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Brenden Abbott

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Brenden James Abbott
Brenden James Abbott
Born
Brenden James Abbott

(1962-05-08) 8 May 1962 (age 62)
Other namesThe Postcard Bandit
OccupationBank robber
Criminal statusRemanded in custody
Conviction(s)Bank robbery, Prison escape
Criminal penalty25 years' imprisonment (13-year non-parole period)

Brenden James Abbott (born 8 May 1962) is a convicted Australian bank robber. He is reported to have stolen and hidden millions of dollars, and was dubbed "the postcard bandit" by police seeking media coverage.[1]

Abbott was held in a maximum-security prison in Queensland until he was transferred in 2016 to Casuarina Prison in Western Australia. He will be eligible for parole in 2026.

A film about Abbott, The Postcard Bandit, was made in 2003.[2]

Personal

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A former ward of the state of Western Australia, Abbott continues to suffer anxiety and related health disorders, as noted in a semi-biographical work, Australian Outlaw, by Derek Pedley. Abbott attended Eastern Hills High School in Mount Helena and was considered an average to good student. His watercolour "Little Boy Blue" was painted after the November 2009 national apology to Forgotten Australians.

Abbott is recognised as a highly intelligent criminal and "minor genius" with a strong reliance on memory and observational skills to carry out his criminal activities.[3][4] He used his knowledge and self-taught skills in make-up to create convincing disguises, computers to create false IDs, and electronics to dodge alarms and police. Weeks were spent methodically planning each bank robbery including observing the staff in the bank, identifying weaknesses in security, patterns of behaviour and the layout of the premises prior to the robbery taking place. These skills are widely thought to have assisted him in both successful prison escapes. Police officers who have interviewed Abbott have stated he is always probing for information on how he has been caught or what the police know about him. Abbott used his understanding of police methodology and intelligence gathering to successfully avoid capture during his time as an escapee.

Fremantle Prison escape – 1989

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Abbott had fled from police during questioning in relation to burglary at the Nollamara police station in 1986 and in 1987 successfully stole $112,000 from the Commonwealth Bank in Perth with his first bank robbery. In the months following, police arrested Abbott at Perth Airport. Sentenced to Fremantle Prison, Abbott was given duties in the tailor workshop, fitting and sewing uniforms to order. It was through the workshop Abbott and Aaron Reynolds were able to create fake prison guard uniforms. On 24 November 1989 Abbott dressed in the false uniform, cut through the bars in the workshop and gained access to the guard's walkway, he made his way across the rooftop and out of the prison grounds. This escape earned Abbott his lifelong notoriety as a criminal genius, and ultimately led to his permanent and erroneous branding as "the postcard bandit." In the almost 150-year history Fremantle Prison was operational, Abbott is the only prisoner on record to escape and never return due to its closure in 1991.

Fugitive 1989–1995

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While Reynolds was arrested within weeks of the Fremantle escape, Abbott went on to establish himself as a "professional" bank robber, believed to have been responsible for "40 to 50" bank robberies across Western Australia, South Australia and Queensland's Gold Coast. Working in Abbott's favour, the Adelaide police force was structured with each suburb having its own CIB office, limiting communication between the departments and making Adelaide a repeated target. Rivalry between the states made intelligence sharing minimal and Western Australian Police were yet to issue a warrant for Abbott's arrest almost five years following the escape. By 1994 the states' police departments compromised and agreed to work together. Elevated to the status of Australia's most wanted man, his five-and-a-half years on the run came to an end when police tracked down a post-office box on Queensland's Gold Coast used by Abbott, which was found to contain a pager bill registered to the address where he was living. On 26 March 1995 Abbott was recaptured.

Media reports in the 1990s said Abbott sent postcards of his travels to the Western Australian Police. However, the story was a WA Police media unit concoction;[1] the "postcards" were photos Abbott lost while running from police with Aaron Reynolds after the Fremantle Prison escape, and were intended for his friends and family. They included a picture of Reynolds outside the Dwellingup police station.

Sir David Longland Prison escape – 1997

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On 5 November 1997, less than three years after his recapture, Abbott escaped with four other prisoners from Sir David Longland Prison at Wacol, Queensland. Using angel wire—diamond-encrusted wire—smuggled into the prison to cut through the bars in their cells, the escapees made it to the perimeter sensor fence where they were thrown bolt cutters by an accomplice, Brendan Berichon, who had been released in September. Uncharacteristically for Abbott, the escape from Sir David Longland Prison in November 1997 involved actual force rather than an implied threat of force. While cutting through the sensor fencing, the alarm was raised. Berichon was armed and fired on a patrol vehicle successfully disabling it. Guards were pinned down by the shots. The offenders alleged that this occurred in panic, when the escapees' escape plan went awry. Nonetheless, it gave the escapees enough time to cut through the fence and escape in the car driven by Berichon.

