Port Arthur massacre (Australia)
Port Arthur massacre | |
---|---|
Location | Port Arthur, Tasmania, Australia |
Coordinates | 43°8′12″S 147°51′10″E / 43.13667°S 147.85278°E |
Date | April 28, 1996 11:45 AM – 8:00 AM (UTC+10) | - April 29, 1996
Target | Port Arthur Historic Site |
Attack type | Shooting spree, carjacking, arson, mass murder, mass shooting |
Weapons | |
Deaths | 35 |
Injured | 24 (including the perpetrator) |
Perpetrator | Martin Bryant |
The Port Arthur massacre of 28–29 April 1996 was a mass shooting in which 35 people were killed and 25 wounded in Port Arthur, Tasmania. The murderer, Martin Bryant, pleaded guilty and was given 35 life sentences without possibility of parole. Fundamental changes of gun control laws within Australia followed the incident. The case is the worst massacre in modern Australia committed by a single person.[3]
Background
Location
The main location of the incident was the historic Port Arthur former prison colony,[4] a popular tourist site in south-eastern Tasmania, Australia.[5]
Perpetrator
In 1992, Martin Bryant – then 25 – was bequeathed about $570,000 in property and assets by a friend, Helen Harvey, who left her estate to him following her death in a car crash.[6] He used part of this money to go on many trips around the world from 1993 onwards.[7] Bryant also withdrew many[quantify] thousands of dollars during this period. He used at least some of this money in late 1993 to purchase an AR-10 semi-automatic rifle through a newspaper advertisement in Tasmania.
Bryant's father had tried to purchase a bed and breakfast property called Seascape, but Noelene (also known as Sally) and David Martin bought this property before his father could ready his finances, much to the disappointment of Bryant's father, who often complained to his son of the "double dealing" the Martins had done to secure the purchase. Bryant's father offered to buy another property from the Martins at Palmers Lookout Road, but they declined the offer. Bryant apparently believed the Martins had deliberately bought the property to hurt his family and believed this event to be responsible for the depression that led to his father's 1993 suicide. Bryant later described the Martins as "very mean people" and as "the worse [sic] people in my life."[8]
In late 1995, Bryant became suicidal after deciding he had "had enough". He stated, "I just felt more people were against me. When I tried to be friendly toward them, they just walked away". Although he had previously been little more than a social drinker, his alcohol consumption increased and, although he had not consumed any alcohol on that day, had especially escalated in the six months prior to the massacre.[8]
In March 1996, Bryant had his AR-10 repaired at a gun shop and made inquiries about AR-15 rifles in other gun shops. At the time of purchase, non-handguns were not required to be registered in Tasmania.
According to Bryant, he thought the plan for Port Arthur may have first occurred to him four to 12 weeks before the event.[8][1]
Motivation
Bryant's motivations for the massacre were the refusal of the sale of Seascape by owners David and Noelene Martin and to become notorious, as revealed by his lawyer, on the Channel 7 program "Sunday Night", air date Sunday, 6 March 2016. From the moment he was captured, he continually wanted to know how many people he had killed and seemed impressed by the number. Bryant is only allowed to listen to music on a radio outside his cell and is denied access to any news reports of his massacre. Photographers who took pictures of him in his prison cell were forced to destroy the film in his presence when the Governor found out.[9]
Gun laws in Australia before the Port Arthur massacre
A redesign of the laws for all States and Territories of Australia had been prepared by officers and presented at a meeting of Police Ministers' in Launceston in 1995. It had been rejected by Tasmania.[10]
Attacks
The events of this day were pieced together after investigation by police, then presented in court on 19 November 1996.[1]
Morning events
Bryant awoke at 06:00, notable to his family as he was not known to do so due to a lack of commitments. Two hours later, his girlfriend left the house to visit her parents. According to the home security system, Bryant left the house at 09:47.
Bryant travelled to Forcett, arriving some time around 11:00 a.m. He continued to Port Arthur and was seen driving into Seascape down the Arthur Highway around 11:45 a.m. He stopped at the Seascape guest accommodation site (43°07′08″S 147°51′12″E / 43.11888°S 147.85326°E[11]) that his father had wanted to purchase, owned by David and Noelene Martin. Bryant went inside and fired several shots, then gagged and stabbed David Martin. Witnesses testified to different numbers of shots fired at this time. It was stated in court that it was believed that this was the time that Bryant killed the Martins, his first two victims.
