Do you know David and
Sally Martin?
A. Ohh, yeah, I knew them
well.
Q. You knew them well?
A. When I was about, when I
was about that high.
Q. When did you last see
them?
A. I saw them I reckon back
in 1991 when I saw them in town. No it wasn't, they were going to
Calvary Hospital to visit some friends.
Q. I don't believe that.
A. Calvary Hospital to visit
friends.
Q. I don't believe that.
A. Why?
Q. I believe.
A. I went down, I went to
their, their house on the Sunday but they weren't home. You said
last time you saw, saw them. You didn't say, did you go and see
them? I went down to see them but they weren't there.
Q. Ohh sorry. Ive got
confused.
A. You got them confused,
ohh. Yeah I knocked on the door and there was no one at the guest
house.
Q. And that's on the Sunday
you went surfing?
A. Yes. 'Cos I went down 'cos
apparently over the years they were renovating the guest house and I
thought I'll call in and see them and have a chat to them.
Q. So what you're saying is
you wouldn't have ever spoken to them for some years?
A. Yeah, that's right.
Would've been good to have seen them but there was no answer at the
door.
Q. What about ahh, the ahh
Martin boys, have you seen them recently?
A. Yes, I was with me
girlfriend, must've been ahh, eight months ago. We were over at
Eastlands doing a bit if shopping and Glen, Glen Martin, that's one
of the sons, we went back and had a, I think it was a cappucinno,
ice coffee that day at the cafeteria.
Q. Did you talk to.
A. Sorry I can't talk very
well 'cos we I haven't had a drink or anything to eat today and I'm
a bit worked up.
Q. Would you like a drink of
water or something?
A. Yeah or a cup of tea would
be nice.
Q. I'll see if I can arrange
it.
A. Alright, thanks. Then I'll
be up like this talking to yous. Yeah, what a lovely place at the
Martins.
WARREN
Q. Yeah. What sort of
memories have you got of that place?
A. I've been informed by some
security guards here that it's been burnt down to the ground ...
inaudible ... been burnt down to the ground. Is that so?
Q. Well look, just wait till
Mr Paine gets a drink for you and just have a rest for a few minutes
okay.
A. Mmm. Am I allowed to have.
Q. Feeling alright mate?
A. Ohh yeah, I'm feeling
good.
Q. Are you?
A. Yeah. Am I allowed to have
a read of them?
Q. No, they're ours mate.
A. They're yours, yeah.
Q. I don't think you'd ahh,
find any great interest there mate.
Inspector PAINE re-enters the
room.
PAINE
Q. I'm not a very good
waiter.
A. Ugh, ugh.
Q. Do you have to go past
Seascape to get to Roaring Beach?
A. You can and you can't; you
can go out past Seascape to get to Roaring Beach or you can go, cut,
cut off at Taranna and go around to Roaring Beach.
Q. So which way did you go
that day?
A. I cut up at Taranna, went
around Roaring Beach. I ... inaudible ... the circle around the,
past Port Arthur.
Q. Could you speak up Martin
sorry.
A. I actually cut off at
Taranna to go round to Roaring Beach that day.
Q. But you didn't say that
you called in at the ahh, ahh, Seascape?
A. Seascape I did, that was
after I went surfing.
Q. After you went surfing?
A. Yes.
Q. Ohh right, sorry. Where'd
you park your car at Roaring Beach?
A. Umm, at the car park
there. It's small.
Q. I don't know the area.
A. Ohh there's a small
carpark at Roaring Beach and it takes about five minutes to walk
into the surf.
Q. So it's quite a long walk
for the carpark to the beach?
A. Yeah, about a five minute
walk.
Q. Ohh right.
A. Mmm.
Q. What color's your
surfboard?
A. It's umm, all different
colors, it's got a bit of purple, it's got a bit of white and, it's
a Stranger surfboard.
Q. Did anyone else see you at
Roaring Beach?
A. There were two other
people bodysurfing on that day.
Q. Did they have wetsuits on?
A. They did, short ones.
Q. Short ones.
Q. Did, ahh, were you talking
to them at all?
A. No.
Q. They saw you?
A. I reckon they did but they
were, they was, they were that, oh a fair distance away.
Q. Mmm.
A. And if I was surfing at
one end, they'll surf at the other.
Q. What were you wearing umm,
before you obviously took your clothes off to go surfing?
A. I was wearing a tracksuit.
And ahh, I was wearing a whole tracksuit but the other half of the
tracksuit was blue. Mmm and a jacket.
Q. Did you walk from your car
to the beach with that on?
A. Ohh no, I had umm, ohh
with my clothes.
Q. Yeah.
A. On? No I had to wait
around for a while because I forgot the towel and I was shivering a
bit and I put my clothes on, they were a bit wet.
Q. So you put them back on at
the beach?
A. Mmm.
Q. Ohh right.
A. Had to stand for about
five or ten minutes till I dried off.
Q. And after you left Roaring
Beach, where'd you go then?
A. Umm, dunno, I stopped ahh,
at umm, Nubeena and got a coffee and I think I got a toasted
sandwich too.
Q. Do you remember where that
was?
A. I was at the shop there,
it's a little shop near the school.
Q. A little shop near the
school you got a toasted sandwich and a cup of coffee?
A. Yeah.
Q. What'd you do then?
A. Then I left and drove
around past Port Arthur and went and, went in to see the Martins.
Mmm.
Q. Was there anyone else
there when you ahh, called in?
A. No, I umm, unfortunately I
held up a car, I took ahh, I saw this car I liked and got umm, held
up the person in the car and kidnapped him.
Q. Kidnapped him?
A. Mmm.
Q. When you say held up.
A. That was actually past the
Martins. Ohh actually, that was on the corner of Palmers Lookout. No
I didn't really, didn't know whether I'd let you know you're not
gonna let anyone else know. You're not gonna let anyone else know.
Yeah, no, I stopped the car, I was in the Volvo, I stopped the car
on the corner, there was a nice looking BMW and I asked them to get
out of the car but the ...
Q. How many people were in it?
A. There was a child in there,
in the back and a lady and the man. The man, I got him out the car,
I had my gun with me and I said I want to take your car, so I took
his car. I got, then his wife or girlfriend got into the Volvo with
the child and I left, I drove off.
Q. So you drove away in the
BMW?
A. Yes.
Q. With another male person?
A. Yeah, he was in the boot.
I put him in the boot of the car.
Q. How did he get into the
boot?
A. Bit like the Ben Morrison
case isn't it?
Q. You remember the Ben
Morrison case do you?
A. Yeah.
Q. Yeah, what, what.
A. Umm.
Q. What do you remember about
it?
A. I remember I saw you on
television and I saw you that day at the Royal. I thought you were
connected with Ben Morrison. Yeah I thought that was a rather
dramatic.
Q. Mmm.
A. 'Cos Radloff's in here.
PAINE
Q. Who's in here?
A. Radloff, the man that was
involved in the Ben Morrison.
Q. Have you ever met him have
you?
A. No, never.
Q. No.
A. Only heard about him but.
Did you ever meet him?
Q. No, I never actually met
him, no.
A. Ohh.
PAINE
Q. Have you met him?
WARREN
Q. But I know him.
A. You know him, yeah.
Q. Yeah.
PAINE
Q. Have you met him Martin?
A. No, I I've only read
things about him in the paper, mmm.
WARREN
Q. What sort of things ah, do
you think about him?
A. I don't know. Funny guy. I
think things went wrong with him.
Q. Mmm.
A. Like they did with me and.
PAINE
Q. Back, just.
A. And later on you'll think
twice why did, why did you do these things and, yeah.
Q. Martin, just back to the
BMW. How did this guy get to get in the boot?
A. I put him in the boot
because I had a gun.
Q. Which gun did you have?
A. I had the umm.
Q. Can Mr Warren hold it up?
A. That AR15. You see if
people didn't do these unfortunate things, you guys wouldn't have a
job.
Q. Well there's a lot of
truth in that Martin, let me tell you.
WARREN
Q. That one there?
A. Yes.
Q. Yeah.
A. That was the one.
Q. This is the one.
A. It's a sweet little gun.
Because it's so light. How light is it?
Q. Can you remember what you
said ahh, this fellow?
A. Hey mate, can you get out
of your car please, I'm gonna take your car.
Q. Did, and you had this
pointed at him did you?
A. Yeah I had it pointed at
him.
Q. Right.
A. And moving it backwards
and forwards with his wife and child too.
PAINE
Q. Was the gun loaded?
A. Yeah the gun was loaded,
yeah had about eight, nine rounds in it. Mmm.
Q. And where did this take
place Martin sorry?
A. At the Fortesque Bay
turnoff, just, ohh about three or four minutes away from the
Martin's farm.
Q. To which side of ...
A. That was.
Q. ... The Seascape is
Fortesque Bay turnoff?
A. Ahh, before you go to
Seascape on the way to, on the way to Hobart.
Q. So it's on the Hobart side
of Seascape?
A. Mmm.
Q. Right. And where did you
drive then?
A. I drove full speed, it was
about, I was going about 140 Ks up the road and went into Seascape.
Just drove down there in the BMW.
WARREN
Q. Where, can you remember
where you drove when you went into Seascape?
A. I remember skidding on
some grass and, I had a heap of petrol, had some petrol with me, I
put some petrol in the BMW.
PAINE
Q. And what happened then?
A. Well what happened then, I
knocked on the door to see the Martins but there was no answer. And
what happened is I remember the explosion.
Q. Where was ...
A. I think, I don't know
whether I put the car on, lit the car up or not.
Q. Sorry?
A. I don't know whether I lit
the car up or not but there was an explosion.
Q. Where was the man that
was?
A. He must've been trapped in
the boot, the hostage.
Q. Where did the petrol come
from?
A. A service station.
Q. Which service station?
A. Umm, where do you get the
petrol, in Elizabeth Street self serve.
Q. So you had it in drums?
A. Mmm.
Q. Can you describe the ...
A. Plastic, just plastic
drums.
Q. What colour were they?
A. Red.
Q. Red plastic containers?
A. Mmm.
Q. How many did you have with
you?
A. Ohh two or three on me.
Just in case, I used to often run out of petrol you see and oil, I
didn't have any oil on me at the time but I had petrol.
Q. When did you say you ran
out of petrol, in the Volvo you're talking about.
A. Mmm.
Q. How come you ran out of
petrol?
A. Ohh the, it, it was the
gauge was pretty, fairly faulty you know.
Q. The gauge was faulty?
A. Yeah.
Q. Ohh.
A. And then.
Q. How did the BMW go?
A. good.
Q. Do they go petty well do
they?
A. Yeah.
WARREN
Q. Was it an automatic or
manual?
A. Automatic.
Q. Mmm.
PAINE
Q. What model was, was it, do
you remember?
A. Well, I was a ...
inaudible ... Ohh it was a fairly high model, fairly big model, you
know. Mmm. Worth a fair bit of money they say, fifty, sixty thousand
dollars a car. I was rapt up in it when I saw it.
WARREN
Q. Mmm.
A. I would love to own a BMW.
PAINE
Q. What colour was it?
A. Gold. It was a gold BMW.
Q. After you left Roaring
Beach and before the BMW, did you speak to anyone?
A. Only the, think in the
shop in Nubeena when I got the toasted sandwich and ...
Q. Did you speak to anyone
before you went to Roaring Beach surfing?
A. Ahh, oh I had a coffee at
Sorell.
Q. Coffee at Sorell.
A. Yeah.
Q. Right.
A. And something to eat, I
forget what i had to eat.
Q. And what about Mr Larner?
A. Mr Larner. Larner's were
the people who used to agist the horses umm, my Mum and myself had a
horse and my sister, we used to just, they've got a, got a farm.
Q. Speak up.
A. They've got a farm at Port
Arthur. Mmm. No, last time I seen them was probably going back ten
years ago, mmm. But then.
Q. Did you used to go down to
Port Arthur regularly sort of, of weekends and holidays?
A. Mmm. Nearly every weekend.
Mmm.
WARREN
Q. Is this when you were a
young fella?
A. Mmm. The Martins won a
farm too, next to the Larners.
PAINE
Q. Were you on your own when
you went to Port Arthur, oh Roaring Beach that day?
A. Yes. Mmm. I was. I wish
I'd took my girlfriend but like I said, it's good for her to go home
on a Sunday to her parents.
Q. Alright, back to Seascape.
So.
A. Yeah, back to Seascape.
Q. You got out of the car.
A. Back to the Pink Palace.
Q. Is that what you used to
call it?
A. Yeah, most people down
there used to call it the Pink Palace 'cos it's pink.
Q. Right so we've got, you've
got out of the BMW?
A. Mmm.
Q. Tipped petrol, where'd you
tip the petrol?
A. I don't recall because it
was a vast explosion and I had my gun strapped around me.
Q. Which one?
A. The AR15 there.
Q. The one Mr Warren lifted
up a short time ago?
A. Yeah. Mmm.
Q. Right. And what'd you do
with that?
A. And umm, I also had me
shotgun.
Q. Your shotgun?
A. Yeah, And I don't remember
anything else.
WARREN
Q. Where did you have the
shotgun Martin?
A. I left that in the Volvo.
Q. When you went to Seascape?
A. Yeah.
Q. You left the shotgun in
the Volvo?
A. Yeah. 'Cos I was all shaky
'cos I had this bloke hostage and ...
Q. What about his ahh, what
about the lady?
A. Yeah I got her to go, get
into the Volvo so the child went in too. She was just there shocked.
Devastated. Mmm. So ...
PAINE
Q. Did you actually knock on
the door at Seascape?
A. Mmm, few times, went
around the back, knocked on the door, no answer.
WARREN
Q. Do you remember talking to
anyone that morning, that same morning at Seascape?
A. No.
Q. Are you sure about that?
A. Mmm.
PAINE
Q. Did you go inside at
Seascape?
A. No. You can ask me
questions. It'd be interesting if I could hear some of yours, you
know, like your other, if you've got other things that you could
tell me on you report.
Q. Did you get the hostage's
name?
A. No, not at all.
Q. So apart from ...
A. What have you got on your
report? Is there other things that you reckon I've done down there?
Q. Yes there are.
A. What like?
Q. Well you see.
A. Tell me.
Q. If you could tell us.
A. No I don't.
WARREN
Q. Do you, you've already
said that you remembered me going to see you at the hospital?
A. Ohh yes. Mmm.
Q. And that I told you that
you were being charged with ...
A. A murder count.
Q. A murder.
A. Yeah.
Q. What recollection have you
got of that?
A. Must've been the hostage,
the bloke in the BMW must've died.
Q. That's what you think it
is is it?
A. Mmm.
Q. Do you remember me telling
you who you were charged with murdering?
A. No I don't ... inaudible
...
Q. Do you remember me
mentioning a name?
A. A murder count. No I don't
I remember yes, I remember you mentioning a name but ...
Q. Mmm.
A. I don't actually vaguely
remember who it was or, who was it actually?
Q. Right, well I mentioned to
you.
A. Mmm.
Q. I told you that you were
being charged with the murder of a woman called Kate Scott.
A. Ohh.
Q. Does that register with
you?
A. No. I mean I let the lady
go into the Volvo, I didn't hurt her or anything. No I don't
register, it doesn't register.
PAINE
Q. Did you have any favourite
restaurants at Port Arthur?
A. What sort of work did she
do?
WARREN
Q. Well I don't know to be
honest ahh, Martin.
A.
Mmm. Ahh, no favourite
restaurants, ohh Kelly's is pretty good, that's at, out, just it's
not quite into Port Arthur. You turn off, that's actually in
Stewart's Bay ... inaudible ...
PAINE
Q. And is that next to the
service station is it?
A. Umm, next to the service
station. It's about a kilometre.
Q. So you recommend we visit
that one?
A. Yeah recommend.
Q. But that's the only one?
A. Damn chair, it's a
nuisance when they're not that comfortable these ... inaudible ...
Q. No ours aren't that
comfortable either.
A. Let's swap then. Mmm. Mmm.
Q. Did you actually go into
Port Arthur site that day?
A. No I wouldn't have because
it would've cost me. In think about twenty five dollars to have gone
in. It would've been pointless for me to even have thought about
going in. 'Cos I didn't have, I had only about ten, fifteen dollars
on me.
Q. How did you pay with your
...
A. For the day.
Q. Your cup of coffee that
you said you bought at Sorell?
A. Ohh I had some coins.
Q. What did you have the
coins contained in?
A. In the glovebox in my car.
Q. Just loose in the
glovebox?
A. Mmm. That's about all I
had that day, coins. Gold coins.
Q. Do you need another drink?
A. Yeah, my lips are drying
up.
Q. I suppose when you lived
at Port Arthur, or when you used to visit Port Arthur, there wasn't
a fee to get into the site?
A. Mmm.
Q. Times have changed haven't
they?
A. Yeah. Is there a, is there
still a fee, have they still got the ...
Q. Well I suppose so.
A. Mmm.
Q. You have to pay a fee to
get into all parks and reserves don't you in Tasmania?
A. Yeah, people weren't happy
there because they've got that toll box to pay to get into Port
Arthur.
Q. Have you ever gone into
Port Arthur and paid the toll?
A. Umm, it was there but when
my parents had the shack, had a sticker and you had a shack or
residence, you didn't have to pay so you just drove past.
Q. What about say in the last
couple of months?
A. No, never. I haven't been
in Port Arthur probably six, seven yars. Mmm.
Q. Have you toured around the
state, Tasmania as, extensively or?
A. Not, not, went up to
Deloraine a couple of times and Launceston and ...
Q. Do you know people up
there?
A. No. No I don't.
Q. Oh right.
A. It'd be good actually to
have some friends in Launceston you could stay with. Yeah I wish it
had a few more friends. But I didn't have a great deal of friends at
school so it made things difficult.
Q. Back at, back to Seascape.
What happened when no one answered the door?
A. I went round to the back.
Q. You went round to the
back? And what did you do there?
A. No answer the door there
either.
Q. No.
A. So next thing is I must've
played around with petrol.
Q. Must've played around with
the petrol.
A. Mmm.
WARREN
Q. What do you mean, you
must've played around with the petrol?
A. Set fire to the, to the
car.
