This was the missing link that puzzled me. Bryant's mother, Carleen, didn't come to the rescue of her son. Was it because she too was convinced that he was guilty?
The media even tried to make out like his family had deserted him. A Tasmanian journalist
claimed that "she, (Carleen Bryant), told Martin that unless he confessed to the crimes, she and his
younger sister Lindy would commit suicide".
These were words that might be uttered by a very emotional woman who was convinced her only son was capable
of the horrible murders before he was even found guilty. Strange words indeed from a mother.....but
as Joe Vialls points out, Carleen vehemently denies the claim and as the saga continues we find out
how senior police, brought this woman in for questioning before Martin Bryant was even identified.
She has been refused visits to see her son who, as yet, has never been tried for the Port Arthur
Massacre, only accused before a hearing and sentenced after his "not guilty" plea was denied in order
to avoid a trial by jury. A trial which would surely have found him "not guilty" because to this very day there
has not been a single soul identify Martin Bryant as the killer. Hundreds of witnesses would have had
to have given testimony at a trial which would have exposed the inadequacies of the justice system in
this country and proved that not only could Bryant not be identified but that he was incapable of the
deed.
A crime which has been hailed as one of the worst in our history has never been properly investigated by the police, never been tried by a jury and to this day cries out for a Royal Commission to answer the leading
question..... who was the man with the long blond hair?
MARTIN BRYANT'S MOTHER SPEAKS OUT
Copyright Joe Vialls, 5 June 1999, All Rights Reserved, 45 Merlin Drive,
Carine, Western Australia 6020
On 28 April 1996 at Port Arthur in Australia, some of the best combat
shooters in the world used a total of only 64 bullets to kill 35 people,
wound 22 more, and cripple two cars. The first 19 victims in the Broad
Arrow Cafe each died from a single 5.56-mm bullet to the head, all fired in
less than 20 seconds from the right hip of a fast-moving combat shooter.
This awesome display of marksmanship was blamed on an intellectually
impaired young man called Martin Bryant, who had no shooting or military
experience at all. In the months and years following Martin's arrest, much
of the public and private strain fell on his widowed mother Carleen.
This is a very small part of Carleen Bryant's profoundly disturbing story.
Tasmanians are a hardy breed and Carleen Bryant is probably one of the
hardiest of them all. Her idea of "taking a break" this year was to
navigate her camper van alone from Tasmania to Western Australia with only
a CB radio for company, drive half way around WA looking at the sights,
then drop in on us for the afternoon before starting back eastward across
the Nullarbor Plain. Not being a radio buff, she was disappointed that her
CB "wasn't working too well" but a quick twist of the squelch knob fixed
that, and Carleen slowly accelerated out of Perth, happily listening to
about twenty truckies chattering incoherently over her CB loudspeaker on
channel nine.
Life has been hard for Carleen, probably hardest of all when she realised
that her son Martin needed speech therapy as a child, and other remedial
help later which led to an invalid pension. As a mother she handled
difficult situations well enough but her husband Maurice found it much
harder. He was a devoted husband and father and a highly organised man, but
Carleen says "it was more difficult for him. Martin was his son and fathers
expect their sons to be normal."
Hard though Maurice tried over the years
he slowly but surely became depressed and "mentioned" suicide on a number
of occasions. Then without warning in 1993 Maurice took his own life at the
family farm at Copping, but long before his death had already taken steps
to minimise its impact on Carleen and their children. Carleen was dreading
all of the paperwork after his death "because Maurice always looked after
that', but was astonished to find all of the documents she needed placed in
a single neat pile where she could easily find them.
Even more astonishing, months earlier Maurice had transferred the Hydro
account from their joint names to Carleen alone, ensuring things would run
automatically after he died. "Maurice was a very thoughtful man" Carleen
says, which indeed he was.
Life then continued as normally as possible until 8 p.m. on the evening of
28 April 1996 when two burly plain-clothes police officers knocked on her
door in Hobart and asked, "Do you have a son called Martin Bryant?" When
Carleen said yes, the officers took her down to headquarters and bombarded
her "with questions about Martin's big house in Newtown and his trips
overseas".
