Robert Neil DEARDS

Robert Neil DEARDS   

AKA  Bob DEARDS

Late of 29 Mathews Ave, Jewels, NSW

 

“possible’ Relation in ‘the job’:  Graham DEARDS, NSWP Cadet # 1891 – NSWPF # ???? ( Resigned on 5 March 1964 )

 

NSW Goulburn / Redfern / Penrith Police Academy Class #  112    

NSW Police Cadet # 2054   

New South Wales Police Force

Uniform # 4162    

Regd. #  12819    

 

Rank:  Commenced Training as Police Cadet on 16 August 1965 ( aged 17 years, 4 months, 8 days )

Probationary Constable- appointed 15 September 1967 ( 19 years, 5 months, 7 days )

Constable – appointed 15 September 1968

Constable 1st Class – appointed 15 September 1972

Detective – appointed ? ? ? ( No )

Senior Constable – appointed 15 September 1976

Sergeant 3rd Class – appointed 31 March 1983

Sergeant 2nd Class – appointed ? ? ?

Last appears in the 1985 ‘Stud Book’ but not the 1987 issue.

 

Final Rank = Sergeant 3rd Class

 

Stations:

As a Cadet:  C.I.B. – Campbell St Surry Hills,

As a Sworn Member:  Paddington, ‘R’ District ( 1968 ), Griffith, Cargelligo ( ? – Oct 1973 ), O.I.C. – Laurieton ( Oct 1973 – 2 July 1986 ) – Dismissed as of 19 April 1984.

The two ‘red’ dates are obviously recorded in the wrong order.  

Service:  From 16 August 1965   to  2 July 1986 =  20 years, 10 months, 16 days  Service

After being Forced to Resign from the employ of NSWPF, Rob started his own transport company.

 

CMF ( Citizen Military Forces )   

Service name:              Alternative Service

Service number:          2267014      

Registered #:               11192020   

Rank:                             Private     

Unit Name:                    ?   

Date of birth:                8 April 1948  

Place of birth:               Dungog, NSW  

Date of intake:              15 March 1969   

Date of exit:                    ?   

Total Days:                     ?   

NS Training:                  C M F    

National Service:          ?      

Basic Training:             ?   

Next of Kin:                  Mr G. Deards    

Medals:                          ADM  /  ANSM   

Robert Neil DEARDS 05 - NSWPF 12819 - Died 2024
Robert Neil DEARDS   
AKA  Bob DEARDS

 

Awards:  National Medal – granted 9 August 1983 ( Sgt 3/c )

Robert Neil DEARDS 04 - NSWPF 12819 - Died 2024
Robert Neil DEARDS   
AKA  Bob DEARDS    

Born:  Thursday 8 April 1948 in Dungong, NSW

Died on:  Monday 11 March 2024

Age:  75 years, 11 months, 3 days

Cause:  Cancer – “possibly” stemming from Radioactivity or DDT

Event location:   ?

Event date:  ?

 

Funeral dateFriday 15 March 2024

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 )

 

Future Wake location:  ? TBA ( Due to current Govt. restrictions of 2 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: ?

Buried at:  Cremated – Internment at Foster, NSW

 

Memorial / Plaque / Monument located at: ?

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

 

BOB is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance, S.P.C.  * BUT SHOULD BE

BOB IS NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance, Sydney Domain BUT PROBABLY SHOULD BE

BOB is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance, Canberra  * NOT JOB RELATED

 


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/

 


 

Robert Neil DEARDS 02 - NSWPF 12819 - Died 2024
Robert Neil DEARDS   AKA  Bob DEARDS    Corporal with the Citizens Military Forces ( C.M.F. ) 

Robert Neil DEARDS 017 - NSWPF 12819 - Died 11 March 2024
Robert Neil DEARDS   
AKA  Bob DEARDS

 

Robert Neil DEARDS 016 - NSWPF 12819 - Died 11 March 2024
Robert Neil DEARDS   
AKA  Bob DEARDS

 

Robert Neil DEARDS 018 - NSWPF 12819 - Died 11 March 2024
Robert Neil DEARDS   
AKA  Bob DEARDS

 

Robert Neil DEARDS 04 - NSWPF 12819 - Died 2024
Robert Neil DEARDS   
AKA  Bob DEARDS

 

Robert Neil DEARDS 03 - NSWPF 12819 - Died 2024
Robert Neil DEARDS   
AKA  Bob DEARDS

 

Bob DEARDS

Policing NSW in the 1960s & 1970s

Former officer Bob Deards recounts his experiences of the good, the bad and the ugly among the constabulary of New South Wales.