Q. Can you remember doing
that? You say you must.
A. No I can't. Vaguely.
Vaguely remember a flash and I must've been in the car when it went
up 'cos I got burnt so. Mmm. Someone's whistling.
PAINE
Q. And you said to us earlier
that you think that the hostage at that stage must've been in the
car, that's, is that correct or?
A. In the boot.
Q. Must've still been in the
boot?
A. Yes.
Q. Yeah.
A. Mmm.
Q. How do you feel about that
Martin?
A. Pretty awful. Mmm.
PAINE
Q. Just excuse me for a
moment please Martin, do you want another drink?
A. No, no.
WARREN
Q. Ahh.
A. Shame me legs are tied up.
Q. Sorry?
A. Shame these legs, I might
be able to take them off.
Q. No, leave, leave them the
way they are I think.
A. Otherwise I might get in
trouble.
Q. Mmm. So don't, don't ahh,
play with them you might get yourself in trouble.
A. That is why I might've
been better off if I wasn't alive anymore with all this. This
bullshit.
Q. Just excuse me Martin.
Inspector WARREN leaves the
room
A. Ahh, it's turned off I
suppose. You've got a hot drink, you're lucky. Some interesting
guns.
Unknown voice:
Ahh?
A. Some interesting guns there.
Unknown voice:
Mmm.
Inaudible background
conversation
WARREN
Q. How's the feet?
A. Oh my leg's aching a bit.
That doesn't matter umm, it's good to have a talk to people. I tell
you I'd rather be in at Kentucky Fried Chicken at this minute.
Q. Martin just ahh, why did,
why did you, I'm rather interested ahh, to know why you made the
comment just a minute ago, about you said, you said you'd rather be
dead or something?
A. Well at this umm, now I
can't remember now what, what I was thinking. Ohh that's right that
umm.
Q. Just talk up a bit Martin?
A. Ohh I wouldn't have to
worry, worry about this would I, I wouldn't be in prison would I,
but and all the burns, having to put up with all the burns and
stuff.
Q. Mmm.
A. Be easier for you wouldn't
it if I was.
Q. Be easier for me?
A. Yeah.
Q. Well, it really doesn't
make any difference to me Martin, so.
A. Mmm.
Q. We don't like to see
anyone ahh, die to be perfectly honest.
WARREN
Q. How did you get the burns?
A. From the fire I spose.
Q. Which fire?
A. I, I was involved in down
at the car. The BMW.
Warren: Q. Can you remember
how you started that fire?
A. Must've been with a match.
Q. With a match?
A. Mmm.
Q. Do you carry matches with
you?
A. Not very often, I don't
smoke so there's no reason for me to carry matches or lighters.
Q. Mmm.
WARREN
Q. You don't smoke at all?
A. No, not at all.
Q. Clean‑living person?
A. Try to be.
WARREN
Q. Have you ever had a smoke
Martin or ...
A. No, not at all.
Q. Mmm. So ahh, why would you
have the matches?
A. Probably because ahh,
there happened to be a box of matches in the BMW, jacket, in me
jacket.
Q. In a jacket there?
A. Yeah.
WARREN
Q. What type of jacket was
that?
A. Inside 'cos I umm, wore it
a couple of times when I used to light like an open fire at home so
I forgot to take the box of matches out ... inaudible ...
Q. What type of jacket was
that Martin?
A. It was a Ripcurl, it was a
black Ripcurl.
Q. How long?
A. It would've went to about
there.
Q. What, went down to about
your mid thighs?
A. Waist, yeah.
Q. So it's a long jacket?
A. Yeah.
Q. Ohh. When, the hostage,
did you, did he just get in or did you handcuff him or anything like
that?
A. Umm, handcuffed him or
anything, no. Ahh, what was that?
Q. Well do you own any
handcuffs?
A. No, never, never owned
handcuffs in my life.
Q. Ohh right. Do you remember
what he was wearing?
A. Ahh, just a sports jacket,
a shirt, jeans.
Q. Excuse me one moment,
having a technical problem.
A. Like I said, I put you
all, through this and wouldn't be here now if I wasn't.
Inaudible background
conversation
A. I want to know if I can
sit over there on one of them chairs, make it easier ... inaudible
...
Q. The trouble is they
control those sort of things, not us.
A. inaudible
Q. Can you describe the
clothes the hostage was wearing?
A. Ahh, he had a sports
jacket on and ...
WARREN
Q. Do you know anyone called
Jamie?
A. No, not at all.
Q. What about Rick?
A. Rick, no. I don't. I've
got no recollection of him.
Q. Do you remember seeing a
white ahh, small Japanese car, like a Corolla?
A. Corolla, no. Not at all.
Q. Did your Mum and Dad ever
want to buy Seascape?
A. No, no.
Q. Did you ever want to buy
it?
A. No, umm, I would've loved
to have bought the Martin's farm, that other one, next door to the
Larson's but.
Q. And that's in umm.
A. Just ... inaudible ...
it's beautiful.
Q. What's the name of the
road?
A. Ahh, Palmers Lookout Road.
Q. Palmers Lookout.
A. Yeah, I'd like, what I
did, asked them a few times but Mrs Martin didn't want to sell. She
said ... inaudible ... one day and I ... inaudible ...
Q. When did she tell you
that?
A. When I was smaller, when I
was about sixteen, seventeen.
Q. Ohh back in school days?
WARREN
Q. Was that when you first
said that you'd like to buy that property or ...
A. Ohh a few times but that
was about ... inaudible ... I talked to my mother that night and she
said no I'm not interested in helping out.
WARREN
Q. Is that when the Martins
bought it?
A. Yes, back in '78. That
upset me that did. Mmm.
Q. Did Lindy like, used to
like going down there?
A. Yeah Lindy loved it. Lindy
had a lot of friends.
Q. Ohh right.
WARREN
Q. Did you have many friends
down there when you were a young fella?
Q. Excuse me just a moment.
A. ... inaudible ... I had
friends under the water.
Inspector
PAINE leaves the room.
WARREN
Q. On the water?
A. Sea. They were my friends,
mmm, weekend used to scuba dive.
Q. Mmm.
A. Maybe once, maybe twice a
day. Dad used to take me out a lot, over.
Q. Did Dad ahh.
A. My Dad was a ... inaudible
... man.
Q. Did Dad do any diving when
you were diving or?
A. No.
Q. He'd just sort of take you
out?
A. Mmm. Start the little
seagull engine up.
Q. Mmm.
A. In this ... inaudible ...
Q. We're just having a few
ahh technical problems. Your father always encouraged you though to
sort of get into the diving or?
A. Yeah always.
Q. Right. Want another drink
Martin?
A. No, no, that's alright.
They get a bit smelly after a while these bandages.
Q. Well you can notice, I
can't notice 'em so.
A. ... inaudible ...
Q. Sorry?
A. I don't even know what day
it is today. I lose track of the days. I'm losing, I'm losing my
mind.
Q. It's the, the fourth of
July actually today.
A. I thought you were gonna
say that ... inaudible ... lose your mind.
Q. It's Thursday today the
fourth of July. Remember ahh, earlier when you said that you saw
Glen Martin at Eastlands?
A. Yeah.
Q. Yeah. Did you know that he
had a shop there or?
A. I'd known for quite a
while, yeah, me and me Mum.
Q. Mmm.
A. We used to go up to the
shop and just look in, ohh he must own the shop.
Q. Mmm.
A. See him working in there.
'Cos his daughter's got a shop too, at Sandy Bay. Has a milkbar.
Q. His daughter?
A. Mmm.
Q. Ohh right.
A. Do you know the Martin's
at all?
Q. Ohh I know Glen Martin
yeah.
A. Quite well?
Q. Ohh reasonably well.
A. Mmm. So what would be the
value in the house to burn down, apparently its sposed to have been
burnt down ... inaudible ...
Q. I've got no idea. Can you
remember what you said to Glen that day or, at the shop?
A. I asked for a cappuccino.
How are you Glen and how is your brother.
Q. Mmm.
A. How's your Mum and Dad.
(Inaudible background
conversation.)
Q. Mmm.
A. Have you been in there for
a drink with him at Eastlands?
Q. Ohh could’ve been Martin.
I really wouldn't know where his shop was in there so. I might've
went, been in there not knowing you see.
A. Mmm.
Q. Just excuse me for a
while.
Q. Martin there's just ahh,
just go back a couple, a couple of steps now. When you took the
hostage, now you've said you, you can't remember his name?
A. No.
Q. You had your gun?
A. Yeah.
Q. And, and you said it was
loaded?
A. Mmm.
Q. Now how was it loaded ahh,
did it have a magazine or what?
A. Yeah, it had a magazine.
Q. Right.
A. Had a magazine.
Q. Alright. How many ahh,
rounds do you think was in that magazine?
A. There was only eight
rounds because I put ten rounds in it and I fired two rounds be,
when I left home on Sunday. Target.
PAINE
Q. At which target did you
fire them Martin?
A. At which.
Q. Those two rounds, what did
you fire them at? A. I fired 'em at a little, umm, sometimes I use a
saucer ... inaudible ... or tin cans or whatever I see.
Q. So you didn't fire it at
a, one of your homemade targets that you were talking about earlier?
A. I could've umm, I don't
know whether I had a homemade target on me that day but umm, no I
dunno, I'm not sure now.
Q. Did you do that at that
place past Mudunna that you told us?
A. Mmm.
Q. So you stopped and did
that.
A. I've been there various
other times too.
Q. Yeah.
A. Couple of times.
Q. So had eight or nine
rounds left in it you say?
A. Yeah, about that. Can't be
quite sure about that, it was less than ten.
Q. How many does the magazine
hold in total?
A. 20.
Q. 20.
A. Or up to 30 sometimes.
Q. Up to 30?
A. Yeah.
Q. In the same magazine?
A. Mmm. It's a lot isn't it.
WARREN
Q. Did you always maintain a
full ahh, full lot of rounds or not?
A. No because I never, I
didn't want to disturb the peace with having a gun, a gun, 'cos they
make quite a big bang.
Q. Mmm.
A. Jump around a bit.
Q. The gun jumps around a bit
does it?
A. They kick a bit. It's the
sound that's worse, it's pretty loud.
Q. Mmm.
A. Didn't want to get in
trouble with the neighbours because I didn't have a licence you see
when I was target practising.
Q. Which neighbours are you
talking about?
A. Whoever they were when I
was target practising.
Q. Mmm.
A. I didn't want to get in
trouble, if they heard the guns go off, the gun go off, thought they
might call someone in and.
Q. Why did you have the guns
in the car on that day?
A. 'Cos I wanted to target
practice. I often took them when I went down that way surfing or,
used to go down there and just to, say at Dunalley and have
something to eat or drink and, at the hotel or take their guns down
there and just.
Q. Speak up a bit please.
A. And just use 'em as
targets, a couple of times, just made me feel good, just letting,
letting a couple of rounds off.
Q. You went, you used to go
down in that area a fair bit then?
A. Mmm.
Q. Would it be fair to say
you go down there more than ahh, you know other parts of the State?
A. With the guns?
Q. Mmm.
A. That's the only place I
used to take the guns.
Q. Right.
A. Nowhere else and it's only
been the past six, seven months that I've actually used the guns.
Before that I'd never used them, before in my life.
PAINE
Q. Did you think that, did
you think it was safe to have the ahh, firearms loaded in your car?
A. Umm, well they've got a
safety catch thing.
Q. So you always kept 'em in
you car did you?
A. Mmm.
Q. Even when you were at
home?
A. Mmm. It's only seven
month's ago that I got that other one out, that AR10, that I never
got round to using it but I'd used the wrong bullets so that was
seven month's ago that I found out, I went to Terry Hill and got.
Q. Mmm.
A. That's, it's only been
seven months that I've been firing 'em. Mmm.
Q. A little bit earlier I
think you said it made you feel good to umm, use the rif, firearms,
why did it make you feel good?
A. Ohh just exciting, just
shooting at targets. I dunno, just having something, having a
firearm.
Q. Did you ever shoot at
game?
A. Never, never, never came
to my mind to.
Q. Do you like animals?
A. Yeah, love animals.
Q. Mmm. So that's the reason
why you wouldn't.
A. I've been brought up with
animals.
Q. Sorry?
A. I've been brought up with
animals.
Q. Mmm. And that's the reason
why you wouldn't shoot them, is that right?
A. Mmm, that's right.
Q. Do you remember ahh, that
morning you went down to Roaring Beach, buying a cigarette lighter
form a shop?
A. No, I can't. Which shop is
that?
Q. Midway Point.
A. Not at all, not at all, I
didn't stop at Midway Point.
Q. Are you sure about that?
A. Definitely.
Q. How can you be definite
about it?
A. I don't know but I didn't
stop at Midway Point. I remember stopping at the bakery at Sorell.
Q. Sorell. You didn't buy a
lighter there?
A. No.
Q. What about fire lighters?
A. Fire lighters. Ohh, got
them in me house, got 'em stored up in the house, quite a few, but.
Q. What for?
A. To start a fire.
Q. Did you have any in your
car that day?
A. No, not at all.
Q. Are you sure about that?
A. Yeah, positive.
Q. Do you remember stopping
at the Forcett shop?
A. Forcett Shop, umm, no I
don't. I used to stop there now and then to get a coffee but that's
about it.
Q. When you went down that
day, did you call into Eagle Hawk Neck, you know the Blowhole or
anything like that, that day?
A. No.
Q. To have a look on the way?
A. No.
Q. No.
A. Drove past all them.
Q. You don't remember ahh,
talking to anyone on the side of the road for instance or?
A. No, I can't recall talking
to anyone.
Q. You don't remember going
into the Port Arthur site, that's what you said before?
A. No I don't.
Q. At all?
A. At all.
Q. When do you reckon you
were there last?
A. Mmm, quite a number of
years.
Q. You sure?
A. Yeah. Mmm.
Q. Could we cover that bit
about umm, Seascape again where I asked you umm, did your family
ever want to buy it. Could you go over that again for me please
Martin?
A. I never wanted to buy
Seascape.
Q. No, I think, didn't you
say your father had expressed an interest?
A. Not on Seascape, but the
farm, back in '78.
Q. That was the farm in
Palmers Lookout Road?
A. Mmm, the Martins owned
that.
Q. Right.
A. Still do. Mmm.
Q. How, you, you mentioned
earlier on when we first started talking about how long it was that
you'd, how long ago it was that you'd seen the Martins ahh, and it
was what, when you were a teenager was it?
A. Yeah.
Q. Yeah and you haven't had
anything to do with them since basically?
A. No. You mean the sons or
the?
Q. No, Mr and, Mr and Mrs
Martin?
A. No, ... inaudible ...
Q. But you haven't either,
you haven't seen the boys either have you for a while?
A. No, not at all. I haven't
seen Darren since I was about this high but I've seen Glen
obviously, about four months ago at the ... inaudible ...
Q. Can you remember when the
Martins, that Mr and Mrs Martin, ahh, bought Seascape?
A. Back in the '80s, middle,
'84, '85 I think they bought it.
Q. Mmm.
A. Mmm.
Q. Did you go down there at
all anytime after they'd bought it?
A. Ahh, this is the first
time in my life that I've been down there to see them.
Q. What did you think about
it?
A. I thought I'd call in and.
Ohh I though it was great, having a host farm.
Q. Mmm.
A. Worked hard all their
lives, renovating, took them years to build it, renovate it and to
start it all up and it's just so sad to see, apparently it's burnt
down, it's so sad to see it burnt down.
Q. So you know Seascape's
burnt down?
A. Yeah. Been informed.
Q. Who told you that?
A. A doctor, and security
guards.
Q. What else have they told
you?
A. They said.
Q. Could you speak up please.
A. They said that people had
been burnt inside there. Mmm. So I don't know how many people were
burnt inside the Seascape Guest House.
Q. I'm just a little bit
confused here Martin because you seem to know a little bit about or
a fair bit about what's happened and what they've done to that
place, now, how, how did you know that happened?
A. 'Cos when you used to
drive past you could see, you, every few weeks, while my parents had
a shack, you could see them working on the place, renovating the
homestead.
Q. This is when you used to
go down surfing?
A. No, no, this is when my
parents had the shack.
Q. Right, okay.
Q. When did your parents sell
that shack?
A. About 1991, '92. So they
were working on the, I think they opened up the guest house then but
in the late '80s they were renovating. Took 'em, I think it took 'em
five or six years to build it up.
Q. Martin, going back to the
BMW as we were just talking about the Seascape and the car, why did
you put the man in the boot?
A. Ohh because to take him
hostage, I thought I'd get in less trouble if I got caught having
him in the boot, but I don't know, I just thought, I was a bit
worried that if he didn't go, he'd go off in my car.
Q. And why'd you think you'd
be in less trouble?
A. I didn't, I didn't want to
shoo... 'coz I wouldn've got caught, probably wouldn've got caught
you see, he would've gone off in my car, rang the police straight
away so I thought I'd take him hostage and let him go later after
taking the car for a spin but and when I drove along, I thought I'd
go down and see the Martins. Mmm.
Q. What trouble did you think
you were in?
A. Ohh, it just came to me to
take, take this car, get hold of this car and take if for a drive
and it just felt good.
[PORTION MISSING]
Q. Do you think.
A. It's possible.
Q. Do you think...
inaudible...
A. That's all I've done wrong
in my life. The only other thing was on the way home from Kingston,
getting pulled up.
Q. Are you sort of saying
that Terry Hill shouldn've supplied you those firearms?
A. Ohh I don't know, he's a
good man but, mmm. .... inaudible....
Q. So are you blaming Terry
Hill for what happened?
A. Well I'm not blaming
anyone, it wasn't Terry Hill's fault, I got that one out of the
paper, don't forget.
Q. True.
Q. Mmm.
A. So they're available
...inaudible... advertise 'em. If they don't advertise 'em you
wouldn't get 'em. It wouldnt've happened.
WARREN
Q. So.
A. I mean, it's alright for
you guys but you're probably glad that it's happened 'cos it's a
job.
Q. No, no, no.
Q. We're not glad anything's
happened like that Martin.
A. It's no good to me either
'cos I'm in here. .... inaudible.... That's all.