Fugitive 1997–1998

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Abbott was on the run for six months from 1997 to 1998. On 2 May 1998 he was eventually caught in Darwin and was, as of March 2015, serving a 23-year sentence in Queensland for bank robberies and the 1997 prison escape. Following his recapture, Abbott was transferred to Maximum Security at Woodford Correctional Centre. Due to Abbott's high risk profile, he was flown into the prison by helicopter, being the only prisoner in Australia to have arrived directly by air. After serving two years of his current sentence in solitary confinement, he sued the Queensland Government for mistreatment.[5] He was released from solitary confinement in May 2004 and returned there on a Maximum Security Order in April 2006, after he requested medical attention three times in 12 months. After years in mainstream, Abbott was again returned to Supermax solitary confinement in August 2008 and then released back into mainstream detention in the days preceding a judicial review hearing into his back-to-back Maximum Security Orders, in October 2009.

Attempts to transfer

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A 1994 warrant for questioning remains in place with Adelaide Criminal Prosecutions Branch for one count of armed robbery in Glenelg, South Australia. In mid-2008, Abbott applied for an interstate transfer to South Australia to address the outstanding warrant. The application followed official statements by Adelaide detective Sid Thomas, in The Advertiser in 2008, that detectives were travelling to Queensland to question Abbott at Woodford Correctional Centre, although no such interview has ever occurred. In December 2010, Abbott's application for a South Australian transfer was approved by the Queensland Attorney-General, and the South Australian Attorney-General's decision is pending. On 12 June 2011, The Advertiser reporter Nigel Hunt incorrectly reported that Abbott had filed for a Supreme Court Judicial Review regarding the application to transfer to face the charges.[6] Hunt's story concludes with an unnamed source's suspicions that Abbott could have committed not just the one he is sought for questioning over, but multiple robberies in South Australia.

During Abbott's Queensland sentence, Western Australia twice refused Abbott's transfer applications in 2005 and 2008 to return to the state to complete his sentence. In 2004 Queensland authorities approved an interstate transfer[7] but Western Australian Attorney-General Jim McGinty refused to accept him.[8] In early 2007, Abbott re-applied to be transferred to Western Australia and that was approved by the Queensland Attorney-General in 2008.[9] However, former WA Corrective Services Minister, Margaret Quirk, promptly released a media statement rejecting Abbott's bid to return home. Abbott had unsuccessfully applied for transfer to Western Australia four times in response to outstanding warrants. In May 2010, Glenn Cordingley of The Sunday Times in Perth, cited an unnamed Western Australian police source who alleged that WA authorities "had a cell waiting" for Abbott, although there had been no official confirmation of such.[10]

On 4 May 2016, Abbott was extradited back to Western Australia to serve out his sentence of 16 years, nine months and two days that he was serving for armed robberies and his role in the Fremantle Prison riot at the time of his escape in 1989 (12 years, six months and 24 days plus an additional one-third penalty of four years, two months and eight days in forfeited remissions for escaping custody under the law then extant). On 16 January 2017, Abbott was sentenced to an additional and cumulative five months' imprisonment for the 1989 escape.

In June 2019, Abbott had a bid for freedom unanimously rejected by the WA Court of Appeal. Lawyers argued the sentence should be reduced because he already spent 17 years in prison in Queensland for crimes committed before he escaped Fremantle Prison in 1989. The court said the original sentences were appropriate, and it would not intervene on the basis of mercy, noting Abbott had also deliberately committed subsequent crimes that led to his imprisonment in Queensland.

He will be eligible for parole in Western Australia in July 2026, and his Western Australian sentence will expire in July 2033. If no further charges are laid against him, he will remain on parole in Queensland until July 2040, when he will be 78 years of age.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Nyst, Chris (defence lawyer)."The Usual Suspect" Archived 16 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Australian Story (program transcript), 27 October 2003
  2. ^ Buchanan, Matt. (26 May 2003). Born To Run Archived 13 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine. Sydney Morning Herald.
  3. ^ Cartwright, Lexie (14 May 2016). "Gold Coast woman tells of chilling encounter with Brenden Abbott aka Postcard Bandit". Gold Coast Bulletin. News Corp Australia. Archived from the original on 21 May 2016. Retrieved 15 June 2024.
  4. ^ Waters, Carly (24 February 2016). "'The Postcard Bandit' could be paroled within weeks". Seven News. Seven West Media. Yahoo! News. Retrieved 15 June 2024.
  5. ^ Townsend, Ian, "Postcard bandit" sues Qld Govt over mistreatment in jail Archived 12 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine. The World Today. 20 October 2000.
  6. ^ Nigel Hunt (12 June 2011). Postcard Bandit may be on the move Archived 17 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine. The Sunday Mail. Retrieved 30 October 2012.
  7. ^ AAP, Postcard Bandit can move to Perth Archived 12 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine, The Age, 7 July 2004
  8. ^ O'Donnell, Mick, Postcard Bandit hopes for transfer to WA Archived 13 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine, The 7.30 Report (transcript), 7 July 2005
  9. ^ Hansen, Peter (11 March 2007). Abbott faces parole limbo. Sunday Mail.
  10. ^ Glenn Cordingley (15 May 2010). WA police waiting for Brenden Abbott release Archived 18 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine. Sunday Times. Retrieved 30 October 2012.