In this retrospective report, the long-standing controversy surrounding the 1982 Perth Mint Swindle is re-examined, detailing the corruption that led to the wrongful conviction of the Mickelberg brothers. The case began when 68 kilograms of gold bullion were stolen from the Perth Royal Mint using fraudulent building society checks. Ray, Peter, and Brian Mickelberg were subsequently charged and convicted, though they consistently maintained they were framed by the Western Australia Police. Decades later, the case was reopened following a confession from former detective Tony Lewandowski, who admitted to fabricating evidence and forging confession notes under the direction of Detective Sergeant Don Hancock. This archival look at the investigation highlights how systemic failures and police misconduct resulted in a significant miscarriage of justice. Although the Mickelbergs’ convictions were eventually quashed by the Supreme Court of Western Australia in 2004, the stolen gold remains largely unrecovered, and the true architects of the original fraud have never been officially brought to justice.
- The heist occurred in June 1982, involving the theft of gold bars worth approximately $650,000 at the time.
- Ray, Peter, and Brian Mickelberg were arrested and found guilty based largely on unsigned confession notes provided by the lead investigators.
- The brothers spent years in prison, with Ray Mickelberg serving eight years before his initial release, while consistently alleging police brutality and evidence tampering.
- In 2002, former detective Tony Lewandowski confessed to framing the brothers, admitting he and Don Hancock had physically coerced the suspects and falsified statements.
- The Supreme Court of Western Australia officially overturned the Mickelbergs’ convictions in 2004 following the revelation of police misconduct.
- Detective Don Hancock, a central figure in the investigation, was killed in a car bombing in 2001, an event unrelated to the Mickelberg case but linked to his history in the police force.
- Despite the exoneration of the brothers, the 68kg of stolen gold has never been fully accounted for, and the case remains one of Australia’s most famous unsolved mysteries.
Gemini said 60 Minutes is an American television news magazine that has been a staple of CBS News since its debut in 1968. Created by Don Hewitt, the program is renowned for its hard-hitting investigative journalism, high-profile interviews, and in-depth feature stories that have earned it a reputation as the gold standard of broadcast news for over half a century.
Official website: https://www.cbsnews.com/60-minutes//
Original video here.
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