See Sydney Crime Museum under ‘Organised Crime’ – where else – for a rare first-hand record of what life on the job was really like.

Yes, there is a cameo appearance from Roger Rogerson! It all ended with a call to a shocking traffic accident that destroyed Bob’s career.

 

Policing in the 1960s and 1970s: a memoir

The Memoirs of Bob Deards

NSW police officer: 1967 to 1986

Copyright in the following remains with the author, Bob Deards 2020.

“Jack Smith” is a false name used to protect an identity.

 

Dedication

TO ALL THOSE MEN AND WOMEN OF THE NEW SOUTH WALES POLICE FORCE WHO STRIVE TO PROTECT US AND OUR WAY OF LIFE AND WHO ABIDE BY THE LAW OF THE LAND I GIVE MY THANKS. I CONDEMN ALL OF THOSE POLICE WHO STRAY FROM THE NARROW LINE AND BRING DISGRACE TO THE POLICE FORCE IN GENERAL.

 

My name is Robert Neil Deards and I was born at Oomabah Private Hospital in Dungog on the 8th April 1948. In 1967 I began my training at the NSW Police Training Centre at Redfern, and was later attached to Paddington Police Station, earning $49.94 per week.

During the morning of my first day at Paddington a senior constable approached me and another constable and said, “Which of you two is Deards?” I replied that it was yours truly. He threw a set of car keys to me, and said, “You drive”. We jumped into a paddy wagon and drove away. I had no idea of where I was going and the other officer called directions. We eventually arrived at Circular Quay.

I was directed to stop the truck outside a large brick building with several roller doors in the front and one smaller access door to one side. As soon as we entered, I was almost overcome with the terrible smell emanating from the place. We walked down a corridor that opened into a large room with several stainless- steel tables in various places. All these tables had what I thought were dummies lying on them, and they were all colours, black, blue, red and a mixture of other colours. I had no idea where I was but the smell was sickening.

A man dressed in a white coat and eating a sandwich approached and spoke to the senior constable. I was having some serious problems with my breakfast that did not want to remain in my stomach. Suddenly another man dressed in white approached a table near where I was standing carrying a rather large knife and immediately struck it into the throat of a “dummy”. Blood gushed out all over the floor as did my breakfast.

I was taken back to our truck and driven back to Paddington where I was told to go home for the day and recover. The following day I found that it was a big joke among the other police in relation to my attendance and performance at the City Morgue. I will always remember that day

I was initially rostered to perform Station Reserve Duties with a 1st class Sergeant in Charge and I was also one of two police rostered to drive the divisional paddy wagon on our shift. I can recall many instances when during the night shift, the sergeant would say to me, “Why don’t you go for a walk down Oxford Street and check the shops etc.”

On one such night I came across a shop which had the plate glass window smashed. I ran back to the police station and told a senior officer what I had found. He requested detectives attend and then he directed me to return to the scene and assist the detectives if possible. By the time I arrived back on the scene a paddy wagon was already reversed up to the door of the shop.

I said to one of the detectives, “Do you think there is much missing,” to which he replied, “No, not yet!” giving me a stupid smile while he spoke.

He and other detectives then commenced to fill up the back of their truck with fur coats, wigs etc. and other expensive clothing. On my return to the station I told the sergeant what I had seen and he said, “Don’t worry, it’s probably just exhibits.”

I recall one instance when I was working night shift and at around 2am we received a radio call informing us that a taxi driver had dropped off a man, at the Gap at Watson’s Bay and that the man was carrying a military style bayonet. On arriving at the Gap, we saw a male person walking backwards and forwards along the cliff top. As myself and my partner approached the man, he began yelling for us to stop or he would jump. In the majority of cases it had been my experience that the threat to jump was a bluff. They were simply seeking a shoulder to cry on and usually a sympathetic ear and a display of genuine concern was all that was needed to end the situation.

