1

Robert COOKE

Robert COOKE

 

AKA Bob COOKE, Rob COOKE    

* Nickname:  Cookie

Late of  ? 

 

Relations in ‘the job’:

“possible” relation in ‘the job‘:    ?

 

Tasmania Police Academy –  Class #  ? ? ?  

 

Tasmania Police Force

 

Regd. #  ????? 

 

Rank: Commenced Training at Tasmania Police Academy on Monday ? ? ?

Probationary Constable- appointed ? ? ? 

Constable – appointed ? ? ? 

Constable 1st Class – appointed ? ? ? 

Detective – appointed ? ? ?

Senior Constable – appointed ? ? ? 

Leading Senior Constable – appointed ? ? ?

Sergeant 3rd Class – appointed ? ? ? 

Sergeant 2nd Class – appointed ? ? ?

Sergeant 1st Class – appointed ? ? ? 

 

Final Rank: =  Sergeant

 

Stations?, Oatlands – O.I.C.,

  

Time employed ( Paid ) with Tasmania PoliceFrom:   ? ? ?   to   ? ? ?? years,

Service ( From Training Date ) period: From   ? ? ?     to     ? ? ?  ? years,  Service

 

 

Retirement / Leaving age:?

Time in Retirement from Police?

 

Awards:  National Medal – granted ? ? ?

1st Clasp to National Medal – granted ? ? ? 

2nd Clasp to National Medal – granted ? ? ?

 

Robert COOKE, Bob COOKE

 Born:   ? ? ?

Died on:   ? October 2020

Age:  49 years,

Organ Donor:  Y / N / ?

 

Cause:  Depression – PTSD – Suicide – Method ?

Event location:   ?

Event / Diagnosis date ?

 

Funeral date? ? 2020

Funeral location?

LIVE STREAM    ?

 

 

Wake location???

Wake date?? 2020

 

 

Funeral Parlour: ?

 

Buried at?

Grave LocationSection:          Row?         Plot?

Grave GPS?,       ?

 

Memorial / Plaque / Monument located at?

Dedication date of Memorial / Plaque / Monument: Nil – at this time ( February 2024 )

 

 

COOKIE is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance, Canberra  * BUT SHOULD BE

 

  ? IS mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance


 

FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal


 

May they forever Rest In Peace

https://www.facebook.com/groups/AustralianPolice.com.au/ 

https://www.facebook.com/groups/TasmaniaFallenPolice/

https://www.facebook.com/groups/NSWFallenPolice/ 

Australian Police YouTube Channel

 


Coroner urges six-monthly welfare checks after inquest into four police suicide deaths

Posted 
  • In short: A Hobart coroner who investigated the deaths of four police officers who took their own lives has recommended Tasmania Police conduct mandatory half-yearly well-being screenings for PTSD.
  • What’s next? The Police commissioner says work will continue with the police association to implement changes

 

The family of one of four Tasmanian police officers who died by suicide between 2016 and 2020 say they hope the findings of a coronial inquest may prevent a similar tragedy in the future.

Coroner Simon Cooper has handed down his findings into the deaths of Constable Paul Hunt, Senior Sergeant Paul Reynolds, Constable Simon Darke and Sergeant Robert Cooke, recommending a swathe of welfare supports be implemented.

 

WARNING: This story touches on themes of depression and suicide.

 

During last year’s hearings, the court was told how overworked officers were self-medicating with alcohol and drugs, and of significant shortfalls in welfare support — particularly in areas such as fatigue management and protocols around interactions with the Professional Standards Command.

In his findings, Coroner Cooper, acknowledged the fact that these men were all serving police officers was “only part of the whole picture” of their lives, but he said he had “no doubt” that “Sergeant Cooke‘s police service was the direct cause of his death“.

But he said the provision of welfare support and whether it was adequate was a “central consideration at the inquest.”

He called for Tasmania Police to immediately develop and implement a fatigue management policy saying it was essential it was “addressed urgently”.

The inquest heard Robert Cooke had reportedly worked “16-hour continuous shifts for four weeks” during the Central Highlands bushfires in 2019.

This had left him “exhausted and barely functioning towards the end of the third week”.

“Tasmania Police had no fatigue management policy at any time, up to and including as recently as when the evidence at the inquest was publicly taken at the end of 2022,” he said.

The absence of any fatigue management policy was, I consider, a direct factor in Sergeant Cooke’s death.”

Tasmania Police officers salute at Robert Cooke's funeral in 2020.(ABC News: Luke Bowden)
Tasmania Police officers salute at Robert Cooke’s funeral in 2020 .(ABC News: Luke Bowden)

The coroner also recommended six-monthly screenings of all operation police officers for post-traumatic stress disorder.

Sergeant Cooke obviously suffered from the effects of PTSD for a long time before it was diagnosed,” he said.

“Every health care professional who gave evidence … unanimously agreed that his PTSD was entirely attributable to his service as a police officer.

“Every health care professional also agreed that earlier detection of PTSD increases the chances of successful treatment and recovery.”

Tasmania Police investigating the feasibility of “introducing a points system”, whereby an officer’s exposure to severe incidents would be tracked, was also recommended.

When a “critical points threshold” was reached, an automatic referral to a psychologist should be triggered, Coroner Cooper said.

 

The coroner also called for better support for officers under investigation for misconduct — including ensuring that those who had their phone seized by Professional Standards be given a replacement mobile pre-programmed with well-being support numbers.

“The death of any member of the community by suicide is a tragedy,” Coroner Cooper said.

The suicide of serving police officers, whatever their individual circumstances, is particularly tragic for serving members of the police force and the community at large.

“My sincere hope is that some improvements and learnings can emerge from the deaths of Constable Hunt, Senior Sergeant Reynolds, Constable Darke and Sergeant Cooke.”

Robert COOKE, Bob COOKE, Rob COOKE, Cookie
Sergeant Robert “Cookie” Cooke was well-regarded among his Tasmania Police colleagues.(ABC News: Luke Bowden)

Families welcome findings

In a statement, Robert Cooke‘s mother Lyn and sister Michelle said they were satisfied with the findings, particularly the recommendations for a fatigue management policy and screenings for PTSD stress disorder.

“The family miss Rob terribly and hope the findings and increased support for mental health may prevent similar events in the future,” they said.

“[Our] thoughts are with all the families involved in this inquest.”

Commissioner committed to ‘safe model of policing’

 

Police Commissioner Donna Adams acknowledged it was a difficult time for the families and colleagues impacted by the coronial report.

She said improvements had already been made within Tasmania Police.

Strategies included “a strong peer support group, and a critical stress program” to ensure officers could access the help they needed.

 

But she said changes wouldn’t end there — and that Tasmania Police would work with the Police Association to examine the coroner’s recommendations.

Police Minister Felix Ellis said the government had allocated funding to “Tasmania Police and the Department of Police, Fire and Emergency Management’s nation-leading wellbeing program”.

“Police officers, by the nature of the job, are exposed to some pretty difficult and extraordinary circumstances, so providing that support is important,” he said.

“We want to work to make sure that policing continues to be a career or choice, and that we’re supporting our officers if they do find themselves facing challenging circumstances.”

Coroner urges six-monthly welfare checks after inquest into four police suicide deaths – ABC News

 

Helplines:


 

Inquest into four Tasmania Police suicides exposes harsh toll on officers

Posted , updated 

 

An inquest examining the deaths by suicide by four police officers in Tasmania has heard how overworked officers were self-medicating with alcohol and drugs, were poorly served by under-trained welfare staff, with one officer enduring horrific nightmares of what he had seen in the line of duty.

WARNING: This story touches on themes of depression and suicide.

The three-weeks of hearings learned about one instance where an officer went from being a happy-go-lucky family man who was exceptionally good at his job, to an absolute wreck who couldn’t get out of bed before his eventual death by suicide.

Sergeant Robert Cooke — affectionately known as “Cookie” — had been diagnosed a year before he died in October 2020 with post-traumatic stress disorder, which was attributed to years of cumulative trauma and over-work.

Before he was placed on leave, the veteran officer of 30 years was in charge of Oatlands police station, in rural central Tasmania, which meant he was regularly on-call and would often take sole responsibility for an incident.

The inquest was given evidence that Sergeant Cooke had worked 16-hour continuous shifts for four weeks during fires in the Central Highlands in 2019, and was experiencing increased anxiety, including nightmares of the dead and burnt bodies he had seen throughout his career.

Robert COOKE, Bob COOKE, Rob COOKE, Cookie
Sergeant Robert “Cookie” Cooke was well-regarded among his Tasmania Police colleagues.(ABC News: Luke Bowden)

Clinical psychologist Jacqueline Prichard — who was treating Sergeant Cooke — said he could sometimes go from one traumatic incident to the next or straight into shift work before he would have had the opportunity to fully process the initial trauma.

“Your brain naturally resolves trauma in your sleep patterns in the three days following a traumatic incident, which is why it is important to get at least eight hours of sleep in the subsequent nights,” Ms Prichard said.

“If there’s no chance for sleep, or to think about the traumatic incident, then it becomes stored within the brain and can be as vivid as it was on the day.”

The inquest also heard there was a tendency among some police officers to abuse alcohol after a serious incident, which can also be disruptive to a person’s sleep pattern.

“If officers could clean out each trauma as they occurred, so they weren’t getting the cumulative effect, that would help,” Ms Prichard said.

Former Tasmania Police commissioner Darren Hine and Senior Constable Jenny Carlisle salute the hearse at Sergeant Cooke's funeral in 2020.(ABC News: Luke Bowden)
Former Tasmania Police commissioner Darren Hine and Senior Constable Jenny Carlisle salute the hearse at Sergeant Cooke’s funeral in 2020.(ABC News: Luke Bowden)

Sergeant Cooke‘s then-partner, Senior Constable Elizabeth Carlisle, said well-meaning but under-trained people in welfare roles at Tasmania Police had a negative impact on his mental health.

Senior Constable Carlisle told the inquest she did not believe a welfare officer supporting the 49-year-old in the lead-up to his death had any formal training in assisting someone with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

“Welfare officers back then were not equipped to deal with someone as unwell as Sergeant Cooke … but they are significantly better trained now,” she said.

Abused during bushfire evacuations

The deaths of Senior Sergeant Paul Reynolds, Constable Simon Darke and Constable Paul Hunt, between 2016 and 2020, have also formed part of the inquest that ended in Hobart on Friday.

In her evidence to the inquest, a former partner of Constable Simon Darke said the 45-year-old had threatened self-harm before he took his own life in 2019, but there was a perception that he would be judged if he got help.

Shanna Sweeney, said she contacted police after Constable Darke threatened suicide in 2011 but did not believe her concerns were taken seriously.

She said that Constable Darke was concerned he could be punished if he was seen as being vulnerable.

The inquest also heard evidence from Constable Darke’s father, Graham, who told the court the long hours during the 2019 bushfires and run of night shifts at a Hobart police station became too much for his son.

“He mentioned he had copped a lot of abuse when he asked people to leave their homes during the fires. He then went onto night shift by himself,” Mr Darke told the inquest.

The catastrophic 2019 bushfires in Tasmania were cited several times during the inquest.(Supplied: Tasmania Fire Service)
The catastrophic 2019 bushfires in Tasmania were cited several times during the inquest.(Supplied: Tasmania Fire Service)

The inquest was also told the Department of Police, Fire and Emergency Management had made significant changes to the welfare protocol as a direct consequence of Constable Hunt‘s suicide in 2016.

Constable Hunt took his own life on the same day he received an unannounced visit from Professional Standards Command (PSC) personnel over allegations that he used his police badge and other people’s driver’s licence numbers to obtain codeine and pseudoephedrine-based medications from pharmacies in Hobart.

The court was told that the 32-year-old had his personal phone confiscated and did not have a support person present at the meeting with officers from PSC when he was officially stood down from his role.

Tasmania Police officers salute at Robert Cooke's funeral in 2020.(ABC News: Luke Bowden)
Tasmania Police officers salute at Robert Cooke’s funeral in 2020.(ABC News: Luke Bowden)

Police Inspector John Ward told the inquest that he saw the benefit of putting a system in place where a risk assessment is carried out before an officer is approached about an investigation involving them.

“I was aware that Constable Hunt had been suffering from a medical condition, but didn’t realise he was experiencing suicidal thoughts,” he said.

The inquest was told that Senior Sergeant Paul Reynolds died by suicide in September 2018, the day after officers from the PSC searched his residence and confiscated his phone and other personal items.

At the time, he was facing allegations that he had sent and received child exploitation material, and that he had groomed young men.

Director of wellbeing support at Tasmania Police, Matthew Richman, told the court, the organisation has looked at what additional early intervention opportunities could be implemented as a direct consequence of Senior Sergeant Reynolds‘ death.

“Every aspect of policing has changed dramatically from when Senior Sergeant Reynolds started his career to the time of his death, but I think there is an opportunity to rethink our wellbeing check approach,” he said.

