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Prison escapes: Australia’s most infamous and daring jailbreaks

GIVEN the chance, hardcore crims won’t hesitate to shoot cops, hijack choppers, seduce guards, or blast their way out of our highest security jails.

The 1967 escape plot.
The 1967 escape plot.

PRISON escapes have gone the way of the Holden Kingswood in recent decades.

But not so long ago there was a time when men with nicknames like “Badness” and “Mad Dog” were making big headlines by breaking out of jail.

Modern technology has made it almost impossible to bust out of the maximum security prisons of today.

But up until the 1990s, there had been some amazing escapes from Australia’s jails.

Here are some of the more remarkable.

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Sweet talk to shootout

IT was the escape that started with a Melbourne CBD bang and ended six days later in a blazing bushland shootout.

By that time, there was one corpse, a wounded policeman, a career in ruins and a feared criminal headed back to where he belonged.

Not that the scheme’s mastermind Peter Gibb was actually the type who would have lost too much sleep over it.

He just wanted out and used his lover, rogue prison guard Heather Parker, to do it.

Gibb convinced Parker to get him explosives which he and jail buddy Archie Butterly used to blast their way through a security window at the old Melbourne Remand Centre on March 17, 1993.

Archie Butterly.
Archie Butterly.
Peter Gibb.
Peter Gibb.

The pair ran to a getaway car then travelled to a stolen motorcycle, which they crashed on Southbank Boulevard.

Young police officer Warren Treloar tried to intervene and was wounded in the ensuing shootout.

Gibb quickly grabbed the surviving Sen-Constable Treloar’s revolver before he, Butterly and Parker reunited and went bush.

The first sign police had of their whereabouts was when the Gaffneys Creek Hotel, in northeast Victoria, burnt down on the morning of March 11.

The trio had been staying there as Gibb and Parker helped Butterly recover from injuries he suffered during the breakout.

Three days later, the trio was cornered in isolated bush near Jamieson.

Gibb back in police custody after the shootout.
Gibb back in police custody after the shootout.
Heather Parker after her capture near Jamieson after assisting Peter Gibb and Archie Butterly escape from the Melbourne Remand Centre.
Heather Parker after her capture near Jamieson after assisting Peter Gibb and Archie Butterly escape from the Melbourne Remand Centre.

Butterly was to die during a shootout with members of the special operations group, but not from one of the police bullets.

The favoured scenario — never proven — is that Gibb shot the police-hating Butterly to avoid being killed in the confrontation.

Gibb was later released from prison but continued to attract trouble with the law.

He died of natural causes in 2011 in the period after being assaulted at Seaford.

Gibb and Parker leave Frankston Magistrates’ Court not long before his death.
Gibb and Parker leave Frankston Magistrates’ Court not long before his death.

Badness and his wild ways

ARMED robber Christopher Dean Binse has been one of Australia’s most prolific escapees.

The feared gunman, who this year faced court over a bizarre siege in Melbourne, has at least six convictions for escaping custody.

The most dramatic was in 1992 when he busted out of St Vincent’s Hospital.

Binse, who gave himself the nickname “Badness”, had been under heavy guard at the hospital where he was recovering from a stab wound suffered at Pentridge Prison.

A female acquaintance is suspected of smuggling a gun in to the bandit, which he then used to menace three guards before fleeing.

Christopher Binse in his early criminal days.
Christopher Binse in his early criminal days.

Binse was recaptured in Sydney five weeks later but escaped again from Parramatta jail before being recaptured.

By 1995 he was at it again from a high security unit of Barwon Prison, near Geelong.

Binse teamed up with another seasoned escapee, the killer John William Lindrea, and caused a massive security alarm with a futile bid for freedom.

The pair cut their way from their cells and into an exercise yard before disappearing.

A massive police operation swung into action.

Binse in police custody in 2005.
Binse in police custody in 2005.

The degree of police concern was evident in radio communications issued at the height of the drama.

“They will not hesitate to take on police and if they have in fact got out they may be armed,” police D24 said on air.

Binse and Lindrea were found hours later hiding under building materials inside the prison grounds.

Police had good reason for their concern.

Binse, during a previous spell on the run, had terrorised victims during armed robberies.

He celebrated his efforts by lodging a newspaper advertisement saying “Badness is back” and sending investigators postcards and Christmas greetings — one showing Santa with bags of cash.