A couple stopped at Seascape and Bryant met them outside. When they asked if they could have a look at the accommodation, Bryant told them that they could not because his parents were away and his girlfriend was inside. His demeanour was described as quite rude and the couple felt uncomfortable. They left at about 12:35 p.m.[1]
Bryant drove to Port Arthur, taking the keys to the Seascape properties after locking the doors. Bryant stopped at a car which had pulled over due to overheating and talked with two people there. He suggested that they come to the Port Arthur café for some coffee later.[1]
He travelled past the Port Arthur historic site towards a Palmer's Lookout Road property owned by the Martins, where he came across Roger Larner. Larner had met him on some occasions more than 15 years previously. Bryant told Larner he had been surfing and had bought a property called Fogg Lodge and was now looking to buy some cattle from Larner. Bryant also made several comments about buying the Martins' place next door. He asked if Marian Larner was home and asked if he could continue down the driveway of the farm to see her. Larner said OK but told Bryant he would come also. "Bryant then responded that he might go to Nubeena first" and he was going to return in the afternoon.[1]
Port Arthur Historic Site
At around 1:10 p.m., Bryant paid the entry fee for the site and proceeded to park near the Broad Arrow Café, near the water's edge. The site security manager told him to park with the other cars because that area was reserved for camper-vans and the car park was busy that day. Bryant moved his car to another area and sat in his car for a few minutes. He then moved his car back near the water, outside the café. The security manager saw him go up to the café carrying a "sports-type bag" and a video camera, but ignored him. Bryant went into the café and purchased a meal, which he ate on the deck outside. He attempted to start conversations with people about the lack of "WASPs" in the area and there not being as many Japanese tourists as usual. He appeared nervous and "quite regularly" looked back to the car-park and into the café.[1]
Broad Arrow Café murders
Bryant finished his meal and returned his tray to the café. He put his bag down on a table and pulled out of it a Colt AR-15 SP1 Carbine with a Colt scope and one 30-round magazine attached. It is believed the Colt magazine was partially emptied from the shootings at Seascape.
The café was very small, and was particularly busy that day as many people waited for the next ferry. Bryant pointed his rifle to the table beside him, fatally shooting Moh Yee (William) Ng and Sou Leng Chung, who were visiting from Malaysia.[12] Bryant then fired a shot at Mick Sargent, grazing his scalp and knocking him to the floor.[12] He then fatally shot Sargent's girlfriend, 21-year-old Kate Elizabeth Scott, hitting her in the back of the head.[12]
A 28-year-old New Zealand winemaker, Jason Winter, had been helping the busy café staff.[12] As Bryant turned towards Winter's wife Joanne and their 15-month-old son Mitchell, Winter threw a serving tray at Bryant in an attempt to distract him. Joanne Winter's father pushed his daughter and grandson to the floor and under the table.[13]
44-year-old Anthony Nightingale stood up after the sound of the first shots. Nightingale yelled "No, not here!" as Bryant pointed the weapon at him.[12] As Nightingale leaned forward, he was fatally shot through the neck and spine.[12]
Bryant fired one shot that killed Kevin Vincent Sharp, 68.[12] He then fired another shot at Walter Bennett, 66, which passed through his body and struck Raymond John Sharp, 67, Kevin Sharp's brother, killing both.[12] The three had their backs towards Bryant, and were unaware what was happening . The shots were all at close range. Gerald Broome, Gaye Fidler and her husband John Fidley were all struck by bullet fragments, but survived.[12]
Bryant then turned towards Tony and Sarah Kistan and Andrew Mills.[12] Andrew Mills was shot in the head. Tony Kistan was also shot from about two metres away, also in the head, but had managed to push his wife away prior to being shot. Sarah Kistan was apparently not seen by Bryant, as she was under the table by that time.
