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Family hopes for change as inquest draws to an end

Family hopes for change as inquest draws to an end

The Advertiser6 hours ago
The family of a teenager who was fatally shot by a police officer are calling for "truth, accountability and justice" following a years-long coronial inquest.
Kumanjayi Walker was shot three times at close range by then-constable Zachary Rolfe at a home in the Northern Territory town of Yuendumu, in November 2019.
The death of the 19-year-old Warlpiri-Luritja man devastated the community, Mr Walker's cousin Samara Fernandez-Brown said.
"We miss him and feel his loss deeply every single day, it will stain our country for generations to come," she said in a statement.
In March 2022, an NT Supreme Court jury acquitted Mr Rolfe of murdering Mr Walker. He has since left the police force.
Over the course of the coronial inquest, which has faced several delays, text messages between Mr Rolfe and colleagues, littered with derogatory language were revealed, as were racist award certificates, which triggered a probe in early 2024 by the NT corruption watchdog.
It has been a gruelling, shocking and devastating process for family and the community, Ms Fernandez-Brown said, as they prepare for Coroner Elisabeth Armitage's findings, to be handed down in Yuendumu on Monday.
"Racism killed Kumanjayi. Racism from NT Police, the NT government, from Zachary Rolfe," Ms Fernandez-Brown said.
"Yet none of them have ever been held to account for Kumanjayi's death.
"We are heartbroken and exhausted after many long years, but we are hoping change is coming."
During the inquest, Mr Walker's family called for an independent police ombudsman to be established, self-determination for Yuendumu and other Aboriginal communities, investment in culturally-safe alternatives to prison and punitive policing, the banning of guns in community and a reckoning with the over-incarceration of Aboriginal people in the territory.
Senior Warlpiri Elder Ned Jampijinpa Hargraves, said if the NT Police Commissioner Martin Dole or other officers intended on going to Yuendumu for the findings, they should come without guns, and no "empty words".
"If he (Dole) is just coming to say sorry he is not welcome - how many times have they said sorry and still harmed us," Mr Hargraves said.
"If Dole comes with news of real change that would be different. If he said police would put down their guns like we wanted, yes, he would be welcome.
"But they are now giving out more guns to more police to shoot our people."
13YARN 13 92 76
Lifeline 13 11 14
The family of a teenager who was fatally shot by a police officer are calling for "truth, accountability and justice" following a years-long coronial inquest.
Kumanjayi Walker was shot three times at close range by then-constable Zachary Rolfe at a home in the Northern Territory town of Yuendumu, in November 2019.
The death of the 19-year-old Warlpiri-Luritja man devastated the community, Mr Walker's cousin Samara Fernandez-Brown said.
"We miss him and feel his loss deeply every single day, it will stain our country for generations to come," she said in a statement.
In March 2022, an NT Supreme Court jury acquitted Mr Rolfe of murdering Mr Walker. He has since left the police force.
Over the course of the coronial inquest, which has faced several delays, text messages between Mr Rolfe and colleagues, littered with derogatory language were revealed, as were racist award certificates, which triggered a probe in early 2024 by the NT corruption watchdog.
It has been a gruelling, shocking and devastating process for family and the community, Ms Fernandez-Brown said, as they prepare for Coroner Elisabeth Armitage's findings, to be handed down in Yuendumu on Monday.
"Racism killed Kumanjayi. Racism from NT Police, the NT government, from Zachary Rolfe," Ms Fernandez-Brown said.
"Yet none of them have ever been held to account for Kumanjayi's death.
"We are heartbroken and exhausted after many long years, but we are hoping change is coming."
During the inquest, Mr Walker's family called for an independent police ombudsman to be established, self-determination for Yuendumu and other Aboriginal communities, investment in culturally-safe alternatives to prison and punitive policing, the banning of guns in community and a reckoning with the over-incarceration of Aboriginal people in the territory.
Senior Warlpiri Elder Ned Jampijinpa Hargraves, said if the NT Police Commissioner Martin Dole or other officers intended on going to Yuendumu for the findings, they should come without guns, and no "empty words".
"If he (Dole) is just coming to say sorry he is not welcome - how many times have they said sorry and still harmed us," Mr Hargraves said.
"If Dole comes with news of real change that would be different. If he said police would put down their guns like we wanted, yes, he would be welcome.
"But they are now giving out more guns to more police to shoot our people."
13YARN 13 92 76
Lifeline 13 11 14
