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{{short description|Australian murderer}} | |||
{{Article issues | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2021}} | |||
| wikify = August 2009 | |||
{{Use Australian English|date=January 2013}} | |||
| cleanup = August 2009 | |||
{{Infobox criminal | |||
| original research = August 2009 | |||
| name = Ronald Ryan | |||
| POV = February 2009 | |||
| image_name = RonaldRyanImage.jpg | |||
| refimprove = February 2009 | |||
| image_size = | |||
| unbalanced = February 2009 | |||
| birth_name = Ronald Edmond Thompson | |||
}} | |||
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1925|2|21|df=y}} | |||
{{Infobox Criminal | |||
| birth_place = ], Australia | |||
| subject_name = | |||
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1967|2|3|1925|2|21|df=y}} | |||
| image_name = <!-- Use of placeholder now deprecated --> | |||
| death_place = ], ], Australia | |||
| image_size = | |||
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| alias = | ||
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| height = {{convert|5|ft|8|in|m}} | ||
| conviction = ] | |||
| place_of_birth = ], ] | |||
| conviction_penalty = ] | |||
| date_of_death = {{death date and age|1967|2|3|1925|2|21|df=y}} | |||
| conviction_status = | |||
| place_of_death = ], ] | |||
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| occupation = | ||
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| spouse = Dorothy Janet (née George) | ||
| parents = John and Cecilia (née Young) Ryan | |||
| conviction = ] | |||
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| death_cause = ] | ||
| status = ] | |||
| occupation = | |||
| spouse = Dorothy Janet (nee George) | |||
| parents = John Ryan and Cecilia (nee Young) | |||
| children = Janice, Wendy, Rhonda, Robert | |||
}} | }} | ||
'''Ronald Joseph Ryan''' (21 February 1925 |
'''Ronald Joseph Ryan''' (21 February 1925 – 3 February 1967) was the last person to be legally ]. Ryan was found guilty of shooting and killing ] George Hodson during an escape from ], ], in 1965. Ryan's ] was met with public protests by those opposed to ]. Capital punishment was abolished in all states by 1985.<ref name="hanged">{{cite web|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0485330 |title=''The Last Man Hanged'' (1992) (TV)|publisher=IMDb|access-date=2015-11-06}}</ref> | ||
<ref name="correspondance">{{citation|journal=Victorian Bar News|issue=122|issn=01503286|date=Spring 2002|publisher=]|location=Melbourne, Australia|title=Correspondance|last=Opas|first=Phil|pages=13|url=http://www.vicbar.com.au/webdata/VicBarNewsFiles/122%20Correspondance.pdf|accessdate = 2009-08-07 | |||
}}<!-- Note: the url is to the specific section; the entire publication (with the details here) is available at http://vicbar.com.au/webdata/VicBarNewsFiles/122%20Complete.pdf) --></ref><ref name="RyanCase">{{citation|jornal=Sunday Herald Sun|year=1997|month=January|day=19|title=Ryan: the case that won't die|page=78|url=http://www.vicbar.com.au/vicbar_oral/images/opas/11_RyanCase.gif|publisher=]|location=Melbourne, Australia|accessdate= 2009-08-07 | |||
}}</ref><ref name="casewontdie">{{citation|jornal=Sunday Herald Sun|year=1997|month=January|day=19|title=Ryan: the case that won't die|page=79|url=http://www.vicbar.com.au/vicbar_oral/images/opas/22_Casewontdie.jpg|publisher=]|location=Melbourne, Australia|accessdate= 2009-08-07}}</ref> | |||
==Early life== | == Early life == | ||
{{Unreferenced section|date=August 2009}} | |||
Ryan was born on 21 February 1925 at the Royal Womens' Hospital in Melbourne's inner suburb of Carlton, to John (aka Big Jack) and Cecilia Thompson. Cecilia already had a son with her first husband George Harry Thompson and was living with John Ryan. Cecilia and George had separated in 1915 when George left to fight in the Great War. The relationship never resumed. Cecilia met John Ryan while working as a nurse in Woods Point where he was suffering lung disease. They formed a relationship in 1924 and later married after Thompson's death in 1927 from a car accident. | |||
Ronald Edmond Thompson was born at the ] in ]'s inner suburb of ], to John Ronald Ryan and Cecilia Thompson (née Young). Cecilia already had a son with her first husband, George Harry Thompson and was living with John Ryan. Cecilia and George had separated in 1915 when George left to fight in the ]. The relationship never resumed. Cecilia met Ryan while working as a nurse in Woods Point where he was suffering from ]. They formed a relationship in 1924 and later married in 1929, after Thompson's death in 1927 by falling from a tram and getting hit by a car.<ref name=ryanjoke/> Ronald then adopted the name Ronald Edmond Ryan. In 1936, Ryan was ] in the ] Church. He took as his confirmation name Joseph, becoming Ronald Edmond Joseph Ryan. He did not like Edmond and from then on used "Ronald Joseph Ryan".{{cn|date=February 2022}} | |||
In 1936 Ryan was confirmed in the Catholic Church. He took as his confirmation name Joseph, and then became known as Ronald Joseph Ryan. The family lived in dire poverty. When Jack was completely unable to work due to lung disease and with most of his invalid pension spent on alcohol, the family move to a tiny cottage in Brunswick and things became even more desperate. Severe, neglected ulceration leaves Ronald almost blind in his left eye, which causes a slight droop to his damaged eye. Finally Mrs Ryan can no longer keep the state child welfare authorities at bay. | |||
His three sisters were made ] a year later when authorities declared them to be neglected. His sisters were sent to the ] in ]. Ryan absconded from ] in September 1939 and, with his half-brother George Thompson, worked in and around ], ]; spare money earned from ] cutting and kangaroo shooting was sent to his mother, who was looking after their sick, alcoholic father.<ref name="Anu.edu.au">, Mike Richards, ''Australian Dictionary of Biography''</ref><ref name="vicbar.com.au"> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060901165514/http://www.vicbar.com.au/vicbar_oral/images/opas/11_RyanCase.gif |date=1 September 2006 }} ''Sunday Herald'', 19 January 1997.</ref> | |||
The Ryan children are made a ward of the state after authorities declared them as "neglected". At the age of ten Ronald Ryan is sent to the Salesian Brothers' Orphanage at Sunbury, on the outskirts of Melbourne. His sisters (Irma, Violet and Gloria) were sent to the Good Shepard Convent in Collingwood. | |||
At the age of 20, Ryan had saved enough money to rent a house in Balranald. He collected his mother and sisters and they lived together in this house. Ryan's father stayed in Melbourne and died a year later, aged 62, after a long battle with miners' disease, ].<ref name=ryanjoke>{{cite web|url=http://www.vicbar.com.au/vicbar_oral/images/opas/15_RyanMother.gif|format=GIF|title=Ryan still able to joke: mother|date=27 January 1967|publisher=Vicbar.com.au|access-date=2015-11-06|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130618215017/http://www.vicbar.com.au/vicbar_oral/images/opas/15_RyanMother.gif|archive-date=18 June 2013}}</ref><ref name="Anu.edu.au"/><ref name="vicbar.com.au"/> | |||
Ryan did quite well, captaining the football and cricket teams, joining the choir, and impressing other boys as 'a natural leader'. Ryan absconded from Rupertswood in September 1939 and joined his half-brother George Thompson, working in and around Balranald, New South Wales, spare money earnt from sleeper cutting and kangaroo shooting was sent money to his mother looking after their sick alcoholic father John Ryan. | |||
==Move to Victoria, marriage and children== | |||
At the age of eighteen, Ryan returns to Melbourne from Balranald and picks up his three sisters from the convent and buys them new clothes. Excitedly, he tells his sisters about the wide-open space in the "outback", and his plans to move them and their mother away from the violence and bad memories of the big city. Later that year, after months of hard work to prove his ability to support his sisters, the state child welfare authorities agree to young Ronald's plans. That Christmas the family are joyfully reunited at Balranald. Ryan is now the sole breadwinner for the family. While his sisters go to school and his mother looks after the house, Ryan takes on some farm work as well as his other jobs. Ryan's father Jack, stayed in Melbourne and died after a long battle with miners' phthisis turberculosis a year later. Ryan worked to support his mother and sisters. | |||
Aged about 22, Ryan decided to join his brother, who was tomato farming near ], Victoria. He started visiting Melbourne on weekends and during one of these weekend trips Ryan met his future wife, Dorothy Janet George. On 4 February 1950, Ryan married Dorothy at St Stephen's Anglican Church in ], Victoria. He converted from ] to the ] to marry her. He converted back to Catholicism<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091001044444/https://150.theage.com.au/view_bestofarticle.asp?straction=update&inttype=1&intid=952|date=1 October 2009}}</ref> shortly before his execution.<ref>Larkin, John (3 September 1994) {{webarchive|url=https://archive.today/20120907120001/http://www.rattler.com.au/rattler-articles/1994/9/3/remembering-ronald-ryan/ |date=7 September 2012 }}. ''Sunday Age'', via Rattler.com.au</ref> Dorothy was the daughter of the mayor of the Melbourne suburb of ]. Ryan and Dorothy had three daughters, Janice, Wendy and Rhonda. A fourth baby was stillborn. | |||
Aged about 23, Ryan returned to Melbourne where he was employed as a storeman. On 4 February 1950, Ryan married Dorothy Janet George at St Stephen's Anglican Church in Richmond. She was the daughter of the Mayor of the Melbourne suburb of Hawthorn - a prominent figure in local government, from an old Melbourne family. Ryan's origins are firmly working class. Ronald and Dorothy then have three daughters, Janice, Wendy, Rhonda and Robert (died a few hours after birth). | |||
== Later life == | |||
Although Ryan had no trade, he was a versatile worker, managing to support a wife and three daughters. Each summer he works as a timber-cutter for a man named Keith Johanson, a logging and pulpwood contractor in the mountains near Matlock, eighty miles from Melbourne. Gradually, Ryan worked up to a position as sub-foreman, responsible for paying and organising a number of other men. Every second weekend, Ryan hitch-hikes home to Melbourne with a cheque for his family, but the precious hours with his wife and daughters are never long enough. Early Monday morning he went back to work in the forest. | |||
After spending a few months working for his father-in-law as a trainee mechanic, Ryan decided that more money could be made cutting timber near ] and ]. When it was too wet to cut timber, Ryan got a job painting for the ]. By 1952 the Ryan family was living in ].<ref name="ReferenceA">''The Herald'', 20 December 1965, "The men Police are hunting!" p.5</ref> | |||
Ryan works harder than ever, earning the respect of his employers and the men under him. When his daughters begin attending school and the timber-cutting season ended, there is not enough money. Ryan, now aged 31, is too proud to ask Dorothy's parents for financial help and instead begins to gamble heavily and passing forged cheques. He is soon caught and he pleads guilty. Ryan is released on a five-year good behaviour bond. In one report a detective describes Ryan as "highly intelligent". Ryan worked in a series of straight jobs closer to home. For three years he avoided crime, instead turning to gambling as a way to give his family what he believed they deserved. However this inevitably leads Ryan to store-breaking, then stealing, then factory-breaking. Again he is caught. | |||
Trouble with the law started when his rented house burnt down. Ryan was away for the weekend in Melbourne when the ]ist struck. The arsonist was caught and claimed that Ryan had put him up to it in order to claim insurance money. His first appearance in court was in ] in 1953 when he was ] on a charge of ].<ref name="ReferenceA"/> | |||
==Ryan's Life== | |||
In 1956 Ryan appeared in court for ] in ]. He was given a bond. His next appearance in court was after he issued a large number of forged cheques in ]. His partner was caught with the goods purchased with the bad cheques and handed Ryan over to the police. He received another good-behaviour bond after the arresting detective gave a favourable character reference on Ryan's behalf.<ref name="Ryan the man condemned">{{cite web|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=-toQAAAAIBAJ&sjid=b5MDAAAAIBAJ&pg=1292%2C3511417&dq=ronald+ryan|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130125004227/http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=-toQAAAAIBAJ&sjid=b5MDAAAAIBAJ&pg=1292%2C3511417&dq=ronald+ryan|url-status=dead|title=The Age – Google News Archive Search|date=25 January 2013|archive-date=25 January 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=SRETAAAAIBAJ&sjid=tqkDAAAAIBAJ&pg=4198%2C4066902&dq=ronald+gallagher&hl=en|archive-url=https://archive.today/20120711001502/http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=SRETAAAAIBAJ&sjid=tqkDAAAAIBAJ&pg=4198%2C4066902&dq=ronald+gallagher&hl=en|url-status=dead|title=The Age – Google News Archive Search|date=11 July 2012|archive-date=11 July 2012}}</ref> | |||
Ryan was a petty-thief, a small-time criminal, with no history of violence. Unlike many criminals, Ryan's police record did not begin until he was 31 years of age.<ref name="RyanCase"/> | |||
Ryan first served prison time at ]. Here, under ] (who would later become the Governor of ]), he appeared to want to better himself.<ref name="vicbar.com.au pdf">{{cite web|url=http://www.vicbar.com.au/GetFile.ashx?file=GeneralFiles/BarNewsArchive/2000-2009/VBN_122_2002_Spring.pdf |title=Victorian Bar News |date=2002 |publisher=Vicbar.com.au |access-date=2015-11-06}}</ref> He was studying for his ] (the successful completion of 12 years of formal schooling) when he was released on ] in August 1963. He was regarded by the authorities as a model prisoner.<ref>Grindlay, Ian, ''Behind Bars: Memoirs of Jail Governor, Ian Grindlay'', Southdown Press, Melbourne</ref> | |||
Ryan was first sent to prison for robbery. He had overcome the temptation to fall into a criminal life during a difficult upbringing, only to stumble in maturity.<ref name="RyanCase"/> | |||
After working as a ] for a couple of months, Ryan went to lunch and was never to be seen again, as he had started robbing butchers shops and used explosives to blow their safes.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=VB0TAAAAIBAJ&sjid=15YDAAAAIBAJ&pg=6848%2C3295591&dq=ronald-joseph-ryan|archive-url=https://archive.today/20120711073113/http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=VB0TAAAAIBAJ&sjid=15YDAAAAIBAJ&pg=6848%2C3295591&dq=ronald-joseph-ryan|url-status=dead|title=The Age – Google News Archive Search|date=11 July 2012|archive-date=11 July 2012}}</ref> | |||
Ryan's troubles began when he tried to live up to the social level of his wife's family, who were wealthy business people. In desperation Ryan turned to gambling, switched from manual work to passing bad cheques, received stolen goods, shopbreaking and burglary.<ref name="RyanCase"/> | |||
Ryan and two accomplices were caught after a shop robbery on 4 January 1964. He was charged with breaking and entering and theft offences on 6 January 1964. Bailed on 3 February 1964, Ryan skipped town and fled to ]. He later admitted to nine robberies in New South Wales between 4 April and 11 July 1964. On a visit home on 14 July he was caught by Victoria Police in the early hours the next morning. On 13 November 1964 he received an eight-year prison sentence for breaking and entering. He was sent to Pentridge Prison.<ref name="hanged"/> | |||
Ryan first served prison time at Bendigo Prison. His time in prison was productive and he exhibited a disciplined approach to study, completing his Leaving Certificate (year 11). Ryan was studying for his Matriculation Certificate (year 12) when he was released on parole in August 1963 He was regarded by the authorities as a model prisoner. Appearing to want to rehabilitate himself. | |||
== Escape == | |||
According to his wife Dorothy, in the documentary film ''The Last Man Hanged'' Ryan wanted to provide everything for his family and his gambling escalated. Ryan returned to crime. On 13 November 1964, Ryan received an eight-year prison sentence for breaking and entering. He was sent to Pentridge Prison. | |||
After Ryan was sentenced to Pentridge Prison, he was placed in B Division where he met fellow prisoner Peter John Walker, who was serving a 12-year sentence for bank robbery. When Ryan was informed that his wife was seeking a divorce, he made a plan to ]. Walker decided to go along with him. Ryan planned to take himself and his family and flee to ], which did not have an ] treaty with Australia.<ref name="hanged"/><ref name="vicbar.com.au pdf"/> On 19 December 1965, Ryan and Walker scaled the prison wall and ran across the top of the wall to a prison watchtower, where they took prison officer Helmut Lange hostage, threatening him to open the gate with his own M1 rifle. Lange agreed, but deliberately pulled the wrong lever. Ryan and Walker then proceeded downstairs with their hostage only to find that the gate would not open. At the bottom of the stairs was the night officers' lodge. Warder Fred Brown was returning from lunch to relieve Lange when he was confronted by the escapees. Brown did not resist. When Ryan realised Lange had tricked him, he jabbed the rifle into Lange's back and marched him back up the stairs so Lange could pull the correct lever to open the tower gate. The two escapees then exited through the gate into the prison car park.<ref name="hanged"/> To the escapees' dismay there were only six cars in the car park and five had flat tyres.<ref name="walker">"The Walker Interview", ''The Truth'', 25 January 1985</ref> | |||
Slightly built and 5 ft 8 ins (173 cm) tall, Ryan was a stylish-if spivvy'-dresser, who usually wore expensive, well-cut suits, silk tie and a fedora. He was always keen to impress as a man of means and consequence. He was of above-average intelligence and was described by not only the people who knew him, but also prison authorities, as a likable character with dignity and self-respect. | |||
However, they did encounter the prison chaplain, Brigadier James Hewitt of ], in the car park. The escapees grabbed Hewitt and used him as a shield. Ryan, armed with the rifle, pointed it at Hewitt and demanded his car. Prison Officer Bennett in Tower 2 saw the prisoners. Ryan called to Bennett to throw down his rifle. Bennett ducked out of sight and then got his rifle.<ref name="hanged"/> | |||
==Prison Escape== | |||
When Hewitt told Ryan he did not have his car that day, Ryan rifle-butted him in the head causing serious injuries.<ref>''The Herald'', p5, 20 December, "Death was 1/2-inch away for Gaol Chaplain"</ref> Les Watt, a petrol attendant who watched the escape from a petrol station on Sydney Rd, witnessed Ryan hitting Hewitt with the rifle.<ref>''The Sun'', p. 2, 20 December 1965, "I saw Murder"</ref> The escapees then left the badly injured chaplain and Ryan ran out to Champ Street, directly in front of the south-west corner of the prison.<ref name="hanged"/> | |||
After Ryan was sentenced to Pentridge, he was placed in 'B' Division where he met a fellow prisoner Peter John Walker (who was serving a 12 year sentence for bank robbery). When Ryan was informed that his wife was getting a divorce, he made a plan to escape from prison. Walker decided to go along with him. Ryan planned to take himself and his family and flee to Brazil, where there was no extradition treaty with Australia. In the documentary film ''The Last Man Hanged'' Dorothy Ryan confirms this fact. | |||
Walker went south across Church Street toward the adjacent Roman Catholic church in ]. Prison officer Bennett had his rifle aimed at Walker and ordered Walker to halt or he would shoot. Walker took cover behind a small wall that bordered the church.<ref name="walker"/> The prison alarm was raised by Warder Lange, and it began to blow loudly, indicating a prison escape. Unarmed warders, Wallis, Mitchinson and Paterson, came running out of the prison's main gate and onto the street.<ref name="hanged"/><ref name="transcript">Trial transcript ''R v Ryan & Walker'' 15–30 March 1966</ref> | |||
At around 2 p.m. on Sunday 19 December 1965, Ryan and Walker put the escape plan into effect. As prison officers were taking turns attending a staff Christmas party in the officers' mess hall, Ryan and Walker scaled a five-metre prison wall with the aid of two wooden benches, a hook and blankets. Running along the top of the wall to a prison watch tower, they overpowered prison guard Helmut Lange, and Ryan took his M1 carbine rifle. | |||