Q. Do you think that you're
not shutting something out of your mind and not being completely
open and honest with us here Martin about that day?
A. I'm honest.
Q. Yeah.
A. About everything.
Q. I just wondered whether
you're not really wanting to tell us what you can remember.
A. No, no....inaudible....
PAINE
Q. We just have to let us
have a short break for a moment please Martin.
A. Mmm, alright, yeah.
(Inaudible background
conversation)
Q. Sorry about that MARTIN
A. That's alright.
Q. Bit of a technical
malfunction.
A. I've had me Kentucky so
I'm right.
Q. Had your Kentucky. Martin
just, just to remind you, you remember earlier when we first started
talking that I, I warned you that you weren't obliged to say
anything unless you wanted to.
A. Yeah.
Q. If I just remind you of
that and you're well aware of that and understand that you don't
have to say anything if you don't want to.
A. No that's fine.
Q. Okay. Just so that you
understand, that's all. It's a fair while since we started talking
with you.
Q. Martin, on the day you
went to Roaring Beach at Port Arthur, Seascape, did you take your
camera with you, a movie camera?
A. Did I take a movie camera,
no I didn't take a movie camera but I have got a movie camera.
Q. You have got and I suppose
you've used 'em when you've been overseas?
A. No, it's only a small
camera.
Q. Small camera. Are you a
good photographer?
A. Yeah, good photographer,
yeah. Yeah.
Q. Are you aware of a you
know, seasonal problem with wasps at Port Arthur?
A. Seasonal problems. Umm,
not at all, not at all. Wasps?
Q. Wasps, yeah.
A. No.
Q. Well have you got any
other ...
A. I'm allergic.
Q. ... Understanding of the
term wasps?
A. No, but I know that I'm
allergic to bees, I nearly died when I was eleven years old.
Q. Did you?
A. The sting, neck swelled
right up and just lucky I got to the doctor's in time. Mmm.
Q. Have you ever been to
Japan?
A. No never.
Q. But.
A. I'd like to go, 'cos the
people are very polite and.
[PAGE 266 MISSING]
Q. Mmm.
A. Mmm.
Q. Just umm, before we go any
further, I'll just, you mentioned the Ben Morrisson case earlier ahh,
did that in anyway affect your judgement in relation to taking that
hostage?
A. No, not at all. I didn't
really want to take him, it's only 'cos I didn't want him going
straight to the Police, that's the reason I took him hostage.
Q. Right, so the Ben
Morrisson case had nothing whatsoever to do with your judgement?
A. Ohh no, not at all.
Q. So.
A. It's only 'cos I remember
you being involved with it, and coming out of the Court with the
parents and, and being on television.
WARREN
Q. Mmm.
A. A couple of times. It was
good, I thought you done a good job.
WARREN
Q. Martin, getting back to
that point about the hostage, you taking the hostage because you
didn't want him telling the Police. What didn't you want him telling
the Police.
A. That I took his umm, car.
Q. But I mean, if you'd have
left him on the side of the road, he wouldn't have known where you
could've driven.
A. Yeah but he could've let
them know that there was a chap with blonde hair, took me car, stole
me car. So I sort of put him in the boot to be safe.
Q. So you thought your looks
that day were distinctive and if someone said they saw a chap with
blonde hair.
A. Mmm.
WARREN
Q. At Port Arthur on that
particular day.
A. What happened at Port
Arthur.
Q. Well you're saying to us
that you didn't go to Port Arthur did you?
A. No I didn't.
Q. And you're quite definite?
A. I didn't go, definitely
didn't go to Port Arthur.
Q. Well what would you say if
...
A. I wouldn't, I wouldn't pay
the money to go in. I would, I would've if I didn't have to pay
money.
Q. Well what would you say if
I told you that you were seen going into Port Arthur and in fact you
were at the toll gate?
A. I couldnt've been.
Q. And more than that, that
you did complain about the price of admission.
A. Umm, I don't remember
going in, into Port Arthur or going through the toll gate at all.
Q. Well as you said a minute
ago, you, your description of the long blonde hair does make you
umm, stand out from the crowd.
A. Mmm, exactly.
Q. What about your yellow
Volvo?
A. That would wouldn't it,
that would stand out.
Q. Yeah.
A. I had me surfboard on top
of it. Mmm, I drove straight past.
Q. Well.
A. inaudible
Q. We have lots of people who
are telling us that they saw you at Port Arthur and your car.
A. Well it must've been
another, there's other Volvos ...
WARREN
Q. With surfboards on the
top?
Q. With someone with long
blonde hair driving them or getting out of them?
A. There's not many with
surfboards on top.
Q. You don't recall ahh,
someone in, in Port Arthur, when you pulled your car up, talking to
you about you're not allowed to park your car where you put it?
A. No, not at all.
Q. Is it possible that you
could've been in there do you think?
A. Definitely not possible.
Q. Why do you say that?
A. 'Cos I remember driving
straight past.
Q. Mmm.
A. ... inaudible ... Martin
Bryant
Q. Martin, what if I said to
you that ahh, neither Inspector Paine or myself believe what you're
saying to us?
A. You don't believe one
little thing.
Q. No, but we don't believe
that you're, what you're telling us now about not being at Port
Arthur.
A. Mmm, all I can say is ...
inaudible...
Q. Why do you think ...
A. inaudible
Q. ... Why do you think we
would not believe you?
A. I don't, I don't really
know. Can't understand.
PAINE
Q. Martin, I want you to have
a look at this photo. It's photo number zero one one two. In it is a
car I believe to be yours and it's depicted adjacent to the toll
booth.
A. Couldn't be mine, where'd
you get that. I don't remember being stationary ... inaudible ...
Q. Do you agree that that
could be a surfboard on the top?
A. Yes I think it probably
is.
Q. And it's certainly similar
to your ahh, your car?
A. Mmm.
Q. The registration number of
this vehicle I think is CG two eight three five.
A. I don't remember the
registration.
Q. Well that's your car.
Q. So that certainly suggests
it because that's the exit road at the toll booth, that your car had
been.
A. How could the car be there
when I didn't go, go there in the first place. .... inaudible ...
Q. As I said, sorry, as I've
said, we have, there are lots of people saying that they saw you in
the Port Arthur site and your car in the Port Arthur site.
A. Mmm, I can't recall that.
Q. Did you go to the Broad
Arrow Cafe?
A. The last time I've been
into the Broad Arrow Cafe was about, I can't recall, must've been
two or three years ago.
Q. Once again.
A. 'Cos I haven't been, I
haven't been, I haven't taken any of my girlfriends down there. Not
at all.
Q. Do you remember going
there about, about the end of March this year?
A. No, no, no. Was I there in
March or what?
Q. Well I'm asking you.
A. No.
Q. Once again, lots of people
are saying they saw you in the Broad Arrow Cafe on Sunday the 28th
of April.
A. Mmm, that's untrue.
Q. It's untrue is it?
A. Mmm.
Q. And why do you say that
Martin?
A. Because I didn't, I drove
straight past.
Q. So how do you account for
the car being there?
A. That lady could've drove
it down there. That one, the wife or girlfriend of the chap I took
hostage 'cos I said to get into my, the Volvo.
Q. Martin.
A. Mmm. Like I was telling
you before, it's, it's true.
Q. I believe that you umm,
took the BMW near the toll booth, not on the highway.
A. ... inaudible ... I wasn't
there that afternoon.
Q. And what's more, I can
tell you we have spoken to the people that say the car was taken
from the toll booth area.
A. It's not true.
Q. Not true?
A. Must've been someone else
... inaudible ...
Q. How many people were in
the BMW?
A. Ahh there was a lady, I
don't recall if it's a boy or girl, and a man, there's three people
altogether.
Q. Couldn've been four?
A. No definitely three.
Q. Definitely three.
A. Mmm.
Q. How many women did you
see?
A. In the BMW?
Q. Mmm.
A. There was the lady and the
child, I forget whether the child was a boy or a girl.
Q. Martin, I believe you went
to the Broad Arrow Cafe at Port Arthur on Sunday the 28th.
A. That's nonsense. Like I
said I didn't go to Port Arthur.
WARREN
Q. See you, you've been
pretty good with your memory really and a lot of things that we've
been talking to you about, some things you're not recollecting, but
you're very very definite now that you weren't at Port Arthur on
that day.
A. Probably because I've got
a reasonably good memory.
Q. You've got a reasonably
good memory.
A. I would've definitely told
you if I, if I went into Port Arthur 'cos Port Arthur attracts a lot
of crowds.
Q. Do you like going to
places where there's a lot of people?
A. Ohh, all depends who I'm
with and ...
Q. Mmm.
A. ... What, what's going on
that day and whatever.
Q. What ahh, would you say if
I said that someone's identified you having a meal at the Broad
Arrow Cafe?
A. Having a meal? I had a
toasted sandwich at Nubeena and that was it.
Q. Martin, you haven't asked
Mr Warren where the lady with the, with whose death you've been
charged, was.
A. Yeah it was a lady, you,
you said that the lady's name, you told me.
Q. Where was she?
A. Umm, I really don't know.
That's like I said to you earlier, it was the chap that I took
hostage and I reckon he was the one that died.
Q. You reckon.
A. On the murder count.
Q. Just have a bit of a think
about it, about this particular lady. You've already been charged
with her murder okay, just have a bit of a think about it for a
minute. Thinking about it?
A. No, I'm thinking what this
is, what this is.
Q. I'd like you to have a
look at this photo. It's numbered zero zero nine zero. Okay. It's a
white Toyota Corolla.
A. I drove straight past that
day and I just drove past there.
Q. What about this car?
A. Is there a person in it.
Q. You haven't seen that car
before?
A. No never.
Q. Right.
A. Drove straight past that
shop that day, that Sunday.
Q. Martin, quite frankly I
find it very hard to believe what you're telling me.
A. Well it's your word, I
mean how come you don't believe me?
Q. Well Inspector Paine
mentioned it to you just a very short time ago, we've been speaking
to a lot of people.
A. Mmm.
Q. Who have identified a
person answering your description at Port Arthur, at the Broad Arrow
Cafe.
A. Mmm.
Q. At the toll booth. On the
road on the way to the toll booth and also at the service station
where that Toyota Corolla was. And bearing in mind that your car,
registered to you ...
A. Mmm.
Q. ... Was also there at the
toll booth and you're telling us that you weren't anywhere near it.
A. That's right, I drove
straight past, so.
Q. So how, how do you expect
us to believe what you're telling us. Doesn't add up does it.
Doesn't make any sense.
A. It's silly, I mean, I
wouldn't drive into Port Arthur on that day so. I drove straight
past Port Arthur that day.
Q. Well you did, you did a
month earlier. Drove into Port Arthur. And you were seen.
A. I did not.
Q. You were seen in there.
A. Did not.
Q. Do you know what's
happened on that day?
A. What's happened on that
day.
Q. On the 28th of April?
A. No.
Q. You don't?
A. No.
Q. Are you sure about that?
A. Positive.
Q. Positive.
A. Yep.
Q. Well I'll tell you what's
happened. There have been twenty people in that Broad Arrow Cafe.
A. Mmm.
Q. Who were shot and, and
killed and there were a lot of others injured.
A. Right.
Q. There were also a number
of people in the car park were killed as a result of being shot.
There were four people that were taken out of that BMW who were shot
and killed. There were two children and their mother on the way to
the toll booth.
A. Ohh God, it's awful isn't
it.
Q. And a girl in that white
Toyota Corolla that I just showed you. And we believe you're
responsible.
A. You reckon I'm
responsible.
Q. Well we believe you're
responsible.
A. I only went surfing that
day so.
Q. Well what have you got to
say about that?
A. Well who's responsible.
Q. You are.
A. How many people died
altogether that?
Q. Including the people at
Seascape.
A. Mmm.
Q. Thirty five.
A. How many other people
injured? Many?
Q. Well I.
A. How many ... inaudible...
a dozen.
Q. Approximately twenty.
A. Approximately twenty. What
seriously or not?
Q. Some more serious than
others but they're all okay.
A. This is, I can't believe
this.
WARREN
Q. And those firearms of
yours, the three O eight and the two two three.
A. No, that shotgun and the
little Colt AR15 ...inaudible... I don't know about the others.
Q. Martin, we have spoken to
over six hundred people.
A. Mmm.
Q. A lot of them were at Port
Arthur.
A. Ohh. I mean I would've
said if, that I, I've, I mean, don't you believe me what I'm telling
you about them guns. I've never seen them other guns before in my
life.
Q. ...inaudible... you said
you had those three.
A. Yeah.
Q. The three O eight, the two
two three and the shotgun with you on that day?
A. I, I had two guns with me,
I took for target practising. I took the shotgun and the little
other gun, the Colt. And I, I must've got that burnt that little,
little one in the middle.
Q. How do you reckon that got
burnt?
A. Striking a match, a match.
Why did I stop.
Q. Where was that petrol.
A. 'Cos I mean that, that
wasn't ...inaudible...
Q. Where was the petrol.
A. Would've saved you a lot
of time if I'd been blown up with the hostage.
Q. We've got, we've got all
the time in the world Martin. It's ahh.
A. Obviously I have too, so
what does it matter.
Q. What, what matters is we'd
like to know why you've done, what you've done mate, it's simple.
A. What have I done I mean, I
know I've done the wrong.
Q. I've just told, I've just
told you what you've done.
A. I've done, I've done the
wrong thing by stealing the car.
Q. Are you understanding what
I just said to you? 'Cos I've told you what you have done.
A. What have I done?
Q. You've killed thirty five
people.
A. Ohh ... inaudible ...
Q. And injured several
others. Martin, it's not Mr Warren and I are saying this. We, as I
said to you, we've interviewed a lot of people.
A. Mmm.
A. And a lot of people have
identified a person with your description driving your car, killing
those thirty five people.
A. Well all I can say is
about ...inaudible ... to Port Arthur. All I know is other people
have said to me, asked a couple of times whether I was at Port
Arthur and I've said no because I wasn't there at Port Arthur that
day.
Q. Martin.
A. I drove, drove past the
Port Arthur turn off.
Q. Well we, we don't believe
that.
A. Well how come.
Q. We believe you went into
Port Arthur. Had a slight argument with the toll gate person about
the price on entry. We believe you then went to park you car and an
attendant or someone ...
A. Park the car.
Q. ... Said you couldn't park
in a certain spot, so you didn't and sometime later you did move
your car to that spot. We believe you went to the Broad Arrow Cafe
with that bag over there, containing some guns and your video
camera. You purchased a meal, you went outside, sat down, and then
went back into the cafe. Took one.
A. But you might've. That's
like me saying to you, that you were down there.
Q. But the difference is
Martin, my car wasn't down there and I haven't been identified as
being down there and I wasn't down there. And then you took one of
the guns out of your bag and opened fire in the cafe.
A. Why would I do that, I
mean.
Q. I don't know, you tell me.
A. Why, why would anyone do a
thing like that, what.
Q. Well you tell us.
A. ... inaudible ...
Q. That's what we want to
know Martin, why.
A. What, what, would, I
wouldn't hurt a person in my life.
Q. Well you've already said
you'd put the man in your boot of the car.
A. Only, yes, yes.
Q. Then you've set fire to
the car and you thought that he was in the boot.
A. ... inaudible ...
Q. So how do you explain
that?
A. It was a bad thing.
Q. Well it was a bad thing.
A. But I got burnt too so,
that doesn't worry you I suppose.
Q. Well it does.
Q. Of course it worries us.
A. Well that's all I can
recall. That's all I know. I've got a pretty clear mind.
Q. And then.
A. I definitely wasn't there
at Port Arthur that Sunday or a month before.
Q. After opening fire in the
cafe and walking through the cafe, you left the cafe and went down
near the bus park, shooting, shooting several people. Then you got
in your car and drove back towards the toll booth. Before reaching
the toll booth, you stopped and shot dead a lady and two small
children.
A. Go on.
Q. Then you got to the toll
booth, to the position we showed you your car was in, in that photo.
A. Mmm.
Q. Took the BMW, shooting the
occupants.
A. Must've been, I told, the
BMW was back there at the Fortesque Bay turnoff.
Q. No, the BMW wasn't there.
A. Was it the same colour
BMW?
Q Yes. Shooting the four
occupants. Then driving to the service station near the white
Corolla that was in that photo. Forcing the person into the boot of
the BMW as you've described and shooting the person that was still
in the Corolla and then driving to Seascape.
A. Did that person, did that
person die did you say?
Q. Yes.
A. Mmm.
Q. At Seascape before driving
down the driveway, we believe you shot at several cars driving past.
Then you went down to Seascape.
A. I didn't shoot anyone.
Q. You didn't shoot anyone?
A. No, not at all. And you
reckon you've got dozens of witnesses.
Q. Certainly have.
A. Where are they?
Q. Where are they?
A. Mmm, the witness. Have you
got any other photos to show me?
Q. Well do you ...
Q. ... Do you want to see the
photos?
WARREN
Q. Do you want to see the
photo’s?
A. Of the witnesses if you’ve
got them.
Q. Well we haven’t got any
photo’s of the witnesses. Obviously the witnesses are not here
today. But I have a couple of statements made by witnesses I can
quote.
A. I do like looking at
photo’s. Have you got other photo’s to show me?
Q. What do you want to see
the photo’s for Martin?
A. Whatever they, I don’t
know.
Q. They're not very pleasant.
A. Aren't they ... inaudible
... I don't like ... inaudible.. I like watching videos ...
inaudible ...
Q. You have?
A. Mmm.
Q. Do you like horror videos
do you?
A. Ohh some of 'em. Sometimes
they're okay, there's some good actors in 'em.
Q. What's your favourite
one?
A. Steven Segal in it, umm.
Q. The one on the boat?
A He was the Karate Kid, he
was in Karate Kid II, did you see that one did you?
Q. No.
A. Mmm. Well what, Under
Seige, yeah. Watched that heaps of times, over and over again.
Q. Mmm.
A. Mmm.
Q. You're in a little bit of
trouble Martin aren't you? Would you say?
A. I dunno, I spose I am. I'd
like to get, get hold of some bail money.
