Suspect in 1977 Cold Case Arrested in Italy, Extradition Underway

A man, aged 65, suspected of brutally murdering two women in Melbourne, Australia, in ‌January 1977‍ has been arrested in Rome based on an international warrant. He holds dual Greek and ‌Australian‌ citizenship and was detained at Fiumicino airport after arriving from Greece, where he had been ⁢living, apparently ⁤protected by local laws due to the statute of limitations. The ⁤victims, Suzanne Armstrong and Susan Bartlett, were found‌ stabbed to death in their rented home, sparking one of Melbourne’s ‍most notorious cold cases, known as the “Easey Street murders.” Efforts to solve the ⁤case intensified with a $1 million reward offered by Victoria Police ⁣in 2017, leading to a breakthrough ⁣after ⁤a request for the suspect’s DNA sample prompted ⁢him to go on the run. Australian authorities are now initiating⁤ extradition procedures to bring him back to ⁤face charges.


A man suspected of the brutal killing of two women in Australia nearly a half-century ago has been arrested in Rome on an international arrest warrant, Italian news agency ANSA reported on Saturday.

The 65-year-old suspect, who has dual Greek and Australian citizenship, was detained at Rome’s Fiumicino airport on Thursday after landing on a flight that had departed from Greece, ANSA said.

The man reportedly lived in Greece, where he was protected by the country’s statute of limitations, according to Australian media.

Australian police said on Saturday they would start the process of extraditing the suspect, and Italian courts would set the timeline.

The suspect is accused of killing two friends — Suzanne Armstrong, 27, and Susan Bartlett, 28 — in a knife attack that shocked Australia in January 1977.

The young women were found dead in their rented house on Easey Street in Melbourne, while Armstrong’s 16-month-old son was left unharmed in his cot in another room. Both Armstrong and Bartlett had been stabbed multiple times.

The crime, known as the “Easey Street murders,” became Melbourne’s longest and most serious cold case, but no one had been arrested until now.

Victoria Police offered a $1 million reward in 2017 to catch those responsible. That same year, new technology led to a breakthrough in the case, as the suspect became a fugitive following a request for a sample of his DNA.

The Western Journal has not reviewed this Associated Press story prior to publication. Therefore, it may contain editorial bias or may in some other way not meet our normal editorial standards. It is provided to our readers as a service from The Western Journal.




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