Christopher Dale Flannery

Christopher Dale Flannery
Born 1948 (1948)
Brunswick, Victoria, Australia
Died circa 9 May 1985 (presumed)
Other names Mr Rent-a-Kill
Occupation Hitman, Bodyguard
Criminal penalty 7 years imprisonment
Spouse(s) Kathleen Flannery (2 children)
Conviction(s) Housebreaking, Assault, Car theft, Rape

Christopher Dale Flannery, aka Mr. Rent-A-Kill (born 1948 – missing and believed murdered since 9 May 1985[1]) is alleged to have been an Australian hitman. Flannery was born in Brunswick, Victoria.

Juvenile Crime

Flannery left school at the age of fourteen and received his first criminal conviction later that year. At 17, he was convicted of housebreaking, car theft, assault against police, carrying firearms and rape and was sentenced to seven years imprisonment.[2]

Criminal career

In 1974, Flannery and two other men were alleged to have committed an armed robbery on a David Jones store in Perth. They were arrested in Sydney by former Detective Sergeant Roger Rogerson. It has been alleged that Flannery paid a bribe to Rogerson to escape conviction.[3] Flannery was extradited to Perth but acquitted at trial. However, he was jailed on an outstanding Victorian warrant for rape.

Mr Rent-A-Kill

On his release from prison, he became a bouncer at Mickey's Disco, a night club in St Kilda, but was quickly bored by the work and moved into contract killing, hence the moniker "Mr Rent-A-Kill". According to police, one of his first jobs was the murder of barrister Roger Anthony Wilson. In August 1980, Flannery, Mark Alfred Clarkson and Kevin John Henry ("Weary") Williams were arrested and charged with Wilson's murder.[4] Wilson's body was never found but police alleged that the trio had forced him off the road, abducted him and taken him to Pakenham, where Flannery took him into the bush to shoot him. Flannery is said to have missed and Wilson, bleeding profusely from a head wound, tried to escape. Flannery is then alleged to have gone "mad" and emptied his gun into Wilson's head and back.[5] In October 1981, Flannery, Clarkson and Williams were all acquitted. As Flannery left the court, detectives from New South Wales Police immediately arrested him for the murder of Sydney brothel owner Raymond Francis "Lizard" Locksley, who had been murdered at Menai on 11 May 1979. In 1982 a jury failed to reach a verdict and a retrial was adjourned until 18 April 1984. Flannery was subsequently acquitted.

Flannery's trial had been scheduled for 31 January 1984. However, he was provided with a medical certificate by Geoffrey Edelsten certifying that he was unfit for trial in order to avoid Flannery being tried by a particular judge. Edelsten was convicted on 27 July 1990 for perverting the course of justice and also for soliciting Flannery to assault a former patient.[6] Edelsten was jailed for a year.[7]

After his acquittal, Flannery bought a house in Turrella and brought his wife, Kathleen, and children up from Melbourne. Flannery went to work as a bodyguard for Sydney crime figure George Freeman. In late 1984, he became embroiled in the Sydney "gang wars" and sided with Neddy Smith. Smith claims that Flannery became paranoid and "was running around shooting at anyone he thought had anything to do with (Barry) [McCann] or Tom Domican".[3] He claims that police attempted to negotiate an end to the gang wars but that Flannery refused to stop the killings. At one meeting, according to Smith, Flannery told a high ranking police officer, "You're not a protected species, you know you're not a fucking koala!"[8]

On 6 June 1984, Flannery is alleged to have been the gunman in the attempted murder of a Sydney Drug Squad detective, Michael "Mick" Drury. Drury had been the undercover agent involved in a police drug operation which resulted in charges being laid against Flannery's friend, Alan Williams. Williams later testified that Flannery had attempted to bribe Drury through Roger Rogerson in order to get the charges against Williams dismissed. When Drury rejected repeated attempts at bribery, Williams claims, he agreed to pay Flannery and Rogerson $AU50,000 each to murder Drury. On what he thought was his deathbed, Drury told detectives he believed he was shot because of "the Melbourne job".[9]

As Flannery and his wife walked towards their house on 27 January 1985, the house was sprayed with 30 shots from an Armalite rifle. No one was seriously injured, though Flannery was shot through the hand as he pushed his wife's head down and he suffered some other minor abrasions.[10] Flannery blamed Tom Domican who was later charged and convicted of attempted murder, but the conviction was overturned on appeal.[11] Rogerson was seen in the area in the days after the shooting and was interviewed by police. He claimed he was just curious to see what kind of damage such a gun could do. He was released without charge. Drury was also interviewed, but was not considered a serious suspect.[12]