The family of a teenager who was fatally shot by a police officer are calling for "truth, accountability and justice" following a years-long coronial inquest.
Kumanjayi Walker was shot three times at close range by then-constable Zachary Rolfe at a home in the Northern Territory town of Yuendumu, in November 2019.
The death of the 19-year-old Warlpiri-Luritja man devastated the community, Mr Walker's cousin Samara Fernandez-Brown said.
"We miss him and feel his loss deeply every single day, it will stain our country for generations to come," she said in a statement.
In March 2022, an NT Supreme Court jury acquitted Mr Rolfe of murdering Mr Walker. He has since left the police force.
Over the course of the coronial inquest, which has faced several delays, text messages between Mr Rolfe and colleagues, littered with derogatory language were revealed, as were racist award certificates, which triggered a probe in early 2024 by the NT corruption watchdog.
It has been a gruelling, shocking and devastating process for family and the community, Ms Fernandez-Brown said, as they prepare for Coroner Elisabeth Armitage's findings, to be handed down in Yuendumu on Monday.
"Racism killed Kumanjayi. Racism from NT Police, the NT government, from Zachary Rolfe," Ms Fernandez-Brown said.
"Yet none of them have ever been held to account for Kumanjayi's death.
"We are heartbroken and exhausted after many long years, but we are hoping change is coming."
During the inquest, Mr Walker's family called for an independent police ombudsman to be established, self-determination for Yuendumu and other Aboriginal communities, investment in culturally-safe alternatives to prison and punitive policing, the banning of guns in community and a reckoning with the over-incarceration of Aboriginal people in the territory.
Senior Warlpiri Elder Ned Jampijinpa Hargraves, said if the NT Police Commissioner Martin Dole or other officers intended on going to Yuendumu for the findings, they should come without guns, and no "empty words".
"If he (Dole) is just coming to say sorry he is not welcome - how many times have they said sorry and still harmed us," Mr Hargraves said.
"If Dole comes with news of real change that would be different. If he said police would put down their guns like we wanted, yes, he would be welcome.
"But they are now giving out more guns to more police to shoot our people."
13YARN 13 92 76
Lifeline 13 11 14
The family of a teenager who was fatally shot by a police officer are calling for "truth, accountability and justice" following a years-long coronial inquest.
Kumanjayi Walker was shot three times at close range by then-constable Zachary Rolfe at a home in the Northern Territory town of Yuendumu, in November 2019.
The death of the 19-year-old Warlpiri-Luritja man devastated the community, Mr Walker's cousin Samara Fernandez-Brown said.
"We miss him and feel his loss deeply every single day, it will stain our country for generations to come," she said in a statement.
In March 2022, an NT Supreme Court jury acquitted Mr Rolfe of murdering Mr Walker. He has since left the police force.
Over the course of the coronial inquest, which has faced several delays, text messages between Mr Rolfe and colleagues, littered with derogatory language were revealed, as were racist award certificates, which triggered a probe in early 2024 by the NT corruption watchdog.
It has been a gruelling, shocking and devastating process for family and the community, Ms Fernandez-Brown said, as they prepare for Coroner Elisabeth Armitage's findings, to be handed down in Yuendumu on Monday.
"Racism killed Kumanjayi. Racism from NT Police, the NT government, from Zachary Rolfe," Ms Fernandez-Brown said.
"Yet none of them have ever been held to account for Kumanjayi's death.
"We are heartbroken and exhausted after many long years, but we are hoping change is coming."
During the inquest, Mr Walker's family called for an independent police ombudsman to be established, self-determination for Yuendumu and other Aboriginal communities, investment in culturally-safe alternatives to prison and punitive policing, the banning of guns in community and a reckoning with the over-incarceration of Aboriginal people in the territory.
Senior Warlpiri Elder Ned Jampijinpa Hargraves, said if the NT Police Commissioner Martin Dole or other officers intended on going to Yuendumu for the findings, they should come without guns, and no "empty words".
"If he (Dole) is just coming to say sorry he is not welcome - how many times have they said sorry and still harmed us," Mr Hargraves said.
"If Dole comes with news of real change that would be different. If he said police would put down their guns like we wanted, yes, he would be welcome.
"But they are now giving out more guns to more police to shoot our people."
13YARN 13 92 76
Lifeline 13 11 14
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NT coroner to hand down long-awaited findings into 2019 police shooting of Kumanjayi Walker
NT coroner to hand down long-awaited findings into 2019 police shooting of Kumanjayi Walker