But despite being at Police Headquarters during the exact period
when a telephone conversation was allegedly in progress between her son at
Seascape and police negotiators in the same headquarters building, Carleen
was not asked to assist police by identifying her son's voice. She says
that at that point in time she did not know the conversation was taking
place, but was later provided with the name of the person who "assisted"
police by identifying her son's voice at 7 p.m. the same evening, a name
she provided for the author in confidence. But Carleen says it made no
sense because this particular person "hadn't spoken to Martin since he
[Martin] was twelve years old and would not know what his voice sounded
like anyway."
Shades of JFK
Bearing in mind that even the police marksmen in position around Seascape
did not discover Martin Bryant's identity until he stumbled out of the
building with his back on fire the next morning, how was it possible for
Carleen to be asked detailed questions about her son's large house and his
obscure overseas trips, at Tasmanian Police Headquarters more than twelve
hours before he first stumbled out of Seascape into the arms of waiting
police? Carleen's version of events, if chronologically correct, proves
that at least one stratospherically-placed police officer in Hobart was
already well ahead of the game. Though this sequence appears to indicate
direct police involvement in the mass murder itself, there is a more likely
explanation which Carleen was not aware of before she visited Perth.
Shortly after the murder of President John F. Kennedy in 1963, a
Christchurch, New Zealand morning newspaper printed a detailed story it
received on the New York news wire about Kennedy's "assassin" Lee Harvey
Oswald. There was a major problem with this news story, because at the
time the New Zealand newspaper went to press in Christchurch, Lee Harvey
Oswald had only just been arrested in a Dallas cinema for the alleged
murder of a Texas policeman called Tibbet. Several more hours passed before
Dallas police even accused Oswald of the murder of President Kennedy. So
the Christchurch newspaper inadvertently printed an impossible story, a
concocted lie "seeded" onto the New York news wire too early by the real
murderers, who forgot that international time zones and thus real-time
would allow the New Zealand newspaper to print their pre-arranged cover
story hours before the events happened. That single critical planning error
proved conclusively Lee Harvey Oswald was only a fall-guy, a patsy arrested
and charged on cue by the unwitting Dallas Police Force.
It was impossible timing and too many background details which proved
conclusively that Lee Harvey Oswald was a patsy, and the same impossible
timing and background details prove conclusively that Martin Bryant was
used for identical purposes. While Carleen was being interrogated at Hobart
Police Headquarters at 8 p.m. on 28 April, all the terrified staff and
survivors at Port Arthur knew for sure was that the shooter was a man with
long blonde hair. There are thousands of men with long blonde hair in
Australia, each equally likely to be the man on the trigger, so there was
no innocent way police could possibly have already singled out Martin
Bryant or obtained knowledge about his obscure overseas travels. So between
the time of the mass murder at 1.30 p.m. and Carleen's interrogation at 8
p.m., someone very carefully pointed the finger, and "seeded" Tasmanian
Police Headquarters with an impossible amount of personal information about
her son, many hours before he was first positively identified stumbling out
of Seascape the next day. Ever since that frightening interrogation more
than three years ago, Carleen Bryant, mother of the accused, has been
denied a copy of, or even access to, the telephone tape alleged to contain
a long rambling conversation between her son and police negotiators. Why?
Nothing could prepare any mother for what happened next. When Martin was
transferred from the Royal Hobart Hospital to Risdon Prison as a remand
prisoner, Carleen had visiting rights but no privacy with him at all. She
was shocked to see her son, badly burned in the Seascape fire and still in
great pain, bound to his wheelchair by leather straps. Martin told her that
he had asked to have the painful restraints removed but was refused. When
Carleen asked who refused, her son nodded towards the prison officers, one
of whom then leaned towards Carleen and said "you cannot discuss the
[Risdon Prison] staff". Carleen, suitably intimidated, fell silent. In fact
under the Prisons Act a remand prisoner can be restrained on the orders of
the Prison Superintendent, but only if under escort outside the prison, or
if he poses "a significant danger to others". By no interpretation could an
entirely passive intellectually impaired young man with third-degree burns
to his back and left side, isolated behind bullet proof glass, be
considered a significant danger to others. But at that time Carleen Bryant
did not understand the prison rules and was unable to help her son ease his
pain.