On 23 April 1985, Flannery was allegedly sent to murder Tony "Spaghetti" Eustace. Eustace was found by two school children who were returning home from sports training at about 7 pm. He had been shot six times in the back outside the Airport Hilton in North Arncliffe and was lying beside his gold Mercedes, bleeding profusely. He was rushed to hospital. Police attempted to speak to him, asking who had shot him, but Eustace told them to "fuck off" and died a short time later.[13]

By the time of his disappearance and presumed death, police stated that they believed Flannery to have been responsible for up to a dozen murders.[14]

Disappearance

Not long after the attack on his family, Flannery moved into an inner Sydney apartment which was ironically close to CIB headquarters. On 9 May 1985 Flannery received a phone call from his boss, George Freeman asking for a meeting. Flannery, in leaving for the rendezvous, was unable to start his car. Flannery contacted Freeman who told him to catch a taxi. Flannery obeyed, and after exiting the Connaught onto Liverpool St was never seen again. It has been claimed by former gang associate Neddy Smith that police may be responsible for the disappearance of Christopher Flannery, as Smith noticed Flannery enter a police car with officers he knew on 9 May. The police officers had allegedly offered to take Flannery to meet with George Freeman.

Coroner's findings

On 6 June 1997, New South Wales State Coroner Greg Glass handed down the finding that Flannery was murdered most probably on or about 9 May 1985. Glass also found that the key to solving the murder lay with a former New South Wales Police Force detective-sergeant, Roger Rogerson.[15] On 22 February 2004, Rogerson told the Australian television program Sunday programme, "Flannery was a complete pest. The guys up here in Sydney tried to settle him down. They tried to look after him as best they could, but he was, I believe, out of control. Maybe it was the Melbourne instinct coming out of him. He didn't want to do as he was told, he was out of control, and having overstepped that line, well, I suppose they said he had to go but I can assure you I had nothing to do with it."[14] Flannery left a wife and two children.[14]

Flannery in popular culture

References

  1. "Underbelly comes to town". The Sydney Morning Herald. 21 December 2008.
  2. Goodsir, D. Line of Fire: The inside story of the controversial shooting of undercover policeman Michael Drury, Allen & Unwin, Crows Nest, 1995, p.66 ISBN 978-1-86448-002-3
  3. 1 2 Smith, A.S. Catch and Kill Your Own: Behind the Killings the Police Don't Want to Solve, Pan Macmillan Australia, Sydney, 1997 ISBN 978-0-330-35627-5
  4. James Morton & Russell Robinson 2010. Shotgun and Standover: The Story of the Painters and Dockers, Pan Macmillan Australia, ISBN 978-1-4050-3986-4
  5. Goodsir, D. Line of Fire: The inside story of the controversial shooting of undercover policeman Michael Drury, Allen & Unwin, Crows Nest, 1995 ISBN 978-1-86448-002-3 p.70-72
  6. Grabosky, Peter N.; Russell G. Smith (1998). Crime in the Digital Age: Controlling Telecommunications and Cyberspace. Transaction Publishing. p. 27. ISBN 0-7658-0458-1. Retrieved 2008-03-26.
  7. "Edelsten tries to re-enter the ranks of doctors". The Age. 25 November 2003. Retrieved 2008-03-21.
  8. Smith, A.S. Catch and Kill Your Own: Behind the Killings the Police Don't Want to Solve, Pan Macmillan Australia, Sydney, 1997, p. 169; ISBN 978-0-330-35627-5
  9. Goodsir, D. Line of Fire: The inside story of the controversial shooting of undercover policeman Michael Drury, Allen & Unwin, Crows Nest, 1995, ISBN 978-1-86448-002-3
  10. Domican v. The Queen
  11. Report on Investigation into Use of Informers p. 102
  12. Goodsir, D. Line of Fire: The inside story of the controversial shooting of undercover policeman Michael Drury, Allen & Unwin, Crows Nest, 1995 ISBN 978-1-86448-002-3
  13. Goodsir, D. Line of Fire: The inside story of the controversial shooting of undercover policeman Michael Drury, Allen & Unwin, Crows Nest, 1995, p.168-170 ISBN 978-1-86448-002-3
  14. 1 2 3 Sunday: Ganglands Part 2 transcript
  15. Inquest findings into the disappearance and suspected death of Christopher Dale Flannery, New South Wales Government, 1997

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/22/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.