Murder of Graeme Thorne

Graeme Thorne
A family photo of Graeme Thorne
Born Graeme Frederick Hilton Thorne[1]
18 December 1951[2]
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Died 7 July 1960 (aged 8)
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Body discovered Grandview Grove, Seaforth, New South Wales
16 August 1960
Nationality Australian
Known for Murder victim

In 1960, 8-year-old Australian boy Graeme Thorne was abducted and murdered. His kidnapper demanded a ransom of part of the money that his parents, Bazil and Freda Thorne, had won in an Opera House lottery. The crime, regarded as one of the most infamous in Australia's history,[3] caused massive shock at the time and attracted huge publicity,[4][5] and was the country's first known kidnapping for ransom.[6][7][8] The police investigation that led to the capture and conviction of his murderer, an immigrant named Stephen Bradley, is often considered as sophisticated, pioneering, and the start of modern forensic investigation in Australia.[3][9][10]

Background

By 1960, the construction of the Sydney Opera House was proving increasingly expensive, so the New South Wales government initiated numerous Opera House lotteries to help raise money. The 100,000 first prize (equivalent to A$2.9 million in 2017 values[11]) for Lottery 10[7] was won by Bazil Thorne (ticket 3932) in the lottery drawn on Wednesday 1 June 1960.[12] As there was no real conception of the need for privacy for lottery winners at that time, and also for the sake of transparency, images and private details of Thorne's lottery win were published on the front pages of Sydney newspapers.[7] It was also revealed that the prize would be paid by Thursday 7 July.[13]

The Thorne family consisted of Bazil, his wife Freda, older daughter Cheryl (who had been institutionalised), son Graeme (8), and younger daughter Belinda (3).[5] They lived at 79 Edward Street, a rented house in the Sydney suburb of Bondi.[4][14] Thorne's morning routine was to wait at the corner of Wellington and O'Brien streets, a walk of approximately 300 metres,[15] where a family friend, Phyllis Smith, would pick him up and take him to school with her sons.[16] On the morning of 7 July, five weeks after the win, Thorne left for school as usual at 8:30 AM, but when Smith came to collect him at 8:40, he was nowhere to be seen. Smith drove to the Thornes' home to find out if he was going to school.[16] Surprised, Freda Thorne confirmed that he was and wondered if he might have arrived at the school by some other means. Smith drove to the school, The Scots College in Bellevue Hill, but returned upon finding out Thorne was not there. A concerned Mrs Thorne then called the New South Wales police to report that him missing.[13]

Ransom demand

At 9:40 AM, 70 minutes after Thorne had left for school, a man with a noticeable foreign accent telephoned the Thorne household. Sergeant Larry O'Shea of Bondi Police had already arrived around 9:30,[16] and took the telephone from Mrs Thorne, pretending to be Mr Thorne (who was out of town in Kempsey on business). The kidnapper stated: "I have your boy. I want £25,000 before 5 o’clock this afternoon. I’m not fooling. If I don’t get the money before 5 o’clock, I’ll feed the boy to the sharks."[7][12] O'Shea expressed doubt as to his ability to get hold of such a large sum of money, being unaware that the Thornes had recently won the lottery. The caller then said that he would call back at 5:00 PM with more details, and hung up.[5] At 9:47 PM the kidnapper phoned again, but the telephone was answered by a different police officer (also pretending to be Mr Thorne),[1] who stalled for time to allow for a phone trace to happen.[16] The kidnapper started to give instructions that the money was to be put in two paper bags, but then hung up abruptly without providing further instructions.[17]

Investigation

The police had been busy during the first day of the kidnapping, conducting a concentrated search near the Thorne house in Bondi. News of the kidnapping soon leaked to Bill Jenkings of The Daily Mirror,[3] and at 8.30 PM a public appeal was made on TV from Bondi Police Station by NSW Police Commissioner Colin Delaney,[13] then briefly by an emotional Mr Thorne.[18] The next evening (Friday, 8 July), the focus of the investigation moved to Sydney's north-eastern suburbs, when his school case was found near Seaforth.[7] On 11 July, his school cap and the contents of the case were found nearby.[1] Soon after the discovery, an official reward of £5,000 was declared,[19] and another £15,000 was offered by two newspapers,[7][20] leading to a number of hoax calls.[3][16]

