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MURDER IN QUEENSLAND

FEUD AMONG ITALIANS. GROWTH OF LAWLESSNESS. SYDNEY, March 29. Recently, at Innesfail, in North Queensland, an Italian was shot dead in tho street by a fellow countryman who had lost both ears. The crime was undoubtedly one of vengeance for the oaf-slashing episode, and the alleged murderer lias been committed for trial.

Other Italians have been before the Court this week on serious charges associated with these extraordinary episodes, and some remarkable allegations have been made in the evidence that lias been given. There are many Italians in the north of Australia, particularly in the sugar cane areas, and their ways are not the ways of Australians There has been'a suggestion that the Black Hand secret organisation has been busy in the north, and not long ago the Federal Government threatened to take action in this regard. There has been talk of deportations, but none has been made to date.

During the hearing of the charges of ear-slashing remarkable letters _ were introduced indicating that the crime o) blackmail is most popular among a section of the Italians. Detectivo Ridgwny said he knew that many people in the Mourilyan district had received threatening letters, and had actually handed over sums ranging from £25 to £SO. In the course of liis inquiries ho had always met a wall of silence. Ho strongly suspected the murdered man, Nicola Mamone, in connection with a good number of these letters. The detective then went on to refer to the. prevalence of crime in the north, and gave the following remarkable list of unsolved crimes: Motor-car blown up bv a bomb in an Innesfail street in May, 1932; bomb exploded under house of a woman, believed to be the widow of a man who was shot dead on his own doorstep; Italian farmer’s tractor blown up at Silkwood last April; motor-car blown up at Mourilyan last July; Italian sugar farmer’s horses poisoned with strychnine, attempt to gelignite motor truck; sugar farmer and his wife wounded by bullets at Boogan. ' The man charged with the murder of Mamone was Giovanni lacona, and when he was arrested, according to police evidence, he said: “Yes. Mamone cut my ears off and me shoot him. I wait long time. I was going also to shoot Buiti, who was with Mamone, only I had no chance. Too many j people’ about, and I did not want to I hurt anybody else.’ lacona also alleged that Guiseppe P'arisi held his arms while Mamone cut off his ears. It is known that lawlessness m the north has caused the Queensland Government a great deal of anxiety, and: it- remains to be seen whether the Federal Government will find it neces-j sarv to step in and get rid of the dangerous element among the foreign population.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HAWST19340413.2.94

Bibliographic details

Hawera Star, Volume LIV, 13 April 1934, Page 7

Word Count
465

MURDER IN QUEENSLAND Hawera Star, Volume LIV, 13 April 1934, Page 7

MURDER IN QUEENSLAND Hawera Star, Volume LIV, 13 April 1934, Page 7