Nowadays the only coherent reason for Martin's illegal restraint is
obvious. Prison officers and psychiatrists, in the manner of the Spanish
inquisition, were determined to intimidate and physically punish
intellectually impaired Martin Bryant until he finally "confessed" to a
series of crimes in which he played no active part. That such obscene and
barbaric treatment is illegal under Australian and international law, and
justifiably condemned by Amnesty International as both physical and
psychological torture, does not appear to have impeded the Tasmanian
authorities at all.
It was only at this point while describing the treatment of her son in
Risdon Prison that Carleen's composure slipped for a second and she shed a
tear or two. "He was so terribly lonely" she said, briskly wiping the tears
from her cheeks before continuing. It was a cry from the heart of a mother
who had been unable to help her son in distress, a cry that went home on
this author as surely as a razor-sharp knife.
Next Carleen discussed Martin's actual injuries, because those reported by
the media were wholly inconsistent with the official story of the day, i.e.
that Martin Bryant had set fire to Seascape, panicked, then fought his way
out of the blazing building. Carleen didn't know exactly why I was asking,
but confirmed that the burns were restricted to "his back and left hand
side", pointing to her own left side to illustrate exactly where. "Were
there any burns at all to his face, chest, arms or hands?" I asked. "Oh no,
none at all" Carleen replied confidently. As any fireman will confirm, the
official story of the day is mission impossible. Any person fighting his
way out of a burning building does so head-first so that he can see where
he is going, arms and hands held high to protect his face from the flames
and to deflect burning debris away from his body. It is an instinctive
survival response that we all use in life-threatening fire situations.
Minor first-degree burns are enough to make anyone retreat from a fire
immediately, the split-second that nerve endings send warning impulses to
the brain. Despite this known fact, Martin Bryant remained inside Seascape
until burning debris had caused horrific third-degree burns to his back and
side, but not to his face, chest, arms or hands. How? The only possible
scientific answer is that Martin was lying face-down, either comatose or
drugged, and remained that way as burning debris from the first floor above
(where the fire started) fell onto his back until the intense pain finally
forced him back to consciousness. This is confirmed by video footage of
Martin leaving the building, stumbling along like a dazed drunk. Those
readers asking themselves "but who else could have started the fire if
Martin Bryant was unconscious and the only man left alive inside Seascape,
and how did they do it?" might like to consult standard Army manuals under
the chapters headed "incendiary devices" and "radio detonators".
Carleen continued to visit Risdon Prison and made little lists of questions
she wanted Martin to answer, but most of the time felt so intimidated by
officials that some of the more important questions remained unanswered.
She says constant bombardment by officials pushing the story that "Martin
did it" started to make her believe her son may have been responsible for
the crimes, but for a number of very substantial reasons could not work out
how he could have physically committed them.
Although "Martin was making
money cutting lawns and selling his crayfish", Carleen added "Maurice did
not approve of guns and took Martin's air rifle away. He [Martin] did not
know how to shoot properly and never owned any real guns.
Carleen was also mystified by the "cache" of weapons allegedly found inside
a piano at Martin's house by police several days after the mass murder.
"When he was away on trips I used to go round there, clean the place up and
poke around as mothers tend to do" she says, "Martin knew this and he also
knew I didn't approve of guns. He would never have dared keep any in the
house." Carleen Bryant is not the only person mystified by this impossible
evidence.
Soon after the mass murder, two journalists from a prominent
newspaper illegally entered Martin's house searching for clues. Their
search included the piano in question, which contained only piano parts.
Planting false forensic evidence after the crime to "prove" guilt is far
from new and has occurred many times in the past, including the last
high-profile case the author investigated, which was the murder of
Policewomen Yvonne Fletcher outside the Libyan Embassy in London during
April 1984. The Libyans were wrongly accused of shooting her, and after the
Libyan diplomats left the Embassy to return to Tripoli, a specialist army
clearance team was sent into the building to search for booby traps or
other weapons.
The team carried out one of the most intensive searches in
British Army history, from the basement of the building to the roof, but
found absolutely no trace of guns, ammunition, explosives or any other
incriminating materials. So imagine the Army's stunned amazement when one
week later the Metropolitan Police Service announced that its members had
just found two loaded handguns, machine gun spare parts, and more than
three thousand rounds of ammunition inside the Libyan Embassy!
It is beyond doubt that a person or persons unknown illegally entered and
"seeded" the Libyan Embassy with damning false evidence, sometime during
the week separating the army and police searches.