However, on this occasion as we got closer to the man, he became very aggressive and made several lunges towards us holding the bayonet in his outstretched hand.
As we got closer to the man, he suddenly lunged forward with his right arm raised and his hand still firmly clutching the bayonet. He brought his right arm down striking my partner just under the chin and cutting the front of his shirt open. Luckily there was no blood but my partner fell over backwards more in shock than anything else. I punched the man as hard as I could in the face, knocking him to the ground before jumping onto his chest and pinning both his arms to the ground I had dropped my torch during the brief struggle and we were that close to the edge that it fell over the cliff. My partner soon recovered from his initial shock and came to my assistance. The man was handcuffed, placed in the back of the truck and driven directly to the Rozelle Admission Centre. The remainder of our shift was incident free

About two weeks or so later I received a radio call informing us that a woman had been seen getting out of a taxi and walking toward the safety fence at the Gap. She then climbed over the fence and was last seen standing at the edge of the cliff. By the time we arrived she had sat down and both her legs were dangling over the edge. My partner stayed at the fence saying he was not going near the crazy bitch. I approached her very slowly and trying to talk softly and in as soothing a manner as I could. When I was almost within reach, she held up her hand and screamed, “Stop or I will jump.” I stopped and was attempting to reassure her that everything would be OK if she came with me. She appeared to calm down so I edged cautiously toward her and she screamed,” No closer or I will jump”

My partner yelled out to her and said, “Fine I’m sick of wasting my time over some fat bitch who only wants a bit of sympathy. Go ahead, if you want to fucking well jump then just fucking jump and stop wasting our time.”

With that the woman launched herself off the cliff and fell to her death.

If I was rostered as either driver or observer on a night car from Paddington, Waverly, Bondi, or Rose Bay, one of your last duties at the end of your shift was to drive to a butcher in Paddington and collect a decent supply of steak, sausages and bacon. We then drove to another site and collected eggs, tomatoes, onions, bread and butter etc for some of the day shift and afternoon shifts at the station. You then drove to the milk depot and picked up enough milk for day and afternoon shifts. Of course, both the milk and meat were supplied free of charge, under some arrangement by someone a lot higher up the ladder than me.

One morning in 1968 we were called to a small service station in Bondi. On our arrival I saw that the front plate glass window had been smashed. My senior partner entered the premises through the broken window and found that the offenders had left the scene. There was a red metal cabinet on the counter containing KLG Spark plugs and my partner began grabbing handfuls of these and told me to put them in the glove box of the truck. I mistakenly thought that they must be for exhibits at court if we caught the offender. When the glove box was full, he said to me, “Do you want some spark plugs?” I said “Why?” He replied, ” Do you own a car?” to which I replied “Yes.” He then said, “Has it got spark plugs” I replied, “Yes.” He replied, “Well help yourself”. I told the sergeant that I did not want any.

On commencing my next shift, I reported this incident to a superior officer who replied, “You must be mistaken, your partner is a respected, dedicated and senior member of the service and a good Catholic and he would not be involved in anything like you describe.”

A few days later I arrived for work at Paddington Police Station at 7am and the station sergeant said to me “What are you doing here?” I said “I work here.” he replied “Not anymore, you have been transferred to Griffith and you start work there at 3pm tomorrow. Get home pack your things and get the next train to Griffith.”

So much for opening my mouth about my partner’s actions a few nights previously at the service station.

I was shocked at the level of corruption that should have been obvious to anyone seriously looking. Mainly detectives following break and enters at business premises. They generally took almost as much as the actual thieves. From my observations, the uniformed general duties police were mainly straight and did not get involved in large-scale criminal activities. I’m not saying that they were all perfect but they were generally not involved to the same extent as a great number of the plain clothes police were.

I do know of one particular constable and sergeant that would drive around at night looking for suitable and expensive cars to steal, When they found one, the constable with a few spanners in hand would crawl under the car and remove the tail shaft, climb back out from under the vehicle and connect a tow rope to the paddy wagon and with the constable in the stolen vehicle, the sergeant would tow it back to the constable’s apartment block and push the car into a garage where it could have the engine number re-stamped, chassis number changed, and the vehicle resprayed over a couple of days. The re-birthed vehicle could then be sold.

