The Underland - S1E3 - The Rise of Carl Williams

Aug 24, 01:44 PM

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Melbourne’s underworld had always been a precarious balance—alliances held together by fear, grudges measured in decades, and violence reserved for those who miscalculated their position, who overstepped unspoken boundaries, or who failed to respect the intricate hierarchy of power. It was a delicate ecosystem where one wrong move could trigger a chain reaction, and where loyalty was never guaranteed, only earned and enforced through blood, intimidation, and reputation. But by the early 2000s, that fragile equilibrium began to shift, slowly at first, then with a sudden, irreversible momentum.

The spark came in May 2002, on what appeared to be an ordinary sunny Monday in Port Melbourne. The city, as always, went about its routines—the hum of trams, the chatter of pedestrians, shopkeepers arranging their displays. Yet beneath that veneer of normalcy, tension simmered. Violence had been brewing quietly for years, a storm gathering strength in the hidden corners of alleys, warehouses, and suburban streets.

Victor Pierce, a man whose name was etched into the darkest chapters of Melbourne’s criminal history, pulled up outside a modest fruit shop on Bay Street. To the casual observer, he was just another man in a car. But anyone who knew the city’s underworld—or its police—understood the weight of his presence. He was a survivor, a man who had defied justice more than once, a figure who carried with him the memory of Walsh Street, the infamous murders that had claimed the lives of two young police officers and left the city and the force reeling.

Then came the shots. Five in rapid succession. Four found their mark. Two struck him in the head. The sound echoed through the street, terrifying in its suddenness, brutal in its precision. Pedestrians froze. Shopkeepers ducked behind counters. Children, unaware of the intricacies of the adult world, sensed only the fear, the chaos, the violence erupting in their midst. By the time anyone could react, Victor Peirce was gone. Instantly. A figure once untouchable, a symbol of resilience and fear, reduced in seconds to a lifeless body on the pavement, a stark reminder that in this world, even legends could be brought down.

Pierce was more than just a criminal. He was a bridge to the old guard, a link to an era when the rules of the underworld were written in blood, when certain names commanded both respect and terror. He had survived the Walsh Street trial, had walked free while two young police officers lay murdered, and had endured decades of feuds, grudges, and shifting allegiances. His death was not just the loss of a man—it was the removal of a keystone, a shift that left a vacuum in power, a gap that would not go unnoticed, a signal to anyone waiting in the shadows that the old order was vulnerable.

And from those shadows, a figure who had been quietly observing, calculating, and biding his time began to move. A man who had spent years navigating the margins, learning the lessons of the streets, studying the mistakes and vulnerabilities of others. His time had come. His patience had been rewarded by the chaos around him. His ambition would not be delayed. 

That man was Carl Williams.