YOUTH SHOT
ALTERCATION ON BANK PREMISES NO ARREST YET MADE By Telegraph--Press Association INVERCARGILL. December 27. An altercation early this morning involving two bank clerks sleeping on the premises of the Bank of New Zealand in Tay Street and four young men whom they admitted to the premises ended in one of the visitors being fatally wounded by a revolver shot. The dead youth is Michael Fletcher, aged 19. a storeman. He was employed by Woolworths Ltd. and lived with his parents at 93 Biggar Street, Invercargill. Fletcher was one of a party of four who, seeing a light in the bank in the early hours of the morning, rang the door bell. They were admitted by one of the two clerks on duty and taken to the clerks’ living quarters, though it is understood that the visitors were not known to the clerks. After the six men had been together for about two hours—during which it is stated that several attempts were made to induce the visitors to leave—an excited argument arose in which one of the party fired three shots at Fletcher with a revolver, shooting him through the body. There had apparently been fighting before this, because one of the bank clerks was injured about the face. Fletcher staggered from where he was shot to the door and down the path leading from the door to the side gate in Clyde Street. There he collapsed. It is not certain whether the other three visitors were in or out of the building when the shot was fired, but as soon as they missed Fletcher they began to look for him. When he was found the police were called, and also a doctor, a priest and the ambulance.
The first policeman on the scene was Constable Summers. He found Fletcher deeply unconscious and obviously gravely injured. He was hurried to hospital by the ambulance and died either on the way or immediately after his admission. The other five men were taken to the police station and gave statements about the shooting. Three of these, who were visitors to the bank, will be charged in the Magistrate’s Court tomorrow morning with being illegally on bank premises. No other charge has yet been laid against any of the party. Detective-Sergeant Thompson was called to the bank shortly after the shooting occurred and he took charge of the investigation. An inquest was opened this morning before Mr W. H. Freeman, Coroner, but was adjourned sine die after evidence of identification had been taken. It is the standard practice of banks to keep revolvers for use in time of emergency by employees sleeping on the premises, and it was with one of these that the fatal shot was fired.
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/THD19361228.2.44
Bibliographic details
Timaru Herald, Volume CXLII, Issue 20611, 28 December 1936, Page 6
Word Count
456YOUTH SHOT Timaru Herald, Volume CXLII, Issue 20611, 28 December 1936, Page 6
Using This Item
Stuff Ltd is the copyright owner for the Timaru Herald. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 3.0 New Zealand licence. This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of Stuff Ltd. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.