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NT coroner to hand down long-awaited findings into 2019 police shooting of Kumanjayi Walker

The Northern Territory coroner will today hand down her long-awaited findings and recommendations following an almost three-year inquiry into the 2019 police shooting of Kumanjayi Walker. Note: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised that this article contains the name and image of an Indigenous person who has died, used with the permission of their family. Mr Walker, 19, was fatally shot by then-NT police constable Zachary Rolfe during an attempted arrest in the remote community of Yuendumu, 300 kilometres north-west of Alice Springs. Mr Rolfe was later charged with murder, manslaughter and engaging in a violent act causing death, but was acquitted by an NT Supreme Court jury in 2022 after a six-week trial in Darwin. Mr Rolfe's lawyers argued the three shots were fired in self-defence, as Mr Walker had stabbed the officer in the shoulder with a pair of scissors during a scuffle. The former officer was dismissed from the force in 2023, after penning an open letter criticising the upper echelons of the NT Police Force and the coronial process. Because Mr Walker died in custody, his death was subject to a mandatory coronial inquest under NT law. The inquiry, conducted by NT Coroner Elisabeth Armitage, heard from more than 70 witnesses over 66 sitting days, across almost three years. With the coroner's wide scope of inquiry came a string of legal arguments and appeals, launched largely unsuccessfully by Mr Rolfe and other NT police officers in an attempt to limit the questions they could be compelled to answer. The inquiry was initially scheduled to run for three months in 2022 but faced several extended delays, and as of late 2023, it had cost the Northern Territory government more than $3 million in legal fees and travel expenses. The coroner's report is expected to be lengthy and complex, addressing allegations of racism, perjury, cover-ups and violence raised by witnesses at the inquest. Her extensive investigation heard allegations that racism was "normalised" within the NT Police Force and images were tendered of racist mock awards handed out by the force's most elite unit, described as 'disgraceful and abhorrent' by the then-police commissioner. Through an 8,000-page download of Mr Rolfe's personal mobile phone, the coroner uncovered the use of racist, homophobic and sexist language among officers on the Alice Springs beat. She examined Mr Rolfe's 46 prior use-of-force incidents from his three years on the front line, and heard the then-constable had lied on applications to multiple police services. His private text messages, previous romantic relationships, "concerning" behaviour and allegations of perjury were dissected in open court and ultimately, the coroner was urged to find Mr Rolfe should never have been employed as an NT police officer, let alone deployed to Yuendumu on the night Mr Walker was killed. Much of the evidence heard by the coroner had been ruled inadmissible at trial by Justice John Burns, who found earlier alleged use-of-force incidents and text messages on Mr Rolfe's phone did not have "significant probative value". Judge Armitage also examined Kumanjayi Walker's upbringing, brushes with the law and the level of poverty plaguing communities in the bush. She also examined body-worn camera footage of an earlier incident in which Mr Walker threatened police officers with an axe. Over almost three years, the inquest delved well beyond the night Mr Walker was killed by Mr Rolfe. At the opening of the inquest, Elisabeth Armitage posed the question: "Do I know the story of Kumanjayi Walker and constable Zachary Rolfe? Do you?" Today she publishes that story. Judge Armitage is expected to begin delivering her findings from 11am.