The inquest was told it is now standard procedure for a Tasmania Police officer to be offered a replacement mobile phone if their personal one is confiscated as part of an investigation.

It also heard that significant improvements had been made regarding welfare after the deaths of the four officers, including de-stigmatising post-traumatic stress disorder and other mental health conditions.

The inquest was told that, while Tasmania Police has made improvements in staff rosters and resourcing, it is facing an 18-month delay in the publication of a fatigue-management policy.

Work is continuing between the department, the Police Association of Tasmania and the University of Tasmania to research and identify areas that regulate workloads.

Former commissioner Darren Hine said a lot of improvements had been made over the years and Tasmania Police had dramatically increased the number of welfare officers after a funding submission to the government.

“The area of welfare and mental health will never be finished. It is a growing body of knowledge and it’s something we should never stop learning about,” Mr Hine said.

Coroner Simon Cooper is expected to hand down his findings next year.

The funeral motorcade for Tasmania Police officer Robert Cooke in 2020.(ABC News: Luke Bowden)
The funeral motorcade for Tasmania Police officer Robert Cooke in 2020.(ABC News: Luke Bowden)

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-12-10/inquest-into-four-tasmania-police-suicides-wrap/101755166


 

* Story behind any Nickname:  A play on his name.

 


 

Nothing further, than what is recorded above, is known about this person at the time of publication and further information and photos would be appreciated.

**********

 

Cal
26 February 2024


 

 




Geoffrey Paul BERNASCONI

Geoffrey Paul BERNASCONI

AKA Geoff BERNASCONI   

* Nickname:  Schooners

Formerly of Wagga Wagga, Coolamon, Batemans Bay. Late of Hervey Bay, Qld

 

Relations in ‘the job’:

“possible” relation in ‘the job‘:  Philip Sydney BERNASCONI, NSWPF # 12756 ?

Nina BERNASCONI, NSWPF # 36647  ?

 

NSW Police Training Centre – Redfern –  Class #  158

 

New South Wales Police Force

 

ProCst # 92016

Regd. #  17970

 

Rank: Commenced Training at Redfern Police Academy on Monday 23 January 1978 ( aged 21 years, 8 months, 9 days )

Probationary Constable- appointed 3 April 1978 ( aged 21 years, 10 months, 20 days )

Constable – appointed ? ? ? 

Constable 1st Class – appointed ? ? ? 

Detective ( Technical ) – appointed ? ? ?

Senior Constable – appointed 3 April 1987

Leading Senior Constable – appointed ? ? ? ( N/A )

Sergeant 3rd Class – appointed ? ? ? 

Sergeant 2nd Class – appointed ? ? ?

Sergeant 1st Class – appointed ? ? ? 

 

Final Rank: = Senior Sergeant ( Acting Inspector )

 

Stations:  Sutherland ( 24 Division )( ProCst ),  HWP, ?, Warilla, ?, Wagga Wagga ( 1980s – c1990s ), Urana ( 1984 ), ?, Scientific ( FSG )( 16 years in total ) – Retirement

  

Time employed ( Paid ) with NSW Police:  From: 23 January 1978   to   29 September 2000 ( H.O.D. with PTSD ) = 22 years, 8 months, 6 days

Service ( From Training Date ) period: From  23 January 1978     to    29 September 2000 = 22 years, 8 months, 6 days Service

 

 

Retirement / Leaving age: = 44 years, 4 months, 15 days

Time in Retirement from Police: 23 years, 2 months, 21 days

 

Awards:  No Find on the Australian Honours system

 

Geoffrey Paul BERNASCONI
Geoff’s “Bogan” look – 2009

 Born:   Monday 14 May 1956

Died on:   Wednesday 20 December 2023 in his sleep

Age67 years, 7 months, 6 days

Organ Donor:  Y / N / ?

 

A sufferer of PTSD since February 1999.  Had previous bouts of Cancer. 

Cause:  Official cause of death is a Heart attack in his sleep.

Event location:  Home, Hervey Bay, Qld 

Event / Diagnosis date ?

 

Funeral date:  Thursday 11 January 2024 @ 10am ( Qld time ) – 11am ( NSW time )

Funeral location:  J. Kirk & sons Chapel, 224 Urraween Rd, Hervey Bay, Qld.

All Police, Retired and Serving are most welcome to attend.

There was no Official police involvement at the funeral.

 

 

Wake location:  Hervey Bay RSL, 11 Torquay Rd, Pialba, Qld

Wake date:  Thursday 11 January 2024

 

 

Funeral Parlour:   J. Kirk & sons, 224 Urraween Rd, Hervey Bay, Qld

 

Buried at: Polson Cemetery, Corser St, Pt Vernon, Qld

Grave LocationSection:          Row?         Plot:  663

Grave GPS?,       ?

 

Memorial / Plaque / Monument located at?

Dedication date of Memorial / Plaque / Monument: Nil – at this time ( December 2023 )

 

 

GEOFF  is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance  *NEED MORE INFO


 

FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal


 

May they forever Rest In Peace

https://www.facebook.com/groups/AustralianPolice.com.au/ 

https://www.facebook.com/groups/NSWFallenPolice/ 

Australian Police YouTube Channel


 

Deepest Condolences to his wife, Georgie, and family.

 


 

Paul Herring  

22 December 2023
I have just heard of the passing of a former colleague from Class 158 Geoff Bernasconi. He was a wonderfully generous and giving man and a real entertainer. Your shift is complete Geoff – but your legacy, and the considerable memories you created will live on with many, especially during the times at Wagga Wagga. Special thoughts to Geoff’s family and the friends he leaves behind. Rest easy my friend. ????

  *   *   *

Geoff featured in the book:  ‘Forensic Investigator – true stories from the life of a country crime scene cop’, written by Esther McKay.


 

Class 158A - Redfern Police Academy - April 1978
Class 158A – Redfern Police Academy – April 1978

 


 

Katie BERNASCONI & Geoff BERNASCONI
Katie BERNASCONI & Geoff BERNASCONI

 

Katie BERNASCONI & Geoff BERNASCONI
Katie BERNASCONI & Geoff BERNASCONI

 

 Geoffrey Paul BERNASCONI
Geoffrey Paul BERNASCONI # 17970

Geoffrey Paul BERNASCONI

 

Georgina GREY & Geoffrey Paul BERNASCONI
Georgina CLEMENTS & Geoffrey Paul BERNASCONI # 17970 at their wedding. 10 June 2020

Georgina GREY & Geoffrey Paul BERNASCONI

Geoffrey Paul BERNASCONI & Georgina GREY

 


Canberra Times (ACT : 1926 – 1995),

Tuesday 28 February 1995, page 4

Boys face murder charges

WAGGA WAGGA: Blood had soaked 5cm into the ground around the head of a man found dead by a council worker in Wagga Wagga, the city’s Children’s Court was told yesterday.

Four Wagga boys, aged 11, 12, 15 and 16, have been charged with the murder of Peter William Baker, 55, whose body was found in Victory Memorial Gardens at 8am on November 6 last year.

They were charged also with robbery in company after it was alleged that money had been taken from the dead man.

On the first day of committal proceedings yesterday, Detective Sergeant Geoff Bernasconi said Baker would not have staggered to the spot where his body was found.

He would have fallen to the ground after being struck on the back of the head and stayed there.

A significant feature was that blood had been found only on and under Baker’s head, there had been no blood on the back of his clothes and only minute traces surrounding him.

Peter James Kelly identified three of the four youths as those he had given a lift at about 11.30pm on November 5.

https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/133338827


 

Canberra Times (ACT : 1926 – 1995),

Sunday 30 July 1995, page 3

Problem noted before air crash

SYDNEY: A pilot spoke to his wife about his plane experiencing electrical difficulties only minutes before the plane plunged into a paddock near Wagga in south-eastern NSW, killing all four people on board.

Police said the 64-year-old Narrandera pilot told his wife in a mobile-phone conversation that he had lost the artificial horizon on the twin-engine Cessna 310’s navigation system.

He said he was flying in low cloud cover during a descent from 9000 feet on his approach to Wagga.

According to the Bureau of Air Safety Investigation, the pilot, from an air taxi service in Narrandera, then made his last known radio contact with Wagga airport at 7.43pm on Friday.

He failed to contact the airport six minutes later as scheduled.

A bureau spokesman said his last contact was routine and made no mention of difficulties.

Police identified the pilot as Don Knight, 64, of Knight Air Taxi, Narrandera. The Wagga men were Dallas Gooden, 42, Bruce Campbell, 54, and David Larwood, 33. They had been on a trip to Longreach in far-north Queensland buying stock.

Wreckage was strewn over more than a kilometre in the open paddock where the plane crashed.

Police said a woman from a property near the crash site, about 15km north-east of Coolamon, reported seeing a large flash in thesky and heard the plane crash about 8.10pm on Friday.

But the officer-in-charge at the crash site, Inspector Chris Morley, said it was too soon to talk about the plane exploding in mid-air.

He said the flash in the sky may have been the plane crash reflected on low cloud.

“It’s a big mess, I have never seen anything like it,” Inspector Morley said.

“It’s just devastating.”

The wreckage was found on the Thalia property by the property owner at midday yesterday after the alarm was raised.

This morning, NSW police video unit and photogrammetry officers recorded the crash site.

Two BASI investigators were travelling from Sydney to pick over the wreckage for clues about how the crash happened.

Inspector Morley said the men’s bodies would be collected and eventually taken to the city morgue in Glebe, Sydney, for disaster victim identification procedures, to be carried out by Riverina forensic services head Detective Sergeant Geoff Bernasconi.

Detective Sergeant Bernasconi was in charge of similar investigations after the Monarch air crash that killed seven people as it approached Young in central NSW on June 11, 1993.

NSW Fire Brigade, bushfire brigade and State Emergency Services workers were involved in the search on Friday night.

https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/128290501


 

 

Forensic Investigator: True Stories from the Life of a Country Crime Scene Cop

Author(s): Esther McKay

True Crime

Forensic investigator Geoff Bernasconi had always been passionate about his job as a policeman in rural New South Wales, and went the extra mile, both for victims of crime and for their families. But one night in 1984, he was called to investigate the scene of a horrific car accident in which an entire family had been wiped out – and which it was impossible for him to forget.

Geoff‘s day-to-day working life became a catalogue of tragedies, some of which involved people close to him, and he found himself spiralling downwards in the grip of post-traumatic stress disorder.

When Esther McKay heard that Geoff had been awarded maximum compensation for his suffering, she knew immediately this was a story that needed to be told.

This is a harrowing account of what it is like to work on the frontlines of crime and tragedy as a forensic investigator. It is also the inspiring story of one who has been exposed to sights and experiences many of us can hardly even imagine, yet has emerged from the darkness to begin his journey to recovery.

Forensic Investigator: True Stories from the Life of a Country Crime Scene Cop


 

Relationship issues from the autobiographies
Allan Sparkes (Sparkes, 2013:136) describes his relationship with his wife Deborah as being strong and supportive, although he says “I kept my mental state from her.” Her support, Allan believes was central to his later recovery.

John Horner (Horner, 2011) experienced a marriage breakdown in midcareer, as did Esther McKay.

She described her subsequent partner as “extremely sensitive and comforting” in terms of her battle with the trauma that was then a challenging part of her everyday experience.

Belinda Neil had a similar experience, as did Geoff Bernasconi (McKay, 2010:74)

where he describes his marriage as “weakening under the strain”.

After being absent from home for four days involved with the forensic investigation of a plane crash scene, (during which time he made no contact with his pregnant wife) on arriving back to his home town he went straight to the hotel, got drunk and called his wife, suggesting she join him for dinner. The relationship did not survive.

 

 

Sleep Problems and Exhaustion: The autobiographies.
Alan Sparkes (Sparkes, 2013:140) describes his confronting dreams and his inability to sleep.

As his Post traumatic stress symptoms increased he commenced having nightmares in which he had stabbed to death his wife and daughter. These were the source of profound anxiety and fear for him, prompting thoughts of suicide to protect his loved ones from the possibility that his dreams might become reality.

Esther McKay (McKay, 2005:265/227) gives a similar account of nightmares describing a particularly disturbing one where she was ‘lying naked on the morgue table’.

Belinda Neil (Neil, 2014:2) describes “the long working hours with no time to recover from one traumatic incident to the next. And continues, I was falling apart, exhausted and forgetful”.

Geoff Bernasconi, (McKay, 2010:58/59) is “mentally and physically exhausted” and “fatigue was everpresent, especially on long road trips when Geoff would struggle to stay alert.”

These were officers nearing the limit of their resilience, unsupported by their organisation, isolated and nearing the end of their police careers.

 

Thesis Final PDF.pdf       Trigger Warning re this link; This document looks into Police, the culture, Stress and Suicide / Suicidal thought by Police.


