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Our Criminal History

Did Fitzgerald Inquiry net miss some big fish?

Did Fitzgerald Inquiry net miss some big fish?

Even 30 years on, you can’t look at the Fitzgerald Inquiry and what it achieved without bumping into some stunning statistics. But did it miss some big fish? Who, through fate or design, avoided getting tangled in those impressive stats?

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Six bizarre crimes from the early 1900s

Six bizarre crimes from the early 1900s

SOUTH Australia is synonymous with bizarre crimes. Here are some oddball cases from the early 1900s — from a butterfly heist to a ‘madam’ of Mount Gambier — that you’ve probably never heard of.

Seven bizarre SA crimes of the 1800s

Seven bizarre SA crimes of the 1800s

SOUTH Australia has a well-deserved reputation for weird crimes — but you probably haven’t heard of these oddball cases because they date back to the colony’s early decades.

‘I have your boy. I want £25,000 before 5 o’clock’

‘I have your boy. I want £25,000 before 5 o’clock’

FOR five long weeks the public watched and waited aghast for news after Australia’s first ever kidnap for ransom.  The terrible end to the case crushed a nation’s innocence, but the breakthrough use of forensic science ensured police got their man.  

Hanged child killer ‘in pact with the devil’

Hanged child killer ‘in pact with the devil’

IVY Mitchell was just 11 when she farewelled a young friend and walked home alone, her bare feet leaving tracks in the dust. But soon another set of prints would appear next to hers. This new set was bigger. Much bigger. A man’s boots. A killer’s boots.

Killer escapes justice after siblings slain

Killer escapes justice after siblings slain

TWO sisters raped and bashed to death, their brother shot. Did the brother-in-law who found their bodies know more about the crime? Or was it a revenge attack by a convicted criminal?

Original URL: https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/truecrimeaustralia/ourcriminalhistory/page/17