Thelma Walker and Pamela Law were injured by fragments before being dragged to the ground by their friend, Peter Crosswell, as the three sheltered underneath the table.[12] Also injured by fragments from these shots was Patricia Barker.[12]
Bryant moved just a few metres and began shooting at the table where Graham Colyer, Carolyn Loughton and her daughter Sarah were seated. Colyer was shot in the jaw.[12] Sarah Loughton ran towards her mother, who had been moving between tables. Carolyn Loughton threw herself on top of her daughter.[12] Bryant shot Carolyn Loughton in the back; her eardrum was ruptured by the muzzle blast from the gun going off beside her ear.[12] Despite her efforts, Sarah had been fatally shot in the head.[12]
Bryant pivoted around and fatally shot Mervyn Howard.[12] The bullet passed through him, through a window of the café, and hit a table on the outside balcony.[12] Bryant then fatally shot Mervyn Howard's wife, Mary Howard in the head and neck.[12]
Bryant was near the exit, preventing others from attempting to run past him and escape. Bryant moved across the café towards the gift shop area. As Bryant moved, Robert Elliott stood up.[13] He was shot in the arm and head, though survived his injuries.[13]
From the first shot, all of these events took approximately fifteen seconds, during which Bryant fired seventeen shots, killed twelve people, and wounded ten more.[14]
Gift shop murders
Bryant moved towards the gift shop area, giving many people time to hide under tables and behind shop displays. He fatally shot the two local women who worked in the gift shop: 17-year-old Nicole Burgess, in the head, and 26-year-old Elizabeth Howard, in the arm and chest.[13]
Coralee Lever and Vera Jary hid behind a hessian (burlap) screen with others.[13] Lever's husband Dennis was fatally shot in the head.[13] Pauline Masters, Vera Jary's husband Ron, and Peter and Carolyn Nash had attempted to escape through a locked door but could not open it.[13] Peter Nash lay down on top of his wife to hide her from the gunman.[13] Gwen Neander, trying to make it to the door, was shot in the head and killed.[13]
Bryant saw movement in the café and moved near the front door. He shot at a table and hit Peter Crosswell, who was hiding under it, in the buttock.[13] Jason Winter, hiding in the gift shop, thought Bryant had left the building and made a comment about it to people near him before moving out into the open. Bryant saw him, with Winter stating "No, no" just prior to being shot, the bullet hitting his hand, neck and chest.[13] Winter was then fatally shot in the head.[13] Fragments from those shots struck American tourist Dennis Olson, who had been hiding with his wife Mary and Winter.[13] Dennis Olson suffered fragment injuries to his hand, scalp, eye and chest, but survived.[13]
It is not immediately clear what happened next, although at some point, Bryant reloaded his weapon. Bryant walked back to the café and then returned to the gift shop, where he fatally shot Ronald Jary, Peter Nash, and Pauline Masters.[13] He did not see Carolyn Nash, who was lying under her husband.[13] Bryant aimed his gun at an unidentified Asian man,[15] but the rifle's magazine was empty.[13] Bryant then moved to the gift shop counter, where he reloaded his rifle, leaving an empty magazine on the service counter, and left the building.[13]
Bryant killed eight people after moving to the gift shop, and wounded two others.
In the café and gift shop combined, he fired twenty-nine shots, killed twenty people, and wounded twelve more.[14]
Car park murders
During the café shooting, some staff members had been able to escape through the kitchen and alerted people outside. There were a number of coaches outside with lines of people, many of whom began to hide in the buses or in nearby buildings. Others did not understand the situation or were unsure where to go. Some people believed there was some sort of historical reenactment happening, and moved towards the area.
Ashley John Law, a site employee, was moving people away from the café into the information centre when Bryant fired at him from 50–100 metres (50–110 yards) away, missing.
Bryant then moved towards the coaches. One of the coach drivers, Royce Thompson, was shot in the back as he was moving along the passengers' side of a coach.[13] He fell to the ground and was able to crawl under the bus, but later died of his wounds.[13] Brigid Cook was trying to guide people down between the buses and along the jetty area to cover. Bryant moved to the front of this bus and walked across to the next coach. People had quickly moved from this coach towards the back end, in an attempt to seek cover. As Bryant walked around it, he saw people trying to hide and shot at them. Brigid Cook was shot in the right thigh, causing the bone to fragment, the bullet lodging there.[13] A coach driver, Ian McElwee, was hit by fragments of Cook's bone. Both were able to escape and survived.