 

DAILY TELEGRAPH P15 THURSDAY 23 DECEMBER 2004 FORMER POLICEMAN GEOFF BERNASCONI FROM WAGGA WAGGA WHO SUED THE POLICE DEPT. ARTICLE KEPT FOR INFORMATION ONLY. I DID NOT KNOW THIS PERSON. THE ARTICLE MAY ASSIST ME AT SOME LATER STAGE IF I TRY TO SUE THE POLICE DEPT. FOR NOT LOOKING AFTER ME AFTER MY FATAL ACCIDENT.
DAILY TELEGRAPH P15
THURSDAY 23 DECEMBER 2004
FORMER POLICEMAN GEOFF BERNASCONI FROM WAGGA WAGGA WHO SUED THE POLICE DEPT.


 

Geoffrey Paul BERNASCONI

 

Geoffrey Paul BERNASCONI
My dog Mac reading the book


Forensic officer awarded $750,000

While a judge in Sydney was telling the court that a former policeman should receive the maximum compensation – $750,000 – the man in question was visiting the grave of a victim of a crime he had investigated.

“I have been to a few cemeteries,” said Geoffrey Bernasconi, 48, speaking from his home in Wagga Wagga. “It’s just a solace, a place for me to think and reflect.

“I think about those that are left behind, and I feel for the person … I found it quite peaceful there today. I reflect could I have done more, and I reassure myself, no, I have done everything I can.”

On Wednesday in the District Court, Judge Raymond McLoughlin awarded the former forensic services police officer $785,000 (including interest) for his suffering, and lost career due to work-related post-traumatic stress disorder and depression.

During his 23-year career, in which more than half the cases involved homicides and dead bodies, Mr Bernasconi was only debriefed three times. Those occasions were “poorly organised and often occurred after the event”, the court heard.

A medical report said he had been “repeatedly exposed to some of the most tragic circumstances that may be witnessed in civilised societies”.

Based in Wagga Wagga since 1987, he investigated crime and accident scenes, retrieved body parts from cars, trains and light plane crashes. There were teenage suicides, infant drownings and homicides. Sometimes he was required to remove decomposed bodies because the government contractor “couldn’t stomach it”.

One of Mr Bernasconi‘s strengths was his empathy with the families of victims, who relied heavily on him. But this was also a stress.

The court also heard that for 15 months in the late 1980s he was the only crime scene investigator for the whole region, and was on call around the clock.

Judge McLoughlin criticised the service for failing to properly manage his 70-80 hour week, and failure to order appropriate leave and job rotation.

In 1999, he broke down while giving evidence at a coronial inquiry into a plane crash. The coroner recorded: “I have dealt with this man for 15 years and I have never seen him like this.”

Soon after, his police supervisor took his gun and handcuffs away. He was medically discharged in 2000-2001. He spent months in psychiatric care in hospital.

Judge McLoughlin said there were managerial and psychological interventions which should have been taken by the service. He found Mr Bernasconi was now unfit to work in the labour market.

Forensic officer awarded $750,000


Police obstinacy blamed for huge payouts

By Leonie Lamont and Michael Pelly

 

THE NSW Police Force has wasted millions of dollars fighting “no-brainer” claims by stressed officers, prompting the State Government to order an external review of the force’s legal services unit.

The Herald is aware of at least six cases in which former police officers offered to settle for less than $150,000 but ended up with $750,000 payouts after going to court. Seventy claims are before the courts.

The Police Minister, Carl Scully, said he had “concerns about the performance of the unit, particularly in relation to its management of settlements and litigation”. He mentioned matters “not being handed expeditiously or fairly” and a “reluctance to settle that then causes payouts being larger than what they otherwise may have been”. Payouts include:

■ Child protection officer Rodney Keen: offered to settle for $148,000 plus legal fees of $30,000. Awarded $750,000 plus costs.

Forensic services officer Geoff Bernasconi: offer of $150,000 to avoid stress of court before $750,000 judgement.

Armed hold-up squad officers Edward Shepherd, Mark Wilson and Craig McDonald: offer of $790,000 for all three. Awarded $2.04 million plus costs.

Undercover officer Bob Ridley: offer of $100,000 before $750,000 judgement.

Mr Scully said a solicitor who has worked in the public and private sectors, Helen Vickers, would deliver her report in a few weeks.

He conceded that if the claims were proven, “then obviously I would have to consider ways of improving or potentially changing the way legal services is conducted”.

One police insider said the unit had an “army mentality”. “They want to fight everything and settle nothing and then rage against the courts when things go wrong. It’s scandalous the amount of taxpayer money they are wasting.”

Mr Scully said the current system, under which up to six people must be consulted before making an offer, could be a case of “too many cooks spoiling the broth”. The minister must approve all settlements over $100,000. “No doubt we could potentially streamline that and make it more efficient and effective.”

Mr Ridley‘s solicitor, Philip Sim, settled a case involving another undercover officer – dubbed Miss X – on the fourth day of a District Court hearing last week. “They slow the process down, so they can wear people out,” he said.

He said one attempt at mediation collapsed when police lawyers could not get instructions.

Tom Edmunds, a solicitor and former policeman who represented the hold-up squad officers, was blunt: “$1.4 million – that’s how much the Crown contributed to our legal costs.”

Kim Smith, who acted for Mr Keen and Mr Bernasconi, said the legal costs of running a matter against NSW Police were “so much greater” than her other personal injury matters.

The Crown, which will pay a large amount of Mr Keen‘s estimated $350,000 legal costs, has foreshadowed an appeal.

Ms Smith said the Crown Solicitor’s Office had pointed out many times that NSW Police was exempt from the model litigants’ policy. This demands government departments avoid litigation wherever possible, but only the Attorney-General’s department is bound by the policy.

The secretary of the NSW Police Association, Peter Remfrey, said the way NSW police managed stress had improved but the legal unit’s handling of claims was “dysfunctional”. The association’s research director, Greg Chilvers, said 70 former police – many undercover officers – had negligence claims before the courts.

A precedent was set in a 2000 Court of Appeal judgement which awarded a former child abuse officer, Beth Seedsman, $750,000 for NSW Police’s failure to provide a safe system of work or protection from mental injury. “Given what we know about the law, in these cases it should either be a no-brainer or one to be fought on a matter of principle,” Mr Chilvers said. “It seems on a matter of principle they fight them all.”

Police obstinacy blamed for huge payouts


 

* Story behind any Nickname:  The man liked a drink.


 

Nothing further, than what is recorded above, is known about this person at the time of publication and further information and photos would be appreciated.

**********

 

Cal
27 December 2023

Updated 9 Jan 2024

Updated 31 Jan 2024


 

 




Michael DEUTROM

Michael DEUTROM

AKA Micky D

Late of  ? 

 

“possible” relation in ‘the job’: His brother:  Supt. Antony Deutrom, NT Police  

 

Northern Territory Police  Class #  ? ? ? 

 

Northern Territory Police Force

 

Regd. #  ????? 

 

Rank:  Commenced Training at NT Police Academy on Monday ? ? ?

Probationary Constable- appointed ? ? ?

Constable – appointed ? ? ?

Constable 1st Class – appointed ? ? ? ( YES )

Detective – appointed ? ? ?

Senior Constable – appointed ? ? ? 

Leading Senior Constable – appointed ? ? ?

Sergeant 3rd Class – appointed ? ? ? 

Sergeant 2nd Class – appointed ? ? ?

Sergeant 1st Class – appointed ? ? ? 

Inspector – appointed ? ? ? 

Chief Inspector – appointed ? ? ? 

Superintendent – appointed ? ? ? 

Chief Superintendent – appointed ? ? ?

 

Final Rank: =  ?

 

Stations: Katherine ( early – mid 2000s ), Alice Springs, Yulara, Darwin, Commander’s Tactical Team – Darwin, Metropolitan Social Order & Engagement Unit, ?

  July 2006 – December 2006 – Dili – East Timor on secondment to AFP

 

Service: From  ? October 1998   to   15 April 2022  =  23+ years Service

 

Retirement / Leaving age:?

Time in Retirement from Police?

 

Awards:  No Find on Australian Honours system

 

 Born:   ? ? ? in New Guinea

Died on:   15 April 2022

Age? years,

Organ Donor:  Y / N / ?

 

Cause:  PTSD – Suicide ( Method ? )

Event location:   ?

Event date ? April 2022

 

Funeral date? ? ? TBA

Funeral location? TBA 

LIVE STREAM    PIN:  TBA   Email:  TBA

 

( click here to see Cornona19 Virus Pandemic rules – this will be a limited numbers Funeral )

any Future Wake location??? TBA 

any Future Wake date??? TBA 

( Due to current Govt. restrictions on ‘Gatherings’ due to Corona19 Virus Pandemic, some families may wish to have a Memorial Service / Wake with friends and family at a later date )

 

Funeral Parlour: ?

Buried at: ?

 

Memorial / Plaque / Monument located at?

Dedication date of Memorial / Plaque / Monument: Nil – at this time ( April 2022 )

 

 

Micky D is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance  * BUT SHOULD BE

Micky D is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance  *NEED MORE INFO


 

FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal


 

May they forever Rest In Peace

https://www.facebook.com/groups/AustralianPolice.com.au/ 

 

https://www.facebook.com/groups/NSWFallenPolice/ 

Australian Police YouTube Channel


Michael DEUTROM

This evening ( 16 April 2022 @ 11.36pm Central Australia Time ) we learnt of the tragic passing of a very special and down right awesome Northern Territory Police Officer.
A highly respected and valued member of the Blue Family. Micky D, you will be sorely missed. Almost everyone that every worked with you will have an amazing story to share.
Micky dedicated approximately 20 years of his life to the force. Like many of us, he had seen his fair share of what this job throws at us.
Devastatingly he lost the battle but will be remembered by many as one of the good guys.
We extend our sincerest condolences to the friends, family and colleagues for this tremendous loss.
If you or anybody you know are experiencing difficulties there are resources and support services available. Struggling to cope with everyday life doesn’t look or feel the same for everyone.
These services are there to listen and talk it through with you to help you get the support you need. Help is available.
To the blue family, keep an eye on your mates, notice when they start experiencing signs of depression or anxiety. Ask them if they are ok, turn up at their house, check on them, refer them to our well-being teams.
Beyond Blue 1300 224 636
Lifeline (24hr crisis line): 131 114
NTPFES (24hr on call psychologist) 08 8995 5422

 

(3) Run4Blue – Posts | Facebook


 

Michael DEUTROM
The Drum. NT Police, Fire & Emergency Services magazine. December 2008

 

 

 


Nothing further, than what is recorded above, is known about this person at the time of publication and further information and photos would be appreciated.

**********

 

Cal
19 April 2022


 

 




Bradley James EDWARDS

Bradley James EDWARDS

AKA Brad EDWARDS  

Late of Wellington, NSW

“possible” relation in ‘the job’:    ?

 

NSW Goulburn Police Academy –  Class #  243

 

New South Wales Police Force

 

Regd. #  26909

 

Rank:  Commenced Training at Goulburn Police Academy on Sunday 29 October 1989 ( aged 19 years, 4 months, 3 days )

Probationary Constable- appointed Friday 27 April 1990 ( aged 19 years, 10 months, 1 day )

Constable – appointed ? ? ?

Constable 1st Class – appointed ? ? ? 

Detective – appointed ? ? ? ( YES )

Senior Constable – appointed ? ? ? 

Leading Senior Constable – appointed ? ? ?

Sergeant 3rd Class – appointed ? ? ? 

Sergeant 2nd Class – appointed ? ? ?

 

Final Rank: =  Sergeant 2nd Class 

 

Stations?, Parkes ( 1992 / 1995 ), ?, Dubbo ( 2012 )( Sgt ), ?, Wellington ( Orana-Mid Western Police District ) – Death

  

Service: From  29 October 1989  to  5 June 2021   = 31 years, 7 months, 7 days Service

 

Retirement / Leaving age: = 50 years, 11 months, 10 days

Time in Retirement from Police:  0

 

Awards:  No Find on Australian Honours system

 

 Born:  Friday 26 June 1970

Died on: Saturday 5 June 2021

Age:  50 years, 11 months, 10 days

Organ Donor:  Y / N / ?

 

Cause:  PTSD – SUICIDE ( method ? )

Event location:   ? , Wellington, NSW

Event date:  Saturday 5 June 2021

 

Funeral date:  Friday 18 June 2021 @ 11.30am

Funeral location: Wellington Civic Centre, Swift St, Wellington, NSW

LIVE STREAM    PIN:  TBA   Email:  TBA

 

( click here to see Cornona19 Virus Pandemic rules – this will be a limited numbers Funeral )

any Future Wake location??? TBA 

any Future Wake date??? TBA 

( Due to current Govt. restrictions on ‘Gatherings’ due to Corona19 Virus Pandemic, some families may wish to have a Memorial Service / Wake with friends and family at a later date )

 

Funeral Parlour: Wellington & Dubbo Funeral Home, 24 Nanima Cres, Wellington, NSW  02 6845 2322

Buried at:  Wellington Lawn Cemetery, 11 Old Sydney Rd, Wellington, NSW

Grave location?