***

I enjoyed Griffith and its people, the majority of whom were Italians. They were a very friendly lot and made my stay very enjoyable.

There were two detectives stationed at Griffith at that time. I recall telephoning my fiancée one evening and while talking to her about my fellow workers I mentioned that the detective sergeant seemed like a decent man, certainly very friendly and had obviously done well for himself, as he drove a big Ford Fairlane car and had a nice new brick home in Griffith.

Over the next few months I had the privilege of Meeting Donald McKay, a local businessman who consistently advocated publicly about greater police attention to the marijuana business in Griffith. His actions and comments were not received favourably by some police at that centre and were to have unfortunate repercussions some years later when Donald McKay was reported missing. His remains were never found and according to what I have been told by a retired senior police officer, never will be.

After nine months at Griffith it became quite obvious to me that I did not fit in with the majority of local police and their way of doing things. They did not have the same values as I did. They just about all had second jobs working for the numerous Italian families in the area, either picking fruit, or driving grain trucks to the silo. Even when working on police duties they would spend a lot of time visiting the local hotels and clubs, drinking and socialising with various Italian families, and the majority seemed to me to be mixing with the wrong crowd most of the time.

It is interesting to note that the Police Regulation Act at that time stated that you were not allowed to have a second job because of the obvious conflict of interest, however it did not appear to worry the majority of police or their superiors.

Others had quite different jobs at local clubs, mainly all owned and or run by Italians. The detectives at the station seemed to spend a lot of the time visiting farms in the area and forming a good relationship with the Italian owners. In the late 1970’s all three of the detectives were sentenced to varying terms of imprisonment for their criminal activities in the drug business.

I did find that about six of the local police held similar values as myself and we got along fine and enjoyed our work and social activities together.
I spoke to the inspector in charge and requested a transfer to a small station as soon as possible, and after a while I was transferred to Cargelligo.

Senior police were keen to obtain a conviction against certain section of the community, in particular, SP bookmaking. During my tenure at Cargelligo a senior colleague would be directed to visit some hotels in our area with myself in tow in plain cloths, collar and tie suit and wearing a shoulder holster an, in the case of my senior colleague, his pork pie hat, in an attempt to catch someone breaking the law, by placing a bet. We always drove to Ungarie, a small rural community about eighty kilometres east of Cargelligo, arriving at around 10 am. The publican would have been advised of our impending visit, probably about half the male population were bowling mates of my colleague.

After parking the police car in the yard behind the local police residence we would walk down the main street to the hotel. Being the only two men in the hotel bar not wearing thongs, shorts and a blue singlet tended to make us stand out from everyone else. My colleague would order a couple of schooners then two more. Then it was time for a huge counter lunch. We would sit at one end of the bar each scanning the racing form guide and settle in for a good afternoons drinking. We would generally leave around three pm or so.

I was not interested in SP bookmaking, never have been or, will be. I had more important things to do with my time than trying to nab some poor bugger for wanting to place a bet. The fact that there was no legal means of placing a bet in those small country towns was not their fault so why should they have been penalized.

On our return to work the following day my colleague would prepare a report detailing our efforts at Ungarie the previous day in trying to stamp out this illegal betting. He would submit a voucher for reimbursement of all of his out of pocket expenses incurred by the Police Department. On average we would repeat the same operation about every six weeks or so.

***

In October 1973 I was transferred from Lake Cargelligo to Laurieton as the Officer in Charge, which at that time was a one-man station with its headquarters in Taree. The police station at that time was in an enclosed back veranda of a large three-bedroom home. In the back yard behind my car garage there was a ‘portable cell’, approximately three metres square. This prisoner’s cell was made using two layers of very thick slab timber’ each layer running in opposite directions. There was a tin roof and a normal size half-inch thick steel door, fitted with a very large slide bolt and a huge brass padlock. Toilet facilities consisted of a galvanised steel tin with a lid. It was the job of the Officer in Charge to empty and wash the tin a couple of times per day. Fortunately, I did not have too many people in custody during this period.

Within days of my arrival at Laurieton I was contacted by one of my superiors. During our conversation he said, “Bob I want you to go to one of your local butchers, the one in the main street, and introduce yourself to the owner, He is one of your S.P bookmakers and the deal is that you get ten dollars’ worth of meat each week to look the other way.”