Prison officer George Hodson responded to the whistle and was told by Bennett that he had Walker pinned down. Hodson ran over to Walker and disarmed him, but Walker managed to get free and both men ran towards the armed Ryan.<ref name="hanged" /><ref name="transcript"/> | |||
Ryan ordered Lange to pull the lever which would open the prison tower gate to freedom. Lange pulled the wrong lever. When Ryan realised Lange had tricked him, he threatened Lange by cocking the rifle (which Ryan could not operate) with the safety-catch on. This faulty operation (conceded by Lange and confirmed by ballistic experts during trial) would have caused an undischarged bullet to be ejected, spilling onto the floor of the tower. This bullet was one of eight rounds kept in every M1 carbine rifles issued to prison officers. Lange then pulled the correct lever to open the tower gate, the two escapees ran down the steps towards the prison car park. | |||
Meanwhile, confusion and noise were increasing around the busy intersection of Sydney Road and O'Hea Street and across to the Champ Street intersection, with Ryan waving the rifle around trying to get cars to stop so he could commandeer them, and people ducking for cover between cars.<ref name="hanged"/><ref name="transcript"/> | |||
Walker had hidden behind a nearby church wall. Prison officer Bennett had his rifle aimed at Walker and ordered Walker to halt or he would shoot. Bennett shouted to Hodson he had Walker pinned down. Hodson headed for Walker and in a scuffle he disarmed Walker of his pipe. Walker broke free so Hodson began hitting the fleeing Walker over his head with the piece of pipe. This wasn't the first time that Hodson used violence against a prisoner. ''The Truth Newspaper'' published letters from ex-prisoners claiming that Hodson was a violent heavy-weight bully who would bash prisoners with phone books, as not to leave marks on their bodies. Hodson was separated from his wife and daughter and living with his new family in the red-light center of Inkerman Street, St Kilda. The area was notoriously known for street prostition and illegal narcotics. <ref>{{citation|journal=]|year=1966|month=January|day=22|location=Melbourne, Australia}}</ref> | |||
Frank and ] were travelling south on Champ Street and had slowed to give way to traffic on Sydney Road when Ryan armed with the rifle appeared in front of their car. Ryan threatened the driver and his passenger wife to get out of their car. The driver, ], turned his car off, put it in neutral then got out of his vehicle. Ryan got in via the driver's door. Surprisingly, Pauline Jeziorski refused to get out of the car. She was persuaded by Ryan to get out, only to go back in the car to get her handbag.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=Q9YQAAAAIBAJ&sjid=X5MDAAAAIBAJ&pg=3241%2C3804343&hl=en|archive-url=https://archive.today/20120711122006/http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=Q9YQAAAAIBAJ&sjid=X5MDAAAAIBAJ&pg=3241%2C3804343&hl=en|url-status=dead|title=The Age – Google News Archive Search|date=11 July 2012|archive-date=11 July 2012}}</ref> Paterson, realising Ryan was armed, returned inside the prison to get a rifle.<ref name="The Hanged Man 2002">''The Hanged Man: The Life and Death of Ronald Ryan'' (Melbourne, Scribe, 2002)<!-- isbn# needed --></ref> | |||
Walker was faster runner than Hodson, so Hodson continued to chase after Walker with the pipe still in his hand. Both men ran towards the armed Ronald Ryan. | |||
Warder ] was first to reach the car and grabbed Ryan through the driver's window, he told Ryan "the game's up".<ref name="ReferenceB">{{cite web|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=gRoUAAAAIBAJ&sjid=mpYDAAAAIBAJ&pg=4730%2C341300&hl=en|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130124175940/http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=gRoUAAAAIBAJ&sjid=mpYDAAAAIBAJ&pg=4730%2C341300&hl=en|url-status=dead|title=The Age – Google News Archive Search|date=24 January 2013|archive-date=24 January 2013}}</ref> Warder Thomas Wallis who was following, ran to Pauline Jeziorski's side of the car. He grabbed her and pulled her away from the car.<ref name="The Hanged Man 2002"/> | |||
The prison alarm was raised by prison guard Lange, and it began to blow loudly, indicating a prison escape. Prison guard William Bennett, standing on number 2 tower aimed his rifle at Ryan who was taking Hewitt as hostage. Ryan began running around on the road trying to seize a getaway vehicle. Ryan threatened a car driver and his passenger wife to get out of their car. The driver Frank Jeziorski, got out of his car and Ryan got in. Amazingly, the heavily pregnant Pauline Jeziorski refused to get out of the car. She was persuaded by Ryan to get out of the car, only to get back in the car to get her handbag. In frustration, Ryan then got out of the driver's seat and noticed Walker running towards him, being chased by Hodson who was holding the pipe in his hand. Walker was shouting frantically to Ryan that prison guard William Bennett, standing on the number 2 prison tower, had his rifle aimed at them. At this time, Hodson was running close behind Walker, who was near Ryan. | |||
In frustration, Ryan forced Mitchinson to back off, then got out of the passenger's side door and noticed Walker running towards him, being chased by Hodson who was holding the pipe in his hand. Walker was shouting frantically to Ryan that prison guard William Bennett, standing on the Number 2 prison tower, had his rifle aimed at them. At this time, Hodson was chasing Walker;<ref name=" hanged"/> Ryan took a couple of steps forward, raised his rifle, aimed at Hodson, and allegedly fired.<ref name="ReferenceB"/> | |||
Meanwhile, confusion and noise was gaining strength around the busy intersection of Sydney Road and O'Hea Street, with vehicles and trams banking up and people running around between cars. Armed prison guards, including Robert Paterson, came running out onto the street. Armed prison guards appeared on prison walls and on top of prison guard towers. Paterson admitted that he came out of the prison main gate, stood on a low wall, aimed his rifle at Ryan, and claimed to have suddenly fired a shot in the air when a woman came into his sight. | |||
George Hodson fell to the ground. He had been struck by a single bullet that exited through Hodson's back, about an inch lower than the point of entry in his right chest. Hodson died in the middle of Sydney Road. Warder Robert Paterson, now with a rifle, ran back outside and onto Champ Street.<ref name="hanged"/> | |||
Ryan and Walker ran past the critically wounded Hodson and commandeered a blue ] sedan on Sydney Road from its driver, Brian Mullins. With Walker driving and Ryan a passenger, the car travelled through an adjacent ] and then west along ].<ref name="walker"/> | |||
Based on Hobson's injuries, Ryan's defence counsel argued at his subsequent trial for murder, that the ballistics evidence indicated that the fatal bullet entered Hodson's (shoulder) body at such a downward trajectory angle that Ryan (5 feet 8 inches (1.73 m) tall) would have had to have been 8 feet 6 inches (2.55 m) tall to have fired the shot. But the prosecution argued that Hodson (6 feel 1 inch (1.85 m) tall) could have been running in a stooped position, thus accounting for the bullet's fatal downward trajectory angle of entry.<ref name="haunted">{{citation|jornal=Sunday Herald Sun|year=1997|month=January|day=19|title=Haunted by hanging / The death that changed my life|last1=Robinson|first1=Russell|last2=Opas|first2=Philip|page=80|url=http://www.vicbar.com.au/vicbar_oral/images/opas/23_Haunted.gif|publisher=]|location=Melbourne, Australia|accessdate= 2009-08-07}}</ref> | |||
==On the run== | |||
Fourteen eyewitnesses testified in court that they heard only one shot - no person heard two shots fired. Paterson testified he fired a shot. If Ryan had also fired a shot, it is likely that at least one person would have heard two shots. All witnesses testified to hearing only one shot. Two eyewitnesses testified they saw Ryan's rifle recoil - but the rifle actually had no recoil. Two eyewitnesses testified they saw smoke from Ryan's rifle - but the rifle was actually loaded with smokeless ammunition.<ref name="haunted"/><ref>http://www.vicbar.com.au/vicbar_oral/images/opas/11_RyanCase.gif</ref><ref name="correspondance"/><ref name="RyanCase"/>''<Referenced Documentaries: The Last Man Hanged, The Last of The Ryans, Beyond Reasonable Doubt, Odd Man Out.>'' | |||
Ryan and Walker successfully eluded their pursuers outside Pentridge Prison and drove away before changing cars. They then made their way south following the ] ] to change cars again before hiding in a ] in ] provided by Norman Harold Murray. The following day the men moved into Christine Aitken's flat in Ormond Road, ]. | |||
Later at trial, all prison officers testified that they did not see Hodson carrying anything, and they did not see Hodson hit Walker. However, two witnesses Louis Bailey and Keith Dobson, testified that they saw Hodson carring something like an iron-bar/baton as he was chasing after Walker. | |||
The prison escape dominated newspapers and other media. One newspaper reported that, "Ronald Ryan, serving time for burglary, seized a prison officer and shot him three times, twice in the chest and once in the back."<ref>''The Sun'', 20 December 1966</ref> Reports of their activities caused widespread anxiety. | |||
==On the run== | |||
{{Unreferenced section|date=August 2009}} | |||
On 24 December, Ryan (armed with the warder's rifle) and Walker robbed an ANZ bank in North Road, Ormond. The bank manager and a customer were ordered out of his office with a revolver (different to the warder's rifle).<ref>{{Cite news |date=1965-12-24 |title='Escapees' rob suburban bank |work=Canberra Times |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article105879654 |access-date=2023-12-18}}</ref> Ryan herded 13 people into the bank's strongroom and stole A£4500. A witness, June Crawford, told reporters, "a bandit told me 'This gun shot a man a few days ago.{{'"}}<ref>''The Herald'', 24 December 1966</ref> Ryan and Walker escaped in a 1952 ] sedan. | |||
Ryan and Walker successfully eluded their pursuers outside Pentridge and escaped using a car they commandeered outside the prison. The prison escape was dominating newspapers and the media. One newscast reported that ''"... Ronald Ryan, serving time for burglary, seized a prison officer and shot him dead."'' For the next nineteen days, daily coverage of the shooting of Hodson by Ryan dominated the news. The media coverage had already convicted Ryan of shooting Hodson. | |||
On the same day, the ] announced a £6,000 reward for information leading to the capture of Ryan and Walker. It was reported in '']'' that the Chief Secretary and ], ], had issued a warning to the escapees that the killing of Hodson during the prison escape was the worst Victoria had known and that the "Hanging Act was still in force."<ref name="hanged"/> | |||
On ] there was a party at the flat.<ref name="hanged"/> A petty criminal, John Fisher, who knew Ryan, and Arthur Henderson (Aitken's boyfriend) were there. After all their beer had been consumed, Walker and Henderson left to find ] in ] for more drinks. An hour later Walker returned alone to the flat. He had killed Henderson in a Middle Park toilet block, having shot him in the back of the head. The escapees left the flat and returned to Kensington. On 26 December, Aitken and another woman were charged with harbouring the criminals. They came forward after Henderson was killed and the escapees had left. The charges were later dropped. The pair returned to hiding in the basement of the house in Kensington. Murray was given money to buy a car in ] and return with it. Murray returned with the car with ] plates on ] Ryan and Walker left for Sydney on (] 1966) and arrived on 2 January.<ref name="walker"/> | |||
On 24 December 1965, the Victorian Government announced a 5,000 pounds (AU$10,000) reward for information leading to the capture of the prison escapees, Ryan and Walker. It was reported in The Age newspaper that the Chief Secretary and Attorney General Arthur Rylah, issued a warning to the escapees that ''the killing of Hodson during the prison escape was the worst Victoria had known, and that the Hanging Act was still in force.'' | |||
==Recapture== | ==Recapture== | ||
{{Unreferenced section|date=August 2009}} | |||
Ryan and Walker were on the run for 19 days before being recaptured in Sydney. | |||
After arriving in Sydney, Ryan and Walker endeavoured to establish some safe houses; Ryan also wanted to make contact with a woman he knew when he was in Sydney years ago; she was not home but her daughter was.<ref name="The Hanged Man 2002"/> Ryan made an arrangement to meet the woman and daughter at ] on the evening of 6 January. Unknown to Ryan the daughter recognised Ryan and tipped off the police. Acting on the information, ] (DI) ] was alerted about their presence. DI Kelly with a heavily armed contingent of 50 police officers and detectives set a trap for them. | |||
==Extradited== | |||
When the escapees' car pulled up near the hospital, Ryan walked over to a nearby telephone box, but it had been deliberately put out of order, so he walked over to a neighbouring shop and asked to use the phone there. The owner had been instructed to tell Ryan that his phone was also out of order, and as Ryan walked out of the shop he was tackled by six detectives, dropping a loaded .32 revolver that he had been carrying. At the same moment Det. Sgt ] thrust a shotgun through the car window and held it at Walker's head, and he was captured without a struggle.<ref>"The Walker Interview", ''The Truth'', 25 January 1985.</ref> Ryan and Walker had been on the run for 19 days. In the boot of the car police found three pistols, a shotgun and two rifles, all fully loaded, an axe, ], two coils of rope, a hacksaw and two boiler suits.<ref name="The Hanged Man 2002"/> | |||
Ryan, Walker were extradited back to Melbourne. They were jointly tried for the murder of George Hodson. It is alleged that Ryan made three verbal confessions to police whilst being extradited to Melbourne. According to police, Ryan admitted to them he had shot prison officer Hodson. However, these verbal allegations were not signed by Ryan and he denied making such verbal or written confessions to anyone. The only signed document by Ryan was that he would give no verbal testimony. <ref>http://australianscreen.com.au/titles/last-man-hanged/clip2/</ref> | |||
==Extradition== | |||
Walker was also tried for the shooting murder of Arthur James Henderson during the period when he and Ryan were at large. | |||
Ryan and Walker were extradited back to Melbourne. They were jointly tried for the murder of George Hodson. It is alleged that Ryan made three verbal ] to police whilst being extradited to Melbourne. According to police, Ryan admitted to them he had shot prison officer Hodson. However, these verbal allegations were not signed by Ryan and he denied making such verbal or written confessions to anyone. The only signed document by Ryan was that he would give no verbal ].<ref name="clip2">{{cite web|url=http://australianscreen.com.au/titles/case-of-ronald-ryan/clip2/|title=Beyond Reasonable Doubt – The Case of Ronald Ryan|work=australianscreen}}</ref> Walker was also tried for the shooting murder of Arthur James Henderson during the period when he and Ryan were at large. | |||
==Trial and sentencing== | ==Trial and sentencing== | ||
On 15 March 1966, the case of ''The Queen v. Ryan and Walker'' began in the Supreme Court of Victoria. |
On 15 March 1966, the case of '']'' began in the ]. The first day was spent choosing the make up of the ]. Ryan and Walker each exercised their legal right in objecting to twenty candidates. | ||
===Crown's case=== | |||
At trial Ryan testified, "At no time did I fire a shot. My freedom was the only objective. The rifle was taken in the first instance so that it could not be used against me". | |||
The Crown's case presented no scientific evidence. Ryan's rifle was never scientifically tested by ballistics experts to prove that it had fired a shot. The fatal bullet and the spent cartridge casing were never recovered so no ] or ] was available to prove that Ryan had fired the fatal shot.<ref name="auto">Trial transcript; "R v Ryan & Walker", 15–30 March 1966</ref> | |||
The crown's case relied on eyewitnesses who were near the Pentridge Prison when Hodson was killed. Each witness had a different idea to where Ryan was standing when the shot was fired. Some witnesses testified they saw Ryan's rifle recoil when he fired and that they saw smoke from Ryan's rifle. But that type of rifle had no recoil and it contained smokless cartridges. | |||
<ref name="correspondance"/> | |||
The Crown's case relied only on ] who were near Pentridge Prison when Hodson was shot and killed, because there was no scientific forensic evidence to prove Ryan fired a shot. Each eyewitness testified to a different account of what they saw and where Ryan was standing. Eleven eyewitnesses swore that they saw Ryan waving and aiming his rifle. There were variations, whether Ryan was standing, walking or ] at the time a single shot was heard and whether Ryan was to the left or right of Hodson. Only four eyewitnesses testified that they saw Ryan fire a shot. Two eyewitnesses testified that they saw smoke coming from Ryan's rifle. Two eyewitnesses testified that they saw Ryan's weapon ].<ref name="auto"/> | |||
Some witnesses testified that they saw Ryan's rifle recoil when he fired and also saw smoke from Ryan's rifle. The owners of the car Ryan got into, Frank and Pauline Jeziorski, were two of the witnesses. A warder, Thomas Wallis, testified that he saw smoke come out of the rifle Ryan was holding. Pauline Jeziorski testified that she smelled gunpowder after Ryan had fired the shot.<ref name="hanged" /><ref>Trial transcript: "R v Ryan & Walker", 15–30 March 1966</ref> | |||
==The Crowns case== | |||
At trial, all prison officers testified that they did not see Hodson carrying anything and that they did not see Hodson hit Walker. However, two witnesses, Louis Bailey and Keith Dobson, testified that they saw Hodson carrying something like an iron-bar or baton as he was chasing after Walker. Governor Grindlay testified that he did not see a bar near Hodson's body but that he found one after Hodson's body was loaded into an ambulance. | |||
The crown's case relied heavily on eyewitnesses who were near the Pentridge Prison when Hodson was killed. One of a series of serious weaknesses in the Crown's case was that neither the bullet that killed Hodson nor the spent cartridge case were ever found despite intensive search by police. | |||
==== Verbal confessions ==== | |||
'''The big surprise was that the rifle in Ryan's possession was never scientifically examined by forensics to prove it had fired a shot. Instead, of the rifle being subject to careful storage and ballistic testing, it had been inadequately stored in the boot of a police officer's car where it was subject to contamination by dirt and dust. | |||
The Crown also relied upon unrecorded unsigned testimony that Ryan had, allegedly, verbally confessed to shooting Hodson.<ref name="ReferenceC">Supreme Court Trial Transcript – ''Queen v. Ryan & Walker, 15–30 March 1966''</ref> | |||
Police testified that the M1 carbine rifle stolen by Ryan from Lange "looked as if" it had been fired, but there was no conclusive evidence that the rifle commandeered by Ryan had been fired at all.''' | |||
Detective Sergeant ]told the court that on 6 January 1966, the day after his re-capture in Sydney, Ryan said | |||
There were fourteen eyewitnesses and each had a different account of what they saw. All fourteen eyewitnesses testified they saw Ryan waving and aiming his rifle. Four eyewitnesses testified that they saw Ryan fire a shot (a spent cartridge would have had to spill on the ground), when in fact a spent cartridge was never found despite extensive search by police. Two eyewitnesses testified they saw smoke coming from Ryan's rifle, when in fact that type of rifle contained smokeless cartridges. Two eyewitnesses testified they saw Ryan recoil his rifle, when in fact that type of rifle was recoiless. There were contradicitions also, whether Ryan was standing, walking or squatting at the time a single shot was heard. | |||
<blockquote>In the heat of the moment you sometimes do an act without thinking. I think this is what happened with Hodson. He had no need to interfere. He was stupid. He was told to keep away. He grabbed Pete and hit him with an iron bar. He caused his own death. I didn't want to shoot him. I could have shot a lot more.<ref name="1530Mar66p199">Trial transcript R v Ryan & Walker 15–30 March 66, quoted by Richards, ''The Hanged Man'' at p. 199</ref></blockquote> | |||
Detective Senior Constable Harry Morrison told the court that on 7 January 1966 during the flight returning Ryan back to Melbourne Ryan said: "The warder spoilt the whole show. If he had not poked his great head into it he would not have got shot. It was either him or Pete."<ref name="1530Mar66p555">Trial transcript R v Ryan & Walker 15–30 March 66, p555, quoted by Richards, ''The Hanged Man'', p. 203.</ref> | |||
