Current Easey St Murders Collingwood * ARREST MADE

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Police have arrested a man in Italy over the 1977 murders of Suzanne Armstrong and Susan Bartlett in their Easey Street home. He fled Australia in 2017 after he became aware he was a suspect.

The man fled to Greece and couldn’t be arrested because local laws meant charges must be laid within seven years of the offence.

The Easey Street murders are still unsolved.


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Police have waited those 15 years for him to leave Greece so he could be arrested. They will now seek to extradite him to Melbourne to face the charges.

A police spokesperson confirmed a 65-year-old dual citizen of Australia and Greece was arrested at an airport in Rome in the early hours on Friday.


For you russian bots , long unsolved double murder in Melbourne
 
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Recent article in Age posted here said a then Constable Ron Iddles pulled him up in his car and knife was in the boot with bloodstains. Iddles passed on to detectives but never heard back and assume never followed up.


Wonder if Iddles ever followed up when he was the state's top homicide detective ? Was pretty thorough in that job. Left no stone unturned.
 

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My knowledge is Victorian specific and a couple of decades old, but the breach rate for all parolees was about a third (give or take a few percentage points). This includes reoffending, doing a runner or both,

I did see a report in the papers that the recidivism rate for released convicted prisoners under the the new stricter parole guidelines remains about the same or higher for those not released on parole.

The breaching rate for parolees released following a conviction of Murder, including reoffending, doing a runner or both was less than 10%.

Over a century, to the best of my my memory, a grand total of four persons released from custody following a conviction for murder have been convicted of a further charge of murder. As I said, my specific knowledge is not current, but i do keep a track of names I recognise.

I find it a bit weird that the default response of posters is to go the worst case scenario and start promoting serial killer allegations without any proof at all.

Not saying he didn't commit other murders, serial killers are only a miniscule percentage of all murderers.

I suppose that the serial murderer stirs the imaginations with visceral thrills
I get that it seems counterintuitive to do something as perverse as a frenzied knife attack/rape as a one off, but people do horrendous things in a given instance and then not again. Plenty of war criminals live civilised post-war lives etc.

Unfortunately (assuming it’s the right person) I don’t think he’ll be falling over himself to confess so we probably won’t find out the details.

It’s possible there were a few culprits, or that he flew into a rage over a rejection or that he was horrified by his own conduct in the aftermath or scared straight by nearly getting caught.

The other thing is that committing an act like this one isn’t really a logical act, and there might not be much of a logical explanation.
 
No one is perfect - sounds like he left this stone unturned

If I’m reading right he was a 20yo constable at the time. Apparently did the traffic stop, found the knife in the car and passed it on to the detectives on the case.

Probably not much more he could/should have done
 
If I’m reading right he was a 20yo constable at the time. Apparently did the traffic stop, found the knife in the car and passed it on to the detectives on the case.

Probably not much more he could/should have done
And it would have been one of many traffic stops with knives present
 
There's more information in this segment, Perry lived in a warehouse in Dandenong which I think he owned. Was said to have sold up his properties when he moved to Greece.

Another image in there, I can't tell how tall he is but he looks to be slight framed.

perry1.png



 
How do you go about " living " in a factory ? Common ? Council approvement ?
I looked into it - most have office space you can convert into a bedroom - showers and toilet facilities and with a bit of handyman work another office as a lounge/kitchen with a microwave or you eat out a lot

Then imagine the entertaining area ! :D

Definitely a single male lifestyle choice imo
 
How do you go about " living " in a factory ? Common ? Council approvement ?
Pretty easily if you are there for secruity, as that is one of the permitted reasons that you can live in factories and warehouses here in Vic.
 
Ok this is interesting as to the suspects character.
I had a convo with my 93 yo Dad who said he remembers at the time when he was the site Architect in charge of the refurbishment of the exhibition Buildings in the 70-80's that two of the workers on site, had gone to school with the suspect and were Greek and lived nearby and knew him.
They were talking on site and discussing about whether they should go to the cops about him as they thought at the time that he was involved. They didn't like his character at all.
Dad doesn't know whether they did say something or not but it's interesting that two of a peer group thought it was him or that he was somewhere involved.
 

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Feel free to correct me if I'm wrong (could well be)

Brock: A 'person of interest' because he'd been to the house and was an acquaintance, may have been on a couple of dates with one of the victims. His role and standing on
the 'likely suspects' massively exaggerated by the media because of his name and used to get some more clicks. Never seriously suspected.

Stopping PK for questioning: the inference is that he was stopped because Iddles knew him and he was known as a burglar. He was formally questioned on unrelated matters by police around the time of the murders. Iddles took the knife and left it with the forensics team who were able to determine that blood on the knife was human and match it to the knife one of the victim's types, but no trace of the other victim's blood type. Both had common blood types and the knife had been cleaned, so not much to conclude from that alone.

Still given that PK was apparently pulled over purely because he was a troublemaker and there was a chance (however slight) that it was the murder weapon, in hindsight it would appear that he would/should have been much higher on the persons of interest list.
 
Being fair to him, if there were 130 odd persons of interest I’m sure there would have been a number of them who looked quite appealing for some reason or another.
Yeah but not many i'm sure didn't live nearby and were found with a knife with blood on it ...and wasn't known at the time that he had burglary charges pending?
 
Feels like they should have found the school link if he was known to police?

Maybe they knew about that but the murders were so brutal he was just dismissed as never being capable of doing it plus the alibi he seems to have had which was rock solid.
 
No one is perfect - sounds like he left this stone unturned
OK, what prima facie case can you build to link two murders with a knife found in the boot of a car where there is no other evidence available?

Remember, a jury has to convinced beyond reasonable doubt that the accused commited the offence.

If he was presented for trial (if it even got past commital) on the basis of the only evidence being a knife he said he found near the crime scene it could create a reasonable doubt and the jury would therefore acquit.

If acquited, he could never face trial on that charge ever again
 

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