Q. There's no chance of that.
A. No chance at all.
Q. No chance of bail.
A. That's what I was, the
Magistrate Mr Hill, appeal ... inaudible ... last month. He said,
are you Mr Martin Bryant. I said, yes. He said, you're remanded in
custody till this ... inaudible ... I didn't even come to the
hearing, okay 'cos I wasn't well ... inaudible... I should see me
solicitor about bail.
Q. What did you think ahh,
the night that you were in hospital and I said you were being
charged with the murder of ahh, that girl?
A. Bit shocked, mmm.
Q. Have you given it, have
you given it a lot of thought since?
A. I just, want, I'd love to
just get out of here now. Live a norm, a normal life. Will I be
allowed to do that?
Q. Well that's not a question
for us. What do you think your chances of that are?
A. Ohh.
Q. After hearing what we've
said.
A. Well, I shouldn've gone
and kidnapped him and the BMW. It's the wrong thing. That and, that
and in the, being caught with not having a driver's licence. So
they're the two things I've done wrong. I don't know why I stole the
BMW in the first place. I wish I'd ... inaudible...
Q. Do you remember, do you
remember telling me that you were being unjustly accused in the
hospital that time, after I said you had been charged with murder?
A. No.
Q. You don't remember that?
Well it's surprising because your memory has been pretty good about
that. You can't recall that?
A. Don't recall that at all.
Q. Could it be that you don't
want to remember it Martin?
A. No, I can recall you
saying that when I woke, woke up, all you said was you're on one
count of murder Mr Bryant. I said, what, who have I murdered
...inaudible ...
Q. Could it be Martin that
you ahh, don't want to remember the events at Port Arthur on that
day?
A. I, like I said I haven't
been to Port Arthur this year so. It's true. I've got to tell the
truth.
WARREN
Q. And where do you think
that leaves us?
A. Well you've go ...
inaudible ...
Q. Well bearing in mind what
we've been told by many many people, what we've seen and having
spoken to you, how do you think we feel about this?
A. It's your job, you
probably feel pretty good about.
Q. Why do you say that?
A. I dunno, just.
Q. I can tell you, I don't
feel very good about this at all.
A. Don't you.
Q. No.
Q. Neither do I.
Q. Ahh, both Inspector Paine
and myself and many many other people have been very badly affected
by it.
A. Mmm.
Q. What do you think of that?
A. It's sad isn't it.
Q. And so have you of course
A. Ohh yeah.
Q. You're a victim yourself
aren't you?
A. Mmm. I'm a victim.
Q. Well do you think you are?
I mean I've made the statement.
A. Ohh.
Q. But you, do you think
you're a victim?
A. No ... inaudible ...
Q. Do you think people should
take responsibility for their actions Martin?
A. ... inaudible ...
responsibility?
Q. Well.
Q. I mean do you think that
people should accept the consequences of what they do?
A. Yeah I do. I s’pose I
should for a little while for what I've done. Just a little while
and let me out, let me live my own life. I'm missing my Mum. I
really miss her actually, what she cooks up for me, her rabbit stews
and everything. She's not even allowed to bring a little bit of food
for me, that, that's a bit upsetting. Mmm.
Q. Martin, unless there's
anything else that you want to tell us, we're going to ahh, stop the
interview now. As Mr Warren explained to you, this is the last
opportunity you'll have to speak to us. You'll be at your next court
appearance, charged with twenty murders, I'm sorry, thirty five
murders and ...
A. Just that.
Q. ... And approximately
twenty attempted murders and several wounding charges as well.
A. Attempted murders.
Q. And also.
A. You mean attempted, they
weren't hurt?
Q. Ahh, yes they were hurt.
Some of those people. You'll also be charged with the arson of
Seascape. Do you understand all that?
A. How months will it get me
in?
Q. Well that's not a, a
question I can answer.
A. And the arson of the BMW.
Q. No, of the Seascape. We
believe you burnt Seascape as well as the BMW. I hope we've
explained things clearly and you understand the gravity of the
situation.
A. It's great to have someone
to talk to. And you guys won't be in again?
Q. No.
A. To have a talk.
Q. No.
A. I'll miss ya’s.
Q. Now what's going to happen
now, after we cancel, finish the interview, you'll be introduced to
a senior police officer who will ask you ahh, several questions
about the interview procedure.
A. Now or?
Q. Yeah in about, in a couple
of moments.
A. Might even bring me tea in
here.
Q. Well I'm sorry, we can't
give you any.
A. No.
Q. Kentucky Fried.
A. It's sad.
Q. Extremely sad.
Q. Certainly is Martin.
A. Especially the ones that
were injured. So how many were injured?
Q. About twenty. Some not ...
A. Plus, yeah some.
Q. ... Some not seriously,
some more serious than others obviously.
A. That's what I ...
inaudible...
Q. I might add, with all the
people that were shot, were either shot with those two weapons
closest to us over there, your weapons.
A. Yeah ... No, not the one
with the scope, I don't know that, never seen that one before. Mmm.
I'm not signing anything.
Q. Mr O'Garey will deal with
that.
A. Not until me lawyer sees
me. I'm sure you'll find the person who caused all this. Me.
Q. I don't find that a very
funny statement at all Martin, to be quite honest.
A. You should've put that on
recording.
Q. Ohh it's still recording
at this present stage. So that is on recording.
Q. Like I said to you before
Martin, ahh, like I said before mate, umm, we are looking at the
person responsible.
Q. I'll go and get
Superintendent O'Garey.
A. I must need a lawyer then
... inaudible ...
Q. You tell me.
A. ... inaudible ...
Q. We'd really like to know
why mate because you know, I mean, it's ... inaudible ..
A. I'd really love to help
you out ... inaudible ... but I can't. Have you had other trouble
like this, dramatic?
Q. Not on this scale, no.
A. No. Spose it happens,
doesn't it.
THE COURT RESUMED AT 2.15 PM.
HIS HONOUR: Mr
Bugg?
MR BUGG: Thank you,
your Honour.
Your Honour, during the
luncheon adjournment I tried to seek some authority to perhaps deal
with the issues or consider the issues that your Honour raised first
thing this morning.
HIS HONOUR: Yes.
MR BUGG: The
section 11 of our Code is almost identical in terms to similar
sections under the Griffith Codes in Queensland and Western
Australia. I first of all sought some support through authority
from Queensland and I can give your Honour the references but
unfortunately the factual situations which were being considered by
the appellate courts under their section 16 really involved by way
of illustration, for example, the situation where a person had been
convicted of selling alcohol to a minor and then was later charged
with keep licensed premises open for trading and of course the
appellate courts were saying well look these are quite different
situations. I will give your Honour those references now if you
like. The first is in The Queensland Weekly Notes of 1920,
it’s decision No. 5—
Page 291
Decision number 25 R. v.
Sammon. The next decision is one of the Court of Criminal
Appeal in Queensland in 1975 Q.R. page 301. That’s R. v. GORDON
ex parte The Attorney General. And finally I refer your Honour to
The Queen v. Kiripatea reported in 1991 2Q.R. page 686.
What is interesting about that decision is that the Court of
Criminal Appeal in Queensland found that a person who had been
convicted of mutiny under the Corrective Services Act, an element of
which his escape from prison, when convicted of escape and not
sentenced for that crime was found to be not in a position which
infringed the equivalent section under the Queensland Code. In
other words under our Code, where the Section speaks of punishment,
the Court of Criminal Appeal in Queensland has said that a
conviction does not constitute shall we say an infringement of that
prohibition.
Page 292
-but, Your Honour, just at the
last moment I ‘phoned Western Australia and there found reported in
1992/4 Volume 10 of the WA Reports at page 169 the case of
PHILLIPS v. CARBONE No. 2 and there the issue under
consideration was effectively the factual proposition that I’d
intended to put to your Honour in submissions in the event that I
could find no authority. And in that case the defendant had driven
a motor vehicle into a stationary vehicle and simultaneously
injured two occupants in that stationary vehicle and he was
convicted on two separate counts of dangerous driving causing bodily
harm and he was sentenced on one count but the magistrate held that
he was protected from punishment on the other count by reason of
Section 16 of the Criminal Code – which, as I said, is the Western
Australian equivalent of our Section 11. I notice Mr Mace now has
the report there for your Honour – if I could take you – and I
haven’t read the full text of the judgement in the time available,
your Honour, but I do take you to page 174
Page 293
from the judgement of the
presiding judge Acting Chief Justice Pidgeon where on the third
paragraph of that page he starts “Section 16 in the form as it was
considered in Cutler” and go on from there, I won’t read the section
of the judgement out to your Honour.
If I could take you to the
judgement of Nicholson J. at page 182 at line 10, commencing
with the paragraph “Applying the views which I have reached which I
consider are supported by the approaches of the courts in Cutler
v. Gibson I reached the conclusion that section 16 requires me”
et cetera.
HIS HONOUR: There
doesn’t seem to be any reference to Vallance’s case here.
MR BUGG QC: No, there
isn’t. There usually isn’t when you move outside Tasmania, I’m
sorry your Honour.
HIS HONOUR:
Vallance makes it clear the majority decision that the act in
section 13 as opposed to section 11 is the physical act and doesn’t
include the consequence. And indeed that would seem to be the
concept of act in section 11 because they’re talking about the
possibility of an act causing two separate results, namely something
short of death and death if it subsequently occurs. So the act or
omission, it would seem to me, would be the physical act and not all
the external elements which would make up the offence in question.
MR BUGG QC: I certainly
rad that exception in the last few lines of section 11 as referring
to the situation where someone has for instance wounded a person who
later dies.
HIS HONOUR: Yes.
But it is interesting that it says “if any person dies” not “if the
complainant dies” or
Page 294
The person who has been
injured in the first offence.
MR BUGG QC: I certainly
didn’t read that extended meaning into it, your Honour, and
certainly my learned junior and I were discussing the matter just
before your Honour came in, and certainly in the judgements of the
High Court they of course refer to the meaning of the word “act” and
say that it has different meanings in different sections of the
Criminal Code and they didn’t specifically address section 11 as far
as that was concerned. It would seem to me to be an inconsistency,
your Honour, where the foreseeability of a consequence such as the
ongoing passage of a powerful bullet of a fragmentation from – sorry,
a powerfully driven bullet or the fragmentation from a powerfully
driven bullet and if those consequences were foreseeable that a
person could escape criminal responsibility whereas you can have in
this State and certainly I can’t cite any appellate authority for
you because section 11 has only been referred to once in this Court
or in the Court of Criminal Appeal and that was by your Honour in
Causby’s case in 1984.
HIS HONOUR: Yes,
that was only very much in passing.
MR BUGG QC: And it was
only in passing, if at all in obiter. Your Honour, I would submit
that relying upon Phillips v. Carbone that the position as
formulated within the indictment satisfies –
HIS HONOUR: So
that’s both in relation o the two counts of murder where one bullet
achieved the same results and also to the fragmentation woundings?
MR BUGG QC: The
woundings proceeding from fragmentation.
HIS HONOUR: Yes.
MR BUGG QC: And, your
Honour, in so far as that
Page 295
Is concerned I would, if your
Honour is against me on that, and I don’t seek to have the matter
resolved certainly before I proceed further this afternoon, but I
would then, shall we say as a fall back position, rely upon the
Court of Criminal Appeal’s decision in Queensland in Kirapatayer
(?)
Page 296
HIS HONOUR: Yes,
there’s a discussion about a similar, another Section, which on its
face appears to have marked similarities to our Section 11, but
which in fact does contain quite significant differences which are
relied upon by the Court of Appeal in England in the case of
Thomas which is a 1949 case, I think it’s 32 C.A.R. which I was
looking at in other Chambers and couldn’t find it in the set of
Chambers over here, but they made the very strong point in that
case, which was a Common Law case, that the Section in question, the
Acts Interpretation Act of the United Kingdom was referring to not
being punished for the same offence as opposed to act. Now they are
the very words that we use in our Section, and so I’d like to see
the wording of both Griffith Codes, West Australia and Queensland,
before necessarily following the Supreme Court of Western Australia
if their wording is different.
MR BUGG QC: Yes. Your
Honour insofar as that is concerned you will find that Chief Justice
Hangar in Gordon’s case in Queensland, the reference to which
I gave you, considers Thomas’s case in the second page of his
judgement on page 303, and after referring to the relevant passage
from the judgement of Justice Humphries the learned Chief Justice
in Queensland says “That the law in Queensland is different is made
clear by the assertion in Section 16” so seeking to differentiate
between them.
HIS HONOUR: Yes,
looks as though the Queensland Act might very well be the same as
our Code.
MR BUGG QC: Yes. And
your Honour I’m sorry I don’t have the, all the detail for that
available to you, but I do also refer you to the consolidation of
the statutes with the annotated Section of the Criminal Code in 1932
where in fact Section 32 of the Acts Interpretation Act, our Acts
Interpretation Act, is also referred
Page 297
to in that annotation. But I
can’t take the matter any further your Honour and rely on the
submission I have made to you.
HIS HONOUR: Yes.
Well I wonder if you could just identify the fragmentation counts,
not necessarily now, perhaps Mr Perks could do so. That’s to say
where on the Crown case the bullet that caused the wounding has
already been the subject matter of some prior count. I mean if
there is no challenge from the Defence that some other bullet caused
the - fragmented in some different way by striking something, some
body or some object, which is not the subject to a count, well if
there is no challenge from the Defence I’m not troubled by that.
But it is really only where the Crown has told me that the act of
firing one particular bullet has caused two results. That’s where
I’m troubled so if Mr Perks perhaps could identify those for me I
would be grateful.
MR BUGG QC: Thank you
your Honour.
Page 298
MR BUGG QC: Yes, thank
you your Honour. As I foreshadowed on day 1 I would, after the
conclusion of the playing of the video recorded interview, make some
submissions to you. Firstly in relation to the question of the
impact of the crime upon victims and then, secondly to provide you
with some background information and a psychiatric report prepared
at my request by Dr Sale, together with an update in relation to
that. Your Honour, I do make these submissions to you in accordance
with the requirements of Section 13, or Clause 13 of the Charter of
Victim’s rights, which provides victims of crime with the right to
have the full effects of the crime upon him or her made known to the
sentencing court by the prosecutor in matters relating to offences
involving personal violence and there is a very broad definition of
‘victim’ under that Charter:
HIS HONOUR: Well,
what is the status of this Charter, Mr Bugg?
MR BUGG QC: It has been
adopted by the State Government, by successive State Governments,
and –
HIS HONOUR: Well,
your authority to address on this is really under the Code, isn’t it?
MR BUGG QC: It certainly
is under the Code but –
HIS HONOUR:
Certainly if the government has adopted it, a Charter of this kind,
then provided it’s authorised by the Code I will gladly hear what
you have got to say about it.
MR BUGG QC: Yes, well, I
would submit that the very broad, I think that it is Section 386,
provides-
Page 299
HIS HONOUR: Yes,
but I think that is the Charter with which I have to work.
MR BUGG QC: Yes. Well,
I merely identify that certainly as a basis for a broad public
expectation that victims of crime have certain entitlements under
that Charter.
HIS HONOUR: Yes.
MR BUGG QC: Your Honour,
the grief and anguish that is experienced following the sudden and
unexpected loss of a life’s companion or a lover, a parent, a child
or a cherished friend is a human emotion which requires not
explanation and in times of strife or human conflict or even natural
disaster we tend to accept loss of life or significant personal
injury as one of the exigencies of the environment or times within
which we live. There is no every day experience which can condition
the human psyche for a violent assault upon it of the proportions of
Martin Bryant’s senseless criminal behaviour on the 28th
April, 1996. In a situation such as this I would even go so far as
to submit that a detailed analysis in a subjective sense of the
impact of this man’s callous conduct upon his victims is unlikely to
increase the ultimate sentence which I submit your Honour should be
moved to impose upon him. But it is important that a general
overview of the impact of this man’s crimes upon his victims be
given, not only to properly record in a general sense the impact of
crimes, but also to provide the victims with an opportunity to have
the impact of that crime and their reason to it made known to this
court.
Page 300
Understandably there is such
a mixture of human emotion in the responses provided as a response
to an invitation I issued a week and a half ago, that it is
impossible to individually deal with the response of each victim.
There have been expressions of anger, sorrow, emotional and physical
pain, a desire for retribution, an inescapable element of the
sentencing process as far as this matter is concerned, despair in
coping with the void caused by these crimes and a sense of
hopelessness. Some people have dealt with their burdens with a
fierce determination to survive and a will to prove ultimately that
they have been the victor; others have, in the diverse complexity of
human nature, been utterly devastated by the event and with help are
bravely struggling to the surface; in the middle, we see people with
steady dispositions and wonderfully strong family or support groups
to lean upon when the need arises. To outsiders these people have
survived and are coping. With some few exceptions, Mr Perks, Mr
Craig Coad and I have probably spoken to most people directly
affected by this horrible massacre. But as I said, your Honour, it
would not be appropriate to go through individually in detail the
impact of the crime on each individual victim because I have already
identified perhaps two reasons why and one is it would be unfair to
differentiate in my submission based on responses and seek to
provide to the court some substantial differences and the reasons
for them in the response to these criminal acts.
In dealing with the material
which has been provided to my office, and that which has been
gathered as well by staff within my office, I propose to break down
the issues of impact under four general headings:
1.
Impact to injured persons.
2.
Impact upon those who have lost family members or friends.
3.
Impact upon eye witnesses, and
4.
the impact upon the broader community and the people directly
involved in that broader community in dealing with this particular
matter.
Page 301
Your Honour, I have listed,
as has Mr Perks, those people who suffered significant physical
injury as a result of direct gunshot or relayed gunshot on the 28th
April. Those people have, in many instances, had to undergo a
considerable number of surgical processes. They will never fully
recover from the significant injuries which they have suffered as a
result of this man’s callous criminal conduct. Persons who suffered
serious injury on that day were not only subjected to physical pain
of the injury but also the anxiety and apprehension caused by the
isolation of the site at which this incident occurred. Many waited
in fear of death whilst appropriate arrangements were made to
evacuate them from the area. These people experienced extreme
levels of pain, anxiety and frustration and the responses of their
companions can be equally understood.