All of the fourteen eyewitnesses testified that they heard only one shot - no person heard two shots. | |||
The Crown also called the two bank officers from the bank that Ryan and Walker robbed. Robert Sipthorpe and George Robertson testified that Ryan said "This is the gun that shot a man the other day!" At trial, Ryan's defence lawyer ] cross-examined the two witnesses asking if instead they heard "This is the '''type''' of gun that shot a man the other day." Both witnesses stuck to their story.<ref name="ReferenceC"/> | |||
Prison officer Paterson testified he fired a shot, and he was also the only person to claim to heard two shots fired. At trial, Paterson was questioned about how he used his rifle when he fired a shot. Paterson replied; "I took aim, I took the first pressure that you take on the trigger, and I was beginning to squeeze the trigger when a woman got into my sights, and I could not withdraw my pressure from the trigger, so I had to let the shot go in the air, and I don't know where the woman came from she just appeared in my sights." | |||
John Fisher, who had a long ] and had not seen or heard from Ryan for more than two years, testified that he asked Ryan who had shot Hodson. Fisher said Ryan told him he had shot Hodson.<ref name="hanged" /> | |||
Paterson had contradicted in several statements he made to police about what he saw, heard, and did on that day. His first statement given to Detective Sergeant Carton on 19th December 1965 Paterson said; "I did not hear a shot fired other than the one I fired." In a second statement given to Senior Detective Morrison on 12th January 1966 Paterson said; "Just as I turned into the entrance to the garden I heard a shot." In a third statement on 3rd February 1966 Paterson said; "I ran back inside and asked for a gun, I went to the main gate and I received a gun and ran back outside, as I was running on to the lawn I heard the crack of a shot." Paterson changed his story, too, about who was in the line of fire when he aimed his rifle. In his first statement Paterson said; "I sighted my rifle at Ryan and was about to fire when a woman walked into the line of fire and I lifted my rifle." In his second statement Paterson said; "I took aim at Ryan but two prison officers were in the line of fire so I dropped my rifle again." In his third statement Paterson said; "I took aim at Ryan and I found out I had to fire between two prison officers to get Ryan, so I lowered my gun again." | |||
None of the verbal confessions were signed by Ryan, who only signed documents saying that he would give no verbal testimony. Ryan testified he had been "verballed" and denied the allegations of verbals/confessions said to have been made by him.<ref name="clip2" /> | |||
At trial, all prison officers testified that they did not see Hodson carrying anything, and they did not see Hodson hit Walker. However, two witnesses Louis Bailey and Keith Dobson, testified that they saw Hodson carrying something like an iron-bar/baton as he was chasing after Walker. Governor Grindlay testified that he didn’t see a bar near Hodson’s body but he found one after Hodson’s body was loaded into an ambulance. | |||
=== Defence's case === | |||
Apart from the inconsistencies of witness evidence, missing pieces of evidence and no forensic evidence, relating directly to the shooting of Hodson, the Crown relied heavily upon testimony that Ryan had, allegedly, verbally confessed to shooting Hodson. <ref name="correspondance"/> | |||
The main problem for the defence was that Victoria had the Gaols Act of 1958 in which it stated: | |||
==The Defence== | |||
*Every male person lawfully imprisoned for any crime misdemeanour or offence by the sentence of any court of competent jurisdiction, or employed at labour as a criminal on the roads or other public works of Victoria who escapes or attempts to escape from any gaol or from the custody of any member of the police force gaoler or other officer in whose custody he may be, shall be guilty of felony: | |||
*If a killing occurs by an act of violence in the course of a commission of a felony involving violence or in the furtherance of the purpose of such a felony the accused is ''guilty of murder'' even though, there is no actual intention of killing.<ref>Crimes Act 1958 – sect. 3A</ref> | |||
The defence spent a lot of time arguing about when the time of the felony ended. Did it end after the prisoners had cleared the prison walls or did it once the prisoners were caught and returned to custody?<ref name="auto1">Victorian Reports 1966 – Law Reports of the Supreme Court of Victoria pp. 553–567</ref> | |||
Based on Hobson's injuries, Opas produced and human skeleton as a visual aid to explain the trajectory of the fatal bullet, Opas argued that the ballistics evidence indicated that the fatal bullet entered Hodson's (shoulder) body in a downward trajectory. He also got a Monash University mathematics professor Terry Speed, to explain that Ryan (5 feet 8 inches (1.73 m) tall) would have had to have been 8 feet 6 inches (2.55 m) tall to have fired the shot. These calculations indicated that Hodson was shot in a downward angle and from an elevated position, suggesting that Hodson could have been shot from another elevated point and possibly by another prison officer. It would cast doubt that Ryan had fired the fatal shot. But the prosecution argued that Hodson (6 feel 1 inch (1.85 m) tall) could have been running in a stooped position, thus accounting for the bullet's fatal downward trajectory angle of entry. | |||
The defence pointed various |
The defence pointed to various substantial discrepancies in The Crown's case. While some eyewitnesses testified they saw Ryan to the east of Hodson when a single shot was heard, other eyewitnesses testified Ryan was to the west of Hodson. The discrepancies in evidence were substantial and wide-ranging. Opas contended that each of the fourteen eyewitnesses evidence were so contradictory that little store could be placed on them.<ref name="vicbar.com.au pdf"/> | ||
] produced a human skeleton as a visual aid to explain the ] of the fatal bullet, Opas argued that the ballistics evidence indicated that the fatal bullet entered Hodson's (chest) body in a downward trajectory. He also got a ] mathematics professor, ], to explain that Ryan, {{convert|5|ft|8|in|m}} tall would have had to have been {{convert|8|ft|3|in|m}} tall to have fired the shot.<ref>{{cite web|author=Bridie Smith|url=http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/political-news/professors-brilliant-career--from-murder-trials-to-top-honour-20131030-2whgf.html |title=Professor's brilliant career – from murder trials to top honour |work=] |date=13 August 2012 |access-date=3 February 2014}}</ref> These calculations were based on Ryan being twenty feet from Hodson and Hodson was standing perfectly upright. The bullet would enter Hodson's body 62 inches from the ground and exit 61 inches from the ground. If the shot was in a downward angle the bullet would have hit the road forty feet from where Hodson was hit, it also suggested that Hodson could have been shot from another elevated point and possibly by another prison officer. It would cast doubt that Ryan had fired the fatal shot. But the prosecution argued that Hodson, {{convert|6|ft|1|in|m}} tall could have been running in a stooped position, thus accounting for the bullet's fatal angle of entry.<ref name="vicbar.com.au pdf"/> No witnesses saw or testified seeing Hodson running in a stooped position.<ref name="hanged" /><ref name="transcript"/> | |||
The fact that Ryan's rifle was never scientifically tested by forensic experts was of significate concern. The fatal bullet was also, a vital missing piece of evidence. Scientific forensic tests on the fatal bullet would have provided proof of who's rifle had fired it. Although all prison-authorized rifles were the same M1 carbine type, scientific forensic testing would prove which rifle fired the fatal shot -- every rifle leaves a microscopic "unique marker" on the fired bullet as it travels through the barrel of the rifle. In addition, the spent cartridge was also, a vital missing piece of evidence. The spent cartridge would be ejected to a distance of 5-10 feet -- this meant that it was highly unlikely that Ryan's rifle had fired a shot. | |||
The trajectory theory put forward by Opas, the trial judge dismissed the theory as did the judges at the Appeal two months later. They said there was enough evidence to say Hodson was not standing fully erected but was running in a forward leaning position when he was shot.<ref name="auto1"/> | |||
All the bullets in Ryan's M1 carbine rifle would be accounted for if Ryan cocked the rifle with the safety-catch on, this faulty operation (conceded by prison officer Lange, assistant prison governor Robert Duffy, and confirmed by ballistic experts at trial) would have caused an undischarged bullet to be ejected, spilling onto the floor of the guard tower. Opas established that a person who was inexperienced in handling that type of rifle and its cocking-lever rifle, it would be easy to jam the rifle and any attempt to clear the jam would result in a live round being ejected. | |||
Opas in defending Ryan put a lot of pressure on a warder who made conflicting statements, Paterson had made several mutually contradictory statements to police about what he saw, heard and did on that day. In his first statement given to Detective Sergeant Carton on 19 December 1965 Paterson said; "I did not hear a shot fired other than the one I fired." In a second statement given to Senior Detective Morrison on 12 January 1966 Paterson said, "Just as I turned into the entrance to the garden I heard a shot." In a third statement on 3 February 1966 Paterson said, "I ran back inside and asked for a gun, I went to the main gate and I received a gun and ran back outside, as I was running on to the lawn I heard the crack of a shot." Paterson changed his story, too, about who was in the line of fire when he aimed his rifle. In his first statement Paterson said, "I sighted my rifle at Ryan and was about to fire when a woman walked into the line of fire and I lifted my rifle." In his second statement Paterson said, "I took aim at Ryan but two prison officers were in the line of fire so I dropped my rifle again." In his third statement Paterson said, "I took aim at Ryan and I found out I had to fire between two prison officers to get Ryan, so I lowered my gun again."<ref name="hanged" /><ref name="vicbar.com.au pdf"/> | |||
On the eighth day of the trial Ryan was sworn in and took the witness stand. Ryan denied firing a shot, denied the alleged verbal (unsigned) confessions said to have been made by him, and denied ever saying to anyone that he had shot a man. According to Ryan, they were after the reward money by making false allegations. "At no time did I fire a shot. My freedom was the only objective. The rifle was taken in the first instance so that it could not be used against me". | |||
Ryan testified that he kept his rifle to prove his innocence in the event of recapture, as he knew that forensic microscopic markings on the spent bullet would prove that it was not fired from his rifle.<ref name="vicbar.com.au pdf"/><ref name="library.thinkquest.org"> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081010125154/http://library.thinkquest.org/04oct/00206/mt_artillery.htm|date=10 October 2008}}</ref> | |||
In his final address to the jury members, Opas stated; "Long before this case came to trial there was most unusual publicity given to the exploits of the accused, in the media, on the radio and over television. It would be impossible for anyone living in a capital city in Australia to approach this trial without some pre-concieved notions based on what they had read or heard about the case. It is easy to take the view of the accused that they are convicted criminals, a perfect scapegoat a convicted person would become if he became the target for a trumped-up charge." | |||
Despite extensive search by police, neither the fatal bullet nor the spent cartridge were ever found. Although all prison-authorised rifles were the same M1 carbine type, scientific forensic testing of the bullet would have proven which rifle fired the fatal shot – every rifle leaves a microscopic "unique marker" on the fired bullet as it travels through the barrel of the rifle.<ref name="library.thinkquest.org"/> | |||
After a trial in the Victorian Supreme Court lasting twelve sitting days and despite inconsistencies of evidence, missing pieces of evidence and no scientific proof that Ryan's rifle had fired a shot, the jury found Ryan guilty of murder. | |||
All the bullets in Ryan's M1 carbine rifle would be accounted for if Ryan cocked the rifle with the safety-catch on; this faulty operation (conceded by prison officer Lange, assistant prison governor Robert Duffy, and confirmed by ballistic experts at trial) would have caused an undischarged bullet to be ejected, spilling onto the floor of the guard tower. Opas established that for a person who was inexperienced in handling that type of rifle and its cocking lever, it would be easy to jam the rifle and any attempt to clear the jam would result in a live round being ejected. | |||
Ryan was convicted of the murder of Hodson. Justice John Starke wasted no time in passing the sentence of death. Starke asked Ryan if he had anything to say, Ryan stated; " I still maintain my innocence. I will consult with my counsel with a view to appeal. That is all I have to say!" Without further delay, without the right of plea by the defence and without the usual adjournment prior to sentencing, Starke sentenced Ryan to death; "Ronald Joseph Ryan, you have been found guilty of murder of George Henry Hodson, it is the sentence of this court that you be taken from here to the place from where you came (Pentridge Prison) and on a day and hour to be fixed, you shall be hanged by the neck until you are dead, and may God have mercy on your soul." | |||
On the eighth day of the trial Ryan was sworn in and took the witness stand. Ryan denied firing a shot, denied the alleged verbal (unsigned) confessions said to have been made by him, and denied ever saying to anyone that he had shot a man. According to Ryan, they were after the reward money by making false allegations.<ref name="hanged" /> "At no time did I fire a shot. My freedom was the only objective. The rifle was taken in the first instance so that it could not be used against me." | |||
After a trial in the Victorian Supreme Court lasting twelve sitting days Ryan was convicted of the murder of Hodson and sentenced to death by Justice John Starke, the mandatory sentence at that time. Asked if he had anything to say before sentencing Ryan stated "I still maintain my innocence. I will consult with my counsel with a view to appeal. That is all I have to say!"<ref>Sykes, Trevor (31 March 1966). {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090923093117/http://www.vicbar.com.au/vicbar_oral/images/opas/7_RyanGuilty.jpg |date=23 September 2009 }}. ''The Sun''</ref> | |||
Walker was found not guilty of murder, but guilty of ] and sentenced to 12 years imprisonment. He was also found guilty of manslaughter for the death of Arthur Henderson and received an 12-year sentence. Walker was paroled in 1984. He died on 5 March 2022, at the age of 80.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Cooper |first=Adam |date=2016-02-17 |title=Peter Walker, who escaped Pentridge with Ronald Ryan, sent back to jail at 74 |url=https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/peter-walker-who-escaped-pentridge-with-ronald-ryan-sent-back-to-jail-at-74-20160217-gmwruv.html |access-date=2022-12-15 |website=The Age |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=WALKER, Peter John {{!}} Funeral Notices {{!}} Melbourne |url=https://www.mytributes.com.au/notice/funeral-notices/walker-peter-john/5902281/ |access-date=2022-12-15 |website=My Tributes |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=March 6, 2022 |title=Pentridge Prison escapee Peter Walker dies |url=https://www.heraldsun.com.au/truecrimeaustralia/police-courts-victoria/infamous-jail-escapee-peter-walker-dies-aged-80/news-story/88c9bcb1012d15654bbb59217b9de904}}</ref> | |||
Asked if he had anything to say before sentencing Ryan stated; ''"I still maintain my innocence. I will consult with my counsel with a view to appeal. That is all I have to say!"'' <ref name="correspondance"/><ref>http://www.vicbar.com.au/vicbar_oral/images/opas/7_RyanGuilty.jpg</ref> | |||
==After the trial== | ==After the trial== | ||
According to juryman Tom Gildea, the jury evidently thought that the death sentence would be ], as had happened in the previous 35 death penalties cases since 1951. Gildea's account of the discussions in the jury room, not one member of the jury thought that Ryan would be executed.<ref name="Prior, Tom 1985">Prior, Tom, ''A Knockabout Priest'', Hargreen, North Melbourne, 1985,{{ISBN|0949905240}}</ref> Gildea said, | |||
{{Unreferenced section|date=August 2009}} | |||
According to the 12 male jurors, they evidently thought that the death sentence would be commuted, as had happened in the previous 35 death penalties cases since 1951. According to one jury member's later account of the discussions in the jury room, not one member of the jury thought that Ryan would be executed. | |||
<blockquote>Of the jury, two members held out the first vote we took, but 10 of us were sure Ryan was guilty. He was a bit too sure of himself in the witness box but the thing that decided us was handling the rifle which had killed Hodson. We had been told the rifle had a hair trigger,<ref name="opas01"> ''Victorian Bar News'' Spring 2002, pp. 13–15</ref> but when we examined it we found we had to pull it at least half an inch and use quite a bit of force."<ref name="ryanjuror">"Ryan Juror – "we didn't want rope", ''The Sun'' 14 August 1984</ref> | |||
Eight members of the jury were experienced with rifles either in the country or overseas with war service.<ref name="ryanjuror"/><ref name="Dickems">Dickens, Barry, ''Guts and Pity – The Hanging that ended Capital Punishment in Australia''</ref></blockquote> | |||
Gildea also said, "I don't know how much experience the judge and the lawyers had but we had had our share in the jury box I can tell you."<ref name="ryanjuror"/> | |||
When it was apparent that the Victorian Government was intent on hanging Ryan, Gildea contacted the nine other jury members he could trace.<ref name="Prior, Tom 1985"/> Gildea said that of the twelve jurors, three refused to sign petitions, one older man who was convinced of Ryan's guilt and the two who believe Ryan was not guilty. Two other jurors could not be contacted.<ref name="Prior, Tom 1985"/><ref name="Dickems"/> | |||
Seven jury members, including Gildea, signed separate petitions requesting Ryan's death sentence be commuted to life in prison.<ref name="Prior, Tom 1985"/> Later, some of the jurors came forth and stated they would never have convicted Ryan of murder had they known that he would in fact be executed.<ref name="hanged"/> Gildea said "We didn't want the rope. If we had known Ryan would hang, I think we would have gone for manslaughter."<ref name="ryanjuror"/><ref name="Dickems"/> | |||
==Appeal== | ==Appeal== | ||
{{Unreferenced section|date=August 2009}} | |||
Opas decided to appeal against the murder verdict. The appeal was to the Victorian Court of Criminal Appeal, a bench consisting of three judges of the Supreme Court. His first ground was that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence. He argued that as a matter of law that the inherent inconsistencies and improbabilities and even impossibilities in the evidence. The appeal was dismissed on June 8, 1966. In October 1966, a second appeal is rejected. Soon after, legal aid to Ryan is cut. Opas agrees to work without pay. Two months later Premier Bolte, announces that Ryan's death sentence will not be commuted. Opas flied to London to present Ryan's case to the highest judges in the Commonwealth. Despite Opas' efforts, the Privy Council refused the appeal. On 26 January 1967 a personal appeal to the Queen is unsuccessful. | |||
Opas decided to appeal against the murder verdict. The appeal was to the Victorian Court of Criminal Appeal, a bench consisting of three judges of the Supreme Court. The basis of the appeal was that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence. He argued that as a matter of law that the inherent inconsistencies and improbabilities and even impossibilities in the evidence.<ref name="14witnessgif"> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060901165419/http://www.vicbar.com.au/vicbar_oral/images/opas/14_Witness.gif |date=1 September 2006 }}. ''The Herald'' (weekend magazine), 14 April 1973.</ref> | |||
==A Political Hanging== | |||
{{Unreferenced section|date=August 2009}} | |||