GPS?

 

Memorial / Plaque / Monument located at?

Dedication date of Memorial / Plaque / Monument: Nil – at this time ( April 2022 )

 

 

  BRAD is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance  * BUT SHOULD BE ( April 2022 )

  BRAD IS NOT  mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance ( April 2022 )

  BRAD IS NOT mentioned on the Sydney Police Centre Memorial Wall, Surry Hills ( April 2022 )


 

FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal


 

May they forever Rest In Peace

https://www.facebook.com/groups/AustralianPolice.com.au/ 

 

https://www.facebook.com/groups/NSWFallenPolice/ 

Australian Police YouTube Channel 


Brad EDWARDS

?, EDWARDS & Brad EDWARDS

Brad EDWARDS

Brad EDWARDS

Brad EDWARDS

Brad EDWARDS

Brad EDWARDS - Funeral


Elm Mark

8 June 2021
A man, with a heart of gold, a thoroughly good bloke, who served his community with distinction and with honour, ended his suffering and torment and took his own life recently.
I always thought highly of you mate.
I have just been advised that my Academy Class Mate of Class 243 and fellow brother in blue recently succumbed to the black dog.
Gutted.
Tonight old mate, I most certainly will shed a tear or two, a beer or two and share a laugh or two…in honour of you and in honour of your legacy
Rest in eternal peace SGT Brad Edwards, you are forever missed.

 

 


NSW Police have sadly lost another of their own, SGT Brad Edwards.
Our condolences to his family, friends, colleagues and the Wellington Community.
He will be missed by all
Rest In Peace.
PLEASE – if you’re struggling seek support from friends, family, EAP, Peer support or
LIFELINE 131114 or online www.lifeline.org.au crisis chat 7pm to 4am 7 days a week
BEYOND BLUE 1300 22 4636 or online www.beyondblue.org.au webchat 3pm to 12pm
SUICIDE CALL BACK SERVICE 1300 659 467

 

Police show solidarity against domestic violence

Mary (not her real name) spoke with the Daily Liberal yesterday about her three decades of violence she suffered at the hands of her partner before she went to the police.

She had noticed police wearing white ribbons outside the Dubbo Police Station and decided to share her story.

“Women have to start standing up for themselves,” she said.

Mary said some of the injuries she had suffered in her abusive relationship had been fractures to her nose, jaw, arm and ribs.

“Domestic violence is in the community but women are not coming forward and letting the police know,” she said.

“They need to come forward now, not wait like I waited for 32 years.”

Mary said she believed White Ribbon Day was a good initiative to bring public attention to the issue of domestic violence.

Recently she has begun working to help others affected.

“I have worked with domestic violence victims for the last two years,” she said.

“I have seen both sides.”

White ribbons were worn on the shirts of every Dubbo police officer yesterday as they took a stance against domestic violence.

Orana Local Area Command (LAC) duty officer Inspector Brad Edwards said Dubbo police had handed out many white ribbons to raise awareness of the day and answered questions about the day from members of the public.

“I think it is very important that society realises there is no excuse for violence against women,” he said.

“The fact that it still happens today is pathetic.”

“We know the statistics from on the job experience.”

Dubbo police and their colleagues across NSW all took a pledge against violence against women and wore white ribbons in a show of solidarity across the state.

Dubbo police wearing white ribbons in support of an end to domestic and family violence against women yesterday. Pictured are Senior Constable Jason Pollack, Constable Michael Dawn, Inspector Brad Edwards, Constable Tofazzal Ali.
Dubbo police wearing white ribbons in support of an end to domestic and family violence against women yesterday. Pictured are Senior Constable Jason Pollack ( # 38631 ), Constable Michael Dawn, Inspector Brad Edwards, Constable Tofazzal Ali. Photo: LISA MINNER

Police show solidarity against domestic violence | Daily Liberal | Dubbo, NSW


Brad EDWARDS
Acting senior sergeant Brad Edwards

Would your parents like their property damaged,” Senior sergeant tells children

Wellington police sergeant Brad Edwards has told children at Wellington Public School he and his officers are pushing up the ante on young children aged from nine to 13 throwing rocks.

“I am very upset children in the town are throwing rocks.

“A lot of people have had their car windows smashed. It has cost them more than $50,000,” he said.

“These are parked cars near the railway line, people’s roofs, their houses and they are upset their property is being damaged. Would your parents like their property damaged,” he asked the children.

“I want to get them, take them to the magistrate and lock them up.

“We have cameras now everywhere, hidden from view, monitoring these children. We will lock up these people.” he added.

He warned the children police were answering the community’s plea for the rock throwing incidents to stop.

“Tell your parents, tell your teachers when you see them doing these things,” he said.

Children in the crowd at the school said their parents had been victims of the latest outbreak of vandalism.

“My mum had the back window of her car smashed by a rock,” one child told the class.

“It was so badly damaged mum had to buy a new car.

“There is a hole in our window from people throwing rocks,” another said.

Children said slingshots with rocks were being aimed at people and cars.

“A slingshot is no different to a gun, it injures people and they may die.

“It’s an illegal weapon,” Sgt Edwards said.

The officer also told children social media site Facebook was an ineffective measure in countering the rock throwers and other incidents.

“Don’t go on Facebook and bully people. Turn it off. Don’t gossip and target people,” he said.

The sergeant also said children seen on school grounds during holidays will be prosecuted.

“I went to this primary school but I didn’t want to come back during the holidays,” he said.


 

Brad EDWARDS - Funeral

https://www.pressreader.com/australia/dubbo-photo-news/20210624/281848646567307


 

Our club is special and it was great to see all our teams and even the Refs getting behind raising awareness for Bowel Cancer Australia. This month is Bowel Cancer month and our teams wore the Apple Red socks and trainers wore the bare bums to let everyone know how important this awareness is.
We also Took a Knee for Ackers for James Ackerman who six years ago on this day, was tragically killed in a football match.
Our teams also observed a minute silence for Sergeant Brad Edwards a local Wellington man who was much loved and respected by many. His death has devastated our community.
Much love to Justin Toomey-White and your family! You are our hero always!
Much love to the Ackerman Family. James will always be remembered and our heart felt condolences to Brad Edwards family. A man of diligence and loyalty like no other.
Forever in our hearts and always on our minds.

Wellington Cowboys RLFC Jtune S20,p0 o02l0tur4e251d · Our club is special and it was great to see all our teams and even the Refs getting behind raising awareness for Bowel Cancer Australia. This month is Bowel Cancer month and our teams wore the Apple ???? Red socks and trainers wore the bare bums to let everyone know how important this awareness is. We also Took a Knee for Ackers for James Ackerman who six years ago on this day, was tragically killed in a football match. Our teams also observed a minute silence for Sergeant Brad Edwards a local Wellington man who was much loved and respected by many. His death has devastated our community. Much love to Justin Toomey-White and your family! You are our hero always! ???? Much love to the Ackerman Family????James will always be remembered and our heart felt condolences to Brad Edwards family. A man of diligence and loyalty like no other. Forever in our hearts and always on our minds ????


 
Wellington Cowboys would like to extend their deepest sympathy to the Edwards family.
Brad was a mate to many Committee Members, Players and supporters.
He was one of a kind, a beautiful person who was well respected in our community.
May you Rest In Peace

https://www.facebook.com/page/221174305096878/search/?q=edwards


 

https://scontent-dus1-1.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.15752-9/196738324_346782106809136_4172724986417269888_n.jpg?stp=dst-jpg_p280x280&_nc_cat=111&ccb=1-5&_nc_sid=ae9488&_nc_ohc=AHvhEKd_9C4AX-6ieOw&_nc_ht=scontent-dus1-1.xx&oh=03_AVJI3cM3unsezeLhsEKLnTn7egUTLrs0VTukKLPzepb1Mw&oe=627237B9


 

Nothing further, than what is recorded above, is known about this person at the time of publication and further information and photos would be appreciated.

**********

 

Cal
12 April 2022


 

 




Penny Margaret SHIPTON

Penny Margaret SHIPTON

AKA Turnip 

Late of Wade St, Crookwell, NSW  

 

NSW Goulburn Police Academy –  Class #  ? ? ? 

 

New South Wales Police Force

 

Regd. #  ????? 

 

RankCommenced Training at Goulburn Police Academy on Monday ? ? ?

Probationary Constable- appointed ? ? ?

Constable – appointed ? ? ?

Constable 1st Class – appointed ? ? ? 

Detective – appointed ? ? ?

Senior Constable – appointed ? ? ? 

Leading Senior Constable – appointed ? ? ?

 

Final Rank ?

Prior  to her Policing life – Penny was a Nurse.

 

Stations?, Goulburn Police ( GDs ), ?, Goulburn Police Academy ( about 15 years ), ?

  

Service: From ? ? ? to ? ? ? = ? years Service

 

Retirement / Leaving age: = ?

Time in Retirement from Police: ?

 

Awards:  No Find on Australian Honours system

 

 Born:  Thursday 27 May 1971 

Died on:  Saturday 22 January 2022 

Age:  50 year, 7 months, 26 days

Penny Margaret SHIPTON, Penny SHIPTON

Cause:  Illness, Depress, PTSD, ?

Event location:   ?

Event date:  ?

 

Funeral date: Monday 7 February 2022 @ 2pm

Funeral location:  Craig’s Hill Chapel, 63 Middle Arm Rd, Goulburn, NSW  

( click here to see Cornona19 Virus Pandemic rules – this will be a limited numbers Funeral )

any Future Wake location:  ??? TBA 

any Future Wake date??? TBA

( Due to current Govt. restrictions on ‘Gatherings’ due to Corona19 Virus Pandemic, some families may wish to have a Memorial Service / Wake with friends and family at a later date )

Funeral Parlour: ?

Buried at: ?

 

Memorial / Plaque / Monument located at: ?

Dedication date of Memorial / Plaque / Monument: Nil – at this time ( February 2022 )

 

 

 Penny is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance  *NEED MORE INFO

 PENNY Should be Entitled to be mentioned on the Sydney Police Centre Memorial Wall, Surry Hills


 

FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal


 

May they forever Rest In Peace

https://www.facebook.com/groups/AustralianPolice.com.au/ 

 

https://www.facebook.com/groups/NSWFallenPolice/ 

Australian Police YouTube Channel 


 

 

Penny Margaret SHIPTON, Penny SHIPTON

 

Penny Margaret SHIPTON, Penny SHIPTON


 

Nothing further, than what is recorded above, is known about this person at the time of publication and further information and photos would be appreciated.

**********

Unfortunately my computer system has become weak and can no longer stand the strain I place upon it – thus the lack of information on this Memorial at this time.

 

 

Cal
4 February 2022


 

 




Lisa Ann CAMWELL

Lisa Ann CAMWELL nee PARRISH

the First Full Time Female Rescue Operator at Zetland Rescue Squad

AKA  ?

Late of  ?

 

NSW Goulburn Police Academy –  PREP Class #  242

 

New South Wales Police Force

Regd. #  26988

 

Rank:  Commenced Training at Goulburn Police Academy on 30 July 1989  ( aged 20 years, 9 months, 26 days ) ( spent 5 months, 26 days at the Academy )

Probationary Constable- appointed Thursday  25 January 1990 ( aged 21 years, 6 months, 23 days )  

Constable – appointed 27 April 1991

Constable 1st Class – appointed ? ? ?

Detective – appointed ? ? ? ( NO )

Senior Constable – appointed 30 June 1995 

Leading Senior Constable – appointed ? ? ?

Final Rank =  Senior Constable 

Retirement / Leaving age: =  49 years, 6 months, 15 days

 

StationsSutherland, Menai GDs, State Protection Group – Police Rescue Squad – Zetland ( 4 July 1993 – ? ), Engadine Police Rescue Squad, ?, Monaro District, Police Rescue Squad – Cooma & GDs & Lock Up Keeper ( 12 July 1998 – 5 January 2004 ), Queanbeyan GDs ( 6 January 2004 – 18 September 2010 ), Queanbeyan had a name change to Monaro / Cooma District ( 12 January 2004 ), Blue Mountains GDs & Police Rescue ( 19 September 2010 – 19 April 2018 )

Service:  From 29 October 1989   to   19 April 2018  =  28 years, 8 months, 20 days Service

 

Awards:  No Find on Australian Honours system although –

NSW Police Medal ( 10 years ) granted on 30 September 2004

1st Clasp to NSW Police Medal ( 15 years ) granted on 30 March 2005

National Medal ( 15 years ) granted on 28 April 2005

2nd Clasp to NSW Police Medal ( 20 years ) granted on 11 October 2010

NSW Police Commissioners Sesquicentennary Citation granted on 4 October 2012

1st Clasp to National Medal ( 20 years ) granted on 10 September 2018

3rd Clasp to NSW Police Medal ( 25 years ) granted on 10 September 2018

NSW Police National Service Medal granted on 10 September 2018

 

Born:  Friday  4 October 1968 

Died on:  Saturday  2 January 2021

Age:  52 years, 2 months, 29 days

Cause:  PTSD – Liver and Kidney failure 

Event location: Blacktown Hospital, NSW

Event date:  Saturday  2 January 2021 

Funeral date:  Tuesday  12 January 2021 @ 2pm 

Funeral location:   Pinegrove Memorial Park, North Chapel, Kington St, Minchinbury, NSW  02 9625 8066

( click here to see Cornona19 Virus Pandemic rules – this will be a limited numbers Funeral )

any Future Wake location??? TBA 

any Future Wake date??? TBA

( Due to current Govt. restrictions on ‘Gatherings’ due to Corona19 Virus Pandemic, some families may wish to have a Memorial Service / Wake with friends and family at a later date )

Funeral Parlour: Guardian Funerals 

Buried at: ? TBA

Memorial / Plaque / Monument located at: ?

