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Sunday, January 03, 2010 - 3:18 PM
During the night Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire set his bullock team free. "My team
appears to have strayed," Lynch told the Frazers in the morning. "I'll
have to go home and fetch another one. Meanwhile I'd better hide the
dray. Could you give me a hand." The unsuspecting
Frazers were only too happy to assist John Lynch in his scheme to
murder and rob them. After the three men had hidden the dray, Lynch
said, "I helped them hitch their horses to their cart and we drove out
of Bargo Brush. They agreed to let me travel as near the place as
possible where I was supposed to live." They
traveled all day until they reached Cordeaux Flat, where they made camp
for the night. "In the morning young Frazer and I went in search of the
horses," said Lynch. "I put on my coat so as to hide the tomahawk. I
let the youngster go ahead. Then when we were in the bush I thought to
myself there's no difficulty in settling him. So I crept up behind him
and hit him with one blow and the young fellow fell like a log of wood." Lynch
hid the boy's body beneath some wood and returned to the camp with one
horse. The elder Frazer inquired about the whereabouts of his son.
"When I told him he was looking for the other horse," Lynch said, "he
became agitated, not because he suspected I killed the boy, but because
the horses had never strayed before." Lynch
distracted Frazer by pointing to what he said was his son in the bushes
and when the man turned to look he hit him "a nice one on the back of
the head and he dropped like a log of wood."
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