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Sunday, January 03, 2010 - 2:57 PM
Lynch returned to the camp to find Ireland preparing breakfast
and rather than murder the unsuspecting farmhand immediately, he
explained that the boy had gone looking for the bullocks and they
should eat without him. When Ireland was about to
serve breakfast, Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire distracted him, and when Ireland's back was
turned, Lynch cracked his head open with the tomahawk. As the man lay
dead at his feet, Lynch wolfed down a hearty meal before dragging both
bodies to a cleft between two rocks and covering them with brush and
stones. Then Lynch pointed the team of bullocks and
dray in the direction of Berrima and set them loose, anticipating that
someone would round them up and return them to the Oldbury farm and
nothing would come of it. He then took possession of Ireland's team,
which was carrying the farm produce. Believing the
Lord was looking out for him, Lynch was in no hurry and remained at the
camp for two days. On the second day, he was joined by two men named
Lagge and Lee who were in charge of a team of horses. Lynch said he
enjoyed the company of the two men and they ate, drank and sang well
into the night. The men even performed an Irish jig for Lynch's
entertainment. For these reasons Lynch didn't dispatch the men with his
tomahawk as they slept, conceal their bodies with the luckless Ireland
and the black boy and steal their possessions and sell them in Sydney.
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