Dedication date of Memorial / Plaque / Monument: Nil – at this time ( January 2021 )

 

Lisa Ann CAMWELL

 LISA is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance  *NEED MORE INFO


FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal


May they forever Rest In Peace

https://www.facebook.com/groups/AustralianPolice.com.au/ 

 

https://www.facebook.com/groups/NSWFallenPolice/ 

Australian Police YouTube Channel 


 

Condolences to her partner, Grant Gibson & his two children, family and friends.

Lisa was the eldest child of parents, Ian Roderick Parrish and Marilyn Ann Gibson and Stepmom Judith Parrish.

Sister to Jody and Amanda and Aunty to their children.

Mother of Dayna, Hunter, Kade and Tamsyn.


 

Lisa Ann CAMWELL


 

Lisa Ann CAMWELL, Lisa CAMWELL, Lisa PARRISH

Lisa Ann CAMWELL, Lisa CAMWELL, Lisa PARRISH

Lisa Ann CAMWELL, Lisa CAMWELL, Lisa PARRISH

Lisa Ann CAMWELL, Lisa CAMWELL, Lisa PARRISH

Lisa Ann CAMWELL, Lisa CAMWELL, Lisa PARRISH

Lisa Ann CAMWELL, Lisa CAMWELL, Lisa PARRISH

Lisa Ann CAMWELL, Lisa CAMWELL, Lisa PARRISH

Lisa Ann CAMWELL, Lisa CAMWELL, Lisa PARRISH

Lisa Ann CAMWELL, Lisa CAMWELL, Lisa PARRISH

Lisa Ann CAMWELL, Lisa CAMWELL, Lisa PARRISH

Lisa Ann CAMWELL, Lisa CAMWELL, Lisa PARRISH

Lisa Ann CAMWELL, Lisa CAMWELL, Lisa PARRISH

Lisa Ann CAMWELL, Lisa CAMWELL, Lisa PARRISH

Lisa Ann CAMWELL, Lisa CAMWELL, Lisa PARRISH

Lisa Ann CAMWELL, Lisa CAMWELL, Lisa PARRISH

Lisa Ann CAMWELL, Lisa CAMWELL, Lisa PARRISH

 

 


This was published 13 years ago

Officer who found Byrne’s body grilled

The policeman who found Caroline Byrne dead at The Gap has told a Sydney court that in almost 20 years of rescue work, he had not seen any other bodies so far out from the cliff face.

Senior Sergeant Mark Powderly ( # 14425 ) gave evidence at the committal hearing for Gordon Wood, who is defending the charge that he murdered his former girlfriend.

The body of the 24-year-old model was found wedged head-first in rocks at the bottom of The Gap at Watsons Bay, in Sydney’s east, on June 8, 1995.

Wood, who was stockbroker Rene Rivkin‘s chauffeur at the time, is accused of throwing her from the 29-metre high cliff.

Exactly where Ms Byrne landed is central to the case, but her death was initially treated as suicide and no photographs were taken of her body at the scene.

Sgt Powderley told Burwood Local Court he and Constable Lisa Camwell retrieved Ms Byrne‘s body from a crevice next to a pyramid-shaped rock.

The officer, who spent 19 years in the Police Rescue Squad, said he had recovered up to 20 bodies from The Gap but had never found anyone that far out from the cliff.

Research by physics expert Rodney Cross allegedly shows that Ms Byrne could only have landed at this point, 11.8 metres from the cliff face, if she was hurled using a spear throw.

But a different place was nominated as the point of impact in a 1996 police video, which was played to the court.

In the video, Sgt Powderley narrates from the cliff top as Constable Camwell indicates a place several metres from the pyramid rock.

Sgt Powderley said he “wasn’t really concentrating” when the video – intended to publicise the Byrne case – was recorded.

He had only realised in 2004 that it showed the wrong place.

“If we were there to do a Forensic Services assessment of the scene and pinpoint the exact location … things would have been done differently,” he said.

Sgt Powderley said he saw the video for the first time at the 1997 inquest into Ms Byrne‘s death, but did not notice the position was wrong because he “just wasn’t paying the attention to it that I should have”.

Police initially gave Prof Cross the wrong information about where Ms Byrne landed and he concluded she probably jumped, the court has been told.

Defence barrister Winston Terracini SC suggested measurements of the location had been “wrong for ages”, but were changed when police received a report “that doesn’t suit their purposes”.

Sgt Powderley denied having been asked by the detective heading the investigation, Paul Jacob ( # 18752 ), to reconsider the body’s location.

Earlier, Prof Cross told the court he had not considered information from 1994 about Ms Byrne‘s sporting ability when concluding she could not have jumped so far from the cliff.

Instead, he used reports from Ms Byrne‘s high school teachers that she had no athletic ability.

Mr Terracini asked why he had not taken into account the more recent information which, he said, showed Ms Byrne “excelled at a whole range of different sports” including basketball, swimming and aerobics.

“I presumed that that material was provided by Caroline Byrne herself,” Prof Cross said.

The hearing continues on Friday.

Officer who found Byrne’s body grilled


 

On 9 September 2008 the Daily Telegraph / AAP reported “Exact spot of model’s body ‘forgotten’”

It said a police officer who recovered the body of model Caroline Byrne has told a Sydney court she will never remember the exact location of the body. Senior Constable Lisa Camwell told the New South Wales Supreme Court a controversial 1996 video re-enactment was her best memory of the recovery operation.

Ms Byrne, 24, was found wedged head first in rocks at the base of cliffs at The Gap, in Sydney’s east on June 8, 1995. Her live-in boyfriend Gordon Wood is on trial for her murder. Sen Const Camwell was one of two police involved in retrieving Ms Byrne’s body. She was tasked with carrying a body bag and stretcher across to the recovery site.

The officer today told the jury her recollection of the morning was based solely on her own actions “which was carrying equipment and looking at the ground”. When she took part in a video re-enactment about a year after Ms Byrne‘s death, Sen Const Camwell said she determined the place she believed the body found was based upon an estimate of how long it had taken her to reach it that night. “Most of those large rocks found down the bottom there are mostly just large rocks to me,” she said. “I wouldn’t ever say I know exactly where her body was.”

Sen Const Camwell said she had no further involvement in the case until she was contacted about the video in 2004. She told the court the officer then in charge of the murder investigation said the position of Ms Byrne‘s body had become a ” significant issue ”, and where she had indicated on the video appeared to be incorrect. She agreed with Wood’s barrister Winston Terracini SC that her best memory of events was as recorded on the video.

The location of the body is essential to the Crown case that Ms Byrne was not pushed nor jumped, but was forcefully thrown to her death. Sen Const Camwell‘s partner Mark Powderly has told the jury the body was recovered from a different location which is consistent with the theory that Ms Byrne was murdered. The location indicated by Sen Const Camwell supports the hypothesis that Ms Byrne took her own life. The trial continues.

NSW reports: Exact spot of model’s body ‘forgotten’ – 9 September 2008


 

This was published 12 years ago

Murder trial hears of ‘freakish scream’

MICK BRUNETTA had heard a lot of screams during his 17 years of fishing at The Gap, but he had never heard anything like the one he heard on the night of June 7, 1995, he told a murder trial yesterday.

Mr Brunetta and his brother-in-law Norm Wano were not having much luck as they cast their lines into the darkness from the clifftop. About 11pm they heard what they variously described as a woman’s “freakish scream” and that she sounded “like someone who was panicked or scared”.

Mr Wano turned and said, “F— man, what was that?” and the pair continued fishing.

Gordon Wood, 45, has pleaded not guilty to throwing his girlfriend, Caroline Byrne, a 24-year-old model, from the cliffs at the notorious suicide spot in Sydney’s east.

Mr Wano said that he contacted the police 11 months later after seeing a re-enactment on television where police asked the two fishermen, who were potential witnesses, to come forward.

Wearing an olive-green bandanna over his dreadlocks and his sunglasses perched on top of his head, Mr Wano said that although he was not a keen fisherman, he often accompanied his brother-in-law.

He said he had heard the scream about 11pm and, “It wasn’t a scream of happiness. It was like a scared scream.”

He said that later three men had come by calling out the name “Caroline”. Upon being told of the scream, Mr Wano said, one of the men had said, “On no, she’s done it, she’s done it.”

Mr Brunetta, who gave evidence with the assistance of an Italian interpreter, said that he recalled seeing a lone man calling out “Caroline” and that later that night that same man, who had blond hair, had come back with two other men. After telling the group of the scream, they asked to borrow his torch.

Mr Brunetta said his torch was not very good because the battery “was a bit flat”.

He agreed that in his 2004 statement he had said that when he saw the men trying to shine the torch to illuminate the bottom of the cliff, he had said, “There’s no way that man will be able to see anything because the torch is not strong enough.”

The two fishermen stayed on until dawn watching the police recover Ms Byrne’s body. Mr Brunetta said no one had ever taken him back to The Gap to try to pinpoint the exact location of where Ms Byrne had landed.

Also yesterday, a police witness contradicted another on critical evidence against Wood.

One officer told the jury that she would never be able to pinpoint the exact location of the body, which is vital to proving that Ms Byrne’s death was murder.

The jury has heard conflicting evidence about where the body was found, with senior retrieval officer Mark Powderly testifying Ms Byrne was some 10 metres from the cliff face.

But his partner, Senior Constable Lisa Camwell, yesterday told the court she believed Ms Byrne was in a crevice closer to the shore.

No measurements or photographs were taken on the night of her death.

A 1996 video re-enactment of the rescue operation shows Senior Constable Camwell pointing to a spot, which is referred to as the “exact location” of Ms Byrne’s body.

The officer yesterday said she had estimated the site based upon how long it took her to reach the body on the night of the retrieval, and the video showed her best recollection of events.

“Most of those large rocks found down the bottom there are mostly just large rocks to me,” she said.

“I wouldn’t ever say I know exactly where her body was.”

Murder trial hears of ‘freakish scream’


 

During the trial the court was told of some

During the trial, the Court was told of some uncertainty regarding the actual location where the body was found. Senior Constable Lisa Camwell, one of the officers who retrieved Byrne’s body in 1995 gave evidence that she had in 1996 participated in a video re-enactment in which she indicated the body’s location. She gave evidence that in 2004 she was contacted by an officer in charge of the murder investigation (Sergeant Powderly) and told that the position of Ms Byrne’s body had become a significant issue. She was told that the body position she had indicated on the video now appeared to be incorrect. Media reports during the second trial suggested the location of the body was an essential component to the Crown case that Ms Byrne was not pushed nor jumped, but was forcefully thrown to her death [The12]

 

2.4.3.3
Deliberation and verdict After five full days of deliberation on 21 November 2008 they found Wood guilty. On 3 December 2008 Wood was sentenced to a custodial sentence of 17 years, with a minimum time in prison of 13 years. Wood lodged an appeal to the conviction. 2.4.4 Inquests, Investigations and Trials Two inquests were held into Byrne’s death by New South Wales State coroner John Abernethy, with Wood claiming it was suicide. The second inquest in 1998 delivered an open finding. That same year, Wood left Australia. Police investigations continued from 2000 onwards as “Strikeforce Irondale with hundreds of witnesses interviewed and resulting in a brief of evidence running to more than 350 pages. Caroline’s father Tony Byrne continued to press for action from the investigation eventually enrolling the assistance of New South Wales politician Fred Nile who raised questions about the investigation in State Parliament up till 2004. In 2004 scientific reports relating to the physics of a body falling/jumping/being projected from the cliff produced by Professor Rod Cross were the principal elements of new evidence which encouraged the Crown to push for a trial of Gordon Wood. In March 2006 the New South Wales Director of Public Prosecutions Nicholas Cowdery QC agreed with police that there was enough evidence to charge Wood with Byrne’s murder. Wood was detained in London in April 2006, extradited to Australia and released on bail by a Sydney court on 4 May. On 6 July 2007, Wood was committed to stand trial for the murder of Byrne. The first trial started on 21 July 2008 with Mark Tedeschi QC appearing for the Crown and Winston Terracini QC defending Wood. On 6 August 2008, Justice Graham Barr declared a mistrial because of the alleged contact that a member of the jury had with 2GB radio host Jason Morrison. The juror, who remained anonymous, claimed that some of the jurors were planning a secret night visit to the crime scene (the Gap) being organised by a particular juror who was a “bully” and who had “already decided that Wood was guilty.” Justice Barr ruled “I had to discharge the jury … because some jurors disobeyed my instructions and misconducted themselves.” The second trial commenced on 25 August 2008 and for the first time in New South Wales court history a panel of 15 jurors was sworn in instead of the usual 12 to provide some contingency.

