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Thursday, January 07, 2010 - 2:54 PM
Lynch knew that the Mulligan's 14-year-old daughter was in the
house, and as he entered he saw her standing in the kitchen in terror.
She had seen at least one of the murders. "I saw her
standing behind a table holding a butcher's knife," Lynch confessed.
"She was sobbing with fear and trembling violently. I hadn't been
prepared for this so I just stood there staring at her. Then I yelled
'put that knife down' but she didn't move so I yelled again 'put that
knife down'. "She stiffened, her eyes bulging
fearfully from their sockets, with a strange animal noise squealing
from her tightly compressed mouth. The lobes of her nostrils were
flared and she stood there impotent with terror. "'Put
that knife down,'" I told her. "'I don't want to kill you, but if I let
you live you'll only put me away.'" I then ordered her to get down on
her knees and pray as she only had ten minutes to live." Lynch
then took the terrified young girl into the bedroom and repeatedly
raped her. "I then brought her back out into the kitchen and tried to
comfort her saying that life was full of trouble and that she'd be
better off dead. Then I mercifully distracted her attention and as she
turned away I struck her with the axe and she fell dead without a
murmur," he confessed. Lynch then assembled the Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire family's bodies in the bush and set them alight atop a huge
pyre. "They burnt like bags of fat," he said. From
then on Lynch's confession dealt with how clever he was at getting rid
of the Lynch's possessions and taking over the farm as if it were his
own. Every personal item and all of the dead family's clothing were
burned. Then he inserted an advertisement in the Sydney Gazette stating
that Mrs. Mulligan had left the family home without her husband's
consent and that he, John Mulligan, wouldn't be responsible for her
debts. The ad gave the impression that the Mulligans
had broken up, which would explain why the farm had been sold. Next
Lynch, again under the name of John Mulligan, wrote to all his
creditors telling them he had sold the farm to John Dunleavy for £700,
and Dunleavy had taken responsibility for any outstanding debts. Then
he forged a deed of assignment stating that John Mulligan had signed
over the farm and all its affects to John Dunleavy.
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