Bryant then quickly moved around another coach and fired at another group of people. Winifred Aplin, running to get to cover behind another coach, was fatally shot in the side.[13] Another bullet grazed Yvonne Lockley's cheek, but she was able to enter one of the coaches to hide, and survived.[13]
Some people then started moving away from the car park towards the jetty. However, someone shouted that Bryant was heading that way, so they doubled back around the coaches to where Brigid Cook had been shot. Bryant then moved to where Janet and Neville Quin, who owned a wildlife park on the east coast of Tasmania, were beginning to move away from the buses.[13] Bryant shot Janet Quin in the back, where she fell, unable to move, near Royce Thompson.[13]
Bryant then continued along the car park as people tried to escape along the shore. Doug Hutchinson was attempting to get into a coach when he was shot in the arm.[13] Hutchinson ran around the front of the coach, and then along the shore to the jetty and hid.
Bryant then went to his vehicle, which was just past the coaches, and changed to a self loading rifle.[13] He fired at Denise Cromer, who was near the penitentiary ruins. Gravel flew up in front of her as the bullets hit the ground. Bryant then got in his car and sat there for a few moments before getting out again and going back to the coaches. Some people were taking cover behind cars in the car park, but they were still visible to Bryant. When they realised Bryant had seen them, they ran into the bush. He fired several shots, all of which missed.
Bryant moved back to the buses where Janet Quin lay injured from the earlier shot. He then fatally shot her in the back.[13] Bryant then went onto one of the coaches and fatally shot Elva Gaylard in the arm and chest.[13] At an adjacent coach, Gordon Francis saw what happened and moved down the aisle to try to shut the door of the coach he was on.[13] He was seen by Bryant and shot from the opposite coach. He survived, but needed four major operations.[13]
Neville Quin, husband of Janet, had escaped to the jetty area, but returned to look for his wife. He had been forced to leave her earlier after Bryant shot her. Bryant exited the coach and, spotting Quin, chased him around the coaches. Bryant fired at him at least twice before Quin ran onto a coach. Bryant entered the coach and pointed the gun at Neville Quin's face, saying, "No one gets away from me".[13] Quin ducked when he realised Bryant was about to pull the trigger. The bullet missed his head but hit his neck, momentarily paralysing him.[13] Neville Quin was taken away by helicopter and survived.
Bryant fired at James Balasko, a U.S. citizen, hitting a nearby car. Balasko had been attempting to film the shooter. Many people, unable to use their parked cars, hid along Jetty Road.
At this time, Bryant had killed 26 people and injured 18.
Toll booth murders and carjacking
Bryant then got back into his car and left the car park. Witnesses say he was sounding the horn and waving as he drove. Bryant drove along Jetty Road towards the toll booth where people were running away. Bryant passed by at least two people.
Ahead of him were Nanette Mikac and her children, Madeline, 3, and Alannah, 6.[16] Nanette was carrying Madeline, and Alannah was running slightly ahead. By this point, they had run approximately 600 metres (660 yd) from the car park.[16] Bryant opened his door and slowed down. Mikac moved towards the car, apparently thinking he was offering help. Bryant stepped out of the car, and told Nanette Mikac's to get on her knees.[16] She did so, and Bryant fatally shot her in the temple. He then fatally shot Madeline and Alannah.[16]
Bryant drove up to the toll booth, where there were several vehicles, and blocked a 1980 BMW 7 Series owned by Mary Rose Nixon.[16] Inside were Nixon, driver Russell James Pollard and passengers Helene and Robert Graham Salzmann.[16] An argument with Robert Salzmann ensued, and Bryant took out his rifle and fatally shot him.[16] Pollard emerged from the BMW and moved towards Bryant before being fatally shot in the chest.[16] Bryant then moved to the BMW and fatally shot Nixon and Helene Salzmann before removing them from the car.[16] Bryant transferred ammunition, handcuffs, the AR-15 rifle and a fuel container to the BMW. [17]
Another car then came towards the toll booth and Bryant shot at it.[16] The driver, Graham Sutherland, was hit with glass, but quickly reversed back up the road and left to alert a nearby service station as to what was happening. Bryant then got into the BMW, leaving behind his Volvo 244, including his Daewoo shotgun and hundreds of rounds of ammunition.
At this point, Bryant had killed 33 and injured 19.