 

 

Death of Caroline Byrne

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to navigation Jump to search

Death of Caroline Byrne
Caroline-Byrne.jpg
Date 7 June 1995
Location The Gap, Watsons Bay, New South Wales, Australia
Coordinates 33.843803°S 151.284998°E Coordinates: 33.843803°S 151.284998°E
Cause Death by falling
Deaths Caroline Byrne
Coroner John Abernethy
Suspects Gordon Wood
Charges Murder
Verdict Guilty, overturned on appeal

Caroline Byrne (8 October 1970 – 7 June 1995), an Australian model, was found at the bottom of a cliff at The Gap in Sydney in the early hours of 8 June 1995. Her then boyfriend Gordon Eric Wood (b. 1962), who at the time of her death was chauffeur and personal assistant to businessman Rene Rivkin, was convicted of her murder on 21 November 2008 and spent three years in Goulburn jail. He was acquitted of the conviction in February 2012.[1][2]

Events of 7 June 1995

The Gap at Watsons Bay, location of Byrne’s death.

Born on 8 October 1970,[3] Byrne had been in a relationship with Wood since 1992. She was a model but principally worked as a modelling instructor for Sydney deportment and etiquette educator June Dally-Watkins. On 7 June 1995, she failed to turn up for work and for an appointment with a psychiatrist. There were three claimed sightings of her near The Gap at Watsons Bay that afternoon and evening, in the company of two men, one of whom matched Wood’s description. Two of the sightings – at 1 pm and 3 pm – were by local cafe owners, Craig Martin and Lance Melbourne. In 1998 John Doherty, an Irish artist who had been out of the country in the intervening years, came forward to say that around 8.30pm that evening he too had seen Byrne outside his studio window arguing with one man while another man stood nearby.[4]

Wood denied being present at Watsons Bay that afternoon. Evidence was sworn at both inquests by Wood’s friends Brett Cochrane and Nic Samartis that they lunched with him briefly around 1:15 pm in Potts Point before he was called away after a call from Rivkin.[5]:206 Wood claimed that he was asked by Rivkin to chauffeur prominent lobbyist and ex-federal minister Graham Richardson to an appointment and then spent the afternoon doing regular chores for Rivkin before going home around 7 pm. The Richardson alibi was compromised by Richardson when he was interviewed by police in 2001, when he advised that he had lunched that day with rugby league administrator Peter Moore.[4]

Wood’s movements in the afternoon have never been reported prior to the late evening, when Wood said he awoke on his couch having fallen asleep in front of the television and was immediately alarmed that Byrne was still not home. Wood has said he did not know Byrne’s whereabouts but was led by what he termed “telepathic communication” to The Gap. He had first driven to the beachfront car-park at Bondi Beach where he and Byrne had spent much time and then to a favourite park at Camp Cove where they had often picnicked. Heading back from Camp Cove he spotted Byrne’s white Suzuki Vitara parked in a lane at The Gap. It was when running about the cliff-top and shouting her name that Wood encountered two rock fishermen who verified his appearance around midnight.

Wood then rang Tony Byrne and Caroline’s brother Peter. He drove back into Sydney city and collected them and all three then went to the Gap and scoured the cliff-top. Peter Byrne later gave evidence that at about 1am Wood claimed to have spotted her body at the base of the cliff using torchlight. Byrne himself said he could see nothing and nor could the police who arrived soon after with police torches. The night was dark and the cliff misty. Peter Byrne claimed it was difficult to see the rocks below the cliff, let alone a body. The contention whether Wood had claimed he could see something in the darkness figured in much media speculation over the years and formed a key part of Crown evidence in the 2008 trial. In 2011 the Appeal Court felt that the Crown had presented speculation in this area posing as evidence. This was one of the grounds resulting in Wood’s 2011 appeal being upheld.

The identity of the second man supposedly sighted by Melbourne and Martin with Wood in Watsons Bay earlier in the day has remained unclear. With evidence contradicting the likelihood that the man was either of those whom the police considered in investigation (Byrne’s modelling agent Adam Leigh or Rivkin associate Gary Redding) the Crown chose to pose speculation without evidence on either during the trial and drew criticism from the trial judge and later the appellant judges.

Media interest

Byrne’s death was accepted as a suicide by local Rose Bay Police and others. No photographs were taken of the location of her body’s landing point.

In 1996, Byrne’s father begin to agitate against the notion of suicide such that from 1997 onwards the case and circumstances of Byrne’s death were regularly examined in Australia’s national newspapers and reported as “one of Sydney’s unsolved crimes”. The death of a beautiful model at one of Sydney’s notorious suicide spots, the connection to the flamboyant and newsworthy Rivkin, and a net of witnesses and commentators which included some prominent Sydney identities all added to the intrigue of the case.

Offset Alpine speculation

Attention was particularly heightened by the still unproven speculation of a connection with Rene Rivkin’s financial activities. The day before Byrne’s death, Wood and Rivkin were interviewed by the Australian Securities and Investments Commission about the Offset Alpine fire of 1993 and the true ownership of share parcels traded in Offset Alpine owned by nominees related to Swiss bank accounts.[5]:203 Tony Byrne claimed that Wood had indicated to his daughter that the fire was a set-up for insurance purposes.

Ultimately in 2001 Rivkin was charged with insider trading (of Qantas shares) and his eventual conviction in 2003 had a devastating effect on his mental stability, culminating in his 2005 suicide.[6] However the ASIC investigation into share trading in Offset Alpine and the true beneficiaries proved an epic that outlived Rivkin, commencing in 1995 and continuing from 2005 with a focus shifted to Graham Richardson and Trevor Kennedy until eventually closed without outcome by ASIC in 2010.[7]

Peripheral celebrities

Adding to this intrigue was a list of celebrities with a peripheral involvement in the case. Byrne’s medical doctor who had referred her to the psychiatric appointment she did not keep on 7 June was television celebrity physician, Dr Cindy Pan.[5]:205 Graham Richardson‘s diarised luncheon appointment that day (which caused him to question whether he may have been chauffeured anywhere by Wood) was with rugby league identity Peter Bullfrog Moore at Sydney’s Hilton Hotel and was set up to broker a peace deal in the Super League war which deeply divided Australian rugby league at that time. Wood always claimed that he had driven Moore from a noon meeting with Rivkin to what may well have been a lunch, though the press and (later) the Crown ignored this possibility. Moore died in July 2000 a year prior to the Strikeforce Irondale interview with Richardson, thus preventing corroboration of the luncheon timings and Rivkin too was dead before the trial.[8]

Byrne’s close friends included entertainer Tania Zaetta and actress Kylie Watson, a Home and Away cast member. It was the amateur sleuthing around Watsons Bay armed with photographs of Byrne in the weeks after her death which had Dally-Watkins and Watson uncover the Martin/Melbourne sighting lead.[5]:206 Other celebrity witnesses who figured in the case at some point included businessman John Singleton, journalist Paul Barry and paparazzo Jamie Fawcett.

Inquests, investigation and trials

Two inquests were held into Byrne’s death by New South Wales State coroner John Abernethy, with Wood claiming it was suicide. The second inquest in 1998 delivered an open finding. That same year, Wood left Australia.

Police investigations continued from 2000 onwards as “Strikeforce Irondale” with hundreds of witnesses interviewed and resulting in a brief of evidence running to more than 350 pages. Caroline’s father Tony Byrne continued to press for action from the investigation eventually enrolling the assistance of New South Wales politician Fred Nile who raised questions about the investigation in State Parliament up till 2004.[9]

In 2004 scientific reports relating to the physics of a body falling/jumping/being projected from the cliff produced by Professor Rod Cross were the principal elements of new evidence which encouraged the Crown to push for a trial of Gordon Wood.[10] In March 2006 the New South Wales Director of Public Prosecutions Nicholas Cowdery QC agreed with police that there was enough evidence to charge Wood with Byrne’s murder.[11] Wood was detained in London in April 2006, extradited to Australia and released on bail by a Sydney court on 4 May. On 6 July 2007, Wood was committed to stand trial for the murder of Byrne.

The first trial started on 21 July 2008 with Mark Tedeschi QC appearing for the Crown and Winston Terracini QC defending Wood. On 6 August 2008, Justice Graham Barr declared a mistrial because of the alleged contact that a member of the jury had with 2GB radio host Jason Morrison. The juror, who remained anonymous, claimed that some of the jurors were planning a secret night visit to the crime scene (the Gap) being organised by a particular juror who was a “bully” and who had “already decided that Wood was guilty.” Justice Barr ruled “I had to discharge the jury … because some jurors disobeyed my instructions and misconducted themselves.”[12]

The second trial commenced on 25 August 2008 and for the first time in New South Wales court history a panel of 15 jurors was sworn in instead of the usual 12 to provide some contingency. [12]

Trial evidence

Presentation of the Crown case

Following the aborted first trial Tedeschi, as Crown Prosecutor, presented the Crown case over a nine-week period from 26 August until 24 October 2008. Over 70 witnesses were called and the jury heard hours of audio and video evidence including taped interviews with Rivkin and Wood.[13]

Witnesses called by the prosecution included Pan, Richardson, Watson, Zaetta, Singleton, Fawcett, Bob Hagan and sports journalist Phil Rothfield. Tony Byrne, Peter Byrne, Dally-Watkins and her daughter Carol Clifford appeared. Doherty and Cochrane gave evidence via video link up from overseas. Police witnesses included Tracey Smit ( ProCst # 61020 ) and Paul Griffiths ( # 23770 ? ) (officers on scene), Sgt Mark Powderly ( # 14425 ), Sgt Neville Greatorex ( # 16136 )(who gave evidence on police procedures), Snr Const Lisa Camwell ( # ????? )(who retrieved the body) and the first investigating officer of the case Sgt Craig Woods ( #22599 ? ) of Rose Bay who had first dismissed the death as suicide and who gave evidence that in the first weeks Tony Byrne too accepted the suicide verdict and was explicitly against the idea of an inquest. Another ex-policeman to appear was Byrne’s former boyfriend Andrew Blanchette ( # ????? ). At one stage Justice Barr counselled Blanchette that he ought consider taking legal advice before answering a particular question. Sensationally on his second day in the witness box, Blanchette admitted that early that morning he had phoned another witness – Melinda Medich, his girlfriend and a minor at the time of Byrne’s death – before she was due to give evidence later that day. Blanchette was reported to police by Medich who had not heard from him for a number of years. Blanchette denied that he had been attempting to influence her evidence.

Location of the body

Retired University of Sydney physicist Associate Professor Rod Cross spent two days in the witness box. Over a six-year period Cross had produced six reports on the case – with his initial findings being quite different to the later findings presented in the trial.[10] Although formally qualified in the field of plasma physics, Cross had experience working with biomechanists regarding sports research and had published and refereed many papers on biomechanics;[14] he was therefore proposed by police investigators as a forensic expert in fall dynamics. Between 1998 and 2004 Cross’ reports all concluded that Byrne could have jumped to her death, as he was told that Byrne’s body had been found at a distance of 9 metres (30 ft) from the cliff.[15] In 2005, when he was recontacted by the police that the position of the body was in fact farther away (11.8 metres (39 ft)), he conducted experiments which informed his speculation that Byrne could not have jumped that far and must have been thrown.[5]:210[16] The required launch speed, from the top of the 29 metres (95 ft) high cliff, was 4.5 m/s (see range of a projectile[17][18]), and the available runup distance was only 4 metres (13 ft) – although appeal submissions in 2011 called this into question. Cross tested eleven females from the New South Wales Police Academy and found that they could dive and land head first (in a swimming pool) at about 3.5 m/s after a 4 metres (13 ft) runup. A strong male could throw a 61 kilograms (134 lb) female at 4.8 m/s after a runup of only 2 metres (6 ft 7 in) or 3 metres (9.8 ft).