For Carleen things got worse at Risdon Prison, but she vehemently denies
the claim of Tasmanian journalist Bingham that "she told Martin that unless
he confessed to the crimes, she and his younger sister Lindy would commit
suicide." in Carleen's view by that late stage any intervention of this
sort by her would have been unnecessary. "The continual pressure [from
officials] brainwashed Martin to the level where he may have started to
believe he was guilty." This is hardly surprising. Stalin's communist
thought-police in Russia crafted false beliefs like these into an art form,
and could eventually convince even the most intelligent of men they were
guilty as charged or they wouldn't be in Lubianka Prison in the first
place, would they?
Carleen's last visit to her son was during November 1997, when she was told
by prison officials and psychiatrists that "Martin no longer wants to see
you, which is his right", but at no time has Carleen been able to establish
this message actually came from her son. Martin could, for example, have
told her face to face but did not. He could also have told her over the
telephone but did not. Finally although not a fluent writer, Martin could
have sent her a brief note, but did not do so. Outraged by this procedure
Carleen says she called the prison and asked "what about my rights as a
mother?" Her question went unanswered and the line was disconnected.
Neatly manoeuvred into a subservient position by the Tasmanian authorities,
Carleen was then circumstantially forced to ask a prison psychiatrist,
whose name she provided in confidence, what she should do next, "Write to
him" was the answer and Carleen proceeded to do so, at least once and
sometimes twice a month.
Still she received no word from her son and during
a later visit to the named psychiatrist, Carleen asked what had happened to
her last letter. The psychiatrist flicked through his clip board and found
her opened letter to Martin near the bottom of his papers. "I sent that
three weeks ago" Carleen protested, to which the psychiatrist merely said
"sorry".
It is highly relevant here to ask why any psychiatrist should still be
communicating with her son and handling his mail. After all, the crux of
the psychiatric evidence against Martin Bryant was that he was "fit to
plead", i.e. of sound mind. A prisoner of sound mind has rights, one of
which is the right not be to forced to act as a guinea pig for
psychiatrists busily writing learned papers for local or international
psychiatric journals about a crime he could not have committed. Had Martin
Bryant been found to be of unsound mind and incarcerated in a mental
hospital instead, one might reasonably expect such close psychiatric
attention, but not inside Risdon Prison as a convicted felon serving life
imprisonment.
The psychiatrists will probably defend their intrusive and
manipulative position by claiming "Martin Bryant asked to speak to us." No
doubt he did, after contact with all other prisoners and visitors was first
effectively severed, i.e. de-facto solitary confinement. No man including
Martin Bryant is an island, and all normally need periodic verbal
interactions with others to remain sane in the long term. If the only other
humans you are allowed to meaningfully interact with are psycho-scientists,
the chances are you will eventually ask to speak to them.
The bizarre behaviour of the psychiatrists involved in the Port Arthur case
has presented their profession with an impossible credibility problem.
Setting aside meaningless psychiatric mumbo jumbo and double talk, the act
of entering a historic site and killing or wounding fifty-seven citizens is
perhaps the ultimate hallmark of absolute insanity, rendering the
perpetrator permanently unfit to plead. Indeed, it is difficult for most
normal people to imagine a more insane act. So when Tasmanian and Victorian
psychiatrists declared Martin fit to plead, i.e. sane, at the same time
they acknowledged he could not have committed the crimes.
Nowadays Carleen Bryant wonders why the police did not go to the trouble of
properly verifying her son's new guilty pleas in early November 1996 using
standard police procedures. Many people plead guilty to crimes they could
not have committed, a situation that routinely presents police forces
around the world with a big problem, especially if the guilty pleas are
entered by a person who is intellectually impaired or otherwise mentally
deficient. Standard procedure in these circumstances is to take the suspect
out to the crime scene and ask for details of exactly how he committed the
crime(s), i.e. where each victim was standing, what sex, how many bullets,
where the weapon was reloaded, etc etc., all recorded on continuous
(Time-stamped) video.
