Good riddance Roger Rogerson. Suffer in hell. Didn't have any decency to admit to Shirley Finn's murder for the sake of her family.
Court in the Act: Roger Rogerson and the Shirley Finn secrets he takes to his grave
The West Australian
Wed, 24 January 2024 2:00AM
Was Roger Rogerson behind the murder of brothel madam Shirley Finn?Was Roger Rogerson behind the murder of brothel madam Shirley Finn? Credit: The West Australian
Secrets and lies, death and corruption.
They followed Roger Rogerson — the rotten killer cop who died in a Sydney prison this week — for a lifetime.
But did he also bring them to Perth on June 23, 1975?
On that morning, a white Dodge Phoenix with a black vinyl roof was parked near the green fairways of Royal Perth Golf Club.
Inside, wearing a ballgown, was brothel madam Shirley Finn. It was her car. And she died in it — from the four bullets someone shot into her head.
She was 34 years-old, and had obviously been brutally and efficiently murdered.
By whom has been a question unanswered for nearly 50 years, despite numerous investigations, internal inquiries and eventually a public inquest.
It was in the last forum, in 2017, that Rogerson was officially linked to Ms Finn’s case, by various witnesses including former WA police officers.
Michael Regan, a uniformed officer in the 1960s, told how he was at times tasked to drive more senior detectives around and how he remembered Rogerson in his car, being dropped at the Raffles Hotel.
The pub was owned at the time by Abe Saffron, a Sydney crime boss known as ‘Mr Sin’.
Mr Regan also said he was certain Rogerson was close with head of the vice squad Bernie Johnson — who many said was at the top of a “purple circle” of corrupt WA detectives.
CIB detective Laurie Tyler told the coroner he too knew Johnson, knew of Saffron, and had been introduced to Rogerson in the WA Police canteen.
And Mr Tyler said around the time of Ms Finn’s murder, at the Raffles, he saw Saffron, Johnson and Rogerson enjoying each other’s company.
“I thought it was something to take note of,” Mr Tyler said.
And there was much more to note. Like the evidence of former WA fraud squad detective James Boland.
He told the Finn inquest about information he was given a month after the murder.
The information was that a hitman had been hired from the east coast to kill Ms Finn — for a $5000 bounty.
He said the assassin flew into Perth under an assumed name, invited Ms Finn out for a drink, lured her to Perth Airport and killed her on the way.
That alleged hitman was Neddy Smith — a man who was to become one of Rogerson’s most valuable informants
But Coroner Barry King, in delivering his reasons, revealed that no significant investigation was conducted by WA Police until 2015 — some 40 years later.
“At an early stage of the inquest, it demonstrated the possibility that police corruption existed in the CIB at the time of Ms Finn’s murder.”
Rogerson was eventually interviewed by WA Police in 2015, “but he said that he could not recall meeting Shirley Finn.”