Henry Bolte, Victoria’s longest serving State Premier premier, was a key figure in the hanging of Ronald Ryan. Until this time, the State Government of Victoria had commuted every death sentence passed since 1951, after three people including a female, Jean Lee (the last female executed in Australia) had been executed for a single murder. | |||
At the trial there had been a legal argument on when the crime of escaping from jail had been completed. In the ], a relevant section provides that "every male person lawfully imprisoned for any crime who escapes shall be guilty of a ]".<ref name="14witnessgif" /> | |||
At the time of the Ryan sentence there were at least four State cabinet members who opposed capital punishment but Premier Bolte was determined to prevail. At the time, Victoria was facing another State election and Bolte wanted to win extra votes by taking the "tough on crime" stance. Bolte was reported over the media saying, ''a hanging is 10 percent of the vote.'' Justice John Starke reported that Bolte had insisted that the death sentence be carried out. Bolte's determination to hang Ryan to boost his votes is widely documented in the film ''The Last Man Hanged.'' | |||
At the trial, Mr Justice Starke had directed the jury: "In certain circumstances, the crime of murder may be established even though the accused had no intention of killing. And that is so in these circumstances. If a killing occurs by an act of violence in the course of a commission of a felony involving violence, or in the furtherance of the purpose of such felony, the accused is guilty of murder, even though there is no actual intention of killing."<ref name="14witnessgif" /> There was long legal argument on when the escape felony finished, did it stop once Ryan and Walker left the prison property or did it continue until they were caught in Sydney nineteen days later?<ref name="14witnessgif" /> | |||
When it became apparent that the Premier Bolte intended to proceed with the execution, a secret eleventh-hour plea for mercy was made by four jury members who had found Ryan guilty of murder. They sent petitioning letters to the Victorian governor, stating that in reaching their verdict, they had believed that capital punishment had been abolished in Victoria and requesting that the Governor exercise the Royal Prerogative of Mercy and commute Ryan's sentence of death. | |||
The appeal was dismissed on 8 June 1966.<ref name="14witnessgif" /> | |||
Bolte denied all requests for mercy and was determined Ryan would hang. The approaching execution of Ryan prompted widespread protests in Victoria and elsewhere around the country. | |||
On 14 October 1966, the Full Bench of the ] rejected appeals by Ryan and Walker.<ref name="age1-31-67">{{cite web|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ANsQAAAAIBAJ&sjid=b5MDAAAAIBAJ&pg=4555%2C4661496&hl=en|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130124125919/http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ANsQAAAAIBAJ&sjid=b5MDAAAAIBAJ&pg=4555%2C4661496&hl=en|url-status=dead|title=The Age – Google News Archive Search|date=24 January 2013|archive-date=24 January 2013}}</ref> | |||
Newspapers in Melbourne, traditionally supporters of the Bolte government, deserted him on the issue and ran a campaign of spirited opposition on the grounds that the death penalty was barbaric. There is some evidence that, for premier Bolte, Ryan's execution was an opportunity for him to re-assert his political authority. | |||
With all legal avenues yet to be exhausted, ] to Ryan was cut by the Bolte Government. ] then directed the Public Solicitor to withdraw Opas' brief as the government was not going to fund the petition to the ].<ref name="vicbar.com.au pdf"/> | |||
Ryan had a right to increased free legal assistance for expert forensics analysis, to hire expert witnesses, and to present a series of appeals and recourses that were available to those facing execution by the government. The Full Court agreed that it was unthinkable that a man should be executed before he had exhausted his ultimate right of appeals. Opas decided to apply to the Privy Council in London. The appeal is a vestigial remnant of an appeal to the sovereign in person.<ref name="vicbar.com.au pdf"/> | |||
As Ryan's execution approached, his 75-year old mother made a final plea to Premier Bolte for mercy. Cecilia Ryan wrote; ''"I plead at this late hour you will reverse your decision to hang my son. If you cannot find it in your heart to grant this request then I pray you will grant me one last favour, that the body of my son be given into my custody after his death so that I can give him a Christian burial. I pray to God for the success of this last prayer".'' Premier Bolte promptly replied in a letter, saying that her son would not be spared the death penalty and that his body would not be returned to her for a Christian burial. | |||
On 12 December 1966, the State Executive Council (Premier Bolte's cabinet) announced that Ryan would hang on 9 January 1967. | |||
Churches, universities, unions and a large number of the public and legal professions opposed the death sentence. An estimated 18,000 people participated in street protests and 15,000 signed a petition against the hanging. Melbourne newspapers The Age, The Herald and The Sun, ran campaigns opposing the hanging of Ryan. The Australian Broadcasting Commission (ABC) suspended radio broadcasts for two minutes as a protest. | |||
Opas, convinced of Ryan's innocence, agreed to work without pay. Opas consulted the Ethics Committee of the ] to seek approval to make a public appeal for a solicitor prepared to brief him, as Opas was prepared to pay his travel, other expenses and appear without fee. The Committee said that this would be touting for business and was unethical. Opas argued that a man's life was at stake and he could not see how he would be touting when no payment was involved. Opas defied the ruling and on national radio sought an instructor. Opas was inundated with offers and accepted the first application, being from Ralph Freadman. Alleyne Kiddle was in London completing a master's degree and she agreed to take a junior brief without a fee.<ref name="vicbar.com.au pdf"/> | |||
On the last night before his execution, Ryan wrote letters on toilet paper, to his family and to those who had fought tirelessly on his behalf. Ryan maintained his innocence to the end. Ronald Ryan's last words were to the hangman; ''"God bless you, please make it quick."'' | |||
On 4 January 1967, the State Executive Council stayed Ryan's execution pending an approach to the ].<ref name="age1-31-67"/> | |||
A nationwide three-minute silence was observed at the exact time (8 AM) that Ryan was hanged on the hot morning of Friday 3 February 1967. Thousands of people protested against the hanging outside Pentridge Prison. Inmates staged a sit-in as a protest against Ryan's hanging, refusing to obey orders to go to work. | |||
Opas then flew to London to present Ryan's case to the highest judges in the Commonwealth. Ryan's execution was delayed by Premier Bolte awaiting the Privy Council's decision. | |||
A young female reporter asked Bolte what he was doing at 8:00 a.m. Bolte replied; "One of the three S’s I suppose" when asked what he mean’t by that, Bolte replied; "A shit, a shave or a shower!". | |||
On 23 January 1967, the ] refused Ryan leave for appeal.<ref name="age1-31-67"/> | |||
==Execution== | |||
On 25 January 1967, the State Executive Council set Ryan's execution date as 31 January.<ref name="age1-31-67"/> | |||
All calls for clemency, petitions and protests were to no avail. Ryan was hanged in 'D' Division at Pentridge Prison at 8.00 AM on Friday 3 February, 1967. Only minutes before Ryan was led from the condemned cell to the gallows, Prison Governor Grindlay said to Ryan; You killed one of my men. Ryan replied; ''I didn't do it Gov, I swear I didn't shoot him.'' Ryan insisted he was not guilty of murdering Hodson. Ryan was not given any sedatives and walked calmly onto the gallows trapdoor. | |||
On 30 January 1967, Justice Starke ordered a ] following an ] from former prisoner John Tolmie who said he saw a warder fire a shot from Number 1 tower at the time of the murder.<ref name="age1-31-67"/> The following day Tolmie was charged with ] for making a false affidavit; he was not in gaol at the time of the escape.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=OHwQAAAAIBAJ&sjid=WpMDAAAAIBAJ&pg=4675%2C237880&dq=john+henry+tolmie&hl=en|archive-url=https://archive.today/20120716110755/http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=OHwQAAAAIBAJ&sjid=WpMDAAAAIBAJ&pg=4675%2C237880&dq=john+henry+tolmie&hl=en|url-status=dead|title=The Age – Google News Archive Search|date=16 July 2012|archive-date=16 July 2012}}</ref> | |||
'''Ryan was NOT given the right of making a last verbal statement to the persons who had gathered to witness the execution.''' | |||
Bolte scheduled Ryan's execution for the morning of Friday 3 February 1967, a week before the dismissal of the appeal to the Privy Council was published in the ].<ref name="vicbar.com.au pdf"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/law-order/crime-week-the-story-of-ronald-ryan-the-last-man-hanged-in-australia/story-fni0ffnk-1226911556180 |title=No CookiesHerald Sun |publisher=Heraldsun.com.au |date=2013-03-22 |access-date=2015-11-06}}</ref> | |||
Instead, the hangman wasted no time and quickly pulled the lever. Ryan fell through the trapdoor with a loud crash. | |||
Several media journalists were invited to witness the execution. | |||
==Final appeals== | |||
A nationwide three-minute silence was observed at the exact time that Ryan was hanged on the hot morning of Friday 1967. Thousands of people protested against the hanging outside Pentridge Prison. | |||
The State Government of Victoria had commuted every death sentence passed since 1951, after Robert Clayton, Norman Andrews and ] were executed for the torture and murder of an old man.<ref> – Episode 12 (broadcast 6.30 pm on 29 April 2002), Australian Broadcasting Corporation</ref> | |||
Later that day, Ryan's body was buried in an unmarked grave within the "D" Division prison facility. The exact location of Ryan's grave has never been released by the authorities. | |||
Starke reported that the Premier of Victoria, Sir ], insisted that the death sentence be carried out.<ref name="clip2lmh"/> Bolte's cabinet was unanimous although there were at least four State cabinet members who opposed capital punishment.<ref name="clip2lmh">{{cite web|url=http://australianscreen.com.au/titles/last-man-hanged/clip2|title=The Last Man Hanged|work=australianscreen}}</ref> | |||
While the biggest public protest ever seen in the history of Australia was not successful in averting Ryan’s execution, the protest campaign to save Ryan from the gallows ensured that governments around Australia regarded it as too difficult politically to ever resort to the death penalty again. <ref>http://www.vicbar.com.au/vicbar_oral/images/opas/25_Vigil.jpg</ref> | |||
When it became apparent that Bolte intended to proceed with the execution, a secret eleventh-hour plea for mercy was made by four of the jury members. They sent petitioning letters to the ], Sir ], stating that in reaching their verdict they believed that capital punishment had been abolished in Victoria and requested that the governor exercise the ] and commute Ryan's sentence of death. Such Melbourne newspapers as ''The Age'', '']'' and '']'' all ran campaigns opposing the hanging of Ryan. The papers ran a campaign of spirited opposition on the grounds that the death penalty was barbaric. Churches, universities, unions and a large number of the public and legal professions opposed the death sentence. An estimated 18,000 people participated in street protests and around 15,000 signed a petition against the hanging. The ] (ABC) suspended radio broadcasts for two minutes as a protest.<ref name="hanged"/> | |||
Within twenty years, capital punishment would be abolished federally and in all state and territory jurisdictions. In 1985, Australia officially abolished capital punishment. | |||
Bolte denied all requests for mercy and was determined that Ryan would hang.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.vicbar.com.au/vicbar_oral/images/opas/25_Vigil.jpg |format=JPG |title=A Vigil Begins |publisher=Vicbar.com.au |access-date=2015-11-06 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303195941/http://www.vicbar.com.au/vicbar_oral/images/opas/25_Vigil.jpg |archive-date=3 March 2016 }}</ref> On the afternoon of the eve of Ryan's hanging, Opas appeared before the trial judge, Justice John Starke, seeking a postponement of the execution due to the opportunity to test new proffered evidence. Opas pleaded with Starke and said, "Why the indecent haste to hang this man until we have tested all possible exculpatory evidence?" Starke, however, rejected the application.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.vicbar.com.au/vicbar_oral/opas_trans_ed11.asp |title=The Victorian Bar – Oral History |publisher=Vicbar.com.au |access-date=2015-11-06 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160305131054/https://www.vicbar.com.au/vicbar_oral/opas_trans_ed11.asp |archive-date=5 March 2016 }}</ref> | |||
Today, almost all federal and state politicians from all political parties are opposed to the reintroduction of capital punishment in Australia, for all crimes. Whether these politicians are representative of their voters is less clear. In recent years, Australian politicians (both government and opposition) have made various comments that have changed Australia's opposition to the death penalty. The implications of this shift in Australian policy have not yet been fully explored or debated. <ref>http://nla.gov.au/anbd.bib-an000040581531</ref> | |||
Attorney-General, Sir ], rejected a second plea to refer Ryan's case to the Full Court under Section 584 of the Crimes Act. A third attempt to save Ryan, in the form of a petition presented at the Crown Solicitor's office pleading for clemency, was also rejected. Close secrecy surrounded all government moves on the Ryan case. That evening, a former Pentridge prisoner, Allan John Cane, arrived in Melbourne from Brisbane in a new bid to save Ryan. An affidavit by Cane, which was presented to Cabinet, says he and seven prisoners were outside the cookhouse when they saw and heard a prison warder fire a shot from the No. 1 guard post at Pentridge Prison the day Hodson was shot. Police had interviewed these prisoners but none were called on at the trial to give evidence. Cane was immediately rushed into conference with his solicitor, Bernard Gaynor, who tried to contact cabinet ministers informing them of Cane's arrival. Gaynor telephoned Government House seeking an audience with the Governor, Sir Rohan Delacombe. However, Gaynor was told by a Government House spokesman that nobody would be answering calls until 9 am (one hour after Ryan's scheduled execution). Gaynor said Cane's mission had failed.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=OXwQAAAAIBAJ&sjid=WpMDAAAAIBAJ&pg=3804%2C463013&dq=ryan+allan+cane&hl=en|archive-url=https://archive.today/20120713052516/http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=OXwQAAAAIBAJ&sjid=WpMDAAAAIBAJ&pg=3804%2C463013&dq=ryan+allan+cane&hl=en|url-status=dead|title=The Age – Google News Archive Search|date=13 July 2012|archive-date=13 July 2012}}</ref> | |||
==Forty Years Later== | |||
At 23:00, Ryan was informed that his final petition for mercy had been rejected. More than 3,000 people gathered outside Pentridge Prison in protest of the hanging. Shortly before midnight more than 200 police were at the prison to control the demonstrators.<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091001044444/http://150.theage.com.au/view_bestofarticle.asp?straction=update&inttype=1&intid=952|date=1 October 2009}}</ref> | |||
Forty years after Ronald Ryan was hanged, his family members made a request to have his body exhumed and placed with his late wife Dorothy, at Portland Cemetery. Victorian Premier John Brumby, gave permission for archaeological work and exhumation of Ryan's body. | |||
==Execution== | |||
Only recently has it been revealed by undertakers ''John Roy V. Allison'' that Ryan was buried in a highly polished darkwood coffin with the best trimmings, high-quality handles, satin lining, and a crucifix attached to the coffin. In a protest against the hanging, the undertakers added the best of everything to Ryan's coffin, so that his daughters would know he had a bit of dignity. <ref>http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,22668956-2862,00.html</ref> | |||
On the night before the execution Ryan was transferred to a cell just a few steps away from the gallows trapdoor. Father Brosnan was with him most of this time. At the eleventh hour Ryan wrote his last letters to his family members, to his defence counsel, to the Anti-Hanging Committee and to Father Brosnan. The letters were handwritten on toilet paper inside his cell and neatly folded. In the documentary film ''The Last Man Hanged'' Ryan's letter to The Anti-Hanging Committee is read out loud to the public. Ryan wrote: "I state most emphatically that I am not guilty of murder." Ryan's last letter was to his daughters; it contained this line: "With regard to my guilt I say only that I am innocent of intent and have a clear conscience in the matter."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://australianscreen.com.au/titles/last-man-hanged/|title=Video Overview The Last Man Hanged (1993) |work=ASO – Australia's audio and visual heritage online}}</ref> | |||
However, the daughter of murdered prison guard, Carole Hodson-Barnes-Hodson-Price, strongly objected and claimed Ryan did not deserve to be buried in consecrated ground. She was a 13-year-old at the time of her father's death and had not lived with her father for a number of years. When visiting Ryan's unmarked grave recently, she danced and jumped on it. <ref name="news.com.au">http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,22668957-2862,00.html</ref> | |||
Ryan refused to have any sedatives but he did have a nip of whisky, and walked calmly onto the gallows trapdoor. Ronald Ryan's last words were to the hangman: "God bless you, please make it quick."<ref>The Truth newspaper, edition 10 April 1976</ref> | |||
Carole Hodson angrily demanded to know who was funding Ryan's exhumation and made a plea to Victorian Premier John Brumby to ensure Ryan's remains not be removed from the prison grounds and not be returned to Ryan's family members. But Mr Brumby supported the views of Ryan's relatives to have his body exhumed so it could be cremated and placed with his late wife Dorothy, buried at Portland Cemetery. <ref name="news.com.au"/> | |||
Ryan was hanged in 'D' Division at Pentridge Prison at 8:00 am on Friday 3 February 1967. | |||
Carole Hodson has been unable to bury the bitterness and get any sense of peace after so many years. She has been vocal and angry and doesn't believe Ryan deserves any consideration. Her request to the journalist for media interview has been ignored. <ref>http://blogs.news.com.au/heraldsun/robynriley/index.php/heraldsun/comments/bury_the_bitterness/</ref> | |||
A nationwide three-minute silence was observed by Ryan's supporters at the exact time that Ryan was hanged. Ryan's fellow prisoners staged their own protest – they refused to get out of bed, staged a sit-in, refused to work or obey orders. There was an eerie silence throughout the prison.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://redflag.org.au/article/fight-against-death-penalty|title = The fight against the death penalty |work=Red Flag}}</ref> | |||
The effects of the death penalty experienced by families of executed criminals are documented in two books; ''Hidden Victims: The Effects of the Death Penalty on Families of the Accused'' by Susan F. Sharp (Associate Professor of Sociology) and ''Capital Consequences: Families of The Condemned'' by Rachel King (Lawyer). The books highlight the death penalty's hidden victims - the families of executed offenders and how the execution trickles down to those closely connected to the offender. Family members and friends experience a profoundly complicated and socially isolating grief process - economic, social and psychological repercussions that shape the lives of the forgotten families of executed offenders. Post-traumatic stress disorder can also affect these innocent family members. <ref>http://www.amazon.com/Hidden-Victims-Effects-Families-Critical/dp/0813535840</ref><ref>http://www.amazon.com/Capital-Consequences-Families-Condemned-Stories/dp/0813535042/ref=pd_bxgy_b_text_c/190-2023592-0485564</ref> | |||
Later that day, Ryan's body was buried in an unmarked grave within the "D" Division prison facility. | |||
