I'd be interested in knowing how Shannon supposedly had the issue under control prior to Josie appearing. Had Shannon allowed the reporter to remain or had she asked her to leave? If asked to leave, why was she still there? If she was not asked to leave by Shannon, she was told to do so by Josie in no uncertain terms. If I think someone has "pulled a gun" on me and is pointing it at me, and roaring at me to "Get out", you can bet your boots I'm gettin' on the first roar ... not going to stand there and try to justify why you should let me stay. The only threat that I saw was Josie saying to the effect (paraphrased) that the police would be called.
Also, I do not see the gun being pulled on the reporter or waved or brandished at the reporter. It went from under total control pointed at the ground, and then under total control with the barrel pointed toward the sky. There's only so many ways you can carry a gun, but it was most definitely not pointed or brandished.
All MOO
ETA: Considering the DM seems to be the only pub that insists on referring to and publicizing such details of their very private life to the world, I'm not surprised that these folks aren't feeling all warm and fuzzy toward the DM much at all.
The way I understand it, the first grandparent had asked the reporter to leave, and as she was walking to the gate to leave, the second grandparent appeared with the gun, initiating secondary contact, asking her who she was.
That particular reporter is rather ballsy, she is the one who sat in a car with James Wood for an
interview - half an hour before his arrest (it was also mentioned by that reporter on one of her tiktok videos that the car caught fire while she was interviewing him, in response to this, he just turned the car off and continued the interview like nothing happened).
However, in
this video I can hear the fear in her voice. I'm sure she would have been somewhat shocked, being out in the middle of nowhere with I assume only a photographer with her.
I, myself, would have been terrified - given events over the last few years with shootings on rural properties. And IMO the second grandparent's big, booming voice, immediate hostility
while holding a gun would have made me poop myself.
So, IMO given the circumstances, and the context of her occupation and the whole reason she was there, I can imagine she wasn't exactly thinking straight, which IMO might be why she answered the second grandparent's question / attempted to explain herself despite the very apparent aggression / threat.
Also, IMO a lot of Australians on rural / remote properties own guns, that's not a problem in itself. In my experience (having lived in the country almost my whole life), the people with gun licenses are very careful about following certain very basic gun handling
rules - trigger discipline, never pointing it at anything you don't intend to kill, treating every firearm as loaded (even if you have just unloaded it), etc.
In my opinion the change of gun position (a few seconds after
this timestamp) was completely unnecessary, I can think of no legitimate explanation as to why this position change was required in any way.
Also, at
this point in the video the grandparent is approaching while holding the gun upwards, moves it downwards to the ground, in an arc which directs the gun muzzle straight at the camera. This is very,
very poor gun handling, I don't know any gun owner who would change the position of the gun in such an unsafe way. A gun should never even momentarily be pointed towards another person, loaded or unloaded.
In this
video, the reporter says that when she made her statement about the incident to the police, the police said "It's going to be very hard to prove that she wasn't out there removing a snake for example..."
Personally, I hate the Daily Mail as an outlet. I only use that website for news about missing people / criminal cases. I always see all the trashy articles in the sidebar... However, I can't deny that they do publish so much more information than is available on any of the other news websites about these cases. That particular reporter may not be perfect or polished - in fact she put me off when I first encountered her - however over time I have come to really enjoy her grassroots style of reporting.
All IMO.