Service station murder and abduction
Bryant drove up to the service station and cut off a white Toyota Corolla that was attempting to exit onto the highway. Glenn Pears was driving, with girlfriend Zoe Hall in the passenger seat.[16] Bryant quickly exited the car with his rifle in hand and tried to pull Hall from the car. Pears got out of the car and approached Bryant. Bryant pointed the gun at Pears and pushed him backwards, eventually directing him into the now open boot of the BMW, locking Pears inside.[16]
Bryant then moved back to the passenger side of the Corolla as Hall attempted to climb over to the driver's seat.[16] Bryant raised his rifle and fired three shots, killing her.[16] Many people around the service station witnessed this and hid. The service station attendant told everyone to lie down and he locked the main doors. He grabbed his rifle, but by the time he could retrieve some ammunition and load his gun, Bryant had left in the BMW. A police officer arrived several minutes later and then set out in pursuit of Bryant.
Zoe Hall was the 34th victim killed.
Seascape roadway
As Bryant drove down to Seascape, he shot at a red Ford Falcon coming the other way, smashing its front windscreen.[16] Upon arriving at Seascape, he got out of his car. A Holden Frontera 4WD vehicle then approached Seascape along the road. Those in the vehicle saw Bryant with his gun, but believed him to be rabbit hunting and slowed down as they passed him. Bryant fired into the car; the first bullet hit the bonnet and broke the throttle cable.[16] He fired at least twice more into the car as it passed, breaking the windows. One bullet hit the driver, Linda White, in the arm.[16]
Another vehicle then drove down the road, carrying four people. It was not until they were almost adjacent to Bryant that they realised he was carrying a gun. Bryant shot at the car, smashing the windscreen. Douglas Horner was wounded by pieces of the windscreen.[16] The car proceeded ahead where White and Wanders tried to get in, but Horner did not realise the situation and drove on. When they saw that White had been shot, they came back and picked them up. Both parties then continued down to a local establishment called the Fox and Hound, where they called police.[16]
Yet another car drove past and Bryant shot at it, hitting the passenger, Susan Williams, in the hand.[16] The driver, Simon Williams, was struck by fragments.[16] The driver of another approaching vehicle saw this and reversed back up the road. Bryant also fired at this car, hitting it but not injuring anyone. Bryant then got back into the BMW and drove down the Seascape driveway to the house.
Sometime after he stopped, Bryant removed Pears from the boot and handcuffed him to a stair rail within the house.[16] At some point, he also set the BMW on fire.[16] He is believed to have arrived at the house by about 2:00 p.m.
Capture on 29 April
Bryant was captured the following morning, when a fire started in the guest house, presumably set by Bryant.[18] Bryant taunted police to "come and get him", but the police, believing the hostage was already dead, decided that the fire would eventually bring Bryant out. Bryant eventually ran out of the house with his clothes on fire, suffering burns to his back and buttocks. He was arrested and taken to hospital for treatment.
It was discovered that Glenn Pears had been shot during or before the standoff and had died before the fire. The remains of the Martins were also found.[19] It was also determined they had been shot, and that Noelene Martin had suffered blunt-force trauma. They both died before the fire; witness accounts of the gunfire, as presented to the Supreme Court of Tasmania, place the time of death of David and Noelene Martin as being approximately noon on 28 April. One weapon was found burnt in the house, and the other on the roof of the adjacent building where police believed they had seen Bryant the night before. Both weapons had suffered from massive chamber blast pressure, possibly from the heat of the house fire.
Casualties
Fatalities
The following is a list of those killed in the Port Arthur massacre.[17]
|
|
|
Aftermath and analysis
The Port Arthur tourist site reopened a few weeks later, and since then a new restaurant has been built. The former Broad Arrow Café structure is now a "place for quiet reflection", with a monument and memorial garden dedicated at the site in April 2000.[20] The Australian Journal of Emergency Management published several research articles on the response and the ongoing processes of recovery, including an article about caring for the social workers working with residents.[21]
Community response
A substantial community fund was given for the victims of the Port Arthur massacre. The murder of Nanette Mikac and her daughters Alannah and Madeline inspired Dr Phil West of Melbourne, who had two girls similar in age to the murdered children, to set up a foundation in their memory.[22] The Alannah and Madeline Foundation supports child victims of violence and runs a national anti-bullying programme.[23] It was launched by the Prime Minister on the first anniversary of the massacre.
In 1996, Australian composer Peter Sculthorpe wrote Port Arthur, In memoriam: for chamber orchestra, "...for the victims of the massacre at Port Arthur, 28 April 1996, for those who died, and for those who live with the memory of it." The work was first performed 24 June 1996, at Government House, Hobart, Tasmania, by the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra conducted by David Porcelijn.[24]
In 2007, Tasmanian playwright Tom Holloway dealt with the massacre in his play Beyond the Neck.[25] Tasmanian composer Matthew Dewey also deals with these issues in his first symphony.[26][27] The case was also covered by Casefile True Crime Podcast on 11 February 2017.