During the trial the Court was told of some uncertainty regarding the actual location where the body was found. Senior Constable Lisa Camwell, one of the officers who retrieved Byrne’s body in 1995 gave evidence that she had in 1996 participated in a video re-enactment in which she indicated the body’s location. She gave evidence that in 2004 she was contacted by an officer in charge of the murder investigation (Sergeant Powderly) and told that the position of Ms Byrne’s body had become a significant issue. She was told that the body position she had indicated on the video now appeared to be incorrect. Media reports during the second trial suggested the location of the body was an essential component to the Crown case that Ms Byrne was not pushed nor jumped, but was forcefully thrown to her death.[19]

Suicide history

The court heard that Caroline’s mother Andrea Byrne had committed suicide in March 1991 after she became depressed following a breast enlargement operation that went wrong.[20] Terracini also read to the court a letter Tony Byrne had previously provided to police in which he claimed that Caroline had made an attempt on her own life via overdose in 1992. In court Tony Byrne denied that Caroline had on that occasion intended to kill herself and instead was making “a cry for help”. At another stage of the cross examination, he claimed to suppose that had Caroline wanted to kill herself she would have copied her mother’s method rather than jumping from a cliff.[21]

Byrne’s doctor, author and television personality Cindy Pan, gave evidence that she had seen Byrne for two years before her death and had specifically discussed Byrne’s depression with her in the weeks leading up to her death. Dr. Pan told the court Byrne said she had felt depressed for about a month and the condition had worsened in the week leading up to their appointment on 5 June 1995. Pan said the model told her she could not put a finger on what she was unhappy about.

“I was trying to explore with her what she might be depressed about, but she was not really able to identify any one specific thing,” Pan told the court. She said Byrne told her she “had the same thing three years ago” and had been put on medication, which had helped. Pan said Byrne denied having thoughts of self-harm and she referred her to a psychiatrist, obtaining an appointment for 4 pm on 7 June.[22]

Presentation of the defence

One defence witness, Prof John Hilton, a forensic pathologist, was called during the Prosecution case, due to his later unavailability. Otherwise Terracini commenced the defence case on 27 October 2008 calling another physics expert Prof Marcus Pandy, a electromechanical engineer who conducted experiments on running and jumping speeds of two females. Only a handful of defence witnesses were called – two forensic pathologists, one psychiatrist, Prof Pandy, a stunt diver, and Wood’s sister Jacqueline Schmidt – and the defence case concluded within a week.

With the trial drawing to a close, the jury made a number of requests of Justice Barr that included a visit the Gap for a third time; for a transcript of Doherty’s evidence; and for video footage of Pandy’s running experiments.[23]

Deliberation and verdict

For the first time in New South Wales court history, a ballot was used to select the three jurors who would stand down so that twelve of the sitting fifteen would deliberate to a verdict. After five full days of deliberation on 21 November 2008 they found Wood guilty.[24][25] On 3 December 2008 Wood was sentenced to a custodial sentence of 17 years, with a minimum time in prison of 13 years. Wood lodged an appeal to the conviction.[26]

Appeal

Wood’s appeal hearing commenced on 22 August 2011 in the Criminal Court of Appeal before Chief Judge at Common Law Peter McClellan, Justice Megan Latham, and Justice Stephen Rothman. Wood’s barrister Tim Game SC submitted that the jury’s verdict was unreasonable and not supported by the evidence. His submission spoke of nine grounds for appeal. One was that the trial miscarried by reason of the prejudice occasioned by the Tedeschi’s closing address. Others related to criticisms of Barr’s directions to the jury.

Early media reporting of the appeal focused on Game’s submission that the scientific evidence used to convict Wood and presented by Associate Professor Cross was flawed. A photograph was presented in the trial and purported to be taken in 1996 showing that scrub near the fence line had limited Byrne’s possible run-up to the jump, supporting an argument that she would have needed to have been thrown to achieve the horizontal distance from the cliff wall that her body travelled. The appeal judges heard and the Crown acknowledged that the photo was in fact taken in 2003 and that photo’s quality meant that a shadow might have appeared to be scrub. The appeal judges heard that a 1996 colour photo which showed that there was no scrub limiting the run-up was available to the Crown during the trial but that the Crown had chosen to introduce the blurrier, non-contemporaneous, more ambiguous image.[27]

Game’s submission, consistent with so much of the trial evidence, concerned matters relating to the exact positioning of Byrne’s body at the base of the rocks and the orientation of her legs and torso and leading to questions regarding the contended launch point and the assumptions and assertions made by Cross in his pre-trial studies and reports and his trial evidence. Day two of Game’s submission focused on the police’s changed view between 1996 and 2005 as to Byrne’s landing spot and specifically trial evidence given by Sergeant Mark Powderly used to justify the reconstruction.[28]

The Criminal Court of Appeal delivered their opinion on 24 February 2012 acquitting Wood of Byrne’s murder and ordering his release from jail.[1] The appellate judges delivered a unanimous decision that there was insufficient evidence beyond reasonable doubt that Wood murdered Byrne and that the jury’s verdict was not supported. They dismissed the Crown evidence as being critically flawed and ruled that the possibility of her suicide ought not have been excluded.[1][2]

Justice McClennan described Cross’ experiments as “unsophisticated” and in the summation of his decision said that he was not satisfied by either of the two motives presented by the Crown.[1] Regarding the motive submitted by Tedeschi that Byrne had information about Rivkin’s business dealings that Wood was trying to hide, McClennan said “The exploitation of public rumour and the use of mere innuendo to compensate for inadequate evidence of motive is not consistent with the obligations of a prosecutor to press the Crown case “to its legitimate strength” by reliance upon credible evidence”.[2]:para 305 McLennan was also troubled that the notion Byrne may have been unconscious when she left the cliff top was introduced by the Crown late in the case.[2]:para 277 He described Tedeschi’s suggestion, first made in his closing address and mentioned at no other time in evidence, that a “shot-put” action was used to despatch Byrne as “an invention of the prosecutor…for which there was absolutely no support in evidence”.[29] McClennan also expressed some doubt as the reliability of evidence concerning the claimed sightings of Wood and Byrne at Watson’s Bay on 7 June 1995 noting that some of these witnesses had come forward years after the event and the initial investigations; he raised concerns that the Melbourne/Martin first identification of Wood and Byrne was based on a specific photos shown to them by Dally-Watkins rather than from being picked from a selection. Tedeschi was criticised by McClellan for presenting reasoning that was “dangerous” and “entirely without foundation”. Tedeschi contributed to the alleged miscarriage with his “50 killer questions” which took an “impermissible course” in asking the jury to consider rhetorical questions dealing with matters that had not been presented with in evidence.[29] McClennan ruled that he was not persuaded that Sgt Powderly’s evidence regarding the changed landing position of the body was entirely reliable.[2]:para 317

Wood was freed from prison on 24 February 2012; having served three years two months in Goulburn Correctional Centre, following an initial month in Parklea prison. Three weeks later the new New South Wales Director of Public Prosecutions, Lloyd Babb SC, issued a press release simply announcing that “the OPDD will not appeal the Court of Criminal Appeal’s judgement in the matter of R v Gordon Wood . No further comment will be issued”.[30] This was 24 hours after meeting Tony Byrne and attending the Gap with him – a meeting which Byrne described as ‘fruitful’.[31]

Post-appeal

Wood left Australia after his release from prison and spent time in the United States and Britain. In 2014 he brought defamation actions against the Sydney radio stations 2GB and 2UE, Channel Seven Sydney, and The Daily Telegraph[32] which were all settled out of court in his favour for undisclosed sums.[33]

In 2016 Wood sued the state of New South Wales for millions of dollars plus costs for malicious prosecution and wrongful imprisonment, based on a number of grounds including a “hopelessly corrupted” and “ridiculous” police case against him.[34] In a witness statement filed as part of his lawsuit against the state, Mr Wood said that during his three years in Goulburn Jail he lived in constant fear of guards who dished out “therapy” and was king-hit (a term widely used in Australia, meaning a very hard punch, usually delivered to the head, that is completely unexpected) and knocked unconscious in the prison yard by an infamous rapist and killer.[35] The suit was dismissed on 10 August 2018, with Wood receiving no compensation.[36]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_Caroline_Byrne


 

 

 

Nothing further, than what is recorded above, is known about this woman at the time of publication.

 

Cal
3 January 2021


 

 

 

 

 




Anthony John CRAMP

Anthony John CRAMP

AKA Tony & Crampy

Late of Coolamon, NSW 

Related (Father?) to NSWPF Member Daniel CRAMP? Regd # ?????

NSW Redfern Police Academy Class # 194A

New South Wales Police Force

Regd. #  20880

 

Rank:  Commenced Training at Redfern Academy on ? February 1983

Probationary Constable- appointed 6 May 1983 ( aged 22 years,  7 months,  27 days )

Constable – appointed ? ? ?

Constable 1st Class – appointed 6 May 1988 

Detective – appointed ? ? ?

Senior Constable – appointed ? ? ? 

Sergeant 3rd Class – appointed ? ? ? 

Sergeant 2nd Class – appointed ? ? ? ( yes )

Sergeant 1st Class – appointed ? ? ? 

Final RankSergeant 2nd Class

 

StationsFairfield GDs ( 34 Division ) 1983 – 1985, 

Cabramatta ( 34 Division )(1985 – 12 mths ),

Cowra ( GDs )( 1986 – 1991 ), BCI ( Bureau of Criminal Intelligence, Canberra – Intelligence Officer – ( January 1991 –  January 1994 ),

Major Crime Squad South, Surry Hills – Intelligence Officer ( January 1994 – 1996 ),

State Intelligence Unit, Strawberry Hills – Intelligence Officer ( Sgt )( 1996 – September 2000 )

VKG4 – Wagga Wagga – Shift Supervisor ( September 2000 – 2009 ), 

Wagga Wagga GDs ( 2009 – 12  January 2017 ) – Retirement ( H.O.D. )

Service:  From ? ? pre February 1983   to 12 January 2017  =  35+ years Service

 

Awards:  National Medal – granted 24 March 2000 ( Sgt )

Police Medal – granted ? ? ?  ( Sgt 2/c )

Born:  Friday  9 September 1960

Died on:  Tuesday  23 June 2020

Age:  59 years,  9 months,  14 days old

Cause: ‘Silent Heart attack’ from Diabetes.  Also suffered from Major Depression & PTSD.

Event location:  Home at Coolamon, near Wagga Wagga, NSW

Event date ?

 

Funeral date:  Tuesday  30 June 2020 @ 11am

Funeral location:  Alan Harris McDonald Chapel, 76 Copland Street, Wagga Wagga, NSW 02 6921 4913

( Due to current Govt. restrictions of 50 persons at a Funeral due to the Cornona19 Virus Pandemic – this was a Private Funeral )

 

 

Future Wake location??? TBA

( Due to current Govt. restrictions of 50 persons only at ‘Gatherings’,  there won’t be an immediate Wake )

Future Wake date???

( Due to current Govt. restrictions on ‘Gatherings’ due to Corona19 Virus Pandemic, some families may wish to have a Memorial Service / Wake with friends and family at a later date )

 

Funeral Parlour:  Alan Harris McDonald Funerals, Wagga Wagga, NSW

Buried at: ?

 

Memorial / Plaque / Monument located at: ?

Dedication date of Memorial / Plaque / Monument: Nil – at this time ( July 2020 )

 

 TONY is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance  *NEED MORE INFO


FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal


May they forever Rest In Peace

https://www.facebook.com/groups/AustralianPolice.com.au/

https://www.facebook.com/groups/NSWFallenPolice/

Australian Police YouTube Channel


 

Anthony John CRAMP AKA Tony CRAMP

CRAMP
Anthony John

Passed away suddenly at his home, the place he loved in Coolamon on Tuesday, 23rd June 2020.

Beloved husband of Debbie.

Dearly loved father and father-in-law of Daniel & Bree, Mitchell and their mother Janice.

Loving stepfather of Katie, Carissa, Sara and Sonia & Peter.

Treasured Pop of Logan, Eli, Riley, Aaliyah, Sophia, Matayo and Maharlah.

Cherished by his four-legged mates Lochie, Benson, Betty and Tilly.

Aged 59. He will be sadly missed by all his family and friends.

A Service to Celebrate Tony’s life will be held at the Alan Harris McDonald Chapel, 76 Copland Street, Wagga Wagga on Tuesday, 30th June 2020 commencing at 11:00am.

Family and friends are respectfully invited to attend.

For family and friends unable to attend the Celebration for Tony’s life, you are invited to watch the service via live-stream at the website: www.alanharrismcdonald.com.au.

If you would like to be recorded in the family memorial book, please contact the team at Alan Harris McDonald on: (02) 6933 7802.

https://tributes.dailyadvertiser.com.au/obituaries/134367/anthony-john-cramp/


Anthony John CRAMP AKA Tony CRAMP

?, Anthony John CRAMP AKA Tony CRAMP & ?
Tony Cramp in the middle

 

Anthony John CRAMP AKA Tony CRAMP

 


 

Anthony John CRAMP AKA Tony CRAMP

The club is saddened by the loss of Tony Cramp, better known around the club as Crampy. Crampy became involved in the club over the last few seasons and didn’t miss a training this pre season, always making sure the players drink bottles were full and always up for a chat.
Thank you for your contribution Crampy the club was a better place with you in it and we will miss you mate.


 

Anthony John CRAMP AKA Tony CRAMP

Pauline MizzLassi Crampy May you bring laughter to the heavens above, just as you did on earth. Thank you for everything you did for my family and I, something that will never be forgotten. Some tears were shed by my four children with my eldest reminding me how much you helped him in his teenage years. Rest peacefully ????

