James Ryan O'Neill | |
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Born | 1947 (age 64–65) Melbourne, Victoria |
Alias(es) | Leigh Anthony Bridgart |
Conviction(s) | Murder |
Penalty | Life imprisonment |
James Ryan O'Neill (born Leigh Anthony Bridgart in 1947, Melbourne, Victoria) is an Australian convicted murderer, currently serving a life sentence in Tasmania for a murder he committed in February 1975.
Allegations have been made that O'Neill also murdered a number of other children in several Australian states from the mid 1960s whilst he was still a teenager through to the murder that he was imprisoned for in 1975. He is currently Tasmania's longest serving prisoner for a single offence.
He was the subject of a documentary The Fishermen which was broadcast on ABC TV in October 2006.
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O'Neill attended Brighton and Caulfield Grammar Schools and Scotch College following which he began working in real estate. He later became a gun dealer and is known to have associated with members of Melbourne's underworld.
Between 1965 and 1968, O'Neill (as Bridgart) worked in the opal industry which required frequent travel between Melbourne and Coober Pedy in South Australia. He then obtained work on a cattle station in the Kimberley region of Western Australia. In 1969, a business partner was playing with a pistol and accidentally shot him in the head. The bullet, which entered his right forehead and came out of his neck, destroyed his sense of smell and taste. Bridgart went on to give many reasons for the bullet wound to various people including it being the result of serving in Vietnam, that his mother's boyfriend had shot him and being an ASIO spy.
In 1971 Bridgart was charged with 12 offences involving abductions and sexual assaults of four boys in Victoria. He skipped bail and fled to Western Australia. In November 1974 he moved to Tasmania and changed his name to James Ryan O'Neill.
In February 1975 nine year old Ricky John Smith (also known as Ricky Kube) was abducted and O'Neill was one of many who helped in the search for the missing boy. Over the next two weeks five children were abducted in separate incidents but all managed to escape. Nine year old Bruce Colin Wilson was then abducted and his body was found in May 1975 near Risdon Vale. O'Neill was a suspect and after interrogation led police to the body of Ricky Smith. Although arrested for both murders he was only tried for Ricky Smith's murder following legal practice at the time. O'Neill pleaded insanity, due to his head injuries from being shot in 1969, and claimed that police had held a gun to his head to get his confession.
After deliberating for three hours, the jury found O'Neill guilty and he was jailed for life. He applied for parole in 1991 but was turned down and has not re applied. He remains Tasmania's longest serving prisoner.
In the 1990s, crime reporter Janine Widgery approached a retired Victorian detective, Gordon Davie, with a proposal to make a documentary on James O'Neill. In 1998 Davie read in a news report that O'Neill had been transferred in 1991 to the low security Hayes Prison Farm and was allowed to go fishing in the Derwent River unsupervised. The same report claimed that O'Neill had no criminal record prior to his conviction for murder. Davie thought this unlikely because Davie believed it was rare for a serial killer to start so late in life. Davie wrote to O'Neill asking for permission to interview him.
Davie interviewed him for the entire day with O'Neill claiming he had never even received so much as a parking ticket before the murders. Davie contacted Widgery and told her he didn't believe a word O'Neill had said and he thought there would be a story. Over the next four years Davie hand -recorded hundreds of hours of their conversations.
He sent those tape over to Widgery who then started asking questions in the places O'Neill mentioned. Soon Widgery located and spoke to people he had talked about on tape, people from Victoria and all the way to the Kimberley in far Western Australia. Over the next few years Widgery worked closely with the police in the Kimberley and with the National Missing Person Bureau in Canberrra and Perth. During a conversation with an owner of a large cattle station in Fitzroy Crossing, Widgery was told of a particular story where O'Neill had boasted to a fellow worker that he had "Done the Beaumont Children." The story started to gather momentum and funding. At one stage on tape from jail he mentioned a former teenage girlfriend at a beachside town she was known as Elizabeth he said she had died of a drug overdose however Widgery found her alive and very well. In fact she too talked about how O'Neill allegedly told her he had allegedly murdered a young boy on their family property. That story was the opening scene on the Documentary. Although unconfirmed Widgery has been commissioned to write a book about O'Neill and tells of disappearances she uncovered that never went to air. The book also touchs on in a bizarre twist as one of them had been investigated by Homicide Detectives as actually being an associate of O"Neills back in the early 1960s. It was nearly a case of the investigators being investigated.
The resulting documentary The Fishermen, named for O'Neills passion for fishing and Davies belief he also used the term as a euphemism for his murders, was scheduled for broadcast on ABC television on 21 April 2005 but O'Neill applied for an injunction on the grounds it was defamatory and would hurt his chances of parole. The case, O'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Roar Film Pty Ltd and Davie,[1] was heard by the Supreme Court on 22 April. The judge ruled in favour of O'Neill and granted an interlocutory injunction against the broadcast in Tasmania. As the documentary could still be viewed by 500 houses in northern Tasmania due to transmission overlap from the mainland the documentary was pulled nationwide. On 29 August 2005, the ABC's appeal against the decision was dismissed 2-1 by a full sitting of the Tasmanian Supreme Court. The ABC appealed this decision to the High Court of Australia in Sydney which in a 4-2 decision quashed the Tasmanian Supreme Court ruling allowing the program to be aired in October 2006.[2]
Chief Justice Murray Gleeson and Justice Susan Crennan wrote in their joint judgement: "It is one thing for the law to impose consequences … in the case of an abuse of the right of free speech, It is another … for a court to interfere with the right of free speech by prior restraint."
Dissenting Justice Michael Kirby wrote: "Effectively, it means that any prisoner, serving a sentence for a heinous crime is fair game for anything at all that a media organisation … might choose to publish".
In the early 1970s O'Neill told a station owner in the Kimberley and several other acquaintances that he was responsible for the disappearance of the Beaumont children. Although O'Neill claims never to have visited Adelaide, the roads to travel from Victoria to Coober Pedy pass through Adelaide. The Tasmanian Police Commissioner, Richard McCreadie was also interviewed for the documentary and claimed that O'Neill was going backwards and forwards through Adelaide frequently at about that time. When asked if he had murdered the children O'Neill replied "Look, on legal advice I am not going to say where I was or when I was there". O'Neill has never spoken on the subject again. He now denies being in South Australia between 1965 and 1968. Although Davie and McCreadie don't believe he is a prime suspect both admit the possibility that O'Neill was responsible. The South Australian police however interviewed O'Neill and discounted him as a suspect.