I did not have the chance to make a special call that week to meet the butcher. Early the following week a lady from the butcher’s shop called at our home and dropped off a bag of meat. I rang the owner and told him I didn’t expect free meat under any circumstances. I was not and never had been overly concerned about small-time bookmakers.

Some months later the butcher rang me and informed me that he was giving the bookmaking away as he could no longer afford to pay my superior, saying that he had become too greedy, asking for a side of butchered beef per week.

Laurieton was a small fishing village and tourist destination and was situated some forty-eight kilometres south of Port Macquarie with a population of approximately 5,200 people. During holiday periods the population would swell to around 15,000. Over a four-week period each Christmas a second officer from another small station would be temporarily attached to Laurieton to assist with the large influx of people. The two of us were kept extremely busy, general patrols and supervision, sea rescues, attending to general motor vehicle accidents often involving fatalities. We were expected to cover the Patrol 24 hours per day, seven days a week.

Laurieton had a large fisherman’s co-operative in the town and a permanent fleet of approximately fifteen large trawlers which on many occasions I had to charter on behalf of the NSW Police as the responsible authority for search and rescue in coastal waters. I had many trips to sea on a couple of these trawlers usually at night and usually in horrendous sea conditions.

In November 1975 a Forestry Commission ranger called at my office at around mid-morning and told me he had found a cannabis plantation in the forest near Watson Taylor Lake. I followed him to the location where I found approximately 35 cannabis plants all about two meters in height plus several dozen smaller plants in ceramic and black plastic pots. The ranger had a machete and cut all the plants down and I squashed them into the boot of my car, thanked the ranger and returned to Laurieton.

I rang a superior officer and told him of our find and he said that he would come down to Laurieton later on in the afternoon. At about lunch time, he arrived, parked his car alongside mine, opened his boot and said to me, “Just chuck it all in my boot, will you.” He then walked into my office. As I was about to drop my first armful of cannabis into his vehicles boot, I noticed a black coloured automatic pistol lying in the boot of his car. I finished the transfer of cannabis from my car to his just as he walked back to his vehicle. I said, “What’s the go with the pistol in your boot?” He replied, “Oh that, It’s just a throw-down.” I said, “What’s a throw-down?” and he replied, ” You have got to be kidding Bob, if you happen to shoot someone and then you find that he has not got a gun or a knife, you give him one, then it’s self-defence, end of story and that is why it’s called a throw-down and that is why every police vehicle should carry an old gun or knife in your car because you never know when it’s going to happen to you”.

I replied, “Well you won’t find one in my car.” and he replied. “Don’t say I didn’t warn you”. I said, “Where do you get these old handguns?” to which he replied, “Every now and then the government will declare an amnesty calling for the surrender of unlicensed and or unregistered firearms to be handed into their local police station with no questions asked. There is no requirement to give your name etc to police. Handguns, shotguns rifles, ammunition or explosives etc, are just surrendered, so you just take what you want and send the rest to Sydney to supposedly be disposed of.”

He then said, “You know Bob, there are two occasions in life that a policeman is allowed to tell lies, the first is, if it’s in the interest of justice and second time is to save your own skin, you will do well to remember that.”

I first met Roger Rogerson in 1965 whilst as a police cadet I was attached to the C.I.B. in Campbell Street, Surry Hills. In around 1976 I again met him while he and his family were on holidays in my area. At that time, I did not associate him with my superior, but in hindsight I am sure he was hovering in the background as he had become involved in a couple of serious matters in the Port Macquarie and Laurieton areas.

Sometime around June or July 1978 there was an alleged break-in at the Port Macquarie Police Station where it was alleged that several police shotguns, pistols, a large quantity of cannabis, a large quantity of heroin and an amount of cash was stolen. Entry was apparently gained through the open window of the detectives’ office on the first floor. It must have been Spiderman because he climbed a vertical brick wall about four metres high and climbed through an open window into the detectives’ office. How convenient!