Page 302
When they were eventually
evacuated they were separated from their companions and this only
added to the anxiety of the latter. These people have also had to
undergo as I said surgical procedures on many occasions and even now
many of them are confronted with further operations and therapy.
Some of the persons who are
the subject of the attempted murder charges have suffered
significant physical impairment, loss of employment, or employment
prospects, and certainly enjoyment of life. The impact of the crime
upon injured persons also includes the need for ongoing counselling,
experiencing extreme grief, sleeplessness, flashbacks, nightmares,
anxiety attacks which can involve nausea, loss of balance, headaches
and so on. Many have become socially withdrawn and suffer anxiety
which when in public places particularly restaurants. The emotional
impact on injured persons also includes feeling the loss of identity
and suffering depression, sometimes to the point of having suicidal
tendencies. For many their depression is exacerbated by both the
pain and the limited mobility resulting from their physical
injuries. And I should add that some of the people, and I know
particularly having spoken to Miss Linda White, that the surgical
procedures which have had to be undertaken to try and reconstruct
the injury sites, and in her case her arm, has itself had a huge
telling effect on the sound remainder of their bodies.
The social consequences for
the victims who were injured at Port Arthur include feeling isolated
and losing their sense of freedom in society, loss of self esteem,
social insecurity, in some cases inability to drive motor vehicles
and requiring assistance in performing what previously were for them
every day tasks. Some have suffered severe financial loss due to
inability to work and for many this incident has caused a
significant reduction in their quality of life.
Page 303
Dealing with those who lost
family members or friends the nature of the impact of the crime on
the families and friends of victims include emotional, social,
physical and financial harm. The emotional impact ranges from
sadness and disbelief to anger and bitterness to extreme grief, in
some cases requiring hospitalisation, and further to depression
which for some people extended to considering suicide.
Page 304
some have been prescribed
anti-depressant medication and sleeping tablets. The families of
victims have expressed feelings of powerlessness and frustration,
feelings of loss even for those surviving members whose lives have
fallen apart. They have described their lives as being totally
destroyed, feeling pain at seeing family members grieving and
struggling to be strong and supportive to their loved ones. Many
have suffered relationship breakdowns, many families and friends of
victims have expressed that they have lost their direction in life
and that they are reassessing their whole lives. Many complained of
loneliness and of feeling trapped, many who were also at Port Arthur
with their now deceased loved ones suffer from recurrent nightmares
and flashbacks. This tragedy had also impacted upon people’s social
existence, some victims have said they feel isolated, that they have
a feeling of not being loved, of being socially insecure, some to a
point of describing themselves as agoraphobic. Some have difficulty
in dealing with everyday tasks and find that they are easily
prompted into a bout of uncontrollable crying and some have said
that they experience feelings of guilt when enjoying life. Some
members of families or friends of deceased now suffer from stress,
feel emotionally exhausted and some of those still working have
difficulty with concentration. Some have increased or started
smoking and increased their alcohol consumption. Many families and
friends of deceased victims are receiving ongoing counselling as
well. Many of the deceased victims relatives needed to take time
off work and for some that meant loss of their own income on top of
loss of income from their deceased partners. Many have suffered
financially as a result of the loss of income of a partner or a
parent and in some cases a sibling or a son or a daughter. There
are other obvious financial consequences for families of deceased
victims, usually the cost of flying interstate to be with other
family members or to attend funerals and so on.
Page 305
Your Honour, it goes without
saying that, obviously the conduct that we have described to you,
particularly yesterday, would, when observed by any person, or, when
committed in the presence, perhaps without the full awareness of
many people, have had a significant impact upon those people. Just
the realisation of how close they came themselves to suffering such
violence in itself has had a shattering effect on many people. Many
eyewitnesses to the events of April the 28th have since
felt anger and bitterness, disbelief and powerlessness, some have
even felt guilt at not being able to do more than they did on the
day. And, of course, I hope that the playing of that video film
yesterday would allay some of those concerns. Many eyewitnesses
now suffer from fear and anxiety attacks and feel socially insecure,
many are particularly nervous, some even claustrophobic in crowds or
public places such as shopping malls.
Page 306
Many eyewitnesses have
suffered marital breakdowns or significant tensions within their
family relationships and some have expressed suicidal tendencies as
well. A common complaint is that they keep reliving the event and
that is what haunts them. Many suffer from flashbacks and have
trouble sleeping. Some witnesses have suffered from weight loss or
even weight gain. Some have developed eating disorders. Many
witnesses complain of tiredness and some people have experienced a
reduction in their general physical health and some. As I’ve said
previously in relation to another group, taken up smoking. Some
have had problem with concentration and short term memory loss. It
is not uncommon for witnesses to say that they lose their temper
more readily than they used to. For some, violence has become a
problem for them within their own homes and for others any sign of
violence or even loud noise becomes extremely distressing. An
illustration of that has been given by some witnesses as to their
reaction to the sounds of helicopters. Many witnesses have become
more security conscious and are aware of noises. Some have been
concerned at driving and feeling isolated and many have said that as
a result of this incident they have lost their trust in many people.
Many witnesses expressed distress over their feeling of total lack
of control at the time of the event.
The impact upon children has
also been significant. Changes in results and performances at
school have been observed for the worse.
In so far as the general
community is concerned, your Honour, I propose to merely reply upon
your Honour’s own perception, having lived within this community
during the past six months, as to the impact it has had in a global
sense within this State but obviously, and it goes without saying,
that the emergency services
Page 307
Personnel, ambulance, police
officers, employees at Port Arthur Historic Site, hospital employees
and people directly connected with dealing with this tragedy have
all been subjected to a most unusual, even for their training,
experience within their work and responsibility. For those people,
some have suffered sleeplessness and other understandable responses
to the stress of having had to maintain control and deal with this
tragic event. Your Honour, I don’t propose to go into any more
detail than that, other than to refer you to a brief report that
Doctor Ian Sale provided to me and I’ll make a copy of that
available to your Honour, dated the 13th November,
1996. I have made a copy available to my learned friend. That is
a general summary of the responses of his practice to people,
obviously in an anonymous way, who have attended his practice for
assistance following this incident. I think it’s only appropriate
that I tender it to you in that form.
Your Honour, just before
moving on, there was one passage from a written response which I
proposed to just conclude this aspect of the Crown’s presentation to
you on and it is a response from one person who suffered the loss of
loved ones at Port and that person concluded the letter I received
in this term “I can but keep surviving to enshrine their spirit in
the world. The incredible unconditional love, the warmth and
freedom, the laughter, the dances, the spontaneity cuddling and
kissing, they are no longer there. I will, however, proudly
endeavour to keep their spirits alive throughout my life. My love
for them will never die and can never be taken.” And that is a
response which many people who suffered the loss of loved ones have
expressed to me as well, I might say.
Page308
Your Honour, I told you that
I would provide you with some background into the circumstances of
Martin Bryant because obviously at this stage, there being no trial,
your Honour has little information which would assist you in
understanding the background of this man.
Perhaps if I start by making
available to you the copy of a report which was obtained by me from
Doctor Ian Sale dated the 6th August, 1996. I pass up a
copy to your Honour, my learned friend already has had a copy of
that report, as had his predecessor.
Page309
Some of the background
information contained in that report I was going to refer your
Honour to in some detail from other material which I had gathered,
but I think it’s important that I just say, by way of outline, that
Dr. Sale sets out the basis upon which he claimed some understanding
of Martin Bryant before he expressed the opinion. That’s set out on
page 1 in summary form where he says obviously he had been involved
in advising the Police during hostage negotiation he had observed
the video tape of Martin Bryant’s interview, he had studied records
available at Hospitals and educational institutions, and he had
studied a large number of statements made to Police listed in his
appendix and he had also conferred with a clinical psychologist.
You will see later in the report that unfortunately the clinical
psychologist was unable to complete her report due to effectively a
lack of full co-operation from Martin Bryant. But it in the end is
not a matter of great significance in so far as those matters which
I wish to place before you relate to.
If I could just take your
Honour to perhaps page 7 of the report, because really the interview
material, would provide your Honour with the same understanding as
you would have had from the Police interview. But, at page 7 he
says that, “From the time that Bryant became mobile” that is as a
young child “he seemed particularly active as he was a first child
there was no immediate concerns, there being no basis for comparison.
His speech development however was a concern to his parents and
speech therapy assistance was obtained. His first school which he
attended for just over a year was the Friends School and it was here
that his behavioural problems became clearly evident and his stay at
the school was brief. It was recommended that medical advice be
sought. He was referred then to the Ellerslie Clinic, a guidance
service, a child guidance service now replaced in function
Page 310
by Clare House, where he was
seen by a Medical Practitioner and some form of medication was
prescribed but gave only partial and temporary benefit. He was then
placed on a diet which was thought at the time to be helpful to
hyperactive children. His behaviour at school, and he then went to
the New Town Primary School, continued to cause concern at the
difficulties that were experienced then were restlessness and poor
attention and disruptiveness in class, demanding of attention, poor
relationships with his peers. It was noted hat he really didn’t
have any playground friends at all. And he had a habit of behaving
aggressively towards other children.
Page311
---and certainly as a result
of that there was poor scholastic performance. At the end, your
Honour, of his primary school period he was faced once again at the
Ellerslie Clinic for further assessment and there was a significant
amount of assessment then undertaken.
He then moved into secondary
school – and that’s not referred to in the report but I am just
detailing information that I have from other sources – and his,
certainly in class performance improved as he moved towards his
early teen years.
Your Honour, certainly as far
as his family was concerned his father - well both his parents but
particularly his father appear from all reports that have been
obtained to have tried to do their best for him and insofar as that
is concerned there was a fairly close relationship it would seem on
all accounts between Bryant and his father and that, your Honour,
relationship was terminated when Bryant’s father took his own life,
but I propose to just refer you to some other aspects of his
background which would assist your Honour in perhaps understanding
that when he left school at about age 15 his father tried to
encourage him to take odd jobs in the New Town area – he then lived
at Augusta Road – and he used to do some gardening for people, he
would take vegetables around and try and sell them door to door and
it was through that activity that he met Miss Harvey who owned the
property in Clare Street that he was residing in at the time of this
incident. He did odd jobs for her and gradually the association he
had with her became a very friendly one where he continued to work
on a fairly regular basis for her until she went to hospital with
her mother who was gravely unwell. While she was in hospital,
Bryant and his father tidied up the the house that they were living
in quite substantially, that is, Miss Harvey and her mother, the
property was somewhat of a state, Miss Harvey being described by
many people who knew her
Page 312
As an oddly eccentric person.
However, the association they seemed to have was one which in many
respects kept Bryant under a level of control.
Page 313
The commencement of that
friendship was in about 1986/87 and after that Bryant would be seen
accompanying Miss Harvey and in many respects some of, perhaps, his
rather strange attitudes towards money appear to have evolved at
this time because one person interviewed by the police said that
Miss Harvey would often attend the caryard at which this person was
employed looking for a new car. She would often be accompanied by
Bryant and Bryant would usually indicate to Miss Harvey which
vehicle he wanted to purchase by stating ‘That’s nice.’, or, ’I’ll
have that one’’, and usually, then, Miss Harvey would purchase the
vehicle. She was independently wealthy, being the recipient of a
steady and substantial income from the Adams Estate Trust. On one
occasion this person remembers the buying of a new vehicle at the
beginning of the month and this was sometimes a practice she would
follow when she found there was no money in the bank account to meet
expenses – she’d just take the car in and sell it and then when the
next month’s income would come in, go and buy another car. On
another occasion – and of course Bryant was with her when these
events were occurring – the man illustrated occasions when, for
instance, a new vehicle was purchased for twenty eight thousand
dollars, it was shortly after reversed into a tree denting and
scratching it, they, Bryant and Harvey, repaired the vehicle
themselves utilising house paint and that vehicle was shortly
thereafter sold for seven thousand dollars. Transport Tasmania
records indicate that Miss Harvey owned in excess of fifty motor
vehicles during the period of time that she was the registered owner
of motor vehicles.
HIS HONOUR: Well, that
covers a great deal longer period of time than the prisoner was
associated with Miss Harvey,
Page 314
MR BUGG QC: It certainly
does but there was certainly a frequent interchange of vehicles in
the late seventies. In 1990 Miss Harvey went to hospital and that
is when Mr. Bryant, and his son, Martin Bryant, assisted in cleaning
up the property. When she came out of hospital she was really
unable to cope and at that time she was 47 years of age and Bryant
then moved in to live at Clare Street with her. In October, 1991
Bryant moved to Copping to the farming property that has been
mentioned on a couple of occasions where he lived with Miss Harvey
and operated in a strange sort of way from that property the – Your
Honour, I’m going through some of this material because quite
frankly there has been, in some instances, either a confusion as to
chronology in the way in which some matters have been commented upon
publicly and certainly in so far as some other matters are concerned.
For instance, there was a suggestion that during his younger life
he’d slep with pigs – well, at one stage, there was a piglet at the
property and police have on record a statement suggesting that
Bryant was encouraged to keep the piglet in his bedroom to keep it
warm at night and he did that until it became rather large and
unmanageable.
Page 315
I suppose since seeing “Babe”
not too many people would take a critical view perhaps of that in
its early stages in any event. But on the Thirteenth of December,
1991, Miss Harvey executed a Will leaving her Estate to Bryant. And
on the – some people commented about Miss Harvey’s driving skills.
On the Thirteenth April, 1992, she had an accident in driving the
motor vehicle whilst Bryant was a passenger in the car and it
indicated that at the time of the accident they were travelling at
about sixty kilometres per hour and had two vehicles behind them and
one of them travelled close to the rear of the vehicle and when
there was a sudden stopping motion there was a collision between
vehicles.
He accident in which Miss
Harvey died was on the Twentieth of October, 1992. That accident
was about one point six kilometres on the Arthur Highway west of
Copping and the accident occurred when the Mazda 121 sedan, being
driven by Miss Harvey, in a westerly direction veered onto the
incorrect side of the road and collided with an oncoming vehicle.
In a statement relating to that accident Bryant indicated that he
and Harvey had been to Sorell obtaining groceries and feed for
livestock and were returning to the property. There were three dogs
in the rear of the vehicle and his last recollection was of turning
his head around to his right to stop two of the dogs who were
fighting. Prior to that accident the vehicle was travelling at
about sixty kilometres per hour. After the accident Bryant was
admitted to Hospital and x-rays of cervical spine revealed evidence
of bilateral fractures through both his first and second cervical
vertebrae. That was an injury for which he received treatment and
then your Honour was released from Hospital.
As a consequence of the death
of Miss Harvey Bryant inherited a substantial Estate, that
inheritance the effect of
Page 316
Being effective in June and
July, 1993. This left him independent and wealthy. Now that is
June and July, 1993. On the Thirteenth and Fourteenth of August,
1993, his father committed suicide.
Page 317
But prior to committing
suicide he had commenced making arrangements through Perpetual
Trustees to have a committee appointed under the Mental Health Act
to ;manage his son’s affairs and that, your Honour, was a factor
indicated that prior to him committing suicide, Mr. Bryant senior
was making preparation for things in his absence. He started to put
his son’s affairs in the hands of a committee, he changed bank
accounts over to wife’s name, he changed the Hydro account at their
home over to his wife’s name, and a number of other such matters.
Now, your Honour, I dwell
upon that for two reasons, the first one is that the medical
practitioner treating Mr. Bryant at the time was treating him for
anxiety and depression, on the day that he committed suicide his
wife spoke to him on two occasions by telephone at the property at
Copping and on both occasions she was unable to make any sense or
any real sense in the conversations she had with him and she was
concerned about him. Left pinned to the door of his property, of
the farm house, was a note in his handwriting saying “Call the
police” and his body was some two days later discovered in a dam on
the property, face down in about two to three metres of water. The
relevance of that, your Honour, in 1993 probably, in so far as what
occurred on the 28th of April, is this, that by 1993
Bryant no longer had Miss Harvey, his constant companion, his father,
who always seemed to keep an eye on him when things started to get
out of hand, and was a person with whom he had a lot of social or
recreational activity in the Peninsula area, that is diving, fishing,
his father would take him out scuba diving and so on, and that
consequence left him without any certainly steadying influence from
his father. And a comment has been made that it’s certainly
apparent that his mother is unable or was unable from this time
onwards certainly
Page 318
To control his conduct. He
had the means on a regular basis through Perpetual tees, the
committee appointed, to obtain access to funds and an illustration
of the way in which without any measure of control he spent money in
the months of March and April of 1996, that is leading up to this
event, he had two passbook accounts into which income or revenue was
paid and to which he had access –
Page 319
In March/April he withdrew
from one account Thirteen thousand one hundred and fifty dollars,
from the other account he withdrew Eleven hundred dollars. He sole
property at auction through various auction houses in Hobart worth –
or he received from the sale of that property Nine thousand eight
hundred dollars. So he had access in those last two months before
this incident to Twenty-three thousand dollars and obviously he had
no, shall we say, outgoings or expenses which would normally be
associated with a property of that nature.
HIS HONOUR: Some reference
in the record on interview as I recall it of trips overseas, were
they reality?
MR. BUGG: They were reality,
your Honour. If I could just take you to that.
HIS HONOUR: When did they
occur in this time frame?
MR. BUGG: They certainly
occurred at about this time. What happened was prior to this
incident the extent to which he was able to travel was severely
curtailed by the people controlling his finances because he was just
stepping onto planes and travelling with no concern for where the
funds were coming from. If I could just take your Honour to that.
The travel internationally in recent years shall we say since the
death of Miss Harvey, in December ’93 he flew from Melbourne to
Singapore and returned three days later. In April ’94 he flew to
Melbourne to Bangkok to London, that is on the 19th April.
On the 25th April he flew from London to Sweden. On the
30th April he flew from Sweden to the United Kingdom. On
the 3rd May he flew from the U.K. to Los Angeles. On the
7th May he flew from Los Angeles to Melbourne. That’s in
May.
