Dancing on the Jetty
The Death of Michael Hutchence, et. al.

By Alex Constantine
© Copyright 1999

[From: A. Constantine, The Wall of Death: CIA/Mafia Killings of British and
American Rock Musicians - An Annotated Guide, Feral House, to be published
in the Spring, 2000.]

     On November 22, 1997, the morning Michael Hutchence was found tethered
to a door fixture at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Sydney, Australia, Reuters
placed his self-immolation in context: "If Michael Hutchence's death is
eventually ruled a suicide, the INXS vocalist would join a long list of
rockers who have taken their own lives.... Joy Division singer Ian Curtis
built a career on songs filled with angst, paranoia and death. After making
inspired hits such as 'She's Lost Control,' 'Transmission' and 'Love Will
Tear Us Apart,' he hanged himself in his Manchester, England, home in 1980.
Richard Manuel, pianist and vocalist with the Band, hanged himself in a
Florida hotel room a month shy of his 43rd birthday, in March 1986. Little
had gone right for him since the group broke up in 1976, and a subsequent
reunion - without main man Robbie Robertson - further depressed him....
Psychological problems may have played a part in the 1979 death of soul-pop
singer Donny Hathaway, who fell to his death from a 15th floor hotel room
in New York City. Hathaway, who was 34, was best known for his duets with
Roberta Flack...."
     The mortality rate among rock musicians with abundant capital, sexual
gratification and public adoration is extremely high - depression is often
cited as the prelude to death among these pitiful creatures. It explains
everything. Michael Hutchence was despondent over a custody battle and
destroyed himself. Case clo ....
     But hold the phone, if you please. Kym Wilson, a friend of the
vocalist's, spent some five hours with the rock singer the morning he died.
She was the last person to see him alive, and reported, "He was concerned
about the custody hearing but I wouldn't say he was depressed. His attitude
was that he believed he was right and that he and Paula should get custody
of the children and if they didn't have luck this time, they would keep
fighting on. I never for one instant think he thought that would be the
end." Hutchence had spoken "with such excitement of his future - I had
really never seen him with so much to look forward to."1
     God is secluded in details, so before rushing this case file to the
"Day the Music Died" morgue, one last check for Him in the flotsam of
details related a very peculiar death is in order. There was no inquest.
Friends of Hutchence told investigators that the "happy"/"depressed"rock
singer was "involved in kinky sex over the years," and though it's fairly
certain that he was not the first rock musician to indulge in "kinky sex,"
authorities assembled the pieces and were led to explore auto-eroticism as
the cause of death. The salacious indictment originated with Australian
police, appeared in the New York Post, took on a life of its own, gathered
momentum on the newswires, sprinted across the airwaves and barreled
through the world media machine. On December 24, police spokesmen announced
that they were anxious to quash this ugly rumor. Argumentative "paranoids"
might ask why this particular far-fetched bit of speculation was fed to the
press in the first place. The "mainstream" media ran with it - and both
passed the buck to the tabloid press, as E! News Online  reported:
"Authorities have not officially ruled Hutchence's case a suicide, although
that's where they've indicated they're leaning, in spite of tabloid reports
that the 37-year-old singer accidentally hung himself while practicing an
oxygen-deprivation masturbation game."
     Two weeks after his death, INXS members called a press conference to
complain about a cover story on their late lead vocalist entitled
"Auto-Eroticism - the Sex that Kills" in New Weekly  magazine. The article
played on the conjecture that Hutchence did not commit suicide but hung
himself accidentally, went a bit over the top in the act of self-love. The
stills, lewd  S&M bondage scenes, were shot by fashion photographer Helmut
Newton two weeks before Hutchence died. The magazine's cover featured a
photo of Hutchence chained, a ravishing tart, barely clad in leather,
arching over him. Another portrayed the tart wearing a saddle, with
Hutchence the domineering equestrian. Surviving INXSers announced that they
were considering legal action. A spokesman for the band found the article