Jack Smith, a local resident, had been making some outspoken remarks about the lack of police attention being given to the illicit drug trade which was rife in the area. Detective Sergeant Roger Rogerson and some local police executed a search warrant at the premises of Mr Smith and the word was that they were going to set him up to take the fall for the alleged break-in at the police station a short time before. While searching a shed on the property they found a shotgun in a metal cabinet which Smith agreed was his property. They also allegedly found one Ruger .38 calibre pistol and other things. He was arrested and conveyed to a local police station and interviewed at some length. He was obviously not giving the answers that the police wanted to hear and he was subjected to a beating of such ferocity and intensity that when the police had finished with the ‘softening up’ process a cleaner had to be called to wash the blood from the furniture and walls of the office.

Smith was subsequently charged with receiving police pistols, shotguns and other items that he allegedly had in his possession. He was then granted bail and picked up from the police station by a friend and driven directly to a local doctor’s surgery, where his wounds were cleaned and twenty stitches inserted in his scalp. He also suffered a broken nose and several large bruises in his lower abdomen.

Late in 1978 Roger Rogerson called at the Police Residence and spoke with my wife, Christine. I was out on patrol, and Rogerson told my wife that he was in Laurieton on a job and he needed to use the telephone in the station and asked for the door key. She told him he was welcome to use the phone or radio in the house but she would not give him the keys to the station while I was not present. He became very arrogant and abusive. He was most indignant and said, “Stick your bloody door key, I will go to Port Macquarie. You will hear more about this when I return to Sydney headquarters”. My wife said,” How dare you speak to me in such a disgusting manner. I am going to radio my husband now to return home. You had better be long gone before he arrives or you can suffer the consequences.” She then closed the door and watched him walk out onto the street. Upon my hasty return the low life bastard was nowhere to be seen and I have not seen him since.

On the 14th March 1979 I received information that a bushwalker had come across a body in the bush near Bonny Hills. I drove to the Pacific Highway where I saw a man standing by the side of the highway, he signalled for me to stop. The man got into the police car, introduced himself and he directed me to drive along a dirt track until we came to a clearing. I stopped and we both got out of the car and the man pointed to a skeleton some distance away and then said, “I don’t want any more to do with this, can I leave now?” I replied, “Can I have your name and address?” He replied, “I really don’t want to be involved any further.” He then left the scene and walked back towards the highway.

I approached the skeleton that appeared to be in a kneeling position and he had the tattered remains of a long sleeve shirt draped over his shoulder and hanging over his hands which were behind his back. The skeleton was in a poor state, having been savaged by wild animals. There were pieces of bone lying all over the ground, some intact and some chewed in half.

I noticed a fairly large neat hole in the crown of his skull. I pulled the remains of his long- sleeved shirt off and was shocked to find that he was wearing a pair of ‘Saflock’ Police issue handcuffs which had been around his wrists and covered by the long -sleeved shirt. The handcuffs, complete with the police insignia and a four-digit number engraved thereon (which I recorded in my official notebook) indicated that the murderer or murderers had left the scene in a hurry, otherwise, why leave the handcuffs behind. Possibly they intended to return later and recover them.

A short time later other police arrived. A senior officer told me to remove the handcuffs and give them to him. He then walked to his vehicle, threw the handcuffs under the driver’s seat and said in a loud voice so that all assembled could hear, “Nobody saw a thing, got it!” I said to him, “There is no identification papers with the remains so identification will be difficult”. My superior said, “I know who it is, it’s a drug courier named Wally (Pommy) Lewis”.

We had not found any identification with the remains so how did he know who it was? Makes you wonder doesn’t it? The shoes belonging to the deceased were found several hundred metres from the execution site towards the Pacific Highway.

The senior officer then left the scene. I had to accompany the remains to Port Macquarie mortuary. The doctor was unaware of the handcuffs and I did not enlighten him. After examining the remains and endeavouring to put them back together as best he could, he commenced his examination. He took careful measurements of the bullet wound to the head and remarked that it was a similar to a small calibre bullet. Police were issued .38 calibre revolvers as their Service weapon. Probably just a co-incidence!

During the examination the Doctor also located a spent bullet in the chest cavity. He concluded that the first shot was fired by someone standing over the deceased and had entered through the left clavicle, then entered the chest cavity. The second and fatal shot entered through the top of the head and exited through the face.
Later that day I was told by the senior police officer that the skeletal remains were those of Harry (Pommy) Lewis and not Wally Lewis as he told me previously. Harry had been behind in his payments for police protection. I’m not sure to whom but I could hazard a guess. The officer was laughing as he spoke and said, “The stupid prick, who did he think he was playing with?”