In July ’94, he
went from Sydney to Frankfurt on the 10th. He then went
from Vienna to Frankfurt to Copenhagen
Page320
on the 17th
July. On the 22nd July, he flew from Frankfurt to
Sydney. Then three and a
half months later
he flew from Melbourne to Bangkok to London, he then flew from
London on the 11th November out of Heathrow, destination
unknown. On the 28th November he returned to the United
Kingdom and flew back to Australia on the 30th November
In ’95 in early
February, he flew from Melbourne to Auckland, he then flew four days
later to Los Angeles, six days later from Miami he flew to
Frankfurt, six days later he flew from Frankfurt to Miami, five days
later he flew from Los Angeles to Auckland and Melbourne. Two and a
half months later he flew from Melbourne to Sydney to Bangkok to
London. Five days after that he arrived in Germany, based upon a
passport stamp. Five days later he was in Poland –
Page321
one day later he was back in
Germany, two days later he flew from London to Bangkok to Sydney.
Your Honour, in
1995 – in June, that is, only one fortnight later, he flew from
Hobart to Melbourne then Melbourne, Bangkok, Frankfurt and then two
weeks later he flew Frankfurt to Singapore to Sydney. Then three
weeks later he flew Hobart, Sydney, Los Angeles, six days later he
flew Los Angeles, Tokyo and two days later, Tokyo to Melbourne.
Then a month later he flew Hobart, Melbourne to Kuala Lumpur where
he lasted two days and flew from there to Bangkok and then flew back
to Sydney. And obviously by ’96 there were some constraints being
imposed but five months after that last Bangkok trip in late January
he flew Melbourne, Sydney, Bangkok, London and stayed in London six
days and flew back to Melbourne. That is excluding his interstate
travel and there are four pages of details of interstate travel over
the period of time – sorry, three pages, your Honour, over the
period of time after Miss Harvey’s death.
At the time the
Martins bought Seascape property Bryant’s family were certainly
interested in buying the property. That has been indicated in spite
of what Bryant told the police during the interview and there was
some real disappointment. His father was interested in purchasing
the property, there was no suggestion of any gazumping or any other
such activity as far as Mr. and Mrs. Martin was concerned. The
owners of the property were unwell, they were thinking of selling,
there was obviously information to that effect available in the
district and Mr. Bryant was interested in buying the property but by
the time he got to a stage where he could do anything about it the
Martins had purchased it. That was certainly a matter of
disappointment. Later, when Bryant himself had money and after – he
tried to buy from Mr. and Mrs. Martin the property which they owned
at Palmer’s Lookout Road.
Page 322
You will remember
there was mention about that. And he was told by the Martins that
the property was not for sale. That appears to have been a
disappointment of not having his father – of his father dying and
taking his own life in a state of depression may or may not, and I
am only speculating, your Honour, may or may not provide some
insight into what caused the confrontation between Martin Bryant and
Mr. and Mrs. Martin and why he went to that property first on that
day.
Page 323
Because there had
obviously been some difficulty at Palmer’s Lookout Road as well and
he went there next after he left Seascape, which as I have said
previously, leaving that house with both Mr. and Mrs. Martin dead.
Now whether in his way he had decided that the loss of his father
and his father’s disappointments were in some way connected with an
inability to purchase Seascape and whether he missed the
recreational activities he had with his father at Seascape is a
matter only for speculation your Honour, but on all the material
that has been gathered there has been no indication of motivation
but it certainly is interesting to consider that history.
Your Honour, I
refer you to the rest of the report now of Dr. Sale which was
obviously prepared by him, at my request, to determine whether or
not Section 16 of our Criminal Code provided any explanation for
Bryant’s criminal responsibility, in other words was he criminally
insane at the time he committed these acts. And you will see that
Dr. Sales’s conclusion your Honour was that there was no such
defence available to him. He concluded that it was his opinion that
the syndrome, or disorder, which explained much of the conduct that
Bryant went through, which many people found either disconcerting
and anti-social or inappropriate, was attributable to a syndrome
caused Asperger’s, that’s A-s-p-e-r-g-e-r’s, syndrome and he details
the indicia of that syndrome on page 16 of his report. But he says,
and your Honour will see when you look down the length of that page,
that many of the shall we say indicia that are referred to there may
be said to be consistent with aspects of his conduct or behaviour
about which some comment or evidence has been given.
But he says on page
17 “These various named syndromes are just that, syndromes,
constellations of behavioural patterns that are found together.
There is no indication on causation which for all these syndromes
remains
Page 324
speculative. What
seems clear is that abnormalities were evident from his earliest
days. He was likely born with these problems rather than acquiring
them through an abnormal family environment.”
Page 325
As an adult he can be regarded
as manifesting a personality disorder, the general diagnostic then
goes on to refer to for personality disorders which includes an
enduring pattern of inner experience and behaviour that deviates
markedly from the expectations of the individual’s culture. This
pattern is manifested in two or more of the following areas,
cognition, effectivity, interpersonal functioning and impulse
control. The enduring pattern is inflexible and pervasive across a
broad range of personal and social situations.”
Your Honour, I won’t go through
the further detail of that.
HIS HONOUR: What’s the
prognosis?
MR. BUGG Q.C.: The prognosis,
your Honour, is really that as far as Doctor Sale is concerned,
there would be no improvement on the condition –
HIS HONOUR: Does Doctor Sale
have a view about the presence or absence of schizophrenia or any
other specific psychotic illness?
MR. BUGG Q.C: Yes, your
Honour. Thank you, your Honour, yes, the question of this man
suffering from schizophrenia was the subject of some speculation but
if I can just take your Honour to the relevant section of the report
where he deals with that, at the top of page 18 he says:
“There is no form of mental illness, as the term is usually
understood. He certainly does not manifest any psychotic illness
such as schizophrenia.”
He says: “Personality
disorder is generally subdivided into particularly commonly
occurring patterns. Bryant does not fit into many of these sub
types, they are obviously anti-social traits, but he is
Page 326
Not typical of individuals
with this pattern of behaviour. Perhaps, fortunately, he may be
unique. I am confident that notwithstanding his disabilities Bryant
knows what he has been doing and can discern between right and wrong.
Perhaps the clearest indicator of this is his maintaining a false
account of the day in question, an account that is invented. There
would be no need to invent this if he were not aware of the
wrongness of the behaviours for which he stands accused.”
He then says:
“Finally I do not believe
that he was acting under an irresistible impulse. His preparation
for the day, taking firearms, petrol, handcuffs, getting up early,
argue that some at least of the events of that day were planned
ahead. While Bryant maintains his false account of the day at Port
Arthur the meaning of his behaviour, if there is one, can only be
speculated upon. His preparation for the day and the evidence that
he was at Seascape before going to the historic site suggests that
his major intention was to kill or harm the Martins and perhaps burn
Seascape. He did not like the Martins and his mother has told of
how he held grudges. Perhaps in some way he even held the Martins
responsible for his father’s unhappiness and suicide. Why he then
proceeded on a homicidal spree remains a mystery. He had previously
caused concern during childhood when shot birds or took potshots at
tourists with his air rifle. His acquisition of military firearms
and associated literature suggests that he may have held fantasies
regarding their use. Other than occasional target practice he made
no obvious other use nor did he associate with other gun users.
Perhaps after he had started at Seascape he succumbed to a
previously
Page 327
Held fantasy and took pot
shots at tourists only this time with lethal fire power at his
disposal rather than an air rifle. Unfortunately this remains
speculation, only he knows why he travelled to Port Arthur on the 28th
April and for the present he chooses not to reveal this.”
Page 328
Your Honour, Dr. Sale
provided an update report to me on the 13th of November
along with that material which I indicated to your Honour I had a
copy of. I now pass that up to your Honour. The document, the
letter that I refer your Honour to, is the last two page report
dated the 13th of November. He once again details his
level of communication with Bryant and I think it is appropriate,
your Honour, if I read that last report to the court, a copy of
which my learned friend has.
He says:
Following my assessment of
this various material plus the opportunity of witnessing Bryant’s
demeanour during the hearing on the 7th November which
was, of course, when he pleaded guilty – I am now firmer in
conclusion that Bryant likely manifests a condition termed
Asverger’s Disorder, a developmental condition bearing some
similarities to autism. From early childhood and cognitive
development have been consistently abnormal. There have been
problems with language and communication and especially with his
social behaviour. In addition he has also been noted to have an
unusual voice, high pitched with little tonal variation and there
are unusual mannerisms and motor behaviours. His affect whatever the
circumstances appears fatuous and inappropriate. This was
particularly evident during the recent court hearing. However, it
should be not that this type of behaviour appears to be the norm for
Bryant. There is little variation. He appears to be incapable of
experiencing or expressing empathy, remorse or guilt, those emotions
which tend to act as brakes upon social behaviour. Indeed, his
social behaviour has been frequently observed to be disinhibited,
inappropriate and lacking commonsense. The original description of
Aspberger’s Disorder in 1994 referred to a lack of interpersonal
empathy, solitariness and the pursuit of idiosyncratic goals.
Page 329
He patients show
abnormalities of gaze, quality of expression and gesture and had
unusual voice production. Whilst most individuals with Aspbergers
disorder, going on from that quotation, are quiet, introverted and
present no hazard to the community there have been occasional other
reports where violence has occurred although not of this scope. In
some instances this has been described as apparently motiveless,
oddly motivated or callous. In Bryant’s case there was some earlier
restraining influences which helped contain his inappropriate and
anti-social conduct. For example, his father and Miss Harvey and
his financial circumstances. These restraints have been lost over
recent years. Aspberger’s disorder is not rare, probably occurring
in approximately point three percent of the population. It is far
more common in males. The cause is unknown although a genetic
aetiology has been suggested. There is no evidence to suggest that
an abnormal family environment plays a causative role. Indeed, in
this particular instance it would appear that his family have also
been victims of his behaviour, albeit in a different was and over a
protracted period.
Page 330
There is no treatment for
the disorder which can be regarded as lifelong. The relevant
diagnostic criteria for DSM4, which of course is the diagnostic
booklet used by psychiatrists and psychologists in this community is
attached to that report, your Honour. Your Honour, might I just
make one correction from the transcript, I think yesterday I
referred to Mrs. Pamela Sloane as Pauline Sloane – that should be
corrected on the transcript.
Your Honour, there is
perhaps one matter which I should just refer you to which causes, in
light of what has occurred, some concern and that is that when
Bryant left school he received a disability pension based on an
assessment of 85 per cent or more incapacity to work, and of course
throughout the period of receipt of such pension he has to undergo
regular reassessments insofar as that is concerned and in 1994,
because of the means he then had, that pension was terminated but
prior to the termination of that pension he was medically assessed –
and if I can just obtain that, the assessment involved an interview
as well and the interview material is enlightening to say the least
– I am sorry, the assessment was made in 1991 and during a
conversation with a medical practitioner undertaking the assessment
the comment was made that “His father protects him from any occasion
which would upset him as he continually threatens violence. Martin
tells me he like to go round shooting people”.
Your Honour, in conclusion,
I would make the submission I foreshadowed on the first day of these
proceedings in relation to the sentencing of this young man. The
position is clearly one where he is criminally responsible for his
acts. I don’t make the submission in a way akin to the problem
adverted to by the High Court in Bean’s case but the totality
of this man’s criminal conduct from any view is such that concepts
involving principles of sentencing such as the totality
Page 331
Principle should not have
any relevance to the ultimate disposition of this matter. And I
once again reiterate the submission I made to your Honour on day one.
Page 332
THE ALLOCUTUS WAS PUT TO THE
ACCUSED
HIS HONOUR: I’m sorry, Mr.
Avery, I should have given you an earlier opportunity to make------
Page 333
HIS HONOUR: ------any
submissions about the problem in relation to Section 11 so I’ll deal
with that as and when you wish.
MR. AVERY: Well I think
it’s more my learned friend’s problem than mine, with respect your
Honour, and no doubt he will deal with it in his usual capable way.
HIS HONOUR: Yes, very
well.
MR. AVERY: Your Honour
nothing that I can say on behalf of my client can mitigate the
outrageous nature of his conduct. My learned friend has used
highly charged language to describe the behaviour of Bryant over the
course of this fateful day and I do not disagree at all with his
description of this being a slaughter. The gross nature of the
conduct defies logic aor sane explanation and I am specifically
instructed to make no submissions or place before the Court any
explanation and I am specifically instructed to make no submissions
or place before the Court any explanation or reason for this
massacre other than can be gleaned from the medical material. The
reason and the answer to the burning question why must, at least for
the time being, remain with the Accused. All I can do is share with
the Court and the community the benefit of the expert material that
has been obtained by the Defence to try and give an insight into the
mind of this man.
Your Honour the Accused has
been examined by Dr. William Lucas, consultant psychiatrist of South
Australia, Mr. Ian Joblin, forensic psychologist of Melbourne, and
Professor Paul Mullin, forensic psychiatrist of Melbourne. In a
report prepared to the accused’s former Solicitor, dated Thirty-First
of May, 1996, Mr. William Lucas, who examined Bryant at the Risdon
Prison on the Twelfth of May concluded that it was unlikely that he
was suffering from a major psychiatric disorder. He also stated
that
Page 334
A diagnosis of schizophrenia
could not be made out on the basis of his examination. He commented,
“Mr. Bryant has some unusual symptoms but I think it will turn out
that this can be explained on the basis of a personality disorder
combined with longstanding feelings of depression, rejection and
alienation.”
Page 335
“If he had a longstanding
schizophrenic illness one would expect among other signs an obvious
deterioration in disfunctioning over the years. He seems to have
been much the same a long time. And further, I do not believe that
his depression reached the level of a major depressive episode in
the last twelve months. He did not indicate that he was notably
depressed at the time in question. I am sure Mr. Bryant will turn
out to have the diagnosis of a personality disorder, probably a
severe one, and indications are that the features of this disorder
will be mixed in type”.
The opinion expressed by Dr.
Lucas was in the following term; “At this stage of his assessment
I am of the opinion that Mr. Bryant is not suffering from a
psychiatric disorder which would allow him to raise the defence of
mental illness within the terms of the provisions of the Criminal
Code of Tasmania. I do not believe that at the time of the alleged
offence Bryant was suffering from a mental disease which would
render him incapable of understanding the physical character of his
acts or appreciating that his act was one which he should not do or
that it was done under an impulse which he was deprived of any power
to resist. I am also of the opinion that he is fit to plead,
although he will require some assistance in understanding in full
his legal situation and what is required of him. He is
intellectually handicapped, the degree of which is yet to be
determined, but this does not provide him with the defence and
should not interfere with his ability to participate meaningfully in
the preparation and conduct of his defence.”
Mr. Ian Joblin, the forensic
psychologist of Melbourne, interviewed Bryant on the Tenth of May
and the Sixth of June and, ignoring background material you Honour,
Mr Joblin particularly carried out intelligence testing, and on the
Tenth of May administered verbal – I’ll repeat
Page 336
That, on the Tenth of May
administered the Weshler Adult Intelligence Scale Revised. On that
date only verbal section was administered because of the
restrictions in Bryant’s movement and his verbal I.Q. at that point
was calculated at 64. His performance I.Q. testing was conducted on
the Sixth of June and that was calculated at 72, giving a full scale
I.Q . of 66, and I will detail the effects of that by the report I
particularly rely on in a moment.
Page 337
Two other specific
intelligence tests were conducted the Ravens Cololured Progressive
Matrices is designed for persons who may have an intellectual
abnormality or who may have deteriorated. This test was used to
assess the degree to which Bryant was able to think clearly or the
level to which his intellectual functioning may have deteriorated.
An actual IQ figure is not available from this test but Bryant
scored for Australian norms at a figure just greater than that which
would be expected of an eleven year old. The results of this test
indicate that compared with a group of eleven year olds, Bryant is
in the tenth per cent aisle, that is, ninety per cent of eleven year
old children would score higher than him on this test. To
complement that test, the Standard Progressive Matrices was
administered, this is a new Australian adaption reprinted in 1995,
it is a test of non-verbal reasoning ability and measures cognitive
functioning. This tests provides a measure of fluid intelligence,
eductive ability which is relatively independent of specific
learning acquired in a particular cultural or educational context.
In this 1995 Australian manual research indicated that scores on
this test tend to remain stable from the age of fifteen to twenty –five.
It is appropriate to indicate an IQ figure for Bryant as tested on 6th
June this year at 68. This places Bryant in the second per cent
aisle, that is, relative to persons of his age group, 98 per cent
would score higher than he did.
A further test of receptive
vocabulary was administered. It is often considered that vocabulary
is consistent with intelligence. For the purposes of assessing
Bryant’s power of hearing vocabulary the Peabody Picture Vocabulary
Test, Revised, was administered. This is designed primarily to
measure a subject’s receptive hearing vocabulary of Standard English.
In this sense it is an achievement test in that it shows the extent
of English
Page 338
Vocabulary acquisition. It
is not a comprehensive test of general intelligence, instead it
measures only one important facet of general intelligence,
vocabulary. On this test Bryant scored an age equivalent of a child
ten years nine months. At the time of testing this man’s
chronological age was twenty-nine years and twenty-four days. Again,
this is in my opinion consistent with the results on the
intelligence scale.
Page 339
Your Honour, the opinion
upon which the defence places most reliance, however, is that of
Professor P.E. Mullen, Forensic Psychiatrist, of 160 Nicholson
Street, Fitzroy in Victoria. I tender to the court the report of
Professor Mullin dated 12th of November, 1996, together
with his Curriculum Vitae, but given the import of this report I
would ask to read it in its entirety.
I have prepared this report at the request of Mr Bryant’s legal
representative, Mr John Avery. It is based on interview conducted
on the 4 May 1996 at the Royal Hobart Hospital, lasting in total
some 3 1/2hours. In addition I had access to extensive
documentation which included”
And I won’t detail
that.
This report is intended to clarify for the court why an insanity
plea was not considered appropriate and to at least outline some of
the factors which contributed to the dreadful actions of Mr Bryant.
In my interview with Mr Bryant, although he was initially anxious
and somewhat reticent, he gradually relaxed as the interview
progressed. He was receiving medication for pain but this did not
produce any disorientation or obvious disorganisation in his state
of mind. He gave the impression of attempting within his capacities
to respond to my enquiries. As will be noted later in the report he
initially denied memories of the offences but subsequently gave a
fuller account.
Mr Bryant gives the initial impression of being a normal young man.