BADNESS SPECIAL: Downfall of a modern day outlaw

MORE BADNESS: Binse sentenced | His wild crime spree

Chris Binse (centre) in police custody after his last arrest in 2012.
Chris Binse (centre) in police custody after his last arrest in 2012.

The Postcard Bandit

ARMED robber Brendon Abbott, known as the Postcard Bandit, twice went on the run in spectacular fashion.

In 1989, he and accomplice Aaron Reynolds disguised themselves as prison officers and went over the wall of West Australia’s Fremantle Prison.

They had spent many hours in a jail workshop tailoring uniforms to mimic their captors.

During his time on the run, Abbott earned his nickname by allegedly having photos taken everywhere from police stations to Uluru then sending them to detectives.

It is a claim Abbott’s supporters deny.

One of Brenden Abbott’s holiday snaps.
One of Brenden Abbott’s holiday snaps.

The second escape, from a Queensland jail in 1997, was among the most dramatic Australia has seen.

A girlfriend smuggled in “angel wire” which Abbott and four accomplices used to cut their way out.

Abbott associate Brendan Berichon, who was a free man, was the next part of the plan.

A young Brendon Berichon.
A young Brendon Berichon.

Armed with a high-powered rifle, he acted as sniper to disable a vehicle being driven by guards as the criminals scrambled to freedom at the perimeter.

Abbott’s four less resourceful accomplices — Jason Nixon, Andrew Jeffrey, Oliver Alincic and Peter Stirling — were all rounded up fairly quickly.

Their lack of discipline was personified by Jeffrey who, after big-noting about being one of the escapees in a Footscray pub, belted a man who dared argue.

Police were duly called and Jeffrey was arrested.

But Abbott — who reputedly left a letter requesting a transfer in his vacant cell — was always going to be a tricky proposition for authorities.

He and Berichon travelled to Melbourne where they lived quietly in Carlton, until the younger man injured two police in a shootout in Box Hill.

It was the beginning of the end for Abbott.

He was forced to get out of town and was arrested the next month in Darwin.

THE POSTCARD BANDIT: The true story of Brenden Abbott

Abbott back in custody.
Abbott back in custody.
Abbott the prisoner.
Abbott the prisoner.

Chopper flight to freedom

CAREER criminal John Killick was no spring chicken when he decided to spring himself from Sydney’s Silverwater Prison in 1999.

Going over the wall was not an option for Killick, but his girlfriend Lucy Dudko had another idea.

Dudko, who had seen the Charles Bronson movie Breakout, decided she could turn fiction into reality.

The 48-year-old Russian librarian did it by the book, organising a helicopter joy flight then pulling a shotgun on its horrified pilot, Tim Joyce.

Lucy Dudko after her arrest. Pic: Craig Greenhill
Lucy Dudko after her arrest. Pic: Craig Greenhill
Armed robber John Reginald Killick.
Armed robber John Reginald Killick.
Hijacked pilot Tim Joyce and the helicopter. Pic: Chris Pavlich
Hijacked pilot Tim Joyce and the helicopter. Pic: Chris Pavlich

Dudko directed Mr Joyce to head for Silverwater where he was ordered to land the chopper on an exercise yard.

Killick was waiting and quickly aboard.

In bizarre scenes, other prisoners tried to grab on to hitch a ride to freedom as guards opened fire.

Silverwater Prison.
Silverwater Prison.

Killick and Dudko spent 45 days on the run, some of it in Melbourne, before being captured in New South Wales.

Dudko copped a maximum 10-year sentence.

Killick scored an extra 15.

Killick, now 72, was this year granted parole by New South Wales authorities.

But he must still serve time in Queensland where he owes two-and-a-half years over a 1980s armed robbery.

Killick back in custody.
Killick back in custody.

The oldest trick in the book

THE escape of George Savvas was breathtakingly simple.

There were no guns or scaling of walls and it remains astounding a criminal of his calibre could have been allowed to pull it off.

After all, how could a man doing 25 years for planning to import 80kg of drugs into Sydney just walk out of Goulburn Prison.

George Savvas.
George Savvas.

In fact, Savvas was only at Goulburn because a plan to get out of jail in Maitland months earlier had led to his being moved.

Savvas ultimately got the transfer he really wanted with one of the oldest tricks in the book — a good disguise.

On July 6, 1996, he donned a false beard, moustache and wig and strolled from the visits area to freedom.