The Victorian Police Service observed this standard
procedure meticulously in the case of Julian Knight at Hoddle Street during
1987, as did the New South Wales Police Service after a street shooting in
Wollongong in 1998. Both suspects provided ample accurate details at the
respective crime scenes on continuous video tape without prompting by
police, and both were then properly and fairly dealt with. Nearly three
years after Martin inexplicably changed his pleas to guilty in November
1996, the Tasmanian Police Service has still not verified his guilt using
this standard procedure, and its continued refusal to do so can
realistically be taken as proof of Martin Bryant's innocence.
When Carleen left Tasmania some weeks ago she was unaware that others had
recently spoken out on behalf of her son, most prominent being Brigadier
Ted Sarong DSO OBE, the former head of Australian Forces in Vietnam and one
of the world's leading experts on counter-terrorist techniques and their
application. In an interview with Frank Robson in the Sydney Morning Herald
on 10 April 1999, Brigadier Serong makes it plain that Martin Bryant could
not have been responsible for the mass murder at Port Arthur. "There was an
almost satanic accuracy to that shooting performance" he says. "Whoever did
it is better than I am, and there are not too many people around here
better than I am". He continues "Whoever did it had skills way beyond
anything that could reasonably be expected of this chap Bryant ... if it
was someone of only average skills, there would have been many less killed
and many more wounded. It was the astonishing proportion of killed to
wounded that made me open my eyes first off." Brigadier Serong believes
more than one person was involved and directly infers that the mass murder
at Port Arthur was a terrorist action designed to undermine Australian
national security. "It was part of a deliberate attempt to disarm the
population, but I don't believe John Howard or his Government were
involved. Howard is being led down a track. He doesn't know where it's
leading, and he doesn't much care..."
Some readers might consider that as a soldier Brigadier Sarong is not
qualified to comment on police matters, but they would be wrong. In
addition to his acknowledged military achievements he also raised, trained,
organised and directed a police force larger than all the police forces in
Australia combined. After returning to Australia, as he notes in his book
Defence of Australia Analysis: "I did gently but firmly decline a
suggestion that I be Victoria's Chief Commissioner of Police." Brigadier
Ted Serong is thus far better qualified to comment on the chain of events
at Port Arthur than the current commissioner of the Tasmanian Police
Service, who commands a total force of less than one thousand men, none of
whom has any knowledge of international terrorism or practical experience
of counter-terrorist techniques.
Having broken the ice and had her say in this report, might Carleen now
move on to bigger and better things, perhaps an article in the Melbourne
Age or maybe even a television interview with the fabled Ray Martin? She
says not. "After it happened I had all those [media] trucks parked at the
end of my street for a week, they wouldn't leave me alone and kept asking
for pictures." Even now Carleen Bryant remembers one persistent female
reporter who simply refused to take no for an answer. "She kept jumping
over my front fence" Carleen says, "then she would walk around the outside
of my house, tapping on the windows and calling out my name." Carleen feels
only pity and contempt for all members of the local and international media
who so brazenly vilified her son and nearly destroyed his and her lives.
As I stood by the side of the Great Eastern Highway in Perth waving goodbye
as Carleen's camper slowly accelerated towards Kalgoorlie at the start of
her lonely 2,000 mile trip back to Tasmania, I must admit to feeling a
little sorry for the Tasmanian Government and other officials when they are
finally forced to release her son Martin, which they must. Bound by his
oath as protector of the public interest, the Attorney-General in
particular is obliged to fully investigate all fresh evidence promptly and
openly or face serious legal sanctions. There are no political escape
clauses whatever. The longer the Attorney-General tries to bury fresh
evidence under the parliamentary carpet in Hobart, the more severe those
legal repercussions will be.
The only offence Martin committed on 28 April 1996 was that of being
gullible enough to be lured to Seascape by others under false pretences.
Though certainly unwise behaviour, gullibility is not yet a felony
punishable by strict life imprisonment. When Martin Bryant is released, the
Tasmanian Government and other officials will have many people to answer
to: First the millions of Australians deliberately misled into believing
that thirty five of their own countrymen were slaughtered by an
intellectually impaired young man when they demonstrably knew this was a
blatant lie; then perhaps to Martin Bryant himself who they treated as
sub-human and discreetly tortured behind the dark forbidding walls of
Risdon Prison. If the Tasmanian Government and other officials find these
unpleasant prospects daunting, I can assure them there is something far
worse looming on the horizon: Eventually they will also have to answer to
Martin Bryant's angry mum. Rather them than me...
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