Mental illness and copycat effects
The massacre at Port Arthur created a kinship with the Scottish town of Dunblane, which had suffered a similar event, the Dunblane school massacre, only weeks previously.[28][29] The two communities exchanged items to place at their respective memorials.
Paul Mullen, a forensic psychiatrist with extensive involvement following the string of massacres in Australia and New Zealand, attributes both the Port Arthur massacre and some of the earlier massacres to the copycat effect.[30] In this theory the saturation media coverage provides both instruction and perverse incentives for dysfunctional individuals to imitate previous crimes. In Tasmania, a coroner found that a report on the current affairs programme A Current Affair, a few months earlier had guided one suicide, and may have helped create the expectation of a massacre.[31][32] The coverage of the Dunblane massacre, in particular the attention on the perpetrator, is thought to have provided the trigger for Bryant to act.[33]
Effects
Following the spree, the Prime Minister of Australia, John Howard, led the development of strict gun control laws within Australia and formulated the National Firearms Agreement, restricting the private ownership of semi-automatic rifles, semi-automatic shotguns and pump-action shotguns as well as introducing uniform firearms licensing. It was implemented with bipartisan support by the Commonwealth, states and territories.[34] The massacre happened just six weeks after the Dunblane massacre, in Scotland, which claimed 18 lives, with U.K. Prime Minister John Major reaching out to his counterpart over the shared tragedies; the United Kingdom passed its own changes to gun laws in 1997.[35][36]
Community and government reaction
Australians reacted to the event with widespread shock and horror, and the political effects were significant and long-lasting. The federal government led state governments, some of which (notably Tasmania itself and Queensland) were opposed to new gun laws, to severely restrict the availability of firearms. Concern was raised within the Coalition Government that fringe groups such as the "Ausi Freedom Scouts",[37] the Australian League of Rights and the Citizen Initiated Referendum Party, were exploiting voter anger to gain support. After discovering that the Christian Coalition and US National Rifle Association were supporting the gun lobby, the government and media cited their support, along with the moral outrage of the community to discredit the gun lobby as extremists.[38]
Under federal government co-ordination, all states and territories of Australia restricted the legal ownership and use of self-loading rifles, self-loading shotguns, and tightened controls on their legal use by recreational shooters. The government initiated a mandatory "buy-back" scheme with the owners paid according to a table of valuations. Some 643,000 firearms were handed in at a cost of $350 million which was funded by a temporary increase in the Medicare levy which raised $500 million.[39] Media, activists, politicians and some family members of victims, notably Walter Mikac (who lost his wife and two children), spoke out in favour of the changes.
Much discussion has occurred as to the level of Bryant's mental health. At the time of the offences he was in receipt of a Disability Support Pension on the basis of being mentally handicapped. Media reports also detailed his odd behaviour as a child. He was able to drive a car and obtain a gun, despite lacking a gun licence or a driver's licence.[40][41][42] This was a matter which, in the public debate that followed, was widely regarded as a telling demonstration of the inadequacy of the nation's gun laws.
Investigation
Martin Bryant pleaded guilty to having carried out the shootings and was given 35 life sentences without parole.[43] Since 2015, he has been imprisoned in the Risdon Prison Complex.[44]
Prosecution
Bryant was held in Royal Hobart Hospital under heavy police guard while awaiting trial. According to a guard, there were at least two security guard job applications made by individuals seeking to exact retribution on Bryant.[45]
In a police interview, Bryant admitted to having carjacked the BMW, but claimed it only had three occupants and denied shooting any person. He also claimed he did not take the BMW from the vicinity of the toll booth and that his hostage was taken from the BMW. He said that he thought the man he took hostage must have died in the boot when the car exploded. He did not distinguish between the car fire and the later house fire. Such discrepancies raise speculations that Bryant was either lying during the police interview or was mentally incapable of recalling events accurately. Bryant also claimed that the guns found by police were not his but admitted to owning the shotgun that was found with his passport back in his own car near the toll booth.