 

Anthony John CRAMP AKA Tony CRAMP with Debbie CRAMP

 

 


 

It is with great sadness that I share this post of a Cabramatta icon. My beautiful Mum, Margaret Rose O’Neill sadly passed away on 30 December 2019 in the Palliative Care Unit at Liverpool Hospital, aged 77.

Prior to Mums death she had been a resident of Coventry Rd, Longfield St and John St ( Cabramatta ) for the majority of her beautiful life.

Her employment included 25 + years working at Lansdowne Nursing Home.

Mum was always well known in the CBD of Cabra, and her means of transport were mainly the local bus and taxi services.

It is without doubt that the staff in the Liverpool Palliative Care Unit is living proof that Angels live amongst us.

During Mums funeral service, my sister Cheryl Mcgrath paid homage to the Students of Cabramatta High School who, on Christmas Day, visited the Hospital and shared their love of man kind as they joyfully sang Christmas Carols to the patients. It was the most beautiful experience and a true acknowledgement of the values being instilled in the Students at Cabramatta High.

Mum will be absolutely sadly missed, but I believe her commitment by always remaining a resident of Cabramatta she will always be remembered as a “True Local” of this beautiful town we call Cabra.

RIP Mum forever in our hearts Cheryl & Tony ????


 

Class 194 A - May 1983
Class 194 A – May 1983

 

Anthony John CRAMP AKA Tony CRAMP

Anthony John CRAMP AKA Tony CRAMP

Anthony John CRAMP AKA Tony CRAMP

Anthony John CRAMP AKA Tony CRAMP

Some great memories when Tony was our shift supervisor at VKG4 Wagga a fun 9 years. RIP now Big fella.S/C R Nixon, SCO R Faulkner, Sgt T Cramp, SCO M Mackintosh, S/C K BurnessKind RegardsMichelle Mackintosh ex serial# 8880008
Some great memories when Tony was our shift supervisor at VKG4 Wagga a fun 9 years.     RIP now Big fella.      S/C R Nixon, SCO R Faulkner, Sgt Tony Cramp, SCO M Mackintosh, S/C K Burness        Kind Regards      Michelle Mackintosh ex serial# 8880008

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 




Christopher Noel MANNING

Christopher Noel MANNING

AKA  CHRIS

Late of  Wallsend, NSW

NSW Redfern Police Academy Class #  153

NSW Police Cadet # 3115

New South Wales Police Force

Regd. #  17449

RankCommenced as NSW Police Cadet on Monday 3 February 1975

Probationary Constable – appointed 14 January 1977

Constable – appointed 14 January 1978

Constable 1st Class – appointed ? ? ?

Senior Constable – appointed 14 January 1986

Sergeant 3rd Class – appointed ? ? ?

Sergeant 2nd Class – appointed ? ? ?

Sergeant 1st Class – appointed ? ? ?

Final Rank =  Senior Sergeant

Stations?, Lithgow HWP,   ?    , ‘A’ District HWP, Newcastle HWP – Retirement ( 6 August 2004 )

Service:  From 3 February 1975  to6 August 2004 =  29+ years Service

Awards:  National Medal – granted 15 November 1991 ( SenCon )

1st Clasp to National Medal – granted 6 April 2001 ( Sgt )

BornTuesday  14 January 1958

Died onMonday  30 March 2020

Age:  62 yrs  2 mths  16 days

Cause:  Cancer – Stomach & Gall Bladder

Event location:   Home with family

Event date ?

Funeral date? ? ?

Funeral location?  ( Due to current Govt. restrictions of 10 persons at a Funeral due to the Cornona19 Virus Pandemic – this will be a Private Funeral )

Wake location? TBA ( Due to current Govt. restrictions of 2 persons only at a ‘Gatherings’,  there won’t be an immediate Wake )

Funeral Parlour: Pettigrew Family Funerals – 02 4951 1166

Buried at:  Cremated

Memorial located at: ?

 

Christopher Noel MANNING

CHRIS is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance  *NEED MORE INFO


FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal


May they forever Rest In Peace


 

Deepest of condolences to his wife Julie and their boys Tiron & Nathan and to their extended family and friends.

Now out of pain, may you forever Rest In Peace mate.


 

27 November 2019, the 1975 NSW Police Cadets had a luncheon for Chris Manning ( 2nd from left ) who is severely ill. A great day with food and drinks. Most drove between 2 and 3 hours for the special occasion. with ( L - R ) Rob Schwarz, Chris Manning, Jeff Sloane, Grant Duncan, Neal Carr, Charlie Dagostino & Ian Dawson, at Belmont 16s.
27 November 2019, the 1975 NSW Police Cadets had a luncheon for Chris Manning ( 2nd from left ) who is severely ill.
A great day with food and drinks. Most drove between 2 and 3 hours for the special occasion. with ( L – R ) Rob Schwarz, Chris Manning, Jeff Sloane, Grant Duncan, Neal Carr, Charlie Dagostino & Ian Dawson, at Belmont 16s.

 

NSW Police Cadet hat badge


 

MANNING, Christopher Noel
Late of Wallsend

Died peacefully at home

30th March, 2020

Aged 62 Years

Dearly loved husband of Julie.

Proud Dad of Tiron, and Nathan.
Father-in-law of Kristal, and Jackie.
Besotted Pa of Xavier and Hudson.
Cherished brother, brother-in-law and uncle of his family.
A proud Dinosaur.

The family and friends of Chris are advised that His cremation has taken place privately at His request.

A Memorial Service will be held to Celebrate Chris’ Life at a later date.

‘Keep On Truckin’

logo

logo

Published in The Newcastle Herald on Apr. 4, 2020

http://tributes.newcastleherald.com.au/obituaries/theherald-au/obituary.aspx?n=christopher-noel-manning&pid=195864158&fhid=31483


 

 




Paul James THORN

Paul James THORN

AKA  THORNY

Brother of Retired NSWPF Member – Kelly French ( # ????? ) & Brother-in-law to Insp. Matt French ( # ????? – Kempsey )

Late of Boambee East, NSW

NSW Goulburn Police Academy Class #  259

New South Wales Police Force

Regd. #  29647

Rank:  Commenced at Goulburn Police Academy on Monday 22 August 1994

Probationary Constable – Friday 17 February 1995

Constable – appointed ? ? ?

Constable 1st Class – appointed ? ? ?

Senior Constable – appointed ? ? ?

Final Rank =  Senior Constable

Stations?, Dee Why ( 1995 ), Bourke ( 3 yrs, 1996 – 1999 ), Coffs Harbour – GDs’, OSG, Weapons Instructor, SPSU, HWP ( 1999 – 2017 ), Retired Medical – H.O.D.

Service:  From 22 August 1994  to  20 September 201723+ years Service

Awards:  No Find on Australian Honours

Numerous Group, Unit and Local Citations

Born:  Tuesday  21 September 1971

Died on: Wednesday  11 March 2020

Age: 48 yrs  5 mths  19 days

Cause Sufferer of PTSD: Death Cause – Heart attack due to an undiagnosed & asymptomatic heart disease.

Event location: Home & Coffs Harbour Hospital, NSW

Event date: Wednesday  1 March 2020

Funeral dateFriday  27 March 2020 @ 9.30am

Funeral location:  Hogbin Dve Crematorium Chapel, Stadium Dve, Coffs Harbour, NSW

Wake location: ?TBA ( due to Corona virus lock-down )

Funeral Parlour: Keith Logue & Sons Funeral Directors, Coffs Harbour, NSW (02) 6652 1999

Buried at: Cremated with Ashes to be buried at Karangi Memorial Gardens along with his late mother.

956A Coramba Rd, Karangi NSW 2450

Memorial located at: ?

Paul THORN

  PAUL is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance  *NEED MORE INFO


FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal


May they forever Rest In Peace


 

Husband of Christine,

Father of Chantel ( 21 ) & Bradley ( 19 ),

Brother to Retired NSWPF Member – Kelly French ( # ????? ) & Brother-in-law to Serving Member Insp. Matt French ( # ????? – Kempsey ).

 

Paul, unfortunately, was still suffering from work related PTSD – even after Retiring from the NSW Police Force.

He collapsed, at home, whilst suffered a heart attack.

His daughter-in-law, Bree, bravely performed CPR until the Paramedics arrived, who then took over CPR and transported him to Coffs Harbour Hospital however Paul did not respond to the treatment and passed away at the Hospital a short time after arrival.

It is hoped that he did not suffer.

May Thornys family remember the good times and know that they did everything possible when needed.

Thorny ” bled blue ” and being part of the Police Force meant the world to him – as too, did his family – even through the darkest hours.

May Thorny forever Rest In Peace.

 


 

Paul THORN & Danielle Williams
Paul THORN & Danielle Williams


 

Paul THORN


 

Paul giving Plasma at the Blood Bank
Paul giving Plasma at the Blood Bank

Paul Thorn

 

Paul Thorn

 

? & Paul James THORN AKA THORNY
Paul James THORN AKA THORNY

 

Paul James THORN AKA THORNY

Paul James THORN AKA THORNY

 

 


 

Paul James THORN

Date listed: 21/3/202011th March 2020, passed unexpectedly, protecting those he loved until the end, late of Boambee East.

He leaves behind his beloved wife Christine, his adored children Chantel, Bradley and their partners Bhodi and Bree.

A cherished son to Simon and Maureen (dec’d).

Brother to Mark, Kelly and their partners Bec and Matt.

Uncle to Bennett, Logan, Alexis, Mitchell, Jaiden, Taj and Jamie.

Beloved friend to many.

Aged 48 Years

Brothers In Arms   Please contact Keith Logue & Sons Funeral Directors for Funeral details.

In lieu of floral tributes donations will be taken for a charity close to Paul’s heart, a collection box will be at the Chapel.

Publication: Coffs Coast Advocate

https://www.weeklytimesnow.com.au/tributes/notice/funeral-notices/thorn-paul-james/5365194/


 

Paul James Thorn

Loved husband of Christine, adored father of Chantel, Bradley and their partners Bhodi and Bree.

A cherished son to Simon and Maureen (dec’d). Brother to Mark, Kelly and their partners Bec and Matt.

Uncle to Bennett, Logan, Alexis, Mitchell, Jaiden, Taj and Jamie.

Beloved friend to many.

 

Paul Thorn

http://loguefunerals.com.au/paul-james-thorn/


 

 

 




Stephen Gordon NIXON

Stephen Gordon NIXON

AKA Watergate, Nixo, Nicko

Late of Casino, NSW

NSW Goulburn Police Academy Class #  227

New South Wales Police Force

Uniform # 3998

ProCst # 98464

Regd. #  23842

RankCommenced Training at Goulburn Police Academy on Wednesday  1 April 1987 ( aged 22 years, 2 months, 2 days )

Probationary Constable – appointed 26 June 1987 ( aged 22 years, 5 months, 23 days )

Constable – appointed 26 June 1988

Constable 1st Class – appointed ? ? ?

Senior Constable – appointed ? ? ?

Leading Senior Constable – appointed ? ? ?

 

Final Rank = Leading Senior Constable

Stephen Gordon NIXON AKA Watergate, Nixo, Nicko, Stephen NIXON, Steve NIXON

Stations?, Casino Traffic & Highway Patrol Command – Death

Service:  From 1 April 1987  to 24 November 2019 =  32 years, 7 months, 23 days Service

Awards: No Find on Australian Honours

Born:  Sunday  3 January 1965

Died on: Sunday 24 November 2019 pre 7.30pm

Age:  54 yrs  10 mths  21 days

CauseSuicide – PTSD

Event location: ?

Event date Sunday 24 November 2019

Funeral date: TBA

Funeral location: TBA

 

Funeral Parlour: TBA

 

Buried at: Cremated – Ashes buried

Ashes:  Partly spread between his mum ( Peggy ) and dads ( Gordon ) graves – Section D, Row H, Plot 45 – Casino Cemetery, West St, Casino, NSW

Stephen Gordon NIXON AKA Watergate, Nixo, Nicko, Stephen NIXON, Steve NIXON

Stephen Gordon NIXON AKA Watergate, Nixo, Nicko, Stephen NIXON, Steve NIXON

Stephen Gordon NIXON AKA Watergate, Nixo, Nicko, Stephen NIXON, Steve NIXON

Memorial located at: Garden area of Casino HWP Office, NSW

Stephen Gordon NIXON AKA Watergate, Nixo, Nicko, Stephen NIXON, Steve NIXON, Casino HWP
Memorial outside of Casino HWP Office, NSW

 

STEVEN is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance  * BUT SHOULD BE


FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal


May they forever Rest In Peace


 

Sincere sympathy to Julie and their 3 children.

 


Steve was the Longest Serving member of Casino Police Station – having worked from there for over 30 years.

Stephen Gordon NIXON AKA Watergate, Nixo, Nicko, Stephen NIXON, Steve NIXON, Memorial Board