Family hopes for change as inquest draws to an end
Family hopes for change as inquest draws to an end

The Advertiser

time6 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Family hopes for change as inquest draws to an end

The family of a teenager who was fatally shot by a police officer are calling for "truth, accountability and justice" following a years-long coronial inquest. Kumanjayi Walker was shot three times at close range by then-constable Zachary Rolfe at a home in the Northern Territory town of Yuendumu, in November 2019. The death of the 19-year-old Warlpiri-Luritja man devastated the community, Mr Walker's cousin Samara Fernandez-Brown said. "We miss him and feel his loss deeply every single day, it will stain our country for generations to come," she said in a statement. In March 2022, an NT Supreme Court jury acquitted Mr Rolfe of murdering Mr Walker. He has since left the police force. Over the course of the coronial inquest, which has faced several delays, text messages between Mr Rolfe and colleagues, littered with derogatory language were revealed, as were racist award certificates, which triggered a probe in early 2024 by the NT corruption watchdog. It has been a gruelling, shocking and devastating process for family and the community, Ms Fernandez-Brown said, as they prepare for Coroner Elisabeth Armitage's findings, to be handed down in Yuendumu on Monday. "Racism killed Kumanjayi. Racism from NT Police, the NT government, from Zachary Rolfe," Ms Fernandez-Brown said. "Yet none of them have ever been held to account for Kumanjayi's death. "We are heartbroken and exhausted after many long years, but we are hoping change is coming." During the inquest, Mr Walker's family called for an independent police ombudsman to be established, self-determination for Yuendumu and other Aboriginal communities, investment in culturally-safe alternatives to prison and punitive policing, the banning of guns in community and a reckoning with the over-incarceration of Aboriginal people in the territory. Senior Warlpiri Elder Ned Jampijinpa Hargraves, said if the NT Police Commissioner Martin Dole or other officers intended on going to Yuendumu for the findings, they should come without guns, and no "empty words". "If he (Dole) is just coming to say sorry he is not welcome - how many times have they said sorry and still harmed us," Mr Hargraves said. "If Dole comes with news of real change that would be different. If he said police would put down their guns like we wanted, yes, he would be welcome. "But they are now giving out more guns to more police to shoot our people." 13YARN 13 92 76 Lifeline 13 11 14 The family of a teenager who was fatally shot by a police officer are calling for "truth, accountability and justice" following a years-long coronial inquest. Kumanjayi Walker was shot three times at close range by then-constable Zachary Rolfe at a home in the Northern Territory town of Yuendumu, in November 2019. The death of the 19-year-old Warlpiri-Luritja man devastated the community, Mr Walker's cousin Samara Fernandez-Brown said. "We miss him and feel his loss deeply every single day, it will stain our country for generations to come," she said in a statement. In March 2022, an NT Supreme Court jury acquitted Mr Rolfe of murdering Mr Walker. He has since left the police force. Over the course of the coronial inquest, which has faced several delays, text messages between Mr Rolfe and colleagues, littered with derogatory language were revealed, as were racist award certificates, which triggered a probe in early 2024 by the NT corruption watchdog. It has been a gruelling, shocking and devastating process for family and the community, Ms Fernandez-Brown said, as they prepare for Coroner Elisabeth Armitage's findings, to be handed down in Yuendumu on Monday. "Racism killed Kumanjayi. Racism from NT Police, the NT government, from Zachary Rolfe," Ms Fernandez-Brown said. "Yet none of them have ever been held to account for Kumanjayi's death. "We are heartbroken and exhausted after many long years, but we are hoping change is coming." During the inquest, Mr Walker's family called for an independent police ombudsman to be established, self-determination for Yuendumu and other Aboriginal communities, investment in culturally-safe alternatives to prison and punitive policing, the banning of guns in community and a reckoning with the over-incarceration of Aboriginal people in the territory. Senior Warlpiri Elder Ned Jampijinpa Hargraves, said if the NT Police Commissioner Martin Dole or other officers intended on going to Yuendumu for the findings, they should come without guns, and no "empty words". "If he (Dole) is just coming to say sorry he is not welcome - how many times have they said sorry and still harmed us," Mr Hargraves said. "If Dole comes with news of real change that would be different. If he said police would put down their guns like we wanted, yes, he would be welcome. "But they are now giving out more guns to more police to shoot our people." 