The family members of Ronald Ryan - the unseen and unheard innocent victims of Ryan's execution, have been devastated and have suffered without sympathy or comfort, having had a ripple effect through to the future generations. The Ryan family have kept a low-profile over the decades, but have endured public scrutiny, been subjected to harassment, and are struggling to live with the knowledge that Ryan may have been innocent of murder when he was executed by the State of Victoria. The emotional pain of Ryan's family members tends to attract less attention and empathy from the media and the public, than that of the victim's family members. | |||
Forty years later in 2007, the Victorian Premier John Brumby granted permission for Ryan's family members to have his body ] from Pentridge Prison after Hodson's daughter jumped and danced on Ryan's grave.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,22671366-662,00.html |title=Herald Sun |publisher=Heraldsun.com.au |date=2007-10-30 |access-date=2018-03-27 |url-status=bot: unknown |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071031055652/http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,22671366-662,00.html |archive-date=31 October 2007 }}</ref> Ryan's remains were cremated and placed next to his deceased ex-wife in Portland Cemetery.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/feb/04/goodbye-my-darlings-remembering-the-trauma-of-australias-last-execution |title='Goodbye, my darlings' – remembering the trauma of Australia's last execution|work=The Guardian|date=2017-02-04 }}</ref> | |||
==The Case for Innocence== | |||
==Appearance and personality== | |||
Australian Criminologist Professor Gordon Hawkins, at Sydney University Law School doubts the validity of the unsigned confessions of Ryan in a television film documentary, ''Beyond Reasonable Doubt.'' Although verbal confessions are not permissible in court, in the 1960s the public and therefore the jury, were much more trusting of the police. Whether as a result, an innocent man was hanged there is at least a reasonable doubt. Professor Hawkins questions why Ronald Ryan, a seasoned criminal, would suddenly feel the need to tell all to the police? Was he 'verballed’ as such unsigned confessions are called? These days 'verbals’ are virtually impossible as police have to record all interviews they carry out in connection with a crime, following extraordinary revelations of '''police corruption uncovered by various police royal commissions'''.<ref>http://australianscreen.com.au/titles/case-of-ronald-ryan/clip2/</ref> | |||
Ryan was a slightly built man who stood {{convert|5|ft|8|in|cm|abbr=on}} tall. He had suffered an injury to his left eye as a child resulting in a permanent droop of his left eyelid. He favoured expensive clothing, aiming to impress others, and aspired to be known as Australia's leading criminal.<ref>{{cite book|last=Richards|first=Mike |url=http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/ryan-ronald-joseph-11592 |title=Biography – Ronald Joseph Ryan – Australian Dictionary of Biography |publisher=Adb.anu.edu.au |access-date=2015-11-06}}</ref> He was of above-average intelligence and was described by the people who knew him and prison authorities as a likable character but also a compulsive gambler.<ref name="Ryan the man condemned"/> | |||
Evidence pointing to the innocence of Ronald Ryan may have been lost when prison guard Helmut Lange, committed suicide by shooting himself in the head whilst on duty at Pentridge Prison, two years after Ryan was hanged. It is alleged that a close friend of Lange (who wanted to remain anonymous) claimed Lange had been troubled since the prison escape and committed suicide.<ref name="correspondance"/><ref name="RyanCase"/><ref name="casewontdie"/> | |||
Arresting officer Det Harding described Ryan as "tough, plausible and particularly difficult to question, he gave nothing away until he realised the game was up".<ref name="Ryan the man condemned"/> | |||
This anonymous friend of Lange, telephoned Ryan's defence attorney Dr Philip Opas QC, years after Lange's death to claim that Lange confessed to finding the missing bullet casing in the prison guard tower and told his friend he had made an official report to prison authorities at the time, attaching the missing bullet casing.<ref name="correspondance"/><ref name="RyanCase"/><ref name="casewontdie"/> | |||
==Later statements== | |||
But Lange had been ordered by ''"someone"'' to make a new statement, excluding any reference to the missing bullet casing. Fearing for his job, Lange made a new statement. At trial, Lange testified that he did not see a bullet casing. Dr Opas advised the caller to inform the Police but it is unknown whether in fact the caller did. Police refused to comment.<ref name="correspondance"/><ref name="RyanCase"/><ref name="casewontdie"/> | |||
Nineteen years after Ryan's execution, a former warder, Doug Pascoe, claimed on air to Channel 9 and other media that he had fired a shot during Ryan's escape bid. Pascoe said his shot may have accidentally killed his fellow prison guard, Hodson. Pascoe had not told anyone that he fired a shot during the escape because at that time, "I was a 23-year-old coward." In 1986, he tried to sell his story but his claim was dismissed by police because his rifle had a full magazine after the shooting and he was too far away.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Hughes|first1=Gary|title=Ronald Ryan did not kill warder|url=http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/nation/ronald-ryan-did-not-kill-warder/news-story/16688552f8598b739a26f455761be16a|website=The Australian|access-date=27 June 2017|date=21 December 2007}}</ref><ref name="news.google.com">{{cite news|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=4uoxAAAAIBAJ&sjid=mJIDAAAAIBAJ&pg=6639,1184790&hl=en|title=Ryan inquiry goes on but warder claim is rejected|last=Botten|first=Christobel|work=The Age|date=13 June 1986}}</ref> | |||
In 1993, a former Pentridge prisoner Harold Sheehan claimed he had witnessed the shooting but had not come forward at the time. Sheehan saw Ryan on his knees when the shot rang out and therefore, Ryan could not have inflicted the wound that passed in a downward trajectory angle that killed Hodson.<ref name="RyanCase"/> | |||
Pascoe's claim was rejected by another former warder, Bill Newman. Newman claimed that he was in Tower 3 the afternoon of the escape and that Pascoe was in Tower 4. Tower 3 was 200 metres from the shooting and Tower 4 was 500 metres away.<ref name="newenqs">{{cite web|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=TkoQAAAAIBAJ&sjid=mJIDAAAAIBAJ&pg=3399%2C644115&hl=en|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130124202919/http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=TkoQAAAAIBAJ&sjid=mJIDAAAAIBAJ&pg=3399%2C644115&hl=en|url-status=dead|title=The Age – Google News Archive Search|date=24 January 2013|archive-date=24 January 2013}}</ref> Police produced a photocopy of the duty roster for the day that showed that Newman was meant to have been in Tower 3 and Pascoe in Tower 4.<ref name="news.google.com"/> | |||
All prison authorized M1 carbine rifles were issued with eight rounds of bullets, including the rifle seized by Ryan from Lange. Seven of the eight rounds were accounted for. If the eighth fell on the floor of the prison watch tower when Ryan cocked the rifle with the safety catch on, thereby ejecting a live round, then the bullet that killed Hodson must have been fired by a person other than Ryan.<ref name="correspondance"/><ref name="RyanCase"/><ref name="casewontdie"/> | |||
Though Opas claimed that the staff duty roster was virtually meaningless on the day of the shooting because prison officers were taking turns sitting in for their colleagues while they attended the annual staff Christmas party, Newman said he returned to his tower (3) at 1.45 pm and later signed statements for the police.<ref name="news.google.com"/> According to the duty roster Robert Paterson was not on duty either but in fact he was on duty – he was the one that fired a shot.<ref name="vicbar.com.au pdf"/> | |||
Nineteen years after Ryan's execution, a prison officer Doug Pascoe, confessed on-air to Channel 9 and the media, that he fired a shot during Ryan's escape bid. Pascoe believes his shot may have accidentally killed his fellow prison guard, Hodson. Pascoe had not told anyone that he fired a shot during the escape because at that time, "I was a 23-year-old coward". <ref>http://72.14.235.132/search?q=cache:VI_7mMTWVoEJ:www.cla.asn.au/Articles/060522%2520Herde%2520Death%2520Penalty.pdf+was+ronald+ryan+innocent&cd=48&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=au</ref> | |||
In 1986, he tried to tell his story but his claim was dismissed by police, because his rifle had a full magazine after the shooting and he was too far away.<ref name="correspondance"/><ref name="RyanCase"/><ref name="casewontdie"/> | |||
Retired prison governor ] said that Ryan told him "straight out" that he had shot but not meant to kill Hodson.<ref name="newenqs"/> | |||
It was also were discredited by the authorities because according to the staff roster book Pascoe was on duty at another part of the prison. Whether the staff roster book even existed after 19 years remains questionable. The roster book may have been meaningless on that particular day anyway, because prison staff were taking turns standing-in for workmates as required, while they attended the staff Christmas party.<ref name="correspondance"/><ref name="RyanCase"/><ref name="casewontdie"/> | |||
Sister Margaret Kingston of the Good Shepherd Convent in ], said Ryan told her that he had shot Hodson, but had not meant to kill him.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=l_MjAAAAIBAJ&sjid=M-gDAAAAIBAJ&pg=3322%2C8025575&dq=pentridge+escape&hl=en|archive-url=https://archive.today/20120711115024/http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=l_MjAAAAIBAJ&sjid=M-gDAAAAIBAJ&pg=3322%2C8025575&dq=pentridge+escape&hl=en|url-status=dead|title=The Sydney Morning Herald – Google News Archive Search|date=11 July 2012|archive-date=11 July 2012}}</ref> | |||
Contesting the fatal shot, Dr Opas explains in detail the facts, which he claims cannot lie - which cannot be mistaken - that not only did Ryan not fire a shot, but he could not have fired a shot. Witnesses for the prosecution claimed to have seen Ryan's recoil the rifle, shoulder jerk back, and smoke coming from the barrel of the gun. In fact, that type of rifle had no recoil and it contained smokeless cartridges.<ref name="correspondance"/><ref name="RyanCase"/><ref name="casewontdie"/> | |||
===Eyewitness=== | |||
In a letter, ''Opas on Ryan - The Innocence of Ronald Ryan'' written to The Victorian Bar Association and published in The Bar News in Spring 2002, Dr Opas responds to a recently made assertion by Julian Burnside (who was reviewing Mike Richard's book-for-profits ''The Hanged Man'', and who was not involved with the Ryan case in many manner whatsoever,) that Ryan was guilty, the verdict was correct but the punishment was wrong. It is important to note that Burnside's "personal assertion" is based on one book-for-profits that was published 35 years after Ryan was hanged. After 35 years, many people directly involved in the Ryan case had died, the stories within the book cannot be confirmed, therefore the author's account of the truth is unreliable and in total contrast to the many researched documentary films and articles on the Ryan case. In addition, the editors of The Victorian Criminal Bar Association admitted that Julian Burnside personal assertion of Ryan's guilt is wrong.<ref name="correspondance"/> | |||
Twenty-five years after being a witness in Ryan's trial, where he gave evidence claiming to have seen him commit the murder, a man broke his silence, for fear that the alleged killer was becoming a latter-day ].<ref>"Witness breaks silence to damn Ryan", ''The Australian'', 7 February 1992</ref> Les Watt wrote to '']'': "Let me assure you and your readers that Ryan did kill Hodson." Watt spoke out after reading ]' comments and the latter's autobiography.<ref>Opas, Philip, ''Throw away my wig: an autobiography of a long journey with a few sign posts''</ref> Watt was one of four witnesses to testify seeing Ryan fire a shot. Watt said that it might well be proper for Opas to leave the bar as his emotional involvement with the case had certainly distorted the facts, leading as it had to the suggestion that Ryan might not have fired the shot that killed Hodson. Watt, on the contrary, said that he saw Ryan take aim and fire and then saw Hodson fall flat on his face and not move. "It was a sickening sight. I also witnessed a slight puff of smoke come from the carbine Ryan used. This was probably as a result of a bullet passing through a well-oiled barrel bore."<ref>"Eyewitness breaks 25 year silence, Ryan killed warder with rifle", ''The Australian'', 4 February 1992</ref> | |||
Dr Opas vehemently disagrees with this assertion and refuses to believe that at any time did Ryan confess to anyone that he fired a shot. Burnside has been asked on several occasions to explain how came to his assertion, but has refused to explain. Dr Opas vehemently states that there is no evidence anywhere, that Ryan ever confessed guilt to anyone, either verbally or in writing.<ref name="correspondance"/> | |||
==Case for innocence== | |||
Ryan gave evidence and swore that he did not fire at Hodson. He denied firing a shot at all. Ryan denied the alleged verbal confessions said to have been made by him. Dr Opas says the last words Ryan said to him were; ''We’ve all got to go sometime, but I don’t want to go this way for something I didn’t do.''<ref name="correspondance"/> | |||
An Australian ], Gordon Hawkins, the director of Sydney University's Institute of Criminology, doubts the damning validity of the "unsigned confessions" of Ryan in a television film documentary, '']''.<ref name="clip2" /> Although verbal confessions are not permissible in court, in the 1960s the public—and therefore the jury—were much more trusting of the police.<ref name="aso.gov.au">{{cite web|last=Bell |first=Janet |url=http://aso.gov.au/titles/tv/case-of-ronald-ryan/clip2/ |title=Beyond Reasonable Doubt – The Case of Ronald Ryan (1977) clip 2 on ASO – Australia's audio and visual heritage online |publisher=Aso.gov.au |access-date=3 February 2014}}</ref> As to whether as a result an innocent man was hanged, there is at least a reasonable doubt following revelations of police corruption uncovered by various Australian police royal commissions.<ref name="aso.gov.au"/> Australian police have to record or tape all interviews they carry out in connection with a crime. The police had no evidence of these unsigned verbal confessions. Ryan signed only a statement saying that he would not be giving any statements, verbal or written, to anyone except his lawyer. Hawkins questions why Ryan, a seasoned criminal, would suddenly feel the need to tell all to the police.<ref name="clip2" /> | |||
On 1 March 2004, in an interview with the Australian Coalition Against Death Penalty (ACADP), Dr Opas said; ''I want to put the record straight. I want the truth told about Ronald Ryan - that an innocent man went to the gallows. I want the truth to be made available to everyone, for anyone young and old, who may want to do research into Ryan's case or research on the issue of capital punishment. I will go to my grave firmly of the opinion that Ronald Ryan did not commit murder. I refuse to believe that at any time he told anyone that he did.''<ref name="correspondance"/> | |||
In 1993, a former Pentridge prisoner, Harold Sheehan, claimed he had witnessed the shooting but had not come forward at the time. Sheehan saw Ryan on his knees when the shot rang out and, therefore, Ryan could not have inflicted the wound that had killed Hodson, which passed in a downward trajectory.<ref name="vicbar.com.au pdf"/> | |||
On 23 August 2008, Dr Philip Opas QC, who had received an ''OBE'' died after a long illness at the age of 91. Opas maintained Ryan's innocence to the end. He was posthumously awarded an ''AM : Australia Day Honours in February 2009'' - defended Ronald Ryan in 1966. <ref>http://www.ajn.com.au/news/news.asp?pgID=7013</ref> | |||
<ref>http://www.vicbar.com.au/vicbar_oral/opas_home.asp</ref> | |||
All prison-authorised M1 carbine rifles, including that seized by Ryan from Lange, were issued loaded with eight rounds ball. Seven of the eight were accounted for in Ryan's case. If the eighth fell onto the floor of the prison watch-tower when Ryan cocked the rifle with the safety catch on, thereby ejecting a live round, then the bullet that killed Hodson must have been fired by a person other than Ryan.<ref name="vicbar.com.au"/><ref name="vicbar.com.au pdf"/><ref name="casewontdie">{{Citation|date=19 January 1997|title=Ryan: the case that won't die|page=79|url=http://www.vicbar.com.au/vicbar_oral/images/opas/22_Casewontdie.jpg|work=]|location=Melbourne, Australia|access-date=7 August 2009|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090925142328/http://www.vicbar.com.au/vicbar_oral/images/opas/22_Casewontdie.jpg|archive-date=25 September 2009}}</ref> | |||
Mr. Justice Starke the judge at Ryan's trial, and a committed abolitionist, was convinced of Ryan's guilt but did not agree Ryan should hang. Until his death in 1992, Starke remained troubled about Ryan's hanging and would often ask his colleagues if they thought he did the right thing. | |||
In a letter, "Opas on Ryan – The innocence of Ronald Ryan", written to the ] and published in the ''Victorian Bar News'' (Spring 2002), Opas responded<ref name="vicbar.com.au pdf"/> to an assertion made by Julian Burnside, in reviewing Mike Richard's book ''The Hanged Man'', that Ryan was guilty, but that while the verdict was correct the punishment was wrong.<ref>Burnside, Julian (11 March 2002). ''The Age''</ref> | |||
==Prison Chaplin Father John Brosnan== | |||
Opas disagreed with this assertion, refusing to believe that at any time Ryan confessed to anyone that he fired a shot and denying the existence of any evidence whatsoever that Ryan ever confessed guilt to anyone, either verbally or in writing.<ref name="vicbar.com.au pdf"/> | |||
Father Brosnan was a saintly Catholic priest for 57 years. For 30 years he was Pentridge Prison chaplain and one not easily fooled by the prisoners. He knew Ronald Ryan very well. Father Brosnan was convinced and always believed Ryan was innocent. <ref>http://www.adelaide.catholic.org.au/sites/SouthernCross/Features?more=1464</ref> | |||
Ryan gave evidence and swore that he did not fire at Hodson. He denied firing a shot at all. Ryan denied the alleged verbal confessions said to have been made by him. Opas says the last words Ryan said to him were; "We've all got to go sometime, but I don't want to go this way for something I didn't do."<ref name="vicbar.com.au pdf"/> | |||
On 26 March 2003, Father Brosnan was interviewed by The Australian Broadcasting Commission National Radio, and, as Brosnan was often asked in the past, about Ronald Ryan - who it was believed fired the fatal shot during the prison breakout. Father Brosnan replied; ''I don't know whose bullet killed who, but a friend of mine (Ryan) died. I don't want to make a hero out of Ryan but I'll tell you what, he had heroic qualities."'' | |||
<ref>http://www.abc.net.au/pm/content/2003/s817259.htm</ref> | |||
On 26 March 2003, just months prior to his death, Catholic priest Father John Brosnan was asked on ABC Radio by journalist Kellie Day about Ryan, who was believed to have fired the fatal shot during the prison breakout. Brosnan said; "No, I won't make a hero out of him. He caused a situation. I don't know whose bullet killed who, but a friend of mine died. But I'll tell you what, he had heroic qualities."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.abc.net.au/pm/content/2003/s817259.htm|title=PM – Tribute to Father John Brosnan|work=abc.net.au}}</ref> Father Brosnan said. "George was a nice fellow, but his wife had left him, taking their thirteen-year-old daughter with her, and he didn't have much of a life. I used to talk to him at Pentridge and drop in to see him in St Kilda sometimes to cheer him up."<ref name="Prior, Tom 1985"/> | |||
Ryan's defence lawyer and the priest developed a close friendship while working on the Ryan case. Dr Opas believes that Father Brosnan would have told him if Ryan had confessed guilt. Father Brosnan accompanied Ryan to the gallows and he believed Ryan was innocent.<ref name="correspondance"/> | |||
On 1 March 2004, in an interview with the Australian Coalition Against Death Penalty (ACADP),<ref>. acadp.com. p. 3. Retrieved 3 February 2014.</ref> Opas said: "I want to put the record straight. I want the truth told about Ronald Ryan – that an innocent man went to the gallows. I want the truth to be made available to everyone, for anyone young and old, who may want to do research into Ryan's case or research on the issue of capital punishment. I will go to my grave firmly of the opinion that Ronald Ryan did not commit murder. I refuse to believe that at any time he told anyone that he did".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ronaldryan.info|title=RONALD RYAN – Hanged Innocent in Australia|work=ronaldryan.info}}</ref> | |||
