Colin Sinclair - a fraudster who duped his mates.
 Herald Sun
 										
  								  		   	   			 				 				 				A BLACK Saturday hero has been exposed as a fraud who for more than  20 years duped his community and family into believing he was a Vietnam  vet. 				 				
 			  		 		Colin Sinclair will be noticeably absent from Sunday's Anzac dawn  service in Walhalla, the historic gold-mining town two hours' drive east  of Melbourne.
  For more than 20 years, he has been the driving  force behind the sombre ceremony, shedding tears for those he said he  fought alongside.
 He would give snapshots of life on Radar Hill  at Nui Dat, where the SAS operated.
 But when the school bus  driver was asked to elaborate, he would invoke the Secrets Act. In the  early morning mist he would pay tribute to those who struggled to  readjust to civilian life, and who later took their own lives.
 At  the Walhalla pub, his war adventures were legendary. Some thought they  were too good to be true. They were: Colin Sinclair was living a lie.
 			 		 Early this month, the would-be war hero confessed to his three  children and some mates that he'd been living a double life.
 "It  was all bull----. It started with one lie and then just grew and grew,"  said the 63-year-old, who also works as a tourist guide.
 "I'm an  impostor who has been finally found out. I knew it was going to come one  day. Now I'm so glad it's over ... I don't have to live this lie.
 "It  just got out of control and got to the point where I was hating  myself."
 Mr Sinclair was outed after his war stories were checked  by real Vietnam veterans, who confronted him weeks ago.
 He said  the lie started when he was first asked to organise the local Anzac Day  service, and it was suggested he claim Vietnam veteran status.
 "It  was thought it would seem better if the service was done by an  ex-serviceman instead of an idiot off the street," he claimed.
 "Well,  as things turned out they did get an idiot ... me."
 Mr Sinclair  said in his own mind he rationalised the lies by paying tribute to his  friends who served.
 The closest involvement  he'd had with the military was in the army reserves.
 "I tried to  get into the Army and the Navy, but up here is too dense," he said,  tapping a finger against his temple. "I couldn't pass the IQ test."
 Nonetheless,  he has a keen interest in the military, collecting war memorabilia,  notably Vietnam medallions such as the Long Tan Cross.
 When  people asked to see his war service medals he'd claim to have thrown  them in the river in disgust at anti-war protests. "But I've drawn the  line at wearing medals, and I've never tried to get a pension," he said.
  A couple of weeks ago he purged his guilt, first to his two  daughters and teenage son, and then his pub mates.
 "My daughter  called me a 'bloody idiot' and then told me she loved me," he said.
 Last  year, Mr Sinclair experienced a form of redemption when the Black  Saturday bushfires came close to town.
 The bushfires royal  commission was told that Mr Sinclair had ushered about 30 people to  safety inside the old gold mine where he is a guide.
 In his  submission to the commission, Simon Anthony Seear, who has a holiday  house in Walhalla, said the fire came within a couple of hundred metres.
  "We were just lucky in terms of the wind change," he wrote.
 "Prior  to this wind change, the fire appeared to create its own weather  pattern: it was black; the sky was raining mud; it was like black mud  was covering everything."
 Mr Sinclair can recall seeing  the fires bearing down.
 "We thought we were dead. Then the wind  dropped and it started to rain," he said.
 He won't be marching on  Sunday, but across Australia some Vietnam veterans will be on the  lookout for impostors.
 The ANZMI group, set up to expose military  impersonators, said members would carry phone and digital cameras to  photograph anyone suspected of being an impostor.