"incredibly insensitive."2  It was a smear reminiscent of Albert Goldman's
postmortem demolition jobs, a kick in the backside on the way out.
     All around, it was a damned peculiar death. Senior Constable Mark
Hargreaves of the New South Wales Police media unit, asked by reporters why
Hutchence was naked when he hung himself, replied: "It was early in the
morning, he could have just gotten out of bed. It's hard to determine if he
did it [hanged himself] on purpose or by accident."3
     He didn't leave a suicide note behind for Paula Yates and his
daughter.4
     The night of his death, Hutchence had dinner with his father and
stepmother at a local Indian restaurant. They laughed throughout the meal.
His father expressed concern about Michael's personal problems, and was
reassured, "Dad, I'm fine."
     The vocalist "was an unlikely candidate for suicide," noted Glenn
Baker, an Australian rock historian. "He was the consummate rock star. He
took on the role of a star so comfortably. He floated above the pressures.
Why he would choose this moment to throw in the towel I think will always
remain a mystery." Ian "Molly" Meldrum, a television celebrity in Australia
and close friend, said he last saw the singer in Los Angeles eight weeks
before. Meldrum told reporters: "He seemed so happy and at peace, and even
said to me, 'I've never been happier in my life.'"5
    Zinta Reindel and Tamara Brachmanis, guests at the Ritz during
Hutchence's last stay  there, talked to him the night before his "suicide,"
and recalled, "He looked like he was a bit high on something ... but he was
happy."4 Why not? He was branching out into a thespian career in a Quentin
Tarantino production, was working on a solo album. His daughter was to be
christened soon. Why abandon her without so much as a note?
     Significant details were excluded from most press accounts. Corporate
outlets reported: "SYDNEY, Australia - Michael Hutchence, the lead singer
for the  rock band INXS, was found dead Saturday in a Sydney hotel ...
shortly after midday. The INXS front man was in Australia preparing for the
band's 20th anniversary tour. His body was discovered by a maid when she
went to make up the room. Prescription pills were  found scattered over the
floor of his suite and there were bottles of alcohol on a sideboard."6
     Pills, mostly antibiotics, Prozac, booze and a hotel room in a state
of squalor, a death scene completely consistent with suicide. Hutchence
died of asphyxiation. His body was still warm when he was found suspended
from a door, the leather belt looped around his neck.
     Music critic David Fricke, writing in Rolling Stone,  supplemented the
standard metro daily obituary: "His body bore the marks of a severe beating
(a broken hand, a split lip, lacerations)."7  Hmmmmm ...
     Now, Australian police could find "no evidence" of foul play. Derek
Hand, the new South Wales coroner, stated without reservation: "The
standard required to conclude that his death was a suicide has been
reached."10  But the coroner's report did not address the protruding
questions. Did Hutchence break his own hand? Did he bludgeon himself so
that his lip bled, then beat himself into a pulp, and by doing so break
bones in his hand? Then how, with one good hand and the other in
excruciating , throbbing pain, did he manage to loop the belt through the
door brace and around his neck securely enough to hang? The coroner didn't
address certain lingering questions, but was so confident of his verdict
that he advised against an investigation: "Nothing will be gained by
holding a formal inquest," he concluded. A homicide probe would entail
unwarranted "time and expense."
     Case clos ...  but if there is no objection to one small peek at the
record ...
     The "suicide" verdict may have been self-evident to a trained medical
examiner, but a layman might call it a replay of the Bobby Fuller
"suicide." And it wasn't universally accepted. Paula Yates appeared on
Australian television in March, 1988 to declare publicly that she sought
legal advice to contest the finding. She said that Hutchence considered
suicide the most cowardly act in the world. "I will be making it abundantly
clear that because of information that I and only I could know about, I
cannot accept the verdict. And I won't have my child grow up thinking that
her father left her, not knowing the way he loved her." She acknowledged
that Hutchence had been depressed, but his infant daughter was his passion
and "reason to live."
     "In no way do I accept the coroner's verdict of suicide."9

