
A recap of the circumstances surrounding the hunt for Freeman
The police officers who were shot had been part of a group of 10 police – made up of local officers and members of the sexual offences and child abuse investigation team – who entered Freeman’s Porepunkah property, about 300km north-east of Melbourne in rural Victoria, on a Tuesday morning in August to serve a search warrant. They were then allegedly fired upon by Freeman.
Freeman, a 56-year-old with a history of association with pseudolaw or “sovereign citizen” ideology, allegedly fled into the bush heavily armed, with a manhunt ensuing that has been continuing for the seven months since.
Scott Brandon, owner of the Bright Brewery, a few kilometres away from Porepunkah, has told ABC Radio Melbourne this morning that locals feel a “big relief” following the discovery of Dezi Freeman. He told host Raf Epstein:
I think it’s a big relief for us to have this chapter resolved, if this news is correct. It’s certainly something that’s been weighing on our minds for several months now.
Brandon said when initial search operations were underway there was a “big impact” on tourism in the area and it “caused a lot fear in the community”:
Since then everything has pretty much returned to normal … but it’s certainly something that still gets discussed from time to time. When you’ve got an unresolved event like that where somebody’s clearly still being searched for, it’s going to keep coming up. And so, you know, I think it’s a relief just to have an end to all of that.
Independent federal MP Helen Haines, whose electorate of Indi encompasses Porepunkah and much of the surrounding high country, has released a statement this morning in the wake of the news that Freeman has been shot and killed.
Haines said:
Over the past six months, a dark cloud has hung over the Porepunkah community.
News this morning of the death of Mr Freeman draws this prolonged and devastating incident to a close.
This will come as a relief to the whole community – especially to the families of Detective Leading Senior Constable Neal Thompson and Senior Constable Vadim De Waart, and their colleagues.
I thank Victoria Police, and all those involved in the search for their determination and service.
‘Thoughts, concerns and support’ with Porepunkah community, Victorian attorney general says
The Victorian attorney general, Sonya Kilkenny, was holding a press conference in Melbourne as the news emerged of the police shooting of Freeman. She said:
It is a developing situation and of course understand Victoria police has put out a statement a few moments ago. I think the main thing is our thoughts, our concerns and our support are with the Porepunkah community and the families of the two police officers who were killed in that tragic incident nearly six months ago.
Wayne Gatt, secretary of the Police Association Victoria, issued a statement a little earlier confirming the man fatally shot was Dezi Freeman.
He said:
Our members said they would find him. They did.
Closure isn’t the right word. This represents a step forward for our members, for the families of our fallen members and for the community. It doesn’t lessen the trauma, give back the futures that were callously stolen or lessen the collective fear and grief that this tragic event has instilled in police and the wider public.
Gatt said police officers “won’t reflect on the loss of a coward”. Instead, he said they will spend the day remembering “the courage and bravery of our fallen members and every officer that has doggedly pursued this outcome for the community.”
Gatt’s statement continued:
They have worked tirelessly. During the emergency, in the operation that followed and the months thereafter, members across the state have devoted themselves to this singular pursuit. Days like today offer a sobering reminder that policing happens while you sleep, when the media spotlight on an investigation dims and when everything seems lost and forgotten.
RIP Vadim and Neal. Today, we remember you.
Good morning. Welcome to our live coverage in the wake of the news today that police have shot and killed fugitive Dezi Freeman in north-east Victoria this morning.
Police had been searching for Freeman, also known as Desmond Filby, since 26 August when he allegedly shot and killed Det Leading Sen Const Neal Thompson, 59, and Sen Const Vadim De Waart, 35, and injured a third officer at a property in the small town of Porepunkah, in Victoria’s high country.
We’re expecting to hear shortly from Victoria Police Chief Commissioner Mike Bush with more details about the incident.
Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: theguardian.com