Superficially his conversation is coherent, though his vocabulary is
limited. It is only when you attempt to test Mr Bryant’s
comprehension skills and numeracy that the extent of his
intellectual limitation becomes clear. He functions in the
borderline range between intellectual disability and the dull normal
individual. Mr Bryant’s intelligence has been tested on a number of
occasions between 1973 and 1996. The extensive testing carried out
by Dr Ian Joblin revealed a full scale IQ of 66 with his attainments
on the so called performance scales being somewhat higher than on
the verbal tests. A range of other tests of intellectual functions
performed by Mr Joblin confirmed that Mr Bryant was functioning
Page 340
intellectually in the lowest 1 to 2 percent of the population. A
measure of intelligence is of less practicable significance than
functional capacities. In this regard Mr Bryant has functioned in
the community, lived independently, albeit with the assistance and
financial constraints provided by a guardian. He can manage not
only to function in his every day and routine environment but also
to cope with trips interstate and overseas, though as will be noted
later these represent limited excursions. Mr Bryant, like many
intellectually limited people, has problems with the temporal
relationships and the sequencing of events.
Page 341
Thus he brings
together occurrences which in fact were separated by considerable
lengths of time and he will alter the order of events without being
aware of the distortion. The good physical appearance of Mr Bryant
paradoxically may have added to his interpersonal difficulties as it
raised expectations of a level of interpersonal competence which in
fact he does not possess and the disappointed expectations may have
tended to make others withdraw from him.
Past Medical and Psychiatric History.
Mr
Bryant reports two previous hospitalisations. The first was when he
was about 10 years old and required treatment for burns sustained
while playing with fireworks. The second in October 1992 was
following a road traffic accident in which he sustained a fracture
of his cervical vertebrae, fractures of the ribs and a head injury.
He is recorded as having remained unconscious for approximately an
hour. He described severe headaches for some weeks afterwards. He
was not aware of greater problems with memory or concentration
following the accident nor of any change in his behaviour. He has
subsequently had a CAT scan to visualise his brain and an
electroencephalogram to record the electrical activity in the brain
and these do not suggest any brain damage.
In
his childhood Mr Bryant was assessed on a number of occasions by
psychologists and psychiatrists. He was noted soon after starting
school to have both behavioural problems and learning difficulties.
He was referred from the Friends School in September 1973 for
assessment. He was noted to be aggressive, destructive and very
difficult with other children. He was transferred to the Newtown
Primary School where again his behaviour led to referral to a child
guidance clinic.
Page 342
At
this time he was thought to be hyperactive and placed on both
medication and subsequently on a special diet which was then
fashionable for the treatment of this condition. Mr Bryant’s
behaviour both at school and at home remained troublesome. He is
noted in the records from New Town Primary School to lack friends,
to be struggling scholastically and to be persistently disruptive in
class. There are references to him stealing, to him having violent
outbursts and to tormenting vulnerable children. There are also
descriptions in this material of him taking delight in the
discomfort and failure of other children in the class situation. In
August 1977 he was suspended from the New Town Primary School and
soon after was assessed at the Hobart Diagnostic Centre. In this
assessment there are records of Mr Bryant torturing and harassing
animals and of tormenting his sister. He was still apparently
having speech problems at this time. Considerable work was
attempted to remedy Mr Bryant’s problems and when in 1978 he
returned to school there was noted to be a decrease in his
aggressive and disruptive behaviour, though he was still teasing
younger children. In 1980 on transfer to the New Town High School
he was placed in the special education unit where at least initially
he coped better both academically and behaviourally. There are
however clear indications of deterioration in all aspects of his
performance towards the end of his school career. Again in the
material from this period are references to tormenting animals.
In
February 1984 Mr Bryant was assessed by a very experienced clinical
psychiatrist, Dr Cunningham-Dax. This assessment was initiated to
consider Mr Bryant’s eligibility for a disability pension.
Page 343
Dr
Cunningham-Dax stated that Mr Bryant was intellectually handicapped
and personality disordered. He also raised the possibility that he
might be developing an illness of a schizophrenic type. On the
basis of this report and subsequent assessments which relied upon it,
Mr Bryant was granted a disability pension. There are subsequent
references to Mr Bryant having a schizophrenic illness and of being
a paranoid schizophrenic in the records of Dr Mather (December 1991)
and Dr P M McCartney (December 1991). These diagnostic formulations,
it transpired, were not the results of the doctors own conclusions,
but based on the report of Mr Bryant’s mother that he had been
diagnosed by Dr Cunningham-Dax as suffering from this illness. This
was a misunderstanding on Mrs Bryant’s part and it is this
misunderstanding which led to an opinion by Dr Cunningham-Dax that
Mr Bryant might develop schizophrenia being transmuted into a
diagnosis of this severe mental illness.
Mr
Bryant has had no contact with the psychiatric services since this
time. He did however consult his general practitioner, Dr Mather,
with complaints of anxiety and problems sleeping. He was prescribed
tranquillisers in January 1993 and August 1993. He took these
tablets on three or four occasions per week. He denied using
medications in greater than the prescribed dosage.
Family Background.
Mr Bryant is the elder of two children. Mr Bryant’s father died
three years ago and was described by the accused as a nice, quiet
friendly man with whom he had a good relationship. He was aware
that his father had killed himself and agreed that his father had
been “down” before the suicide. Other information available to me
suggests that Mr Bryant’s father had had a depressive disorder for
some time and had been receiving psychiatric treatment. Mr Bryant
was not able to give a description of his mother other than
Page 344
someone who washed his
clothes and cooked him food. Despite this he considered himself to
have a good relationship with her. Mr Bryant was more forthcoming
about his younger sister now aged 23. She lives in Western
Australia and works as a cook. He said that as children he found
her difficult because she was much brighter than he and seemed to
have lots of friends, whereas he was painfully aware of the lack of
such companions. He said though he was jealous of her as a kid, but
their relationship greatly improved when she did so much to look
after him following his road traffic accident in 1990. He knows of
no history of mental disorder in his sister or his mother.
It
was difficult to obtain any sense of the family environment from Mr
Bryant’s account other than his bland assurances that it was good,
OK and nice.
Page 345
There are suggestions of problems in the family both when Mr Bryant
was a young child and in the years prior to Mr Bryant Senior’s
suicide. The extent to which Mr Bryant’s parents were a couple
struggling to cope with an inherently difficult child and the extent
to which they contributed to his disturbed development cannot
retrospectively be ascertained. It is questionable what weight
should be placed on the negative opinions expressed, particularly
about Mrs Bryant, in some of the earlier records from the child
assessment and guidance clinics.
Personal History. Mr Bryant appears to have shown abnormalities in
development from infancy and early childhood. He was slow both in
attaining his motor milestones and in speech development. The
extensive behavioural and social problems shown by Mr Bryant during
his early school years have already been described. In summary his
physical, emotional and intellectual development were slow. He had
considerable difficulties relating to other children. His behaviour
was often aggressive and disruptive. The intellectual limitations
impaired his capacity to learn and his behavioural difficulties
alienated him from his peers and made him difficult to manage, both
at school and at home.
Mr
Bryant’s memories of school are that he found it an unpleasant and
distressing experience for virtually the whole of his attendance.
He recalls frequently being bullied. He said “I was hazed and
knocked around all the time, no-one wanted to be my friend”. He
only recalls one companion at school and this for a relatively brief
period during his childhood. The predominant memory is of being by
himself, ignored by the other children, or attended to in a bullying
and frightening manner.
Page 346
Mr
Bryant remembers both refusing to go to school because he was afraid
and pretending to have various maladies to persuade his mother to
keep him away from school. He described himself as having been
“terrified” of going to school and of facing his tormentors.
Mr
Bryant was a slow learner at school and was placed in special
classes. Despite his learning difficulties he has acquired adequate
literacy skills. He was able to read aloud from an article in a
woman’s magazine without making any errors. His difficulties were
far more obvious when it came to simple calculations which were
beyond his capacities. Mr Bryant’s intellectual limitations were
recognised both at school and when he finished school. He never
entered regular employment and only managed to make a little money
by odd jobs gardening and tidying up.
It
was while engaged in odd jobs of this kind that he met Miss Harvey.
He describes Miss Harvey as having been his only real friend. He
said from the outset they got on well together. He enjoyed being
with her. They shared an interest with animals. This concern with
dogs and cats does not appear to have extended to the effective care
of these animals as the RSPCA removed large numbers of cats and dogs
from Miss Harvey’s care at various times. The relationship with
Miss Harvey appears to have been that of a helpful and affectionate
child.
Page 347
It
was not a sexual relationship. It does, however, appear to have
provided for Mr Bryant the one experience of effective human contact
outside of his family. Mr Bryant said that he was surprised after
Miss Harvey’s death to learn that she had left him her money. He is
still uncertain as to the extent of his various inheritances having
only the vaguest notions of his financial situation.
In
November 1993 Mr Bryant was made subject to a guardianship order
which placed the management of his money and property in the hands
of the Perpetual Trustees, Tasmania Limited. This order was made on
the application of his mother and on the recommendation of Dr
Terence Craven and Dr Bernard Mather who both expressed themselves
of the opinion that mr Bryant was mentally impaired as the result of
a low level of intelligence which rendered him incapable of managing
his own affairs and property. This arrangement ensured some order
in Mr Bryant’s financial affairs and though he apparently objected
on occasion that he was not provided with even more funds, he
accepted this arrangement. He also developed a trusting
relationship with the administrator of his estate who provided
considerable additional support and advice to him.
Mr
Bryant clearly had difficulty maintaining the property which he now
owned, but did manage a semblance of an independent existence. In
the past few years he has taken a number of trips overseas and
interstate. The first of these occurred prior to Miss Harvey’s
death when he and his father accompanied Miss Harvey to New Zealand.
In the last two years he has taken a number of trips usually alone,
although on two occasions a sixteen year old girlfriend, Janetta
Hoani, accompanied him.
Page 348
He described his various attempts at national and international
travel as disappointing. He said he usually undertook these trips
because “I wanted to meet up with normal people” but apparently “it
didn’t work”. He travelled to such places as London, Los Angeles,
Amsterdam and Bangkok and in these various cities tried to strike up
conversations with people that he encountered. He said that he
would go to, what he referred to as cafeterias and sit down next to
someone and try to engage them in conversation. He was distressed
and enraged by the frequency with which people would move away from
him or in other ways reject what he saw as friendly advances. Mr
Bryant stated that the best part of his international trips was the
long plane journey. It transpired that the long aeroplane journey
was that he could speak to the people seated next to him, who
presumably being strapped to their seats had no choice but to at
least appear friendly. Mr Bryant became quite animated in
describing some of what he regarded as the more successful
interactions with fellow travellers on the journeys to and from
Europe and the United States of America. This account is confirmed
by statements obtained by the police from passengers who found
themselves seated next to Mr Bryant. Next to the journeys
themselves, Mr Bryant listed the sex video shops in Amsterdam as the
greatest pleasure he had derived from world travel. He denied using
brothels and prostitutes while overseas.
Page 349
Mr Bryant made the majority of his trips to Melbourne where he was
fond of riding on the trams and of going to the Zoo.
Mr Bryant’s first sexual encounters were with prostitutes and
escorts. He apparently paid for an escort every month or so in the
years prior to obtaining his inheritance.”
And the author talks of two relationships which I’ll not comment
upon.
Mr Bryant’s only other girlfriend was Ms Wilmot, a young woman of 20
with whom he was having a relationship at the time of the offences.
He describes her as far brighter than himself and as someone who is
currently pursuing a course in horticulture having failed to be able
to find regular employment. They met several times a week and would
go to restaurants and the pictures. The relationship was a sexual
one and he claimed they had intercourse on a regular basis, the last
being on the Friday night prior to the offences. Mr Bryant firmly
rejected any suggestion that his relationship with Ms Wilmot was
becoming strained or in danger of ending at the time of the offences.
He described his pleasure in life as watching the television, music
and killing. – sorry, I’ll reread that. “Mr Bryant described his
pleasure in life as watching the television, music and drinking.
The music that he most favoured was the sound track of the Lion King
and records made by Cliff Richard. On direct questioning he
acknowledged that he spent a considerable amount of time watching
videos and going to the pictures.
Page 350
He listed as his favourite film, ‘Babe’, and as his favourite videos
the Steven Segal movie, “Under Siege”, and a film called the
“Protector”, which he claimed to have watched at least a dozen
times. These latter two videos are of the violent action variety.
Mr Bryant was also in the habit of purchasing both erotic magazines
and military type magazines about weapons, military tactics,
survivalist activities etc.
Mr Bryant has never been involved in competitive sports though when
his father was alive, they would regularly go scuba diving together.
He has acquired a number of guns by private purchase. He apparently
had no difficulty obtaining ammunition for these weapons. He has
never acquired a gun licence, partly because he was afraid of
difficulty answering questions about safe gun usage. He
acknowledged a fascination with weapons and demonstrated an
extensive knowledge of guns. This interest in guns has been more
intense in the last year or so. His access to large amounts of cash
enabled him to purchase automatic and semi automatic weapons
designed for military use.
Alcohol and Drug History. Mr Bryant drank alcohol
occasionally until the last year or so. During the 12 months prior
to the offences his alcohol consumption rapidly increased. He
reports that in the six months prior to the tragedy he typically
drank every day. He would have his first drink in the morning and
then drink more heavily in the afternoon and evening. He was
uncertain of the exact quantities that he consumed, but estimated
that he would drink half a bottle of sambuca, a considerable part of
a bottle of Bailey’s Irish Cream, and would sometimes add to this
port and other sweet alcoholic drinks.
Page 351
Mr Bryant reported disturbed sleep in association with his alcohol
consumption and an occasional intense sense of dehydration. He did
not however, describe early morning shakes, marked amnesia for the
previous day’s drinking or particularly intrusive hangovers. He did
not report any gastro-intestinal disturbances of the kind often
found in alcohol abusers. He said that he drank to fill in the time
and to relieve his loneliness. Mr Bryant was not intoxicated at the
time of the killings. He reports no use of illicit drugs,
specifically denying using cannabis, opiates and amphetamines.
Mental State. Mr Bryant’s user of language showed the
limitations in vocabulary one would expect from someone of low
intelligence, but nonetheless there was a reasonable degree of
fluency and on most occasions, a clarity in his use of language.
Occasionally he would misuse words, or mispronounce words, but these
errors reflect ignorance rather than a disorder in the use of
language. There were occasional sudden switches in the direction of
Mr Bryant’s discourse, but again, I suspect these reflect the
changeability of someone of limited intellect who is easily
distracted by irrelevant or chance circumstance.
Mr Bryant’s mood was predominantly anxious and on occasion, frankly
distressed. The changes in his mood were appropriate on most
occasions to the content of the conversation. The occasional
apparent emotional incongruity, I suspect, reflected the shallowness
of Mr Bryant’s understanding and capacity for sympathy.
Mr Bryant initially denied that he suffers from any depression or
lowered mood. He attempted to portray himself prior to the incident
as a cheerful individual whose pleasure in life was only frustrated
by the unfriendliness and unsociability of his fellow humans.
Page 352
Later in the interview Mr Bryant became more frank. He talked of
the extent to which he thinks about the distress and the rejections
in the past. He said that he tries to live day by day, but
acknowledges that frequently thoughts about past rejections, and
what he recalls as his victimisation at school by bullies, intrude.
He has become more caught up in these thoughts about past
indignities over the last year. He said he became increasingly
unhappy and angry because he had no real friends. He said, “all I
wanted was for people to like me.” Their failure to respond to his
overtures led him to feel “that I’d had a gut full”. This
culminated in the months before the tragedy in a sense that there
was no future for him, that he would always remain lonely and
rejected and that he would be better off dead.
Mr Bryant does report a degree of sleep disturbance in the months
prior to the killings. It was difficult to characterise this, but
it seemed to be a combination of difficulty in getting off to sleep,
sleep disturbed by nightmares and occasional early morning waking.
He does not however report and decrease in his libido. The picture
that emerges was not suggestive of a depressive illness. It was a
pattern more reminiscent of an angry and distressed man having
increasing difficulties coping with his social isolation and his
various disappointments. Nevertheless in this context Mr Bryant
came to the conclusion that life for him was not worth living. He
began to consider suicide for the first time about a year ago. He
said, “about twelve months ago I decided I’d had enough”. The
thoughts of suicide became more prominent in recent months.
Page 353
Mr Bryant acknowledged that he has always been somewhat self
conscious and shy. He has throughout his adult life felt as if
people looked at him in the street, talked about him behind his back
and laughed at him. He feels that they make derogatory comments
about his appearance and how he is dressed. This, in recent years,
has been combined with a conviction that people wanted to hurt or
harm him. He sometimes believes that particular individuals he sees
in the street are bent on physically attacking him. These sensitive
and persecutory ideas are not organised into any system of belief
that there is a plot aimed against him. It amounts to a degree of
over sensitivity and a general conviction in the malevolence of
others rather than being suggestive of delusions of persecution.
Mr Bryant did not describe any phobias, generalised anxiety of an
abnormal degree, or panic attacks. There was nothing to suggest
that he suffers from obsessional symptoms. He does not have
obsessive or eccentric concerns with any topics or activities. He
does show however, considerable persistence with regard to his
resentments and anger about real or imagined insults many of which
date back to his childhood. He also has a rigidity of character
favouring the repetition of the familiar where possible and tending,
once deciding on a course of action, to persist in that plan almost
irrespective of the effects on others or himself.
Page 354
Mr Bryant’s general level of intellectual functioning is low. There
was at the time I examined him nothing to suggest that he was
disoriented or that his consciousness was in any way disturbed.
The Offences: Mr Bryant in the early parts of the interview
referred to the tragic events at Port Arthur as “the accident”. He
claimed to have no memory of these events nor to have any memory for
what may have led up to the shootings. The only account he provided
was of waylaying the occupants of a BMW and then claiming to have
driven this car at high speed. Later in the interview, perhaps as a
result of becoming more trustful, he provided an account which at
least in part may be relevant to the events. This account provided
to me on 4 May has later been confirmed and expanded in Mr Bryant’s
statements.
Mr Bryant began by acknowledging “since I lost Miss Harvey things
have slipped back on me. I just felt more people were against me”.