The police apparently had their suspicions as to the identity of the murderer, and, after a couple of years, they decided that it was a Mr Terence Clarke [“Mr Asia”], but by the time police were ready to act, Clarke had died in prison from a heart attack. Nobody was ever charged with the murder.

A few days after the discovery of the remains I spoke to another senior officer and said, “Did you find out who the handcuffs were issued to?” He replied, “Bob it’s probably best for all concerned that you just complete the forms for the Coroner and forget about the matter. Stirring the pot won’t get you anywhere, I’m sorry.”

On 4 December 1980 I attended a road accident on the Pacific Highway and was poisoned by toxic chemicals and possibly radioactive waste as well. The authorities, including the police, never accepted this or provided me with adequate compensation. In frustration I went to the media.

On the 2 July 1986 police officers called at my home and served me with a Dismissal Notice to take effect as of 19 April 1984.  ( Incorrect Time Line )

***

For the next few years I was in constant fear of being killed because of having the guts to speak out. I didn’t ask to be maimed for life while doing my duty. I will continue fighting until the day I die.

I avoided crowds, shopping centres, movie theatres etc and any other places where groups of people gathered. If I went out to a restaurant for dinner I would never sit near a window and I would always have my back facing a wall so that I could see any possible threat coming. This caused me to suffer badly from anxiety and stress but the authorities didn’t care they had gotten rid of me and probably thought that all would soon be forgotten and their lives of corruption would go on indefinitely.

My wife told me to just forget all about the police, saying that I would never beat them and that I should forget about living in the past and just get on with life as it is now.

For many years I did just that, working hard to provide for my family. I started a transport and courier business which my family and I operated both that and another business until 2000. Later I ran a security business.

***

In my career I would have attended approximately sixty fatal motor vehicle accidents, both single and multiple deaths, two drownings, approximately two dozen suicides, and deaths from fires that had originated in gas appliances in both residential and business premises, house fires from different causes including bush fires, gas poisoning in both private homes as well as business premises, hangings, knife wounds, gunshot wounds, slashing of wrists etc, carbon monoxide deaths in closed up motor vehicles, shootings and drug overdoses.

You never get totally used to it but your feelings can generally be managed.
In the majority of fatal traffic accidents, the bodies were extensively and horribly injured and, in some cases, cut in half. These types of events take their toll on your health and feelings and took a lot more to accept. You just had to think of it as part of your job and try not to get personally involved more than you may have to. There is no training that can prepare you mentally on how you will react to these situations.

I certainly saw things that no human being should have to see. Many of these images will haunt me until the day that I die. During my service I was never offered any counselling or other medical help, just left to suffer in silence. My wife was very understanding of my feelings and did her best to rid me of these demons. I never really talked to her much about what I had seen because it was just so horrible it made me sick.

I am now retired following some serious health problems. I am still under specialist care and I have been diagnosed with Critical Care Syndrome, chronic heart failure, Peripheral Myopathy and Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. I can get around to some degree with the aid of a walking stick.

Apart from that I’m as fit as a fiddle.

END

The above extract is from the manuscript The truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth so help me __ __ __, by Bob Deards. For more information contact: deardsbob@gmail.com

 

Policing NSW in the 1960s & 1970s

http://www.sydneycrimemuseum.com/policing-nsw-in-the-1960s-1970s/


 

Lethal, toxic truth buried in a highway ditch

WHY radioactive materials, a banned pesticide and food were on the same truck that crashed in 1980 is a mystery.

WHY radioactive materials, a banned pesticide and food were on the same truck that crashed on the New South Wales Pacific Highway in 1980 is a mystery.

But the political fallout of its roadside burial and discovery 32 years later – which left five contractors vomiting and exposed another 13 workers to possibly lethal toxic waste – will be nothing short of nuclear.

NSW Roads Minister Duncan Gay yesterday called for a full investigation after workers sought medical treatment when they unearthed what was initially thought to be radioactive material while upgrading the highway at Laurieton, near Port Macquarie. Five had nausea, sore throats, dry mouths and vomiting.