===THE FACTS=== (consistently being deleted by Purrum) | |||
{{Refimprovesect|date=August 2009}} | |||
* '''Ryan's rifle was never scientifically tested by forensic experts.'''<br><ref name="RyanCase"/><ref name="correspondance"/><ref name="RyanCase"/>''<Referenced Documentaries: The Last Man Hanged, The Last of The Ryans, Beyond Reasonable Doubt, Odd Man Out.>'' | |||
* '''There was no proof that Ryan's rifle had been fired.'''<br><ref name="RyanCase"/><ref name="correspondance"/><ref name="RyanCase"/>''<Referenced Documentaries: The Last Man Hanged, The Last of The Ryans, Beyond Reasonable Doubt, Odd Man Out.>'' | |||
* '''The fatal bullet that passed through Hodson's body was never found despite extensive search by police.'''<br><ref name="RyanCase"/><ref name="correspondance"/><ref name="RyanCase"/>''<Referenced Documentaries: The Last Man Hanged, The Last of The Ryans, Beyond Reasonable Doubt, Odd Man Out.>'' | |||
* '''The spent cartridge, also, was never found despite extensive search by police.'''<br><ref name="RyanCase"/><ref name="correspondance"/><ref name="RyanCase"/>''<Referenced Documentaries: The Last Man Hanged, The Last of The Ryans, Beyond Reasonable Doubt, Odd Man Out.>'' | |||
* '''It was never proven that the fatal bullet came from the weapon in Ryan's possession.'''<br><ref name="RyanCase"/><ref name="correspondance"/><ref name="RyanCase"/>''<Referenced Documentaries: The Last Man Hanged, The Last of The Ryans, Beyond Reasonable Doubt, Odd Man Out.>'' | |||
* '''All fourteen witnesses testified they heard one single shot.'''<br><ref name="RyanCase"/><ref name="correspondance"/><ref name="RyanCase"/>''<Referenced Documentaries: The Last Man Hanged, The Last of The Ryans, Beyond Reasonable Doubt, Odd Man Out.>'' | |||
* '''Paterson admitted and testified he fired one single shot.'''<br><ref name="RyanCase"/><ref name="correspondance"/><ref name="RyanCase"/>''<Referenced Documentaries: The Last Man Hanged, The Last of The Ryans, Beyond Reasonable Doubt, Odd Man Out.>'' | |||
* '''No person heard two shots fired. If Ryan had also fired a shot, at least one person would have heard two shots. Only one shot was heard.'''<br><ref name="RyanCase"/><ref name="correspondance"/><ref name="RyanCase"/>''<Referenced Documentaries: The Last Man Hanged, The Last of The Ryans, Beyond Reasonable Doubt, Odd Man Out.>'' | |||
* '''Balistic evidence indicated that Hodson was shot in a downward trajectory angle.'''<br><ref name="RyanCase"/><ref name="correspondance"/><ref name="RyanCase"/>''<Referenced Documentaries: The Last Man Hanged, The Last of The Ryans, Beyond Reasonable Doubt, Odd Man Out.>'' | |||
* '''The measurement of the entry and exit wound on Hodson's body indicated that the shot was fired from an elevated position.'''<br><ref name="RyanCase"/><ref name="correspondance"/><ref name="RyanCase"/>''<Referenced Documentaries: The Last Man Hanged, The Last of The Ryans, Beyond Reasonable Doubt, Odd Man Out.>'' | |||
* '''Ryan (a shorter man) could not have fired at Hodson (a taller man) in such a downward trajectory angle, as both were on level ground.'''<br><ref name="RyanCase"/><ref name="correspondance"/><ref name="RyanCase"/>''<Referenced Documentaries: The Last Man Hanged, The Last of The Ryans, Beyond Reasonable Doubt, Odd Man Out.>'' | |||
* '''Two eyewitnesses testified seeing Ryan recoil his rifle and two eyewitnesses testified seeing smoke coming from the barrel of Ryan's rifle. In fact, that type of rifle had no recoil and it contained smokeless cartridges.'''<br><ref name="RyanCase"/><ref name="correspondance"/><ref name="RyanCase"/>''<Referenced Documentaries: The Last Man Hanged, The Last of The Ryans, Beyond Reasonable Doubt, Odd Man Out.>'' | |||
On 23 August 2008, ] QC, died after a long illness at the age of 91. Opas maintained Ryan's innocence to the end.<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090712052232/http://www.vicbar.com.au/vicbar_oral/opas_home.asp |date=12 July 2009 }} – The Victorian Bar – Oral History</ref> Opas asked Australian Coalition President Dorina Lisson to keep fighting to clear Ryan's name.<ref name="news.com.au">{{cite web|url=http://www.news.com.au/national/ronald-ryan-marked-the-end-of-hanging-in-australia-in-the-hangmans-journal-part-v/story-e6frfkp9-1226388996311|title=Fight to clear Ronald Ryan's name continues in The Hangman's Journal|work=NewsComAu}}</ref> According to Ms Lisson, she and others are determined to have Ryan's murder conviction overturned because there is no scientific ballistic forensic evidence to prove Ryan guilty of murder, that a wrongly convicted man was hanged based solely on unsigned unrecorded unproven "hearsay" allegations of verbals/confessions.<ref name="news.com.au"/> | |||
Not true M1 Carbines do recoil and modern weapons do in fact emit smoke when fired. Check out youtube; search on M1 carbines, live firings clearly show recoil and smoke. However, M1 carbines back in 1965 were not of the "modern" type seen on today's youtube, and were at that time proven to be recoiless and to contain smokless cartridges.<ref name="RyanCase"/><ref name="correspondance"/><ref name="RyanCase"/>''<Referenced Documentaries: The Last Man Hanged, The Last of The Ryans, Beyond Reasonable Doubt, Odd Man Out.>'' | |||
For 35 years, ], who was a member of both the Victorian and Federal Parliaments refused to comment publicly on Ryan's hanging. Mr Jones broke his silence in 2002 at the launch of Mike Richards' book, ''The Hanged Man''.<ref name="heraldsun.com.au">Hore, Monique (8 June 2012). . ''The Herald Sun'' (Melbourne, Australia). Retrieved 3 February 2014. (subscription required).</ref> Mr Jones says he remains "unsure" of whether Ryan ever pulled the trigger. "It seemed to me that there was probably a reasonable doubt in the case," he said.<ref name="heraldsun.com.au"/> Mr Jones, also the former secretary of the Victorian Anti-Hanging Committee says he believes Ryan's hanging was an attempt by then Victorian Premier Henry Bolte, to push his law and order agenda.<ref name="heraldsun.com.au"/> | |||
== Alleged confession == | |||
{{Unreferenced section|date=August 2009}} | |||
In a book-for-profits by Mike Richards entitled ''The Hanged Man,'' (released and published in 2002) makes allegations that Ryan confessed guilt to Pentridge Prison Governor Ian Grindlay the night before the hanging. According to the book that was only released 35 years after Ryan was hanged is in total contrast to the many researched past documentary films on the Ryan case. According to this book Ryan said to Grindlay, "I did shoot him (Hodson) but I didn't mean to kill him only to stop him." It should be noted that Grindlay died more than one decade before the book that contains this allegation was published. Therefore, the author's account of the truth cannot be confirmed and is unreliable. Also, the author makes various unconfirmed allegations against now deceased persons directly involved in the Ryan case. Richards allegations in his book-for-profits are merely "hearsay" in an effort to gain notoriety. | |||
Justice Starke, the judge at Ryan's trial and a committed abolitionist, was convinced of Ryan's guilt but did not personally think that he should hang. Until his death in 1992, Starke remained troubled about Ryan's hanging and would often ask his colleagues if they thought he did the right thing.<ref name="hanged" /> Philip Opas' junior in the trial, Brian Bourke, was filmed in 2005 saying: ″One of the problems of Ryan's trial was an alleged admission that he made on the plane back to the homicide fellows. That sort of thing can't happen now, because they've got to be recorded on tape, but whether he made the admission or was verballed, I don't know. He was a pretty talkative fellow, he might have. I didn't have much doubt about his guilt.″<ref>Brodsky, Juliette. . The Victorian Bar – Oral History, at Vicbar.com.au. Retrieved 3 February 2014.</ref> | |||
The historical "fact" (something that is absolutely indisputable) and supported by Dr Opas and the many other meticulously researched documentaries, stories and articles on the Ryan case, is that there is no evidence, nor are there any documented records, anywhere whatsoever, that Grindlay (while still alive) said to anyone, at anytime, that Ryan had confessed guilt.<ref name="RyanCase"/><ref name="correspondance"/><ref name="RyanCase"/>''<Referenced Documentaries: The Last Man Hanged, The Last of The Ryans, Beyond Reasonable Doubt, Odd Man Out.>'' | |||
==Bibliography== | |||
==Last Legal Execution in Australia Documentary Film== | |||
===Books=== | |||
''The Last Man Hanged'' is a dramatised documentary released in 1992 based on miticulous research, with a mixture of re-creating interviews with the people directly involved in the Ryan case and archival material depicting the events leading up to the hanging of Ronald Joseph Ryan in Pentridge Prison. What evolves in the documentary is a powerful and emotional statement about capital punishment - a universal story about the social and political pressures that can lead a government to take the life of a human being and the story of a complex Ronald Ryan, who was as much a victim of politics as the victims of society he had violated - a man who believed ultimately he had to die. | |||
* ], '''', Hardie Grant Publications, February 2017, {{ISBN|9781743792780}} | |||
Featuring candid interviews with the people who knew Ryan well - his wife, lawyer, fellow escapee, trial judge, the priest, politicians, the journalist who witnessed his execution. The Last Man Hanged is the story of Ronald Ryan, a petty-thief with no record of violence, but whose botched escape from prison resulted in his execution - the story of a brutal, cold-blooded murder by the State. <ref>http://australianscreen.com.au/titles/last-man-hanged/</ref> | |||
* Ayling, Jack, ''Nothing but the Truth: The life and times of Jack Ayling'', Chippendale, Pan MacMillan {{ISBN|978-0-330-27466-1}} | |||
* Dickens, Barry, '''', Currency Press, Sydney, 1996 {{ISBN|0-86819-424-7}} | |||
* Grindlay, Ian, ''Behind Bars: Memoirs of Jail Governor, Ian Grindlay'', Southdown Press, Melbourne | |||
* Hansen, Brian, ''The Awful Truth'', Brian Hansen Publications, 2004 {{ISBN|1-876151-16-1}}, | |||
* Morton, James & Lobez, Susanna, ''Dangerous to Know'', Melbourne University Press, 2009, {{ISBN|978-0-522-85681-1}} | |||
* Opas, Philip, ''Throw away my wig: an autobiography of a long journey with a few sign posts'', 1997 {{ISBN|1-876074-06-X}} | |||
* Prior, Tom, ''Bolte by Bolte'', Craftsman Publishing, 1990 {{ISBN|1-875428-00-3}} | |||
* Prior, Tom, ''A knockabout priest: the story of Father John Brosnan'', Hargreen, North Melbourne, 1985, {{ISBN|0-949905-23-2}} | |||
* Richards, Mike, ''The Hanged Man – The Life and Death of Ronald Ryan'', Scribe Publications, Melbourne, 2002, {{ISBN|0-908011-94-6}} | |||
* Sharpe, Alan, ''The giant book of Crimes that shocked Australia'', {{ISBN|1-86309-018-5}} | |||
* Silvester, John, ''Tough; 101 Australian Gangsters'', Floradale & Sly Ink, Camberwell, 2002, {{ISBN|0-9579121-2-9}} | |||
* Tennison, Patrick, ''Defence Counsel; Cases in the Career of Philip Opas, Q.C.'', Hill of Content, Melbourne, 1975, {{ISBN|0-85572-068-9}}, pp 96–170. | |||
== |
===Pamphlets=== | ||
* Whiticker, Alan J., ''Ronald Ryan: Last Man Hanged'', New Holland Publishers Australia, 2013, pp. 26.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://itunes.apple.com/au/book/ronald-ryan-last-man-hanged/id634299546?mt=11 |title=Ronald Ryan: Last Man Hanged by |first=Alan J. |last= Whiticker |via=iTunes Store |date=3 February 1967 |access-date=3 February 2014}}</ref> | |||
{{reflist|2}} | |||
== |
===Plays=== | ||
*], ''Remember Ronald Ryan: A Dramatic Play'', Currency Press, Sydney, 1994, ISBN 0868193925 | |||
* ''The Blood of Helmut Lange – The Unjustified Execution of Ronald Ryan'', The Factory Theatre Crime Scenes<ref>{{cite web |url=http://factorytheatre.com.au/events/2009/05/27/crime-scenes-the-fusebox |title=Crime Scenes @ The Fusebox |publisher=Factory Theatre |date=20 June 2009 |access-date=3 February 2014 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140221161215/http://factorytheatre.com.au/events/2009/05/27/crime-scenes-the-fusebox |archive-date=21 February 2014 }}</ref> | |||
*Dickens, Barry, ''Guts and Pity - The Hanging that ended Capital Punishment in Australia'', Currency Press, Sydney, 1996 ISBN 0868194247 | |||
* ], '''' Currency Press, Sydney, 1994, {{ISBN|0-86819-392-5}} | |||
* Dr Philip Opas, QC Victorian Criminal Bar Association. (Newsletter, Spring 2002). | |||
* ], ''Ryan: A Monologue'', La Mama Courthouse, 2015<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/theatre/barry-dickins-remembers-last-man-hanged-in-ryan-at-la-mama-20151123-gl5gux.html|title=Barry Dickins remembers last man hanged in Ryan at La Mama|first=John|last=Bailey|date=23 November 2015|via=The Sydney Morning Herald}}</ref> | |||
* The Hanging of Ronald Ryan Transcript, News Articles, Video. | |||
===Film and television documentaries=== | |||
* ''The Last Man Hanged'', 1993 historical documentary, ]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://australianscreen.com.au/titles/last-man-hanged/ |title=Video Overview The Last Man Hanged (1993) on ASO – Australia's audio and visual heritage online |publisher=Australianscreen.com.au |access-date=3 February 2014}}</ref> | |||
* '']'', 1997 television movie, ]<!--IMDb is ]: <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0119504/|title=''The Last of the Ryans''|publisher=IMDb|access-date=3 February 2014}}</ref>--> | |||
* ''Beyond Reasonable Doubt – The Case of Ronald Ryan'', 1977 documentary series, ]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://australianscreen.com.au/titles/case-of-ronald-ryan/ |title=Video Overview Beyond Reasonable Doubt – The Case of Ronald Ryan (1977) on ASO – Australia's audio and visual heritage online |publisher=Australianscreen.com.au |access-date=3 February 2014}}</ref> | |||
* ''Odd Man Out – The Story of Ronald Ryan'', three-part television mini-series<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.acr.net.au/~davidandjane/oddm_20000416.pdf |title=Odd Man Out : The story of Ronald Ryan |publisher=Acr.net.au |access-date=2015-11-06}}</ref> | |||
* ''Who Hung Ronald Ryan?'' Australian Broadcasting Corporation Film, 1987 documentary film on Ryan's execution | |||
* '']'', 2010 television series,<ref>ITV4 ''Real Prison Breaks'' {{YouTube|sDyFJqru9UI|segment}}. Accessed 3 February 2014.</ref> | |||
==Other== | |||
An Epiphany Window was installed at ] a few weeks after the execution. It was created by the artist Miroslav "Dismas" Zika, who etched an inscription in Latin into the glass towards the base of the window, a translation of which in English is rendered "Dismas made this in 1967 at the beginning of the month when Bolte, scandalous, arrogant, was demanding Ryan suffer capital punishment." Bolte considered this objectionable. Sir ], ], apologised to the Premier, clarifying that the inscription had neither been included in the original design brief, nor had any "official authorisation", and that the offending inscription would be removed. Zika remained unrepentant.<ref name="Prelate">{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=j44pAAAAIBAJ&sjid=W5MDAAAAIBAJ&pg=5987%2C623076 |title=Prelate Sorry. |newspaper=] |location=Vic. |date=4 May 1967 |access-date=21 May 2013 |page=5 }}</ref> | |||
==References== | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
*, ''National Nine News'', 29 October, 2007 | |||
*Ewart, Heather, , ''7.30 Report'', Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 14 March, 2002 | |||
*Norden, Fr. Peter, , Jesuit Communications Australia, 10 September, 2007 | |||
*Opas, Dr. Philip, , ''The Victorian Criminal Bar'', 2002 | |||
*, ''Australian Dictionary of Biography'', Volume 16, Melbourne University Press, 2002, p. 157. | |||
*Ryan, Michael, , ''Home News'', 27 January, 1967 | |||
* {{imdb title|0485330|The Last Man Hanged (documentary)}} | |||
* {{Find a Grave|9301142}} | |||
===Film and Television Documentaries=== | |||
* , ''National Nine News'', 29 October 2007 | |||
*, historical documentary, ], Australia, 1993 | |||
* Ewart, Heather, , ''7.30 Report'', Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 14 March 2002 | |||
*, television movie, ], Australia, 23 April 1997 | |||
* Norden, Fr. Peter, , Jesuit Communications Australia, 10 September 2007 | |||
*, documentary series, 1977 ] | |||
* |
* Opas, Dr. Philip, | ||
* , ''Australian Dictionary of Biography'', Volume 16, Melbourne University Press, 2002, p. 157. | |||
*''Who Hung Ronald Ryan?'' Australian Broadcasting Corporation Film (A Documentary Film on The Execution of Ronald Ryan - released 1987) | |||
* The Factory Theatre Crime Scenes. | |||
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Latest revision as of 10:53, 23 November 2024
Australian murderer
Ronald Ryan | |
---|---|
Born | Ronald Edmond Thompson (1925-02-21)21 February 1925 Carlton, Victoria, Australia |
Died | 3 February 1967(1967-02-03) (aged 41) HM Prison Pentridge, Coburg, Victoria, Australia |
Cause of death | Execution by hanging |
Height | 5 ft 8 in (1.73 m) |
Spouse | Dorothy Janet (née George) |
Parent(s) | John and Cecilia (née Young) Ryan |
Conviction(s) | Murder |
Criminal penalty | Death |
Ronald Joseph Ryan (21 February 1925 – 3 February 1967) was the last person to be legally executed in Australia. Ryan was found guilty of shooting and killing warder George Hodson during an escape from Pentridge Prison, Victoria, in 1965. Ryan's hanging was met with public protests by those opposed to capital punishment. Capital punishment was abolished in all states by 1985.
Early life
Ronald Edmond Thompson was born at the Royal Women's Hospital in Melbourne's inner suburb of Carlton, to John Ronald Ryan and Cecilia Thompson (née Young). Cecilia already had a son with her first husband, George Harry Thompson and was living with John Ryan. Cecilia and George had separated in 1915 when George left to fight in the Great War. The relationship never resumed. Cecilia met Ryan while working as a nurse in Woods Point where he was suffering from lung disease. They formed a relationship in 1924 and later married in 1929, after Thompson's death in 1927 by falling from a tram and getting hit by a car. Ronald then adopted the name Ronald Edmond Ryan. In 1936, Ryan was confirmed in the Roman Catholic Church. He took as his confirmation name Joseph, becoming Ronald Edmond Joseph Ryan. He did not like Edmond and from then on used "Ronald Joseph Ryan".
His three sisters were made wards of the state a year later when authorities declared them to be neglected. His sisters were sent to the Good Shepherd Convent in Collingwood. Ryan absconded from Rupertswood in September 1939 and, with his half-brother George Thompson, worked in and around Balranald, New South Wales; spare money earned from sleeper cutting and kangaroo shooting was sent to his mother, who was looking after their sick, alcoholic father.
At the age of 20, Ryan had saved enough money to rent a house in Balranald. He collected his mother and sisters and they lived together in this house. Ryan's father stayed in Melbourne and died a year later, aged 62, after a long battle with miners' disease, phthisis tuberculosis.
Move to Victoria, marriage and children
Aged about 22, Ryan decided to join his brother, who was tomato farming near Tatura, Victoria. He started visiting Melbourne on weekends and during one of these weekend trips Ryan met his future wife, Dorothy Janet George. On 4 February 1950, Ryan married Dorothy at St Stephen's Anglican Church in Richmond, Victoria. He converted from Roman Catholicism to the Church of England to marry her. He converted back to Catholicism shortly before his execution. Dorothy was the daughter of the mayor of the Melbourne suburb of Hawthorn. Ryan and Dorothy had three daughters, Janice, Wendy and Rhonda. A fourth baby was stillborn.
Later life
After spending a few months working for his father-in-law as a trainee mechanic, Ryan decided that more money could be made cutting timber near Marysville and Licola. When it was too wet to cut timber, Ryan got a job painting for the State Electricity Commission. By 1952 the Ryan family was living in Noojee.
Trouble with the law started when his rented house burnt down. Ryan was away for the weekend in Melbourne when the arsonist struck. The arsonist was caught and claimed that Ryan had put him up to it in order to claim insurance money. His first appearance in court was in Warragul in 1953 when he was acquitted on a charge of arson.
In 1956 Ryan appeared in court for passing bad cheques in Dandenong. He was given a bond. His next appearance in court was after he issued a large number of forged cheques in Warrnambool. His partner was caught with the goods purchased with the bad cheques and handed Ryan over to the police. He received another good-behaviour bond after the arresting detective gave a favourable character reference on Ryan's behalf.
