MELBOURNE (AFP) – Notorious Australian mobster Carl Williams was buried in a golden coffin Friday after
a lavish funeral which drew a large crowd of mourners and blanket media coverage
after his savage jailhouse murder.
The plump Williams, known as the baby-faced killer, was killed in Victoria
state's highest security prison earlier this month by a fellow inmate who
attacked him with part of an exercise bike.
The 39-year-old was a key figure in Melbourne's brutal underworld war of the
1990s and immortalised in the popular TV series "Underbelly".
His ex-wife Roberta Williams
and their daughter Dhakota arrived for the funeral and left in a black stretch
Hummer limousine.
"You gave me self-belief and confidence when it had been ripped away years
before," the black-clad Roberta, eulogising her ex-husband, told about 100
mourners at St Therese's Catholic Church in the Melbourne suburb Essendon.
A woman impersonating Melbourne underworld matriarch Judy Moran, whose husband Lewis and son Jason were
killed on Williams's orders, also turned up at the service clutching an urn
before being led away by police.
The woman said Judy Moran, who is in jail awaiting trial over the murder of
her brother-in-law, would have loved to have seen the funeral of her gangland
nemesis.
The dead mobster's casket, reportedly a gold-plated coffin which cost 30,000
dollars (27,885 US) and based on the model used for Michael Jackson, was carried
out of the church under grey skies.
A heavy police presence guarded the church, which was previously used for the
service for Lewis Moran as well as Williams's
mother, who died in 2009 from a drug
overdose, while the primary school next door was in lockdown.
Williams was serving a life sentence with a 35-year non-parole period for
ordering the murders of several rivals.
He was a central figure in Melbourne's violent criminal war which began in
the late 1990s and eventually claimed more than 25 lives, with a sentencing
judge describing him as a "puppet master" who decided who lived and who
died.
A 36-year-old man, who cannot be named, has been charged with his prison
murder.
Williams once said he acted to protect his family, comparing his situation to
soldiers fighting a war.
"Everyday soldiers have to kill the enemy, otherwise the enemy will kill
them, and no-one calls soldiers murderers," Williams wrote in correspondence
giv
en to a commercial television station.
"The people I killed were far worse people than I will ever be ... I never
killed or harmed any innocent people."
Friday, April 30, 2010
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