Porepunkah shooting: Two officers dead and another wounded after shooting at High Country property, Victoria, Australia #2

  • #641
It's weird isn't it? It was so big at first, and now a month has already gone. Although local residents can't relax, I should imagine that for a majority of Aussies they don't think about it much anymore. It's easy to conclude that Dezi must be dead. I found myself thinking that today. But he is one tricky so-and-so, and this may be just the time he has been waiting for. I daresay he knows about Tom Phillips in NZ? I wonder if he knows about him being dead now - I forget now how the dates dovetail. But Tom was on the run for 4 years, Dezi almost certainly knew about him, and probably admired him. He would definitely not give up after 4 weeks.
Good points @Kemug.
What do you think could keep the interest going on this thread.
Do you think there would be a way of marking out possible hiding places using perhaps GIS mapping.
I would have hoped the authorities have been using technology to find caves and mines but they may have missed something.
Maybe there's a mining map showing where shafts were made, or a list of Aboriginal caves around Mt Buffalo.
Do you or anyone else have any ideas.
 
  • #642
Hmmm….. seems things may be easing up in Porepunkah - the airport “closed” signs have been removed, so it looks like the airport is back in business. The airport was closed at 6.00 this morning, but I looked just now and it is open.


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  • #643
Good points @Kemug.
What do you think could keep the interest going on this thread.
Do you think there would be a way of marking out possible hiding places using perhaps GIS mapping.
I would have hoped the authorities have been using technology to find caves and mines but they may have missed something.
Maybe there's a mining map showing where shafts were made, DDor a list of Aboriginal caves around Mt Buffalo.
Do you or anyone else have any ideas.
Well shucks, thank you Lucy! But technology is not my strong point, and I'm not being humble here. However, I do think the fact that airborne heat-seeking cameras have not found Dezi pretty much proves he is underground (unless he has left the area, of course). There is no point in searching on foot for a campsite. And police entering a cave or mineshaft sounds like it could be an invitation to be picked off one by one. Maybe lob smoke bombs/grenades into every single one, and smoke him out.
As for keeping the interest in finding him going, it's hard to have news when there is no news, and hard to talk about something when there's nothing new to talk about. What does come to my mind is a running total displayed "60 days since Dezi was last seen" - something like that. Like they have at mine sites for accident-free days. Boards could be put up around the Snowies, ditto in news bulletins, and even on Websleuths. What do you all think?
 
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  • #644
  • #645
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  • #646
  • #647
That’s interesting Marg.

If Filby’s still out there, four weeks in the bush, probably underground, would be taking a serious toll. His thinking may be foggy, hygiene poor, and his respiration could be strained. Isolation, paranoia, broken sleep, constant alertness, grief, hunger, infection, and injury could all be piling up. He’d have to be in a sustained fight or flight state with adrenaline shredding his nervous system. He might be physically fit and kitted out but he doesn’t come across as mentally or emotionally strong.
If he hasn’t survived, decomposition could be advanced by now. Without remains or sightings, the case could stay unresolved. Police know they have to scale back at some point. Perhaps if the pressure of surveillance lifts and he’s alive, he might start moving again, and the situation may shift from hiding and containment to him travelling or moving which would mean a better opportunity to pursue him.
The approach might be changing, but the determination to get him won’t budge an inch.
 
  • #648
His thinking may be foggy ...

His thinking has always been foggy. imo
By now, as you say, it may be even foggier.

I can't imagine that anyone could slaughter two police officers and think they will get away with it. Keep looking over your shoulder, Filby. Must be very stressful.
 
  • #649
His thinking has always been foggy. imo
By now, as you say, it may be even foggier.

I can't imagine that anyone could slaughter two police officers and think they will get away with it. Keep looking over your shoulder, Filby. Must be very stressful.
Yeah, it’s hard to imagine that kind of delusion, thinking you can take out two officers and just slip through the cracks. The shooting was probably a reactive impulse and then he fled with no long term plan. If he’s still alive he will be very keen to contact or connect with Mali and the kids for sure. I wondered if the full on airfield surveillance was exactly about watching for that. If he’s not already dead he’ll be spiralling towards it. Maybe the system doesn’t need to chase him now. It just needs to wait.
 
  • #650
Yeah, it’s hard to imagine that kind of delusion, thinking you can take out two officers and just slip through the cracks. The shooting was probably a reactive impulse and then he fled with no long term plan. If he’s still alive he will be very keen to contact or connect with Mali and the kids for sure. I wondered if the full on airfield surveillance was exactly about watching for that. If he’s not already dead he’ll be spiralling towards it. Maybe the system doesn’t need to chase him now. It just needs to wait.

Depends on whether or not he thinks he is Malcolm Naden. I think police technology today likely has even better tracking abilities - than in 2012 - once the police get a sniff of where Filby is.


After nearly seven years on the run, Naden is arrested in a dramatic operation in bushland near Gloucester in the Upper Hunter. Police had rigged up hidden cameras in the bush and tracked Naden before his capture.

 

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