Whiskey Au Go Go fire

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For the similarly named nightclub in West Hollywood, California, see Whisky a Go Go

The Whisky Au Go Go Fire was a fire in the Whisky Au Go Go nightclub located in a building on the corner of Amelia Street and St Pauls Terrace in Brisbane Australia's Fortitude Valley in the early 1970s.

On 8 March 1973, the Whisky Au Go Go was firebombed, resulting in the deaths of 15 patrons[1] making it the worst mass murder in Australia at that time. The fire was started with the ignition of two nine-litre cans of petrol in the building's foyer.

[edit] After the Fire

James Richard Finch, 29, and John Andrew Stuart, 33, were arrested soon after the fire. During their court appearances they both loudly protested their innocence against evidence from Stuart's brother Daniel and another witness that the two men had tried to enlist them in a campaign to become the "Mr Bigs" of the Brisbane nightclub protection racket.

Both were convicted and sentenced, in October 1973, to life in prison. While in prison they continued to protest their innocence, fighting a protracted legal battle for release and also mutilating themselves to draw attention to their protest, including swallowing wire and Finch allowing Stuart to hack off one of his fingers.[2]

Stuart was found dead in his cell of Boggo Road Gaol after a six-day hunger strike[3] in 1979.

In 1986, Finch married terminally ill and wheelchair-bound Cheryl Cole.

Finch won his battle for release in 1988, after almost 15 years in prison. As part of his parole conditions he was deported back to his birth country, England, from where he subsequently claimed in an interview that he and Stuart were guilty of deliberately starting the fire. He stated they were dressed in black like the Black September terrorists and the fire just went "whoosh" as it started.

Cole immediately returned to Australia, and divorced in 1991; she died in 2001. Boggo Road Gaol was decommissioned in 1992.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Emergency Management Australia, Disasters Database
  2. ^ "Nightclub terror" by Russell Grenning as quoted in the Brisbane Courier Mail
  3. ^ GNT on ABC Television, Broadcast 6.30pm on 13th Sept 2004
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