The Devils Outside
     Whatever Paula and only Paula knew, it's certain that the name Michael
Hutchence appeared on more than one enemies list.
     Hutchence was a political activist. His will designated Amnesty
International and Greenpeace as the benefactors of the lion's share of his
assets. And like many popular musicians on the Left, the authorities
harassed and set him up for a fall. In a July 1998 interview that appeared
in aXs, a fan newsletter, Colin Diamond, Hutchence's attorney and former
executor of his estate, was asked about the vocalist's September 1996 opium
bust, and his defense that the narcotic was planted by police.
     "Perhaps you should try and figure it out for yourself," Diamond
snapped. "Michael and Paula were out of the country and during that time
only a few people had any real access to the place: Bob Geldof, Anita
Debney, the nanny who used to work for Bob for 12 or so years, and a woman
called Gerry Agar, who had developed a grudge against both Paula and
Michael. The police were called days after the nanny claimed she'd found
two Smarty packets with opium in them. Geldof immediately had a new custody
application before the courts, 'in light of recent events.' The local
police and prosecutors had the media on their case. There was enormous
pressure on them, but even they had to admit something was a bit fishy.
They dropped all charges, remember, and Michael was issued with a
certificate of non-prosecution by the Crown."
     When asked if Hutchence "got off" fairly, Diamond snapped again: "Got
off, GOT OFF?? I think the question should be who tried to get him on.  You
figure it out!"11  The barrister turned on his interrogator again when
asked about the late singer's labyrinthian finances, the "missing millions"
reported by the Australian press:

     "Q: You've copped a bit of a hiding in the press as some sort of
financial Svengali to Michael, with suggestions that, with regards to his
estate, all is not as it should be. You've refused point-blank to speak to
the media before this, so let me ask you directly: Where's the money?
     "Diamond: None of your business. That's the point; it's private.
Don't you guys get it? It's PRIVATE."

     The word "private" is stained and obsured by saliva in the dictionary
used by daily news reporters, and so, seven months later, Australia's
Courier-Mail  found the "missing millions," and a horribly interesting
"Mafia Tie To Rock Star's Lost Riches."
     It was reported that Hutchence "was involved in property dealings with
a company allegedly connected to the Mafia. Bruno Romeo Sr, an alleged
high-ranking member of the L'Onorata Societa,  or Calabrian mafia, and his
family are current and former directors of a company which sold a Gold
Coast bowling alley for $2.25 million to a trustee company linked to the
former INXS front man. A police intelligence report alleged Romeo was a key
member of Italian organized crime groups." The National Crime Authority, in
search of cocaine, descended upon the bowling alley in 1995. "Company
records indicate Harbrick Pty Ltd, whose former directors include Bruno
'The Fox' Romeo, a convicted drug dealer, also borrowed $270,000 as part of
the deal." Colin Diamond "signed the earlier loan documents."   Lawyers and
accountants of Harbrick were hauled to court by Hutchence's mother,
Patricia Glassop, and stepsister, Tina Hutchence, in a bid to reclaim
millions of dollars in assets. Harbrick Ltd was a nexus in an intricate web
of companies, some of them based offshore. The purpose of the lawsuit was
to force them to declare an estimated $25 million in assets not included in
the Hutchence estate.
     "The bowling alley, at 378 Marine Pde, Labrador, is one of five multi
million dollar properties worldwide which Mrs Glassop and Ms Hutchence
claim should have been included in the singer's estate and divided
according to his will," the newspaper reported. The NCA ... targeted a
person associated with Harbrick." This was Bruno Romeo, Sr., 69, "jailed
for 10 years in 1994 over his role as the ringleader of an $8 million
cannabis-growing operation on remote pastoral leases in Western Australia."
Bruno was a director of Harbrick, a family-owned operation, "from 1988 to
1990. His son, Bruno Lee Romeo, 42, who was jailed for 8.5 years in Western
Australia in 1987 for conspiring to cultivate a 1.5ha cannabis crop, is
still a director of the Queensland-registered firm. The other director is
Romeo Sr.'s son-in-law, Guiseppe 'Joe' Sergi, 42 ... sentenced to five
years jail after being convicted over a marijuana crop in 1982."
     Court documents revealed that the representatives of Harbrick in the
loan agreement also worked for a baroque score of offshore companies that
helped themselves to the finances of Michael Hutchence.12
     His mother and sister alleged before the bench that the Ł16 million in
dispute had been siphoned off. Australian tax inspectors said that the
vanishing funds meant that his widow and daughter might not receive a cent
of the inheritance. Outraged, the family filed suit in the Queensland
Supreme Court against Colin Diamond and Andrew Paul, a Hong Kong-based tax
consultant. Companies in Australia, the United Kingdom, France and the
British Virgin Islands controlled the singer's income.
     In fact, the Hutchence clan complained that the pop singer had
relinquished most of his assets, including luxury automobiles and property
in the south of France, Australia and  London. His immense wealth had
completely vanished into a black grotto of investments and trust accounts,
and most, perhaps all of these firms were managed by discretionary trusts
administered by Colin Diamond and Andrew Paul. Hutchence himself was
penniless the day he allegedly looped a belt around his neck and choked
himself into oblivion.
     Many of Hutchence's most cherished possessions "were not actually
owned by him," noted the London Telegraph in April 1999, "but were
controlled by companies - themselves under the control of others.
Beneficiaries have been told that only Mr Hutchence's personal effects will
be distributed to them."13
     The Sydney Morning Herald reported on March 8, 1998 that Hutchence
"died almost penniless. But up to $30 million worth of property, cars,
shares, bank accounts and income streams from his music and publishing -
believed to have belonged to Hutchence - is held by obscure trusts in tax
havens stretching from Hong Kong to the British Virgin Islands." Closed
hearings on Hutchence's will were requested by Andrew Paul, who had the
bile to ask that legal expenses in the pending litigation be underwritten
by the estate.  "The looming court battle has been variously reported as a
'squabble over the estate' or 'the family contesting the will.'" complained
the Herald, "but this is not so. All members of the estranged family have
agreed that Hutchence's will ... was fair. What is disputed is the claim by
his executors that there is nothing in the Hutchence estate to distribute."
14 Too much funny business, and still no investigation of the singer's
death. Reporter Vince Lovegrove, reports New Idea Magazine,  "was the last
person to interview the rock star, has hinted at a conspiracy to cover up
what really happened."15
    The financial links with the Calabrian Mafia raise the specter of
Michael Hutchence's close friend, Gianni Versacé, the celebrated fashion
designer gunned down on the front steps of Casa Casuarina, his palatial
South Beach home, by a serial killer on July 15, 1997, only five months
before the INXS vocalist went down. Versacé, in fact, was raised in the
south of Italy, a locale dominated by the Calabrian Mafia. The Telegraph
reports that Versacé "would become inflamed with rage at suggestions that
he had links with the Mafia."16  But another Telegraph story notes, "There
have long been reports that Versacé, whose family comes from Calabria in
southern Italy, had been financially involved with the Mafia," and so was
Hutchence, with or withour his knowledge. "It had been rumoured that he
borrowed mob money to expand his business, and had been paying 'protection
money.'"17
     In Europe, the press ran rampant with allegations of Versacé's
financial links to the Mafia. Newspapers in Italy and Ireland offered
stories on the designer and the Calabrese. The Russian Information Agency
ran a feature on the topic.
     Then there was the dead mourning dove found lying beside the
designer's body. The dove was said to be a "hit man's calling card."
Police denied any connection to the Mob. One of the .40 caliber bullets
that struck Versacé in the head ricocheted off his front gate of his house,
a police spokesman explained, sending a lead fragment hurtling skyward. It
struck a dove sailing overhead in the eye, killing it instantly. The dove
(the reincarnation of John Connally?) plummeted to the gutter and plopped
down beside Versacés dead body.18
     But the conclusion of a private detective formerly employed by the
fashion designer were at odds with the official verdict. Frank Monté, an
Australian P.I. - and former recruiter of mercenaries for the African
campaigns of the 1960s - told radio shock jock Howard Stern and other
interviewers he was convinced "both Versacé and Cunanan were murdered by
the Mob." He said that he'd been hired by the designer to investigate the
killing of a friend's lover, and was recruited again to follow up on
reports that employees of his own company had been laundering mob money.
The private eye held that Versacé was gunned down because he intended to
turn evidence of the laundering operation over to Italian police. Andrew
Cunanan, Monté insisted, was a patsy kidnapped and "suicided" to provide
the cover story. The investigator was so confident of the Mafia connection
that he publicly advised Cunanan, after Versacé's murder, to turn himself
in or he would be next.
     Ten days after the slaying of Versacé, he rold reporters: "Nothing
that has happened since then has changed my mind."
     He could not shake off certain unresolved discrepancies. Cunanon is
reported to have stolen a .40 calibre pistol and used it to shoot Versacé
two times in the head and then turned it on himself. Cunanon was so badly
disfigured by one blast that police were unable to identify him at first -
but the same gun left two small, pristine holes in Versacé's skull. Monté
was skeptical that the stolen gun could have produced the drastically
dissimiliar wounds, and complained that FBI ballistic tests had been
"fudged."19

