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MURDER CHARGE

BOY FREEMAN UNABLE TO PLEAD TO BE DETAINED IN GAOL. (By Telegraph.— Press Association.— Copyright.) (Received October 22, B.SO a.m.) MELBOURNE, This Day. The trial of the boy Charles Freeman for the murder at Warparilla of a boy named John Anderson- came to an abrupt end. The jury decided that Freeman was unable to plead. He was ordered to be detained in gaol during the Governor's pleasure. [The acoused boy, aged fourteen years, is almost deaf and dumb, and is mentally deficient. Anderson was fifteen years of age. When arrested, Freeman indicated that he (Anderson) and a third boy had been bird-nesting, and that the last-named', deliberately shot Anderson while he was up a tree, and then severed the head from the body. Later, when Freeman still stuck to his story, the police, with a view to testing its credibility, brought Freeman into the presence of a boy attending the same school as Anderson. Freeman, by signs, indicated that this was the boy who had murdered Anderson. The boy was not perturbed ; he laughed, and said, " I was driving sheep the day of the murder." The police fully verified this statement, and the boy was not detained. At the inquest, a schoolboy gave evidence that Freeman and Anderson had had a fight at school a year ago, and that Freeman had made signs indicating that he would shoot Anderson and cut his throat.]

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19131022.2.82

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume LXXXVI, Issue 98, 22 October 1913, Page 7

Word Count
235

MURDER CHARGE Evening Post, Volume LXXXVI, Issue 98, 22 October 1913, Page 7

MURDER CHARGE Evening Post, Volume LXXXVI, Issue 98, 22 October 1913, Page 7