Investigators (now led by Ray Kelly, and with the collaboration of Sydney's underworld[3]) also followed other pieces of evidence. Some weeks before the kidnapping (on Tuesday 14 June[1][21]), a foreign man, acting as an investigator, had called at the Thornes' residence seeking a "Mr Bognor", also asking Mrs Thorne to confirm their as yet unlisted telephone number.[4] A similar looking man had also been seen numerous times by multiple witnesses in the park opposite the Thorne house.[5] Also, at 8:20 AM on the morning of the kidnapping some witnesses had seen an iridescent blue 1955 Ford Customline double-parked on the corner of Francis and Wellington streets,[1] near where Thorne was usually picked up.[12] Investigators, checking more than 270,000 registration records, established that there were 5,000 vehicles matching this general description.[1] Assuming the car had been either borrowed or stolen, officers interviewed owners, including Bradley on 24 August, about car use at that time, but he denied being in Bondi that day.[9][22]

On Tuesday 16 August, nearly six weeks after the kidnapping, and 1.5 km from where the school case was found, Thorne's body was finally discovered hidden on vacant land in Grandview Grove, Seaforth in Sydney,[23][22] and identified at the City Morgue by his father the next day.[14] Wrapped in a blue tartan picnic blanket, and tucked into a ledge, Thorne was tied with string, had been gagged with a scarf, and was still wearing his school uniform.[9][24] The blanket containing the body had been there for some time; two local children had known about it but the discovery was only made when mentioned to their parents around 7:00 PM that day.[22]

Forensic examination of the blanket showed it to be No.0639 (of 3,000) which had been manufactured at Onkaparinga Mills in South Australia, between 6 June 1955 and 19 January 1956.[1][5] It had been sold in Melbourne, and bought by a friend of Mrs Bradley for her.[25] Also, two tree types (Chamaecyparis pisifera and Cupressus glabra) that were not present at the vacant lot where the body was found were identified in the blanket, along with Pekingese and blonde human hair. Examination of the body showed cuts and abrasions and internal trauma, and it was clear that the boy had died from either asphyxiation or a skull fracture or a combination of the two.[12][1][5] Forensic experts (including from the School of Agriculture, University of Sydney[1]) then gathered time data from his body, his stomach contents, fungi on his shoes, and fly larvae (identified as Calliphora stygia).[1] Examination established that he had been murdered within 24 hours of the kidnapping,[1] and dumped soon afterwards. In addition, soil scrapings from the body and the blanket showed tiny fragments of pink limestock mortar,[9] revealing that his body had been stored under a house.

Police then searched for a house with a blue car, pink mortar, and with the two trees growing in the yard. Although cypresses could be found growing in many people's yards, the combination of the two together was rare.[3] Following a tip-off from a postman, a house was identified at 28 Moore Street in the suburb of Clontarf,[22] 1.5 km from where the body was found.[23] Police visited the house on Monday 3 October and learnt that it had been occupied by a Hungarian immigrant named Stephen Bradley. Bradley had also owned an iridescent blue 1955 Ford Customline (registration number AYO-382[1]), had a Pekingese as a family pet, and his wife had dyed blonde hair. However Bradley and his family had vacated the house on 7 July for a rented flat at 49 Osborne Street Manly,[14] and had left Australia for London with his family a week earlier, on Monday 26 September, aboard SS Himalaya.[12]

Extradition and trial

Himalaya docked at Colombo, Ceylon, on Monday 10 October, and two Sydney policemen, Sergeants Brian Doyle and Jack Bateman, were waiting for him. After 5 weeks of legal wrangling,[12] Bradley was extradited to Australia on 18 November 1960, allegedly making a verbal confession to Bateman just before the BOAC flight landed in Sydney.[1] The next day at 10:00 AM, he signed a written confession in English (although he later retracted it[7]), part of which states:

"I went out and watched the Thorne boy leaving the house and seen him for about three mornings and I have seen where he went. And one morning I have followed him to the school at Bellevue Hill. One or two mornings I have seen a womman[sic] pick him up, and take him to the school. On the day we moved from Clontarf I went out to Edward Street. I parked the car in a street I don’t know the name of the street it is off Wellington Street. I have got out from the car, and I waited on the cornor[sic], untill[sic] the boy walked down to the car."[1]