     The funeral of Gianni Versacé in Milan Cathedral was attended by Diana
Spencer, the Princess of Wales, a month before her own death in a Parisian
tunnel. As it happened, another social butterfly and friend of Michael
Hutchence with organized crime connections was Dodi Fayed. Dodi's uncle was
arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi of Iran-Contra fame. Mohamed al-Fayed, dodi's
father, is "one of the richest men in Britain," notes the St. Louis
Tribune. "The source of al-Fayed's wealth always has been somewhat murky.
Born poor in Alexandria, Egypt, he acquired a university education and
married Samira Kashoggi, sister of the fabulously wealthy Saudi Arabian
arms dealer. His brother-in-law gave al-Fayed his start in business by
putting him in charge of his furniture-importing interests in Saudi
Arabia."20 He is said to have sicced Donna Rice  on Gary Hart to sabotage
his bid for the Oval Office. Dodi and his uncle introduced Marla Maples to
Donald Trump. Denise Brown, a sexual gadfly with a black book of organized
crime figures, traveled in the same social circle as Dodi Fayed and dated
him. Al Fayed and Adnan Khashoggi were closely associated with the Sultan
of Brunei, who has been accused by an American beauty queen of presiding
over a "white slaver's harem."
     Dodi Fayed and Diana Spencer were killed in a car crash on August 31,
1997, three months before Michael Hutchence died.
     The intelligence underground withholds its files the accident and has
steadfastly refused to declassify them. In November 1998, in response to a
Freedom of Information Act request filed by the propietors of the APBNews
web site, the National Security Agency confirmed that it had on file "39
NSA-originated and NSA-controlled documents" concerning the crash, but
"refused to release them." The NSA insisted that  the files were "top
secret," and their release, it seems, could bring about "exceptionally
grave damage to the national security." Press accounts of the secret files
moved Al Fayed to undertake a series of lawsuits in Baltimore and
Washington district courts for their release. His demand included any
intelligence that might be cabbaged away in CIA, DIA and NSA files. Each
agency was sued separately in February 1999, and to date, Fayed and the
media have been denied any classified files pertaining to deaths of his son
and the estranged princess.21


Notes

      1. Mike Gee, The Final Days of Michael Hutchence, London: Omnibus,
1998, p. 152.
      2. "INXS fury at photos of bondage,"South China Morning Post,
December 11  1997.
      3. Gil Kaufman, "Police Say INXS Singer Left No Suicide Note,"Music
News of the World,  December 5, 1997.
      4. Ibid.
      5. Geoffrey Lee Martin, "Hutchence seemed so happy, say friends,"
London Telegraph,, Issue 914, November 24, 1997.
      6. Gee, p. 150.
      7. Ibid.
      8. David Fricke, "The Devil Inside," Rolling Stone,  January 22,
1998, p. 17.
      9. Derek W. Hand, Inquest into the Death of Michael Kelland
Hutchence, February 6, 1998.
     10. "Yates in Legal Move to Fight Suicide Verdict," London Telegraph,
March 30, 1998.
     11. Diamond interview transcribed by Leah Sungenis, aXs (INXS
newsletter), July 1998.
     12. Paul Whittaker and Rory Callinan, "Mafia Tie To Rock Star's Lost
Riches,"  The Courier-Mail, February 13, 1999.
     13. Mark Chipperfield, "Hutchence family fights for 'missing'
fortune," Sunday Telegraph, April 19 ,1998.
     14. Ian Verrender, "Fight begins for control of Hutchence assets,"
Sydney Morning Herald, March, 8, 1998.
     15. Leigh Reinhold, Angry Kim - I didn't kill Michael - A year later,
Kym Wilson is still haunted by Michael Hutchence's death," New Idea
Magazine,, Always INSX Web site.
     16. Caroline Davies, "Boy Raised Among the Brothels Who Became a
Fashion Star,"London Telegraph,  July 16, 1997.
     17. James Langton, "Did Mafia silence Versacé to hide financial
scandal?" Sunday Telegraph, July 27, 1997.
     18. "FBI Hunt Gay Serial Killer After Versacé Shot Dead," London
Telegraph, July 16, 1997.
     19. Bruce Taylor Seeman, "A murder theory takes wing: `Dead bird clue'
fosters speculation," Miami Herald, July 27, 1997.
     20. Anonymous, "Dodi's Royal Romance Was Coup for Father," Salt Lake
Tribune, September 3, 1997.
     21. Tami Sheheri, "Al-Fayed Demands Spy Agency's Diana Files,"
APBNews.com, April 19, 1999.









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