Ryan first served prison time at Bendigo Prison. Here, under Ian Grindlay (who would later become the Governor of Pentridge Prison), he appeared to want to better himself. He was studying for his Matriculation (the successful completion of 12 years of formal schooling) when he was released on parole in August 1963. He was regarded by the authorities as a model prisoner.
After working as a clerk for a couple of months, Ryan went to lunch and was never to be seen again, as he had started robbing butchers shops and used explosives to blow their safes.
Ryan and two accomplices were caught after a shop robbery on 4 January 1964. He was charged with breaking and entering and theft offences on 6 January 1964. Bailed on 3 February 1964, Ryan skipped town and fled to New South Wales. He later admitted to nine robberies in New South Wales between 4 April and 11 July 1964. On a visit home on 14 July he was caught by Victoria Police in the early hours the next morning. On 13 November 1964 he received an eight-year prison sentence for breaking and entering. He was sent to Pentridge Prison.
Escape
After Ryan was sentenced to Pentridge Prison, he was placed in B Division where he met fellow prisoner Peter John Walker, who was serving a 12-year sentence for bank robbery. When Ryan was informed that his wife was seeking a divorce, he made a plan to escape from prison. Walker decided to go along with him. Ryan planned to take himself and his family and flee to Brazil, which did not have an extradition treaty with Australia. On 19 December 1965, Ryan and Walker scaled the prison wall and ran across the top of the wall to a prison watchtower, where they took prison officer Helmut Lange hostage, threatening him to open the gate with his own M1 rifle. Lange agreed, but deliberately pulled the wrong lever. Ryan and Walker then proceeded downstairs with their hostage only to find that the gate would not open. At the bottom of the stairs was the night officers' lodge. Warder Fred Brown was returning from lunch to relieve Lange when he was confronted by the escapees. Brown did not resist. When Ryan realised Lange had tricked him, he jabbed the rifle into Lange's back and marched him back up the stairs so Lange could pull the correct lever to open the tower gate. The two escapees then exited through the gate into the prison car park. To the escapees' dismay there were only six cars in the car park and five had flat tyres.
However, they did encounter the prison chaplain, Brigadier James Hewitt of the Salvation Army, in the car park. The escapees grabbed Hewitt and used him as a shield. Ryan, armed with the rifle, pointed it at Hewitt and demanded his car. Prison Officer Bennett in Tower 2 saw the prisoners. Ryan called to Bennett to throw down his rifle. Bennett ducked out of sight and then got his rifle.
When Hewitt told Ryan he did not have his car that day, Ryan rifle-butted him in the head causing serious injuries. Les Watt, a petrol attendant who watched the escape from a petrol station on Sydney Rd, witnessed Ryan hitting Hewitt with the rifle. The escapees then left the badly injured chaplain and Ryan ran out to Champ Street, directly in front of the south-west corner of the prison.
Walker went south across Church Street toward the adjacent Roman Catholic church in Sydney Road. Prison officer Bennett had his rifle aimed at Walker and ordered Walker to halt or he would shoot. Walker took cover behind a small wall that bordered the church. The prison alarm was raised by Warder Lange, and it began to blow loudly, indicating a prison escape. Unarmed warders, Wallis, Mitchinson and Paterson, came running out of the prison's main gate and onto the street.
Prison officer George Hodson responded to the whistle and was told by Bennett that he had Walker pinned down. Hodson ran over to Walker and disarmed him, but Walker managed to get free and both men ran towards the armed Ryan.
Meanwhile, confusion and noise were increasing around the busy intersection of Sydney Road and O'Hea Street and across to the Champ Street intersection, with Ryan waving the rifle around trying to get cars to stop so he could commandeer them, and people ducking for cover between cars.
Frank and Pauline Jeziorski were travelling south on Champ Street and had slowed to give way to traffic on Sydney Road when Ryan armed with the rifle appeared in front of their car. Ryan threatened the driver and his passenger wife to get out of their car. The driver, Frank Jeziorski, turned his car off, put it in neutral then got out of his vehicle. Ryan got in via the driver's door. Surprisingly, Pauline Jeziorski refused to get out of the car. She was persuaded by Ryan to get out, only to go back in the car to get her handbag. Paterson, realising Ryan was armed, returned inside the prison to get a rifle.
Warder William Mitchinson was first to reach the car and grabbed Ryan through the driver's window, he told Ryan "the game's up". Warder Thomas Wallis who was following, ran to Pauline Jeziorski's side of the car. He grabbed her and pulled her away from the car.
In frustration, Ryan forced Mitchinson to back off, then got out of the passenger's side door and noticed Walker running towards him, being chased by Hodson who was holding the pipe in his hand. Walker was shouting frantically to Ryan that prison guard William Bennett, standing on the Number 2 prison tower, had his rifle aimed at them. At this time, Hodson was chasing Walker; Ryan took a couple of steps forward, raised his rifle, aimed at Hodson, and allegedly fired.
George Hodson fell to the ground. He had been struck by a single bullet that exited through Hodson's back, about an inch lower than the point of entry in his right chest. Hodson died in the middle of Sydney Road. Warder Robert Paterson, now with a rifle, ran back outside and onto Champ Street.
Ryan and Walker ran past the critically wounded Hodson and commandeered a blue Standard Vanguard sedan on Sydney Road from its driver, Brian Mullins. With Walker driving and Ryan a passenger, the car travelled through an adjacent service station and then west along O'Hea Street.
On the run
Ryan and Walker successfully eluded their pursuers outside Pentridge Prison and drove away before changing cars. They then made their way south following the Moonee Ponds Creek to change cars again before hiding in a safe house in Kensington provided by Norman Harold Murray. The following day the men moved into Christine Aitken's flat in Ormond Road, Elwood.
The prison escape dominated newspapers and other media. One newspaper reported that, "Ronald Ryan, serving time for burglary, seized a prison officer and shot him three times, twice in the chest and once in the back." Reports of their activities caused widespread anxiety.
On 24 December, Ryan (armed with the warder's rifle) and Walker robbed an ANZ bank in North Road, Ormond. The bank manager and a customer were ordered out of his office with a revolver (different to the warder's rifle). Ryan herded 13 people into the bank's strongroom and stole A£4500. A witness, June Crawford, told reporters, "a bandit told me 'This gun shot a man a few days ago.'" Ryan and Walker escaped in a 1952 Holden sedan.
On the same day, the Victorian Government announced a £6,000 reward for information leading to the capture of Ryan and Walker. It was reported in The Age that the Chief Secretary and Attorney General, Arthur Rylah, had issued a warning to the escapees that the killing of Hodson during the prison escape was the worst Victoria had known and that the "Hanging Act was still in force."
On 24 December there was a party at the flat. A petty criminal, John Fisher, who knew Ryan, and Arthur Henderson (Aitken's boyfriend) were there. After all their beer had been consumed, Walker and Henderson left to find sly-grog in Albert Park for more drinks. An hour later Walker returned alone to the flat. He had killed Henderson in a Middle Park toilet block, having shot him in the back of the head. The escapees left the flat and returned to Kensington. On 26 December, Aitken and another woman were charged with harbouring the criminals. They came forward after Henderson was killed and the escapees had left. The charges were later dropped. The pair returned to hiding in the basement of the house in Kensington. Murray was given money to buy a car in Sydney and return with it. Murray returned with the car with Queensland plates on 31 December Ryan and Walker left for Sydney on (1 January 1966) and arrived on 2 January.
Recapture
After arriving in Sydney, Ryan and Walker endeavoured to establish some safe houses; Ryan also wanted to make contact with a woman he knew when he was in Sydney years ago; she was not home but her daughter was. Ryan made an arrangement to meet the woman and daughter at Concord Repatriation Hospital on the evening of 6 January. Unknown to Ryan the daughter recognised Ryan and tipped off the police. Acting on the information, Detective Inspector (DI) Ray "Gunner" Kelly was alerted about their presence. DI Kelly with a heavily armed contingent of 50 police officers and detectives set a trap for them.
When the escapees' car pulled up near the hospital, Ryan walked over to a nearby telephone box, but it had been deliberately put out of order, so he walked over to a neighbouring shop and asked to use the phone there. The owner had been instructed to tell Ryan that his phone was also out of order, and as Ryan walked out of the shop he was tackled by six detectives, dropping a loaded .32 revolver that he had been carrying. At the same moment Det. Sgt Fred Krahe thrust a shotgun through the car window and held it at Walker's head, and he was captured without a struggle. Ryan and Walker had been on the run for 19 days. In the boot of the car police found three pistols, a shotgun and two rifles, all fully loaded, an axe, jemmy, two coils of rope, a hacksaw and two boiler suits.
Extradition
Ryan and Walker were extradited back to Melbourne. They were jointly tried for the murder of George Hodson. It is alleged that Ryan made three verbal confessions to police whilst being extradited to Melbourne. According to police, Ryan admitted to them he had shot prison officer Hodson. However, these verbal allegations were not signed by Ryan and he denied making such verbal or written confessions to anyone. The only signed document by Ryan was that he would give no verbal testimony. Walker was also tried for the shooting murder of Arthur James Henderson during the period when he and Ryan were at large.
Trial and sentencing
On 15 March 1966, the case of The Queen v. Ryan and Walker began in the Supreme Court of Victoria. The first day was spent choosing the make up of the jury. Ryan and Walker each exercised their legal right in objecting to twenty candidates.
Crown's case
The Crown's case presented no scientific evidence. Ryan's rifle was never scientifically tested by ballistics experts to prove that it had fired a shot. The fatal bullet and the spent cartridge casing were never recovered so no ballistic or forensic evidence was available to prove that Ryan had fired the fatal shot.
The Crown's case relied only on eyewitnesses who were near Pentridge Prison when Hodson was shot and killed, because there was no scientific forensic evidence to prove Ryan fired a shot. Each eyewitness testified to a different account of what they saw and where Ryan was standing. Eleven eyewitnesses swore that they saw Ryan waving and aiming his rifle. There were variations, whether Ryan was standing, walking or squatting at the time a single shot was heard and whether Ryan was to the left or right of Hodson. Only four eyewitnesses testified that they saw Ryan fire a shot. Two eyewitnesses testified that they saw smoke coming from Ryan's rifle. Two eyewitnesses testified that they saw Ryan's weapon recoil.
Some witnesses testified that they saw Ryan's rifle recoil when he fired and also saw smoke from Ryan's rifle. The owners of the car Ryan got into, Frank and Pauline Jeziorski, were two of the witnesses. A warder, Thomas Wallis, testified that he saw smoke come out of the rifle Ryan was holding. Pauline Jeziorski testified that she smelled gunpowder after Ryan had fired the shot.
At trial, all prison officers testified that they did not see Hodson carrying anything and that they did not see Hodson hit Walker. However, two witnesses, Louis Bailey and Keith Dobson, testified that they saw Hodson carrying something like an iron-bar or baton as he was chasing after Walker. Governor Grindlay testified that he did not see a bar near Hodson's body but that he found one after Hodson's body was loaded into an ambulance.
Verbal confessions
The Crown also relied upon unrecorded unsigned testimony that Ryan had, allegedly, verbally confessed to shooting Hodson.
Detective Sergeant KP "Bill" Walters told the court that on 6 January 1966, the day after his re-capture in Sydney, Ryan said
In the heat of the moment you sometimes do an act without thinking. I think this is what happened with Hodson. He had no need to interfere. He was stupid. He was told to keep away. He grabbed Pete and hit him with an iron bar. He caused his own death. I didn't want to shoot him. I could have shot a lot more.
Detective Senior Constable Harry Morrison told the court that on 7 January 1966 during the flight returning Ryan back to Melbourne Ryan said: "The warder spoilt the whole show. If he had not poked his great head into it he would not have got shot. It was either him or Pete."
The Crown also called the two bank officers from the bank that Ryan and Walker robbed. Robert Sipthorpe and George Robertson testified that Ryan said "This is the gun that shot a man the other day!" At trial, Ryan's defence lawyer Philip Opas cross-examined the two witnesses asking if instead they heard "This is the type of gun that shot a man the other day." Both witnesses stuck to their story.
John Fisher, who had a long criminal history and had not seen or heard from Ryan for more than two years, testified that he asked Ryan who had shot Hodson. Fisher said Ryan told him he had shot Hodson.
None of the verbal confessions were signed by Ryan, who only signed documents saying that he would give no verbal testimony. Ryan testified he had been "verballed" and denied the allegations of verbals/confessions said to have been made by him.
Defence's case
The main problem for the defence was that Victoria had the Gaols Act of 1958 in which it stated:
- Every male person lawfully imprisoned for any crime misdemeanour or offence by the sentence of any court of competent jurisdiction, or employed at labour as a criminal on the roads or other public works of Victoria who escapes or attempts to escape from any gaol or from the custody of any member of the police force gaoler or other officer in whose custody he may be, shall be guilty of felony:
- If a killing occurs by an act of violence in the course of a commission of a felony involving violence or in the furtherance of the purpose of such a felony the accused is guilty of murder even though, there is no actual intention of killing.
The defence spent a lot of time arguing about when the time of the felony ended. Did it end after the prisoners had cleared the prison walls or did it once the prisoners were caught and returned to custody?
The defence pointed to various substantial discrepancies in The Crown's case. While some eyewitnesses testified they saw Ryan to the east of Hodson when a single shot was heard, other eyewitnesses testified Ryan was to the west of Hodson. The discrepancies in evidence were substantial and wide-ranging. Opas contended that each of the fourteen eyewitnesses evidence were so contradictory that little store could be placed on them.
Philip Opas produced a human skeleton as a visual aid to explain the trajectory of the fatal bullet, Opas argued that the ballistics evidence indicated that the fatal bullet entered Hodson's (chest) body in a downward trajectory. He also got a Monash University mathematics professor, Terry Speed, to explain that Ryan, 5 feet 8 inches (1.73 m) tall would have had to have been 8 feet 3 inches (2.51 m) tall to have fired the shot. These calculations were based on Ryan being twenty feet from Hodson and Hodson was standing perfectly upright. The bullet would enter Hodson's body 62 inches from the ground and exit 61 inches from the ground. If the shot was in a downward angle the bullet would have hit the road forty feet from where Hodson was hit, it also suggested that Hodson could have been shot from another elevated point and possibly by another prison officer. It would cast doubt that Ryan had fired the fatal shot. But the prosecution argued that Hodson, 6 feet 1 inch (1.85 m) tall could have been running in a stooped position, thus accounting for the bullet's fatal angle of entry. No witnesses saw or testified seeing Hodson running in a stooped position.
The trajectory theory put forward by Opas, the trial judge dismissed the theory as did the judges at the Appeal two months later. They said there was enough evidence to say Hodson was not standing fully erected but was running in a forward leaning position when he was shot.
Opas in defending Ryan put a lot of pressure on a warder who made conflicting statements, Paterson had made several mutually contradictory statements to police about what he saw, heard and did on that day. In his first statement given to Detective Sergeant Carton on 19 December 1965 Paterson said; "I did not hear a shot fired other than the one I fired." In a second statement given to Senior Detective Morrison on 12 January 1966 Paterson said, "Just as I turned into the entrance to the garden I heard a shot." In a third statement on 3 February 1966 Paterson said, "I ran back inside and asked for a gun, I went to the main gate and I received a gun and ran back outside, as I was running on to the lawn I heard the crack of a shot." Paterson changed his story, too, about who was in the line of fire when he aimed his rifle. In his first statement Paterson said, "I sighted my rifle at Ryan and was about to fire when a woman walked into the line of fire and I lifted my rifle." In his second statement Paterson said, "I took aim at Ryan but two prison officers were in the line of fire so I dropped my rifle again." In his third statement Paterson said, "I took aim at Ryan and I found out I had to fire between two prison officers to get Ryan, so I lowered my gun again."
Ryan testified that he kept his rifle to prove his innocence in the event of recapture, as he knew that forensic microscopic markings on the spent bullet would prove that it was not fired from his rifle.
Despite extensive search by police, neither the fatal bullet nor the spent cartridge were ever found. Although all prison-authorised rifles were the same M1 carbine type, scientific forensic testing of the bullet would have proven which rifle fired the fatal shot – every rifle leaves a microscopic "unique marker" on the fired bullet as it travels through the barrel of the rifle.
All the bullets in Ryan's M1 carbine rifle would be accounted for if Ryan cocked the rifle with the safety-catch on; this faulty operation (conceded by prison officer Lange, assistant prison governor Robert Duffy, and confirmed by ballistic experts at trial) would have caused an undischarged bullet to be ejected, spilling onto the floor of the guard tower. Opas established that for a person who was inexperienced in handling that type of rifle and its cocking lever, it would be easy to jam the rifle and any attempt to clear the jam would result in a live round being ejected.
On the eighth day of the trial Ryan was sworn in and took the witness stand. Ryan denied firing a shot, denied the alleged verbal (unsigned) confessions said to have been made by him, and denied ever saying to anyone that he had shot a man. According to Ryan, they were after the reward money by making false allegations. "At no time did I fire a shot. My freedom was the only objective. The rifle was taken in the first instance so that it could not be used against me."
After a trial in the Victorian Supreme Court lasting twelve sitting days Ryan was convicted of the murder of Hodson and sentenced to death by Justice John Starke, the mandatory sentence at that time. Asked if he had anything to say before sentencing Ryan stated "I still maintain my innocence. I will consult with my counsel with a view to appeal. That is all I have to say!" Walker was found not guilty of murder, but guilty of manslaughter and sentenced to 12 years imprisonment. He was also found guilty of manslaughter for the death of Arthur Henderson and received an 12-year sentence. Walker was paroled in 1984. He died on 5 March 2022, at the age of 80.
After the trial
According to juryman Tom Gildea, the jury evidently thought that the death sentence would be commuted, as had happened in the previous 35 death penalties cases since 1951. Gildea's account of the discussions in the jury room, not one member of the jury thought that Ryan would be executed. Gildea said,
Of the jury, two members held out the first vote we took, but 10 of us were sure Ryan was guilty. He was a bit too sure of himself in the witness box but the thing that decided us was handling the rifle which had killed Hodson. We had been told the rifle had a hair trigger, but when we examined it we found we had to pull it at least half an inch and use quite a bit of force." Eight members of the jury were experienced with rifles either in the country or overseas with war service.
Gildea also said, "I don't know how much experience the judge and the lawyers had but we had had our share in the jury box I can tell you."
When it was apparent that the Victorian Government was intent on hanging Ryan, Gildea contacted the nine other jury members he could trace. Gildea said that of the twelve jurors, three refused to sign petitions, one older man who was convinced of Ryan's guilt and the two who believe Ryan was not guilty. Two other jurors could not be contacted.
Seven jury members, including Gildea, signed separate petitions requesting Ryan's death sentence be commuted to life in prison. Later, some of the jurors came forth and stated they would never have convicted Ryan of murder had they known that he would in fact be executed. Gildea said "We didn't want the rope. If we had known Ryan would hang, I think we would have gone for manslaughter."
Appeal
Opas decided to appeal against the murder verdict. The appeal was to the Victorian Court of Criminal Appeal, a bench consisting of three judges of the Supreme Court. The basis of the appeal was that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence. He argued that as a matter of law that the inherent inconsistencies and improbabilities and even impossibilities in the evidence.
At the trial there had been a legal argument on when the crime of escaping from jail had been completed. In the Crimes Act, a relevant section provides that "every male person lawfully imprisoned for any crime who escapes shall be guilty of a felony".