The trial at the Central Criminal Court in Sydney began on Monday 20 March 1961.[12] Examination of his past revealed that Bradley had been born Istvan Baranyay in Budapest on 15 March 1926[7] and, having survived the war and the communist takeover, he arrived in Melbourne aboard Skaugum on 28 March 1950.[6][1] A divorcee since 1948, in 1952 he had then married and had a child with Eva Maria Lazlo in Melbourne and lived with her until she died (perhaps suspiciously[7][8]) in a car accident on 26 February 1955.[6] Baranyay later anglicised and changed his name by deed poll to Stephen Leslie Bradley in August 1956.[6] In 1958 he married a third time to Magda Wittman, a divorcee with two children.[1] Feeling pressure to care for his expanded family, he was forced to work hard at a number of different jobs as their savings dwindled.[7] He was then possibly inspired by the April 1960 Peugeot kidnapping and ransom case in Paris[26] to attempt the abduction.[17]

In court, Bradley pleaded not guilty to murder[21] but was identified as the man seen by witnesses (including by Mrs Thorne).[1] He admitted the kidnapping, providing details of how he posed as a driver and fabricated a tale to persuade Thorne into his car that day.[4] Taking him west to Centennial Park, he had then assaulted the boy, rendered him unconscious, then tied and wrapped him up in a blanket, and placed him in the boot, before driving north across the Harbour Bridge[21] and making the first ransom call.[4] Arriving at his home in nearby Clontarf, he rechecked the boy,[4] but at around 3:00 PM when he checked again, he claimed that Thorne had apparently suffocated in the back of his car.[4] Forensic experts soon disproved this by connecting a breathing mask to the inside of the boot and breathing the air for seven hours.[1] Bradley's wife was also brought in from London to testify, but there was no clear evidence of her involvement.[9] The high-profile trial for murder lasted nine days, and he was sentenced to penal servitude for life,[12][27] the maximum penalty provided in NSW for murder.[1] A later Court of Criminal Appeal hearing was dismissed unanimously on 22 May 1961.[1]

Aftermath

News surrounding the case led to an overwhelming sense of public shock, disbelief, and anger which, alongside later events such as the Wanda Beach Murders and the Beaumont disappearance, "marked an end of innocence in Australian life".[8][20] Lottery procedures in Australia were changed after the Thorne case,[28] with winners being given the option of remaining anonymous.[8] The case also proved pivotal to the development of forensic science and new kidnapping laws in Australia.[23][25] Kidnapping for ransom was seen as a primarily American phenomenon[7] – most notably in the Lindbergh kidnapping – but prior to the Thorne case, such events were unknown in Australia.[7] The late crime journalist Alan Dower was of the opinion that Thorne was not Bradley's initial target. Dower's theory was that his younger sister was Bradley's target and that he had no intention of killing her. At 4, she was young enough that, if she had been kidnapped and then released, she would not have been able to give any useful information that could identify her kidnapper. However, she was also so young that she was never away from her parents.

After the trial, Bradley was sent to Goulburn gaol, where he worked as a hospital orderly[29] and was kept protected from other prisoners. His wife and children returned to Europe, and Magda Bradley divorced him in 1965.[30] On 6 October 1968[6] he died in prison of a heart attack[1] aged 42[12] while playing in the gaol tennis competition, and was buried in the Catholic section of Goulburn cemetery.[29] Regarding the crime, "Bradley never showed any remorse whatsoever".[8] The Thornes, meanwhile, moved to another nearby suburb, Rose Bay.[30] Bazil Thorne died in December 1978.[31] Freda Thorne died in 2012 aged 86.

