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Murder on Easey Street, Melbourne's most notorious cold case, Helen Thomas

Label
Murder on Easey Street, Melbourne's most notorious cold case, Helen Thomas
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references
Illustrations
illustrationsportraits
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Murder on Easey Street
Nature of contents
bibliography
Responsibility statement
Helen Thomas
Series statement
Read how you want 16
Sub title
Melbourne's most notorious cold case
Summary
One summer night in January 1977, Suzanne Armstrong and Susan Bartlett were savagely murdered in their house on Easey Street, Collingwood stabbed multiple times while Suzanne's sixteenmonthold baby slept in the next room. Although police established a list of 130 'persons of interest', the case became one of the most infamous unsolved crimes in Melbourne. Journalist Helen Thomas was a cub reporter at The Age when the murders were committed and saw how deeply they affected the city. Now, forty years on, she has reexamined the cold case, chasing down new leads and talking to members of the Armstrong and Bartlett families, the women's neighbours on Easey Street, detectives and journalists. What emerges is a portrait of a crime rife with ambiguities and contradictions, which took place at a fascinating time in the city's history when the countercultural bohemia of Helen Garner's Monkey Grip brushed up against the grit of the underworld in one of Melbourne's most infamous knockabout suburbs. Why has the Easey Street murderer never been found, despite a milliondollar reward for information? Was the investigation mishandled? Did the women know their killer, or were their deaths due to a random, frenzied attack? Could the murderer have killed again? This gripping account addresses these questions and more as it examines one of Australia's most disturbing and compelling criminal mysteries
Target audience
adult