Civilian Sleuths
Police had the omissions, the contradictions, the missing time, the money, the alibi problem, and the forensic traces. If that still wasn’t enough, what was missing? On the morning Mary Anne Fagan was murdered, three council workers were repairing the road outside her Armadale home. One of them had spoken to her directly. One of them later admitted making graphic sexual remarks about her while sitting on a fence facing her house. One of them left the worksite during the period investigators came to treat as the murder window. And one of them would later sit through hours of homicide questioning as detectives tried to pull apart his account of that day. His name was “James”. Across statements, interviews, forensic evidence, witness accounts and the 1979 inquest, investigators believed a pattern had emerged: omissions, contradictions, unexplained money, a disputed bookmaker alibi, a boot print, microscopic bitumen-like flecks found in the house, and a man the Coroner would later describe in open court as “far from honest”. By the end, the case against “James” looked substantial. And yet, no charge followed. In this instalment of Civilian Sleuths, we follow the evidence that made “James” the focus of the investigation — and the unanswered gap that has remained for more than 48 years. Content warning: this episode discusses the murder of Mary Anne Fagan and includes references to sexually explicit language quoted from sworn inquest testimony. Listener discretion is advised. If you have information about the murder of Mary Anne Fagan, contact Victoria Police Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000, or submit a confidential report online at police.vic.gov.au/crime-stoppers.
14 episodios
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