Dezi Freeman: Police shoot dead fugitive gunman after Porepunkah cop killer spent seven months on the run
Fugitive gunman Dezi Freeman has been shot dead by police after seven months on the run.
The 56-year-old was killed by heavily armed police after an intensive, large-scale search.
Desmond ‘Dezi’ Freeman has been missing since August 26 last year, when he allegedly shot dead Detective Leading Senior Constable Neal Thompson and Senior Constable Vadim de Waart-Hottart while the officers were attempting to execute a search warrant at a remote property in Porepunkah, Victoria.
A third officer was seriously injured during the alleged ambush.
Freeman, who was still armed, ran from the scene and no trace of him had been found until Monday morning, when it is believed he was found in a shipping container near the small town of Walwa near the Victoria/NSW border.
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Sign upPolice received a tip-off about his location from a person close to Freeman, unnamed police sources have told The Age.

Victoria Police confirmed that he was shot dead at a rural property just after 8.30am.
“No police officers were injured during the incident,” police said.
“The State Coroner will attend the scene and the investigation will be oversighted by Professional Standards Command, as per standard process for a police shooting.
“Further information will be released today as the situation develops.”
Freeman, formerly Filby, was an experienced bushman and self described sovereign citizen, a fringe conspiracy group that originated in the US which has evolved into a global collection of people who believe they are exempt from the country’s laws and government.
In September, police offered a record $1 million dollar reward for information leading to Freeman’s arrest after he opened fire on 10 police officers who attended his Porepunkah property on August 26 to execute a search warrant in relation to child sex offences.
Freeman’s wife Mali, who police have confirmed was present during the fatal shootings, and a 15-year-old boy were previously arrested but released without charge.
The incident sparked the biggest police manhunt in Victorian history, with Porepunkah and surrounds locked down and specialised police officers, including from interstate and overseas, flooding the area.
The search involved hundreds of properties, abandoned structures, mine shafts, plantations and gorges, with police describing the search area in nearby Mount Buffalo National Park as “incredibly, incredibly rugged”.
No mourning death of ‘coward’
The Police Association of Victoria says the death of “coward” Freeman is a step forward for the families of Const. Thompson and Sen. Const de Waart.
“Our members said they would find him. They did,” association secretary Wayne Gatt said.
“Closure isn’t the right word. This represents a step forward for our members, the families of our fallen members, and 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.”


“Today, we won’t reflect on the loss of a coward. We will remember the courage and bravery of our fallen members and every officer who has doggedly pursued this outcome for the community. 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,” he said.
“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.”
John Bird, a friend of Sen. Const. Thompson said it was a “good day”.
“It doesn’t change Thommo, but it is a good day because at least the person who caused it is not drawing breath anymore.”
He hoped anyone who had been helping Freeman while he was on the run would be held accountable.
“I hope everyone that has been helping him, because he can’t have been doing this alone, suffers the full force of the law too,” he said.
“It’s just a relief. Like I said, it doesn’t change anything much, but it is closure on that side of things.”
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