At the trial, Mr Justice Starke had directed the jury: "In certain circumstances, the crime of murder may be established even though the accused had no intention of killing. And that is so in these circumstances. If a killing occurs by an act of violence in the course of a commission of a felony involving violence, or in the furtherance of the purpose of such felony, the accused is guilty of murder, even though there is no actual intention of killing." There was long legal argument on when the escape felony finished, did it stop once Ryan and Walker left the prison property or did it continue until they were caught in Sydney nineteen days later?
The appeal was dismissed on 8 June 1966.
On 14 October 1966, the Full Bench of the High Court of Australia rejected appeals by Ryan and Walker. With all legal avenues yet to be exhausted, legal aid to Ryan was cut by the Bolte Government. Premier Bolte then directed the Public Solicitor to withdraw Opas' brief as the government was not going to fund the petition to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council.
Ryan had a right to increased free legal assistance for expert forensics analysis, to hire expert witnesses, and to present a series of appeals and recourses that were available to those facing execution by the government. The Full Court agreed that it was unthinkable that a man should be executed before he had exhausted his ultimate right of appeals. Opas decided to apply to the Privy Council in London. The appeal is a vestigial remnant of an appeal to the sovereign in person.
On 12 December 1966, the State Executive Council (Premier Bolte's cabinet) announced that Ryan would hang on 9 January 1967.
Opas, convinced of Ryan's innocence, agreed to work without pay. Opas consulted the Ethics Committee of the Bar Council to seek approval to make a public appeal for a solicitor prepared to brief him, as Opas was prepared to pay his travel, other expenses and appear without fee. The Committee said that this would be touting for business and was unethical. Opas argued that a man's life was at stake and he could not see how he would be touting when no payment was involved. Opas defied the ruling and on national radio sought an instructor. Opas was inundated with offers and accepted the first application, being from Ralph Freadman. Alleyne Kiddle was in London completing a master's degree and she agreed to take a junior brief without a fee.
On 4 January 1967, the State Executive Council stayed Ryan's execution pending an approach to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council.
Opas then flew to London to present Ryan's case to the highest judges in the Commonwealth. Ryan's execution was delayed by Premier Bolte awaiting the Privy Council's decision.
On 23 January 1967, the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council refused Ryan leave for appeal.
On 25 January 1967, the State Executive Council set Ryan's execution date as 31 January.
On 30 January 1967, Justice Starke ordered a stay of execution following an affidavit from former prisoner John Tolmie who said he saw a warder fire a shot from Number 1 tower at the time of the murder. The following day Tolmie was charged with perjury for making a false affidavit; he was not in gaol at the time of the escape.
Bolte scheduled Ryan's execution for the morning of Friday 3 February 1967, a week before the dismissal of the appeal to the Privy Council was published in the Government Gazette.
Final appeals
The State Government of Victoria had commuted every death sentence passed since 1951, after Robert Clayton, Norman Andrews and Jean Lee were executed for the torture and murder of an old man.
Starke reported that the Premier of Victoria, Sir Henry Bolte, insisted that the death sentence be carried out. Bolte's cabinet was unanimous although there were at least four State cabinet members who opposed capital punishment.
When it became apparent that Bolte intended to proceed with the execution, a secret eleventh-hour plea for mercy was made by four of the jury members. They sent petitioning letters to the Governor of Victoria, Sir Rohan Delacombe, stating that in reaching their verdict they believed that capital punishment had been abolished in Victoria and requested that the governor exercise the Royal Prerogative of Mercy and commute Ryan's sentence of death. Such Melbourne newspapers as The Age, The Herald and The Sun all ran campaigns opposing the hanging of Ryan. The papers ran a campaign of spirited opposition on the grounds that the death penalty was barbaric. Churches, universities, unions and a large number of the public and legal professions opposed the death sentence. An estimated 18,000 people participated in street protests and around 15,000 signed a petition against the hanging. The Australian Broadcasting Commission (ABC) suspended radio broadcasts for two minutes as a protest.
Bolte denied all requests for mercy and was determined that Ryan would hang. On the afternoon of the eve of Ryan's hanging, Opas appeared before the trial judge, Justice John Starke, seeking a postponement of the execution due to the opportunity to test new proffered evidence. Opas pleaded with Starke and said, "Why the indecent haste to hang this man until we have tested all possible exculpatory evidence?" Starke, however, rejected the application.
Attorney-General, Sir Arthur Rylah, rejected a second plea to refer Ryan's case to the Full Court under Section 584 of the Crimes Act. A third attempt to save Ryan, in the form of a petition presented at the Crown Solicitor's office pleading for clemency, was also rejected. Close secrecy surrounded all government moves on the Ryan case. That evening, a former Pentridge prisoner, Allan John Cane, arrived in Melbourne from Brisbane in a new bid to save Ryan. An affidavit by Cane, which was presented to Cabinet, says he and seven prisoners were outside the cookhouse when they saw and heard a prison warder fire a shot from the No. 1 guard post at Pentridge Prison the day Hodson was shot. Police had interviewed these prisoners but none were called on at the trial to give evidence. Cane was immediately rushed into conference with his solicitor, Bernard Gaynor, who tried to contact cabinet ministers informing them of Cane's arrival. Gaynor telephoned Government House seeking an audience with the Governor, Sir Rohan Delacombe. However, Gaynor was told by a Government House spokesman that nobody would be answering calls until 9 am (one hour after Ryan's scheduled execution). Gaynor said Cane's mission had failed.
At 23:00, Ryan was informed that his final petition for mercy had been rejected. More than 3,000 people gathered outside Pentridge Prison in protest of the hanging. Shortly before midnight more than 200 police were at the prison to control the demonstrators.
Execution
On the night before the execution Ryan was transferred to a cell just a few steps away from the gallows trapdoor. Father Brosnan was with him most of this time. At the eleventh hour Ryan wrote his last letters to his family members, to his defence counsel, to the Anti-Hanging Committee and to Father Brosnan. The letters were handwritten on toilet paper inside his cell and neatly folded. In the documentary film The Last Man Hanged Ryan's letter to The Anti-Hanging Committee is read out loud to the public. Ryan wrote: "I state most emphatically that I am not guilty of murder." Ryan's last letter was to his daughters; it contained this line: "With regard to my guilt I say only that I am innocent of intent and have a clear conscience in the matter."
Ryan refused to have any sedatives but he did have a nip of whisky, and walked calmly onto the gallows trapdoor. Ronald Ryan's last words were to the hangman: "God bless you, please make it quick."
Ryan was hanged in 'D' Division at Pentridge Prison at 8:00 am on Friday 3 February 1967.
A nationwide three-minute silence was observed by Ryan's supporters at the exact time that Ryan was hanged. Ryan's fellow prisoners staged their own protest – they refused to get out of bed, staged a sit-in, refused to work or obey orders. There was an eerie silence throughout the prison.
Later that day, Ryan's body was buried in an unmarked grave within the "D" Division prison facility.
Forty years later in 2007, the Victorian Premier John Brumby granted permission for Ryan's family members to have his body exhumed from Pentridge Prison after Hodson's daughter jumped and danced on Ryan's grave. Ryan's remains were cremated and placed next to his deceased ex-wife in Portland Cemetery.
Appearance and personality
Ryan was a slightly built man who stood 5 ft 8 in (173 cm) tall. He had suffered an injury to his left eye as a child resulting in a permanent droop of his left eyelid. He favoured expensive clothing, aiming to impress others, and aspired to be known as Australia's leading criminal. He was of above-average intelligence and was described by the people who knew him and prison authorities as a likable character but also a compulsive gambler.
Arresting officer Det Harding described Ryan as "tough, plausible and particularly difficult to question, he gave nothing away until he realised the game was up".
Later statements
Nineteen years after Ryan's execution, a former warder, Doug Pascoe, claimed on air to Channel 9 and other media that he had fired a shot during Ryan's escape bid. Pascoe said his shot may have accidentally killed his fellow prison guard, Hodson. Pascoe had not told anyone that he fired a shot during the escape because at that time, "I was a 23-year-old coward." In 1986, he tried to sell his story but his claim was dismissed by police because his rifle had a full magazine after the shooting and he was too far away.
Pascoe's claim was rejected by another former warder, Bill Newman. Newman claimed that he was in Tower 3 the afternoon of the escape and that Pascoe was in Tower 4. Tower 3 was 200 metres from the shooting and Tower 4 was 500 metres away. Police produced a photocopy of the duty roster for the day that showed that Newman was meant to have been in Tower 3 and Pascoe in Tower 4.
Though Opas claimed that the staff duty roster was virtually meaningless on the day of the shooting because prison officers were taking turns sitting in for their colleagues while they attended the annual staff Christmas party, Newman said he returned to his tower (3) at 1.45 pm and later signed statements for the police. According to the duty roster Robert Paterson was not on duty either but in fact he was on duty – he was the one that fired a shot.
Retired prison governor Ian Grindlay said that Ryan told him "straight out" that he had shot but not meant to kill Hodson.
Sister Margaret Kingston of the Good Shepherd Convent in Abbotsford, said Ryan told her that he had shot Hodson, but had not meant to kill him.
Eyewitness
Twenty-five years after being a witness in Ryan's trial, where he gave evidence claiming to have seen him commit the murder, a man broke his silence, for fear that the alleged killer was becoming a latter-day Ned Kelly. Les Watt wrote to The Australian: "Let me assure you and your readers that Ryan did kill Hodson." Watt spoke out after reading Philip Opas' comments and the latter's autobiography. Watt was one of four witnesses to testify seeing Ryan fire a shot. Watt said that it might well be proper for Opas to leave the bar as his emotional involvement with the case had certainly distorted the facts, leading as it had to the suggestion that Ryan might not have fired the shot that killed Hodson. Watt, on the contrary, said that he saw Ryan take aim and fire and then saw Hodson fall flat on his face and not move. "It was a sickening sight. I also witnessed a slight puff of smoke come from the carbine Ryan used. This was probably as a result of a bullet passing through a well-oiled barrel bore."
Case for innocence
An Australian criminologist, Gordon Hawkins, the director of Sydney University's Institute of Criminology, doubts the damning validity of the "unsigned confessions" of Ryan in a television film documentary, Beyond Reasonable Doubt. Although verbal confessions are not permissible in court, in the 1960s the public—and therefore the jury—were much more trusting of the police. As to whether as a result an innocent man was hanged, there is at least a reasonable doubt following revelations of police corruption uncovered by various Australian police royal commissions. Australian police have to record or tape all interviews they carry out in connection with a crime. The police had no evidence of these unsigned verbal confessions. Ryan signed only a statement saying that he would not be giving any statements, verbal or written, to anyone except his lawyer. Hawkins questions why Ryan, a seasoned criminal, would suddenly feel the need to tell all to the police.
In 1993, a former Pentridge prisoner, Harold Sheehan, claimed he had witnessed the shooting but had not come forward at the time. Sheehan saw Ryan on his knees when the shot rang out and, therefore, Ryan could not have inflicted the wound that had killed Hodson, which passed in a downward trajectory.
All prison-authorised M1 carbine rifles, including that seized by Ryan from Lange, were issued loaded with eight rounds ball. Seven of the eight were accounted for in Ryan's case. If the eighth fell onto the floor of the prison watch-tower when Ryan cocked the rifle with the safety catch on, thereby ejecting a live round, then the bullet that killed Hodson must have been fired by a person other than Ryan.
In a letter, "Opas on Ryan – The innocence of Ronald Ryan", written to the Victorian Bar Association and published in the Victorian Bar News (Spring 2002), Opas responded to an assertion made by Julian Burnside, in reviewing Mike Richard's book The Hanged Man, that Ryan was guilty, but that while the verdict was correct the punishment was wrong.
Opas disagreed with this assertion, refusing to believe that at any time Ryan confessed to anyone that he fired a shot and denying the existence of any evidence whatsoever that Ryan ever confessed guilt to anyone, either verbally or in writing.
Ryan gave evidence and swore that he did not fire at Hodson. He denied firing a shot at all. Ryan denied the alleged verbal confessions said to have been made by him. Opas says the last words Ryan said to him were; "We've all got to go sometime, but I don't want to go this way for something I didn't do."
On 26 March 2003, just months prior to his death, Catholic priest Father John Brosnan was asked on ABC Radio by journalist Kellie Day about Ryan, who was believed to have fired the fatal shot during the prison breakout. Brosnan said; "No, I won't make a hero out of him. He caused a situation. I don't know whose bullet killed who, but a friend of mine died. But I'll tell you what, he had heroic qualities." Father Brosnan said. "George was a nice fellow, but his wife had left him, taking their thirteen-year-old daughter with her, and he didn't have much of a life. I used to talk to him at Pentridge and drop in to see him in St Kilda sometimes to cheer him up."
On 1 March 2004, in an interview with the Australian Coalition Against Death Penalty (ACADP), Opas said: "I want to put the record straight. I want the truth told about Ronald Ryan – that an innocent man went to the gallows. I want the truth to be made available to everyone, for anyone young and old, who may want to do research into Ryan's case or research on the issue of capital punishment. I will go to my grave firmly of the opinion that Ronald Ryan did not commit murder. I refuse to believe that at any time he told anyone that he did".
On 23 August 2008, Philip Opas QC, died after a long illness at the age of 91. Opas maintained Ryan's innocence to the end. Opas asked Australian Coalition President Dorina Lisson to keep fighting to clear Ryan's name. According to Ms Lisson, she and others are determined to have Ryan's murder conviction overturned because there is no scientific ballistic forensic evidence to prove Ryan guilty of murder, that a wrongly convicted man was hanged based solely on unsigned unrecorded unproven "hearsay" allegations of verbals/confessions.
For 35 years, Barry Jones, who was a member of both the Victorian and Federal Parliaments refused to comment publicly on Ryan's hanging. Mr Jones broke his silence in 2002 at the launch of Mike Richards' book, The Hanged Man. Mr Jones says he remains "unsure" of whether Ryan ever pulled the trigger. "It seemed to me that there was probably a reasonable doubt in the case," he said. Mr Jones, also the former secretary of the Victorian Anti-Hanging Committee says he believes Ryan's hanging was an attempt by then Victorian Premier Henry Bolte, to push his law and order agenda.
Justice Starke, the judge at Ryan's trial and a committed abolitionist, was convinced of Ryan's guilt but did not personally think that he should hang. Until his death in 1992, Starke remained troubled about Ryan's hanging and would often ask his colleagues if they thought he did the right thing. Philip Opas' junior in the trial, Brian Bourke, was filmed in 2005 saying: ″One of the problems of Ryan's trial was an alleged admission that he made on the plane back to the homicide fellows. That sort of thing can't happen now, because they've got to be recorded on tape, but whether he made the admission or was verballed, I don't know. He was a pretty talkative fellow, he might have. I didn't have much doubt about his guilt.″
Bibliography
Books
- Dickins, Barry, Last Words: The Hanging of Ronald Ryan, Hardie Grant Publications, February 2017, ISBN 9781743792780
- Ayling, Jack, Nothing but the Truth: The life and times of Jack Ayling, Chippendale, Pan MacMillan ISBN 978-0-330-27466-1
- Dickens, Barry, Guts and Pity – The Hanging that ended Capital Punishment in Australia, Currency Press, Sydney, 1996 ISBN 0-86819-424-7
- Grindlay, Ian, Behind Bars: Memoirs of Jail Governor, Ian Grindlay, Southdown Press, Melbourne
- Hansen, Brian, The Awful Truth, Brian Hansen Publications, 2004 ISBN 1-876151-16-1,
- Morton, James & Lobez, Susanna, Dangerous to Know, Melbourne University Press, 2009, ISBN 978-0-522-85681-1
- Opas, Philip, Throw away my wig: an autobiography of a long journey with a few sign posts, 1997 ISBN 1-876074-06-X
- Prior, Tom, Bolte by Bolte, Craftsman Publishing, 1990 ISBN 1-875428-00-3
- Prior, Tom, A knockabout priest: the story of Father John Brosnan, Hargreen, North Melbourne, 1985, ISBN 0-949905-23-2
- Richards, Mike, The Hanged Man – The Life and Death of Ronald Ryan, Scribe Publications, Melbourne, 2002, ISBN 0-908011-94-6
- Sharpe, Alan, The giant book of Crimes that shocked Australia, ISBN 1-86309-018-5
- Silvester, John, Tough; 101 Australian Gangsters, Floradale & Sly Ink, Camberwell, 2002, ISBN 0-9579121-2-9
- Tennison, Patrick, Defence Counsel; Cases in the Career of Philip Opas, Q.C., Hill of Content, Melbourne, 1975, ISBN 0-85572-068-9, pp 96–170.
Pamphlets
- Whiticker, Alan J., Ronald Ryan: Last Man Hanged, New Holland Publishers Australia, 2013, pp. 26.
Plays
- The Blood of Helmut Lange – The Unjustified Execution of Ronald Ryan, The Factory Theatre Crime Scenes
- Barry Dickins, Remember Ronald Ryan: A Dramatic Play Currency Press, Sydney, 1994, ISBN 0-86819-392-5
- Barry Dickins, Ryan: A Monologue, La Mama Courthouse, 2015
Film and television documentaries
- The Last Man Hanged, 1993 historical documentary, Australian Broadcasting Corporation
- The Last of the Ryans, 1997 television movie, Crawford Productions
- Beyond Reasonable Doubt – The Case of Ronald Ryan, 1977 documentary series, Australian Film Commission
- Odd Man Out – The Story of Ronald Ryan, three-part television mini-series
- Who Hung Ronald Ryan? Australian Broadcasting Corporation Film, 1987 documentary film on Ryan's execution
- Real Prison Breaks, 2010 television series,
Other
An Epiphany Window was installed at St James the Great Anglican Church a few weeks after the execution. It was created by the artist Miroslav "Dismas" Zika, who etched an inscription in Latin into the glass towards the base of the window, a translation of which in English is rendered "Dismas made this in 1967 at the beginning of the month when Bolte, scandalous, arrogant, was demanding Ryan suffer capital punishment." Bolte considered this objectionable. Sir Frank Woods, Anglican Archbishop of Melbourne, apologised to the Premier, clarifying that the inscription had neither been included in the original design brief, nor had any "official authorisation", and that the offending inscription would be removed. Zika remained unrepentant.
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{{cite web}}
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- Opas, Philip, Throw away my wig: an autobiography of a long journey with a few sign posts
- "Eyewitness breaks 25 year silence, Ryan killed warder with rifle", The Australian, 4 February 1992
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External links
- Ronald Ryan at Find a Grave
- "New resting place for Ronald Ryan", National Nine News, 29 October 2007
- Ewart, Heather, "35th anniversary of Australia's last execution", 7.30 Report, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 14 March 2002
- Norden, Fr. Peter, "Remembering a hanging", Jesuit Communications Australia, 10 September 2007
- Opas, Dr. Philip, "Correspondence – The Innocence of Ronald Ryan"
- "Ryan, Ronald Joseph (1925–1967)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 16, Melbourne University Press, 2002, p. 157.
- People executed for murder
- People executed by Australia by hanging
- Converts to Roman Catholicism from Anglicanism
- Australian Roman Catholics
- Criminals from Melbourne
- People executed by Victoria (state)
- Executed Australian people
- Escapees from Victoria (state) detention
- Australian people convicted of murder
- 20th-century executions by Australia
- People convicted of murder by Victoria (state)
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- People educated at Salesian College (Rupertswood)