Savvas clearly wasted no time getting back into the good life but was smart enough to stay under the radar.

But, eight months later, his love of the good life brought him undone, thanks to a mysterious call to 000.

“Hello, my codename is the Black Fox,” the caller said.

“George Savvas is at the Suntory Restaurant behind the Hoyts cinema complex in Kent Street. He is a wanted man.”

It was indeed the fugitive, cocaine in pocket and enjoying some fine dining with two attractive women.

It took just two months for Savvas to start thinking of another way out but this time prison authorities were ready.

They revealed he and serial killer Ivan Milat had plotted an escape from Maitland.

Savvas was found dead the next day after, apparently, taking his own life.

Savvas appears gun shy after his capture.
Savvas appears gun shy after his capture.

Mad Dog’s wild escapades

HE was known to the public as “Mad Dog” but Russell Cox was an intelligent, calculating and resourceful criminal.

In 1975, he and two other inmates tried to bust out of Long Bay prison in Sydney, taking a warder hostage and threatening to shoot him unless the gates were opened.

As they drove to freedom, the hostage — who was shot twice in the leg during the drama — clung to the bonnet of the car before rolling off.

A Cox mugshot.
A Cox mugshot.
One of Cox’s disguises.
One of Cox’s disguises.

The jail break ended badly when the escapees’ vehicle was rammed by a truck and Cox was sentenced to life imprisonment.

So, when he was thrown into the supposedly escape-proof Katingal special security unit, the scheming man born Melville Peter Schnitzerling found a better way.

He noticed a blind spot in the exercise yard which was not under surveillance

Cox hauled himself up every day by one hand and used a hacksaw to gradually cut through a steel bar.

When the day came to run in 1977, he asked a guard at lockdown if he could return to the yard to fetch one of his sneakers.

Cox bent the bar then climbed through the roof of an exercise yard and jumped over barbed wire fences.

It was to be 11 years before he and accomplice Raymond Denning were arrested in a dramatic shootout with police in the Melbourne suburb of Doncaster.

Cox back in custody. Pic: News Ltd.
Cox back in custody. Pic: News Ltd.
Raymond John Denning after his arrest.
Raymond John Denning after his arrest.

Cox was charged with eight armed robberies committed in that period but suspected of many more.

He was later implicated in the 1982 murder of standover man Brian Kane at a Brunswick pub.

But, in the end, he didn’t do a minute extra for the Katingal escape after convincing a court that it was not a jail under the state’s Prisons Act of 1952.

Cox is now a free man and lives in Queensland.

A recent photo of Cox.
A recent photo of Cox.

Guard dies in Ryan’s prison escape

THE escape of Ronald Ryan was the beginning of one of the most significant chapters in the nation’s criminal history.

Ryan, previously a petty offender, made his move to get out of Coburg’s Pentridge Prison in 1965 with another prisoner.

As they bolted and climbed their way to freedom amid gunshots, prison officer George Hodson was fatally shot through the heart outside the jail walls.

Prisoner Ronald Ryan (left) is taken from the cells to court in February 1966. Pic: Supplied
Prisoner Ronald Ryan (left) is taken from the cells to court in February 1966. Pic: Supplied

It was to spark the biggest manhunt in the state’s history and, in a mounting climate of public fear, the pair continued to commit crimes.

Four days after busting out, they robbed a Melbourne bank but worse was to come.

His accomplice, apparently concerned he and Ryan would be given up to police, shot dead acquaintance Arthur Henderson in a Middle Park toilet.

The 1967 escape plot.
The 1967 escape plot.

Ryan and his accomplice were later captured in Sydney.

When Ryan faced trial for Mr Hodson’s murder, his defence suggested the fatal round was fired by a prison officer but Ryan was convicted and sentenced to hang.

The shell case was never found.

Ryan was eventually hanged on February 3, 1967.

The episode sparked one of the most passionate debates in Victoria’s history and was a watershed for the justice system.

No one has since been executed in Australia.

mark.buttler@news.com.au

MORE TRUE CRIME SPECIALS 

This article first appeared in True Crime Scene in November 2014.

Ryan (centre) in police custody, fully aware of his fate. Pic: News Limited
Ryan (centre) in police custody, fully aware of his fate. Pic: News Limited

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Original URL: https://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/law-order/true-crime-scene/prison-escapes-australias-most-infamous-and-daring-jailbreaks/news-story/22f0277ab8a2f3061ba4217031eeeb71