“When I tried to be more friendly towards them, they just walked
away”. He also became more caught up in ruminating on memories of
slights and insults from the past. He said he began to think about
these things a great deal and began to go over in his mind how he
could get even. Initially he said he thought about strangling
someone who was unfriendly to him, but then his thoughts turned to
“shooting them”. Mr Bryant said, “I thought guns would be better,
the more power the better”. Mr Bryant at this point began to talk
about his various guns, in particular a machine gun which he took to
be repaired in March or February. I asked him whether he had
intended to use this weapon, but he informed me that this type of
gun is “too unstable”. He happily discussed the virtues of various
semi-automatic versus fully automatic guns.
Page 355
He stated that about a year ago he decided he had “had enough”. He
was unsure exactly when the plan came to him for the massacre at
Port Arthur. He said that he thought the plan first occurred to him
a few weeks prior to the tragic events. When pressed he thought it
might be either 4 or as long as 12 weeks ago that this first
occurred. When asked why he selected Port Arthur he responded, “a
lot of violence has happened there. It must be the most violent
place in Australia; it seemed the right place.”
Mr Bryant spoke of his longstanding resentment against Mr and Mrs
Martin. He described them as “very mean people” and as “the worst
people in my life”. The basis for this antipathy appears to be Mr
Bryant’s belief that Mr Martin bought the property which they
occupied at their death with the expressed intention of preventing
his father from buying the same property.
I interpose to say
my client has requested that I correct a point put by my learned
friend that it was the Seascape property. Indeed it was the
property, the farm, the Larner property that my client believes was
the property his father wanted to buy and not the Seascape property
and that error is transmitted into the report of Professor Mullen.
It appears that this was indeed a family myth about their
misfortunes and according to Mrs Bryant her late husband would often
complain to Martin Bryant of the damage to the family inflicted by
what was viewed as the double dealing of the Martin family.
Page 356
Mr Bryant assumed that when he began shooting at Port Arthur he
would himself be shot down. He stated in one interview, “my power,
so powerful and the guns and these magazines filled with bullets. I
could just go bang, bang, bang.” This plan to kill Mr and Mrs
Martin and then proceed to Port Arthur appears initially to have
been elaborated following the break up of Mr Bryant’s relationship
with Ms Hoani at a time when he was particularly despondent about
his situation and his future. Although with the initiation of the
relationship with Ms Wilmot his mood improved and his suicidal
preoccupations disappeared, nonetheless this dreadful plan appears
to have been persisted with and eventually to have been put into
awful practice.
I did not pursue with Mr Bryant any account of the actual killings
as these can sadly be all too readily reconstructed from
eyewitnesses and police investigations.
OPINION: Mr Bryant is of limited intellectual ability, his measured
IQ lying in the borderline intellectually disabled range. He does
however function reasonably well in the community and has a degree
of charm and guile which enables him to perform in many areas at a
far higher level than might be expected from his performance on IQ
tests. The level of Mr Bryant’s intellectual difficulties do raise
at least a question about his fitness to plead. I discussed with Mr
Bryant the nature of a trial and the various roles of the members of
the court. He had a clear idea of the role of his legal
representative, explaining it as someone to help him and speak for
him.
Page 357
He had a rough idea of the function of a judge. He knew what a jury
was, but was uncertain about its exact role. He could however
easily understand when this was explained to him and when asked
about it, an hour or so later, was able to give a reasonable account
of the nature and function of a jury. Mr Bryant knew what it meant
to be guilty and to be not guilty. He was aware that there were
things called crimes and those who were found guilty might be liable
to punishment. He had a clear notion that there are rights and
wrongs. In my opinion therefore, this man is fit to plead, though
he may require a little more assistance and a little more time in
coping with the legal process than would a more intellectually able
accused.
Mr Bryant has been a socially isolated and odd man throughout his
childhood and later life. He has had considerable difficulty
forming normal relationships with those of his own age. The social
ostracism he suffered at school, and social rejection that has been
his lot in adult life, has left him lonely, distressed and deeply
resentful. He became so unhappy in the last year or so as to begin
contemplating suicide. There must be some question when someone
reaches this level of despair about whether a depressive illness has
intervened.
Page 358
This possibility in Mr Bryant’s case must be taken particularly
seriously given the family history of such disorders. The
description that Mr Bryant provides, however, of his state of mind
and of his behaviour does not support a depressive illness. His
appetite and libido were not disturbed. He was not constantly
despondent, but only intermittently unhappy. There were no thoughts
of guilt and worthlessness, but rather the reverse, thoughts of how
ill used he had been and how unfair the world had been to him. In
my opinion this was an angry, lonely and despondent man who came to
contemplate suicide not one suffering from a depressive illness.
Mr Bryant was an over sensitive individual who attributed aggression
and malevolence to many of those around him. This in my opinion is
not as a result of persecutory delusions or of morbid experiences,
but a product of the very real rejection and distain which Mr Bryant
has experienced through much of his life, largely as a result of his
intellectual limitation and his peculiarities of personality. Mr
Bryant is a self absorbed individual with a markedly egocentric view
of the world. He has high expectations of others and a sense of
entitlement which are both constantly being disappointed. The
disappointment of his hopes is usually explained by Mr Bryant in
terms of the insensitivity and ill will of others.
In my opinion though, Mr Bryant was clearly a distressed and
disturbed young man he was not mentally ill.
Page 359
There is no evidence to support the notion that this man has a
schizophrenic illness. The use of this diagnostic term in
association with Mr Bryant by Dr Mather and Dr McCartney was based
on the report of Mrs Bryant who had clearly misunderstood the
opinion of Dr Cunningham-Dax. She had come to the conclusion that
her son had been diagnosed with this condition. Neither Dr Sale, Dr
Lucas nor myself found evidence in Mr Bryant of his ever having had
schizophrenia. Similarly, in my opinion, he does not have the
evidence for a major depressive disorder. There was nothing in his
history to suggest that he has ever been manic.
Dr Sale, in his report of the 6 August 1996, indicates that in his
opinion Mr Bryant manifested severe developmental problems during
childhood and that he could be regarded as having shown a mixture of
conduct disorder, attention deficit hyperactivity and a rare
condition known as Asberger’s Syndrome. I am in agreement with Dr
Sale that the records indicate that Mr Bryant was grossly disturbed
from early childhood. He can certainly be fitted within the
criteria for conduct disorder, but all this amounts to in the
diagnostic manual is a list of a range of aggressive destructive and
deceitful behaviours during childhood and as such does not advance
understandings to any degree.
Page 360
Asberger’s Syndrome is a condition which could explain some of the
abnormalities in Mr Bryant and in noting this possibility Dr Sale
raises a potentially important question. The section from the text
on Forensic Psychiatry covering Asberger’s Syndrome appended to his
report by Dr Sale though providing a good account of the forensic
implications does not adequately describe the critical clinical
features (as one of the authors of the chapter I can perhaps be
allowed this criticism). Mr Bryant craves attention from others.
He desires relationships but fails to effectively communicate with
others unlike the patients with Asberger’s who are blandly
indifferent to others. Mr Bryant also lacks, in my opinion, the
central features of this condition which are repetitive activities,
unusual skills with all absorbing obsessive interests and problems
with the motor coordination. He also showed marked delay in the
acquisition of language skills and required remedial therapy for his
language deficits which is contrary to the picture found in those
with Asberger’s Syndrome.
The enormity of Mr Bryant’s crimes call out for some explanation
equally dramatic and extraordinary. It is not to be wondered at
that the media have either attempted to portray Mr Bryant as
afflicted by a dramatic mental illness, such as schizophrenia, or to
be some kind of evil genius. In my opinion the origins of this
terrible tragedy are not to be found in a single dramatic and
sufficient cause,
Page 361
but in the interaction and combination of a range of influences and
events. We may never know fully the intentions and state of mind
which led to the killings, but a number of contributions are
apparent.
Mr Bryant is an intellectually limited man who from early childhood
showed marked impairment in his capacity to cope with interpersonal
and social relationships. He responded to frustrations with
aggression towards others and towards property. From an early age
his behaviour was characterised by an unfortunate tendency to take
delight in the discomfort of others and in the tormenting of people
and creatures weaker than himself. This probably reflected in part
the struggles of a child who felt buffeted and helpless in the face
of the demands of the world and who sought to gain some sense of
power, and restore some sense of self esteem, through ridiculing and
hurting others. Mr Bryant received considerable support from his
father and there are indications in the record during his later
adolescence that a degree of stability and more effective social
integration was beginning to emerge in this young man. The
relationship with Ms Harvey for all its eccentric features probably
added to Mr Bryant’s increasing sense of having some place in the
world. The death first of Ms Harvey and then the suicide of his
father stripped away from Mr Bryant the two main sources of support
and stability in his life. The acquisition of a level of wealth,
which even with the intercession of the Public Trustees was beyond
Mr Bryant’s capacity to comprehend, let alone manage, may well have
contributed to the subsequent increasing disorganisation in his
existence, rather than forming a basis for stability as presumably
had been hoped by Ms Harvey and his father when they bequeathed him
this wealth.
Page 362
One troubling characteristic of Mr Bryant which was apparent in out
interview, and is attested by a number of the statements, is his
capacity to entertain grudges and to keep alive resentments about
real or imagined injuries over long periods of time. The family
myth about how Mr and Mrs Martin had blighted the hopes of his
father appear to have become a central element in Mr Bryant’s
understandings of the world and of his resentment against others.
Mr Joblin, in his interviews with Mr Bryant, uncovered a number of
childhood memories of being, in Mr Bryant’s eyes, humiliated by
staff at Port Arthur. These trivial events in combination with the
longstanding resentment of Mr and Mrs Martin may have been enough to
give the specific direction to Mr Bryant’s explosion of resentment
against the world. The specific plan to kill the Martins and to
proceed to Port Arthur to engage in a general slaughter appears to
have emerged some months prior to its terrible realisation. At the
time Mr Bryant was isolated and despairing. The improvement in his
life situation and the establishing of the new relationship with Ms
Wilmot, one would have expected to have deflected him from this
dreadful plan. In the event it appears that it is the rigidity in
Mr Bryant’s character which led to the activity of his plans hatched
when despairing but carried out when his actual circumstances had
greatly improved.
Page 363
Mr Bryant stated in one of his interviews that
“It was set in my mind, it was just set that Sunday….I wasn’t
worried about losing my property or never seeing my girlfriend again.
It was just in my mind to go down and kill the Martins and kill a
lot of people.”
Mr Bryant’s limited intellectual capacities and equally importantly
his limited capacity for empathy or imagining the feelings and
responses of others left a terrible gap in his sensibilities which
enabled him not only to contemplate mass destruction, but to carry
it through. There also has to be acknowledged that Mr Bryant took
delight and gained excitement from tormenting others. This reaction
of the frightened child to their own of powerlessness emerged in the
adult as the desire to assert himself through the killing and
maiming of others. He was an individual capable of taking delight
not only in the fantasies of such destruction but, in the event, to
delight in acting out those dreadful daydreams. There is in Mr
Bryant an apparent sense of guilt, albeit truncated, about his
actions, but equally, on occasion, he almost revels in the memories
of his awful day – awful - acts.
Page364
Mr Bryant often experiences fear and a sense of inadequacy when
confronted by other people. In part he compensated for this sense
of weakness through a fascination with weapons and through the
possession of weapons. With his ready money came access to weapons
of enormous potential power for destruction. The obsessive concern
with weapons and the exhilaration he attained from handling and
using guns added yet another element to the tragic mix.
It would be more satisfactory if one could point to some simple and
direct cause of the tragedy at Port Arthur. This would not only
help all of us in our attempts to make sense of this national
disaster, it might at least raise the hopes of preventing a
recurrence. Understanding of these tragic events in terms of a
complex interaction between a number of abnormalities of mental
state, personality deviations and a series of chance events, all
finding a dreadful expression thanks to the availability of powerful
weapons for killing, is less satisfactory and perhaps less useful,
but in my opinion comes closer to describing the elements that went
into making this tragedy.
Mr Bryant currently does not have the signs and the symptoms of a
mental illness. He is, however, by virtue of his personality and
intellectual limitations both of reduced coping ability and of
increased psychological vulnerability. It is possible that under
the combined stress of lengthy incarceration and of having to live
with the memories and consequences of his awful acts that he may, in
the future, break down into frank mental illness. It will be
necessary to continually monitor his state of mind during his future
containment and initiate appropriate treatment if, and when, it is
required.
Page 365
Your Honour, that’s the report
that I will tender to the court. Your Honour, what therefore do we
say is the totality of the medical evidence concerning that of Dr
Sale? Firstly it is abundantly clear that at the time of the
commission of these crimes and at the present day the accused is not
criminally insane.
Secondly, although it has
been thought in his early years that perhaps he suffers
schizophrenia, it can conclusively be claimed that there is no
evidence to support the notion that this man has a schizophrenic
illness.
Thirdly, it appears that the
accused does not fit into any neat pigeon hole of particular mental
illness.
Fourthly, he clearly is
intellectually disabled and without the support of his father and
Miss Harvey and with the access to funds he regrettably found
himself able, with ferocious consequence, to carry out this mass
destruction.
Finally, Your Honour, it
would be quite apparent the accused revels in the notoriety he has
achieved but in his simple way he accepts the enormity of his
actions and as a result has instructed me to comment on penalty.
Page 366
I have no other submissions,
your Honour
HIS HONOUR: Thank you, Mr
Avery. Do you wish to reply Mr Bugg?
MR BUGG: No, I don’t, your
Honour. I don’t seek to have that apparent conflict of opinion
resolved and your Honour, in conclusion I would seek leave to tender
the edited transcript which I spoke to your Honour about this
morning. That hadn’t been done previously.
HIS HONOUR: Yes. And Mr
Avery hasn’t yet tendered the report that he wished to put in.
Section 11. Do you want to be heard any further on section 11?
MR BUGG QC: Oh, only,
your Honour, in relation to the counts in the indictment.
HIS HONOUR: Yes.
MR BUGG QC: Your Honour,
the first one is count 9. And that – if I can just take you through
the indictment – relates to the count of murder concerning Mr.
Walter Bennett – you will recall the evidence.
HIS HONOUR: Yes.
MR BUGG: QC: Then
count 10, following – Mr Sharpe, which is the one shot with two
fatal consequences. Then going back, your Honour, to count 8, the
count of murder in relation to Mr. Kevin Sharpe, the flow-on effect,
or the intermediate scattering it was suggested in relation to that
matter, covered counts 11, 12 and 13, that is Mr Broome, count 11,
causing grievous bodily harm, wounding in relation to John Fiddler,
count 12, and wounding in relation to Gaye Fiddler, count 13.
Page 367
HIS HONOUR: Count 11, the
grievous bodily harm is a fragmentation one too.
MR BUGG: Yes. And then
Counts 14 and 15, if you remember I described the turning of the
firearm in an easterly direction. The intermediate effect relating
– or flowing from Counts 14 and 15 is reflected in Counts 16, 17 and
18. That is, the count of wounding in relation to Thelma Walker.
HIS HONOUR: Thelma Walker,
Pamela Law and Gwen Barker.
MR BUGG: Correct. Then
Count 31, the count of murder in relation to Mr Winter brings us
back to Count 19, Mr. Olson.
HIS HONOUR: Mr Olson, yes.
I think there were two shots fired, were there not, at Mr Winter?
One of them being fatal?
MR BUGG: That’s right, yes.
HIS HONOUR: And the Crown,
I suppose, can’t say which of those two shots fragmented and caused
the wound to Mr. Olson?
MR BUGG: No we can’t no.
Page 368
Count 62 is the count of
attempting to murder Michael Wanders and if you’ll recall that was
the shot which then passed on not hitting Mr Wanders, but in fact
striking Linda White, count 63, causing grievous bodily harm. Then
count 66, your Honour, that was an attempt to commit murder on Carol
Susan Williams and reflected in count 67 of causing grievous bodily
harm to Simon Roger Williams. Once again the shot missing its mark.
And finally-----
HIS HONOUR: A single act,
but with two consequences in other words.
MR BUGG: Yes.
HIS HONOUR: And finally?
MR BUGG: Count 69 and count
70 are related as well.
HIS HONOOUR: Again a single
act ----
MR BUGG: Yes.
HIS HONOUR: ---of
assaulting both of them.
MR BUGG: Yes.
Page 369
MR BUGG QC: Yes, thank you.
HIS HONOUR: Well the
consequence – if I rule against you, you’re interpretation of Count
11, it would seem to me that Count 9 could be amended by including
the murder of Mr Sharp
MR BUGG QC: That’s right.
HIS HONOUR I take it that
if I do rule in that way you’d be applying for that amendment?
MR BUGG QC: I would make
that application. Yes, I would, your Honour.
HIS HONOUR: Then the only
other pair which would lend themselves to the same account would be
69 and 70 because the one act would be an act of assault or
aggravated assaulted upon two people instead of two aggravated
assaults on two separate people. So I take it that you would
likewise apply to amend 69 and delete 70?
MR BUGG QC: That’s correct,
yes, your Honour.
HIS HONOUR: Now the
consequence so far as all the other counts are concerned of the
fragmentation, and they would be 11, 12, 13, 16, 17 and 18l, 19, 63
and 67, if the view I’ve initially expressed is the correct view it
would seem to me the proper consequence of that would be that they
should be quashed?
MR BUGG QC: Yes.
HIS HONOUR: Because they’re
incapable of amendment as I understand the situation.
MR BUGG QC: Yes, that’s
correct, your Honour.
Page 370
HIS HONOUR: All right, well
Mr Bugg I will certainly consider the submissions that you made.
MR BUGG: QC: I’m sorry – if
I may withdraw from that concession your Honour. I still – if your
Honour reaches that position, you were talking about quashing a
conviction –
HIS HONOUR: Quashing the
count. I am still seized of the indictment. It would be – I would
quash the count it would seem to me there would be no conviction
therefore.
MR BUGG: QC: Yes. Yes, I
accept that, your Honour.
HIS HONOUR: Yes, thank you.
The prisoner is remanded for
sentence until 10.a.m. on Friday. Let him stand down.