Media

Thorne's murder was the focus of the Crime Investigation Australia season 1 episode "Kid for Ransom"[3] aired in 2005. In 2008, a children's detective book titled "Kidnapping file: the Graeme Thorne case" was developed by Amanda Howard and published in the US.[32] The book Kidnapped by Mark Tedeschi QC was published in 2015,[19] and in January 2018, Casefile True Crime Podcast featured the Thorne kidnapping in Case 75.[5]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 "Articles – Australian Police Journal | Australian Police Journal". apjl.com.au. Retrieved 2017-10-01.
  2. Bradley Extradition Hearing (Continued):Court hushed as Mrs Thorne called, Sydney Morning Herald, 20 October 1960. Retrieved 27 February 2014
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "'Kid for Ransom – The Graeme Thorne Case'". Crime Investigation Australia (TV series). 2007-11-27. Nine Network.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Tedeschi, Mark (2015-10-24). "The kidnapping that shocked a nation". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2017-10-01.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Case 75: Graeme Thorne – Casefile: True Crime Podcast". casefilepodcast.com. 28 January 2018.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 Blanco, Juan Ignacio. "Stephen Leslie Bradley | Murderpedia, the encyclopedia of murderers". murderpedia.org. Retrieved 2017-10-01.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 "'I have your boy. I want £25,000 before 5 o'clock'". Retrieved 2017-10-01.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 Charleston, Libby-Jane (2016-03-05). "The End Of Innocence: The 1960s Crime That Changed The Lives of Aussie Kids". Huffington Post. Retrieved 2017-10-01.
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 Alberici, Emma (2015-11-02), Interview: Mark Tedeschi QC, New South Wales Senior Crown Prosecutor and author, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, retrieved 2017-10-01
  10. Tilstone, William J.; Savage, Kathleen A.; Clark, Leigh A. (2006). Forensic Science: An Encyclopedia of History, Methods, and Techniques. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 9781576071946.
  11. "Inflation Calculator". Reserve Bank of Australia. contact=Media Office, Information Department. Retrieved 2017-10-02.
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "The lotto kidnapping". Retrieved 2017-10-01.
  13. 1 2 3 "The tiny clue that nailed a child's murderer". Retrieved 2017-10-05.
  14. 1 2 3 "The Sydney Morning Herald - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com. Retrieved 2018-02-19.
  15. "Google Maps". Google Maps. Retrieved 2017-10-01.
  16. 1 2 3 4 5 True Crime – In Sight (2017-09-27), True Crime – In Sight Podcast – Episode # 041 : Graeme Thorne – Documentary, retrieved 2017-10-02
  17. 1 2 "Graeme Thorne". Sydney Crime Museum. Retrieved 2017-10-01.
  18. "AJCS". wwwmcc.murdoch.edu.au. Retrieved 2017-10-02.
  19. 1 2 Andrew Koubaridis (November 4, 2015). "Case that stole our innocence". Herald Sun.
  20. 1 2 "Case that stole our innocence". NewsComAu. Retrieved 2017-10-01.
  21. 1 2 3 "This Is The Man Who Killed My Boy" OUTBURST BY MOTHER AS BRADLEY MURDER TRIAL OPENS". Canberra Times. 1961-03-21. p. 1. Retrieved 2017-10-01.
  22. 1 2 3 4 "EVIDENCE IN THORNE KIDNAP-MURDER CHARGE POLICE STORY OF FIND AT BRADLEY HOME". Canberra Times. 1960-10-18. p. 1. Retrieved 2017-10-01.
  23. 1 2 3 "Insight into child kidnap and ransom case". Retrieved 2017-10-01.
  24. "Graeme Thorne "Died Violent Death", Doctor Tells Court". Canberra Times. 1960-12-07. p. 1. Retrieved 2017-10-05.
  25. 1 2 "Kirby, Michael --- "Forensic Evidence: Instrument of Truth or Potential for Miscarriage?" [2010] JlLawInfoSci 2; (2010) 20(1) Journal of Law, Information and Science 1". www.austlii.edu.au. Retrieved 2017-10-05.
  26. "Peugeot Kidnapping". www.robinsonlibrary.com. Retrieved 2017-10-02.
  27. "Fairfax Syndication – Search Result". www.fairfaxsyndication.com. Retrieved 2017-10-01.
  28. Dielenberg, Rob. "Police Culture in New South Wales in the 1960s-70s".
  29. 1 2 Garton, Stephen. Australian Dictionary of Biography. Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
  30. 1 2 "Graeme Thorne – 1960 | Criminal Encyclopedia". justcriminals.info. Retrieved 2017-10-03.
  31. "The Sydney Morning Herald". 7 December 1978. p. 20. Retrieved 3 October 2017.
  32. "Kidnapping file : the Graeme Thorne case". NOBLE (All Libraries). Retrieved 2017-10-05.

Further reading

  • Archibald, Bill (1961). The Bradley Case
  • Dower, Alan (1979). Deadline. Hutchinson. ISBN 0-09-135180-4
  • Jenkings, Bill (1992). As Crimes Goes By.... Ironbark Press. ISBN 1-875471-14-6
  • Sharpe, Alan (1994). "The Giant Book of Crimes that Shocked Australia". The Book Company. ISBN 1-86309-018-5
  • Whiticker, Alan J. (2005). "Twelve Crimes that Shocked the Nation". New Holland Publishers. ISBN 1-74110-110-7
  • Tedeschi, Mark (2015) "Kidnapped". Simon & Schuster. ISBN 9781925310221 (paperback)
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