Initially Bryant pleaded not guilty to the 35 murders and did not provide a confession. Bryant changed his plea to guilty for a court hearing on 19 November 1996, where he was found guilty of all charges. The judge then ordered that all evidence for the case be sealed.
On 22 November, Bryant was sentenced to 35 sentences of life imprisonment for each count of murder and sentenced to 25 years for the remaining 36 charges on 5 other offences (20 attempted murders, 3 counts infliction of grievous bodily harm, the infliction of wounds upon a further 8 persons, 4 counts of aggravated assault and 1 count of unlawfully setting fire to property). All sentences are to be served concurrently[46] in Hobart's Risdon Prison where he remains in solitary confinement and is not permitted any visitors other than his immediate family. His prison papers indicate that he is never to be released, and he continues to serve his term without possibility of parole. This is very rare in Australia, where the majority of murder sentences allow for the possibility of parole after a long prison term.
Legacy
Tasmanian Police records from the incident are in the care of the Tasmanian Archive and Heritage Office.[47] A memorial service on the 20th anniversary of the massacre had over 500 people in attendance.[48]
See also
- List of massacres in Australia
- Timeline of major crimes in Australia
- List of events named massacres
- List of disasters in Australia by death toll
References
- ^ a b c d e f g "The Queen v. Bryant". Archived from the original on 8 May 2001.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - ^ "As The U.S. Looks To Australia For Hope on Guns, Its Laws Are Being Quietly Pulled Back". HuffPost. Retrieved 22 March 2018.
- ^ Wahlquist, Calla (14 March 2016). "It took one massacre: how Australia embraced gun control after Port Arthur". The Guardian.
- ^ UNESCO's World Heritage "Australian Convict Sites" webpages Accessed 31 December 2010
- ^ Hester, Jere (30 April 1996). "Aftermath of Horror Death Toll Climbs to 35; Tasmaniac is Charged". New York Daily News. Retrieved 26 September 2013.
- ^ Milliken, Robert (1 May 1996). "City feels killer's legacy of bitterness". The Independent. Retrieved 26 September 2013.
When Miss Harvey died in a car crash near Copping about four years ago, she left Bryant property and other assets valued at about £300,000. (Amount converted using Historical currency rates of $1.8971 AUD to GBP on 1 May 1996)
{{cite news}}
: External link in
(help)|quote=
- ^ Bellamy, Patrick. "Martin Bryant". TruTV. Turner Entertainment Company, Inc. p. 2. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
- ^ a b c Mullen, Paul E. (4 May 1996). "Psychiatric Report Martin Bryant". Victorian Forensic Psychiatry Services. Archived from the original on 30 August 2017. Retrieved 2 March 2018.
- ^ "Managing Martin: The Jailing of Martin Bryant". Radio National. Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
- ^ Hon. Duncan James Colquhoun Kerr in The Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia, House Hansard, Thursday, 9 May 1996, pp. 766 ff.
- ^ Seascape guest accommodation site, Landmarks and Buildings identically in googlemaps and gettyimages.de, accessed 2018 April, 11
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Altmann, Carol (2006). "The Massacre". After Port Arthur. Allen & Unwin. pp. 9–11. ISBN 1-74114-268-7.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag Altmann, Carol (2006). "The Massacre". After Port Arthur. Allen & Unwin. pp. 11–15. ISBN 1-74114-268-7.
- ^ a b https://web.archive.org/web/20010508013225/http://www.shootersnews.addr.com/cttranscript.htm
- ^ The identity of this man was suppressed by the DPP
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Altmann, Carol (2006). "The Massacre". After Port Arthur. Allen & Unwin. pp. 15–23. ISBN 1-74114-268-7.
- ^ a b "The new charges against Bryant". The Advocate. 9 July 1996. Retrieved 8 December 2008.
- ^ "Martin Bryant". Biography.
- ^ "Port Arthur Massacre – Background, Events, Aftermath, & Facts". Encyclopedia Britannica.
- ^ "Port Arthur Massacre – Monument Australia". monumentaustralia.org.au. Retrieved 9 December 2015.
- ^ "AJEM A social work perspective on the response to the Port Arthur crisis". ajem.infoservices.com.au. Retrieved 3 October 2017.
- ^ https://storage.googleapis.com/wzukusers/user-15618465/documents/5720af26a0333kstdNEv/Port%20Arthur%20Memoir%20by%20Dr%20Phil%20West%20Founder.pdf
- ^ "Alannah & Madeline Foundation". www.amf.org.au.