13YARN 13 92 76 Lifeline 13 11 14 The family of a teenager who was fatally shot by a police officer are calling for "truth, accountability and justice" following a years-long coronial inquest. Kumanjayi Walker was shot three times at close range by then-constable Zachary Rolfe at a home in the Northern Territory town of Yuendumu, in November 2019. The death of the 19-year-old Warlpiri-Luritja man devastated the community, Mr Walker's cousin Samara Fernandez-Brown said. "We miss him and feel his loss deeply every single day, it will stain our country for generations to come," she said in a statement. In March 2022, an NT Supreme Court jury acquitted Mr Rolfe of murdering Mr Walker. He has since left the police force. Over the course of the coronial inquest, which has faced several delays, text messages between Mr Rolfe and colleagues, littered with derogatory language were revealed, as were racist award certificates, which triggered a probe in early 2024 by the NT corruption watchdog. It has been a gruelling, shocking and devastating process for family and the community, Ms Fernandez-Brown said, as they prepare for Coroner Elisabeth Armitage's findings, to be handed down in Yuendumu on Monday. "Racism killed Kumanjayi. Racism from NT Police, the NT government, from Zachary Rolfe," Ms Fernandez-Brown said. "Yet none of them have ever been held to account for Kumanjayi's death. "We are heartbroken and exhausted after many long years, but we are hoping change is coming." During the inquest, Mr Walker's family called for an independent police ombudsman to be established, self-determination for Yuendumu and other Aboriginal communities, investment in culturally-safe alternatives to prison and punitive policing, the banning of guns in community and a reckoning with the over-incarceration of Aboriginal people in the territory. Senior Warlpiri Elder Ned Jampijinpa Hargraves, said if the NT Police Commissioner Martin Dole or other officers intended on going to Yuendumu for the findings, they should come without guns, and no "empty words". "If he (Dole) is just coming to say sorry he is not welcome - how many times have they said sorry and still harmed us," Mr Hargraves said. "If Dole comes with news of real change that would be different. If he said police would put down their guns like we wanted, yes, he would be welcome. "But they are now giving out more guns to more police to shoot our people." 13YARN 13 92 76 Lifeline 13 11 14 The family of a teenager who was fatally shot by a police officer are calling for "truth, accountability and justice" following a years-long coronial inquest. Kumanjayi Walker was shot three times at close range by then-constable Zachary Rolfe at a home in the Northern Territory town of Yuendumu, in November 2019. The death of the 19-year-old Warlpiri-Luritja man devastated the community, Mr Walker's cousin Samara Fernandez-Brown said. "We miss him and feel his loss deeply every single day, it will stain our country for generations to come," she said in a statement. In March 2022, an NT Supreme Court jury acquitted Mr Rolfe of murdering Mr Walker. He has since left the police force. Over the course of the coronial inquest, which has faced several delays, text messages between Mr Rolfe and colleagues, littered with derogatory language were revealed, as were racist award certificates, which triggered a probe in early 2024 by the NT corruption watchdog. It has been a gruelling, shocking and devastating process for family and the community, Ms Fernandez-Brown said, as they prepare for Coroner Elisabeth Armitage's findings, to be handed down in Yuendumu on Monday. "Racism killed Kumanjayi. Racism from NT Police, the NT government, from Zachary Rolfe," Ms Fernandez-Brown said. "Yet none of them have ever been held to account for Kumanjayi's death. "We are heartbroken and exhausted after many long years, but we are hoping change is coming." During the inquest, Mr Walker's family called for an independent police ombudsman to be established, self-determination for Yuendumu and other Aboriginal communities, investment in culturally-safe alternatives to prison and punitive policing, the banning of guns in community and a reckoning with the over-incarceration of Aboriginal people in the territory. Senior Warlpiri Elder Ned Jampijinpa Hargraves, said if the NT Police Commissioner Martin Dole or other officers intended on going to Yuendumu for the findings, they should come without guns, and no "empty words". "If he (Dole) is just coming to say sorry he is not welcome - how many times have they said sorry and still harmed us," Mr Hargraves said. "If Dole comes with news of real change that would be different. If he said police would put down their guns like we wanted, yes, he would be welcome. "But they are now giving out more guns to more police to shoot our people." 13YARN 13 92 76 Lifeline 13 11 14

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