- ^ "Port Arthur, In memoriam".
- ^ "Beyond the Neck".
- ^ "Matthew Dewey, Composer and Singer". Matthewdewey.com. Retrieved 3 April 2015.
- ^ "ABC, Stateline". Abc.net.au. Retrieved 31 January 2010.
- ^ Shared bond after Port Arthur massacre, The West Australian, 28 April 2016
- ^ Families share massacre grief across the miles, The Herald, 15 April 1997
- ^ Mullen, Paul quoted in Hannon K 1997, "Copycats to Blame for Massacres Says Expert", Courier Mail, 4/3/1997
- ^ Hansen, Jane 1995. "Tassie Guns", A Current Affair 2 October 1995, featuring Roland Browne and Rebecca Peters of the Coalition for Gun Control. Nine Network broadcast.
- ^ Lovibond J. 1996. 'Hobart gun death related to TV show', Hobart Mercury, 21 May 1996, Ed: 1, Pg: 2, 511 words. Newstext
- ^ Wainwright, Robert (28 March 2006). "Inside the mind of a mass murderer". The Sydney Morning Herald.
- ^ "Firearms in Australia: a guide to electronic resources". aph.gov.au. Commonwealth of Australia. 9 August 2007. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
- ^ "The Port Arthur Tragedy". Crimes That Shook Australia. 23 April 2014. approximately (with commercials) 50:00 minutes in.
- ^ Hartmann, Margaret (2 October 2015). "How Australia and Britain Tackled Gun Violence". New York. Retrieved 6 September 2017.
- ^ Farquarson, John (12 November 2002). "Counter-insurgency jungle warrior: Brigadier Ted Serong, Military tactician 1915–2002". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 31 July 2011.
- ^ Reynolds, Christopher Dr. "Issue Management and the Australian Gun Debate: A review of the media salience and issue management following the Tasmanian massacre of 1996". Retrieved 31 July 2011.
- ^ "Firearms Regulations FAQ". Attorney General's Department. Archived from the original on 14 May 2011. Retrieved 2 March 2016.
- ^ When police questioned him as to why he didn't have a car licence, he replied. "I didn't think I'd ever pass or get through the courses 'cos I'm not that bright."
- ^ "A Transcript of the Police Interview With Martin Bryant". Ned Wood.
- ^ "A Transcript of the Police Interview With Martin Bryant". Love for Life. Archived from the original on 11 November 2016. Retrieved 6 June 2010.
- ^ "Australian gunman laughs as he admits killing 35". CNN. 7 November 1996. Archived from the original on 9 June 2007. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
- ^ "Mass murderer Martin Bryant is a danger to front line jail workers, says police officer instrumental in arresting him". news.com. 14 September 2015.
- ^ Pyke, Phil (13 October 2013). "Plans were made to kill Martin Bryant, police officer who guarded him reveals". News.com.au. Retrieved 24 March 2015.
- ^ P. Milgate, (et al), 'The Sentencing of Martin Bryant', Cambridge Legal Studies, Preliminary Second Edition, pp. 254–262. https://www.cambridge.edu.au/go/titles/Cambridge-Legal-Studies---Preliminary-Second-Edition:edition-2ed/
- ^ Ottavi, Nicki. "Session Abstracts". Australian Society of Archivists. Retrieved 26 September 2018.
- ^ https://www.am.news.com.au/national/port-arthur-20-years-on-memorial-service-to-commemorate-those-killed-in-massacre/news-story/851d84eafb8567a167d44d232a224957
Further reading
- Bingham, M (1996) Suddenly One Sunday. Sydney: Harper Collins
- Ludeke, M (2006) Ten Events Shaping Tasmania's History. Hobart: Ludeke Publishing
- Scott, M (1996) Port Arthur: A Story of Strength and Courage. Australia: Random House
External links
- 1996 crimes in Australia
- 1996 mass shootings
- 1990s in Tasmania
- April 1996 crimes
- Deaths by firearm in Tasmania
- Gun politics in Australia
- Mass murder in 1996
- Mass murder in Australia
- Mass shootings in Australia
- Spree shootings in Australia
- 1990s murders in Australia
- 1996 murders in Oceania
- 1990s mass shootings in Oceania
- 20th century mass murder in Oceania