“Independent chemical specialists could not find any radioactive material in samples taken … but investigations are ongoing into other possible substances,” Mr Gay said.

The materials came from a truck carrying nuclear isotopes, caesium 137 and americium 241, the cancer-causing pesticide DDT, and food to Brisbane on December 4, 1980, when it crashed into an oncoming panel van, killing the other driver

Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation records show the materials did not come from Lucas Heights but belonged to an unnamed “geophysical company”.

An ANSTO spokesman said the drums – one 60 litres and another smaller one – carrying the nuclear material were undamaged in the crash and later taken with the undamaged food to Brisbane. The rest, including the DDT, was believed to have been buried. Despite full knowledge of its location the then RTA proceeded with the $60 million upgrade, awarded to BMD Constructions, in March last year without removing it first.

A BMD spokeswoman declined to comment.

A 2008 report by the RTA’s environment branch into the current upgrade described the contaminated area as a 7m x 12m “chemical burial site” and warned the upgrade was likely to affect the site.

But it said the material contained “minor” levels of pesticides and could be classed as inert under EPA guidelines.

The discovery has raised questions about transport guidelines at the time, which preceded the 1986 Chernobyl disaster that forced a global crackdown, as well the material burial and subsequent handling of the incident. The RMS has conflicting reports and at best can only narrow the exposure to workers as occurring between April 2-5.

Port Macquarie man Don Barnes, who was driving one of two cars involved in the 1980 crash, said he saw at least one canister lying on the road.

“They knew it was contaminated, if it was that bad it should never have been buried there – it should have been disposed of properly,” he said.

Ben Colton said his uncle Robert Deards was one of the initial police officers called to the crash and handled the drums, which “made him sick to the point he nearly died“.

Mr Colton said his uncle and another officer spent 14 hours at the scene – and were later told to go for a swim to wash off any radioactive particles – but their complaints and recognition of their exposure fell on deaf ears. Retired firefighter Albert McWhirter was among the men tasked with cleaning up the spilled chemicals.

“By the time we got there they had already taken the radioactive stuff away. We moved the DDT and food powder into a hole they had dug with a backhoe, and as far as I know they just filled it in,” he said.

DEADLY CARGO

CAESIUM-137

A radioactive isotope formed as a by-product of nuclear fission usually involving uranium. It has a half-life of 30 years. It remains the main health risk and source of radiation around the Chernobyl nuclear power plant. Short term high-level exposure can produce nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, head aches and blisters, which can return up to weeks later in the body. It is also blamed for birth defects.

AMERICIUM-241

A radioactive isotope derived from the artificial element americium (Am 95 on the periodic table). It has a half-life of 432 years. Classic radiation sickness is not likely with a release of americium-241 alone unless a victim is exposed to extremely large amounts. Initial symptoms of radiation sickness may include weakness, anorexia, vomiting and diarrhoea.

DDT

Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) is an organochlorine insecticide first synthesised in 1874 but its insecticidal properties were not discovered until 1939 by Swiss scientist Paul Hermann Muller, who was later awarded a Nobel prize. It was widely used throughout World War II to control insects and insect-borne disease and later extensively used in agriculture until concerns emerged in the 1960s that it could cause cancer. It was banned in the US in 1972 and worldwide under the 2004 Stockholm Convention, although it can still be used under certain circumstances. DDT is a persistent organic pollutant in that it is absorbed by soils and sediments, leading to long-term exposure in animals and humans. It is toxic to a wide range of living organisms, including marine animals such as prawns and many fish species. It is considered a carcinogen and evidence suggests it leads to birth defects and other reproductive problems. Acute exposure can cause headaches, nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea.

Lethal, toxic truth buried by highway | The Advertiser


 

Robert Neil DEARDS 011 - NSWPF 12819 - Died 11 March 2024
Senior constables Bob Deards & Terry Clifton at the scene of the drum of radioactive material

 

Robert Neil DEARDS 08 - NSWPF 12819 - Died 11 March 2024
Senior constables Terry Clifton and Bob Deards lift the drum of radioactive material from the highway to the shade of roadside trees.

 

Robert Neil DEARDS 07 - NSWPF 12819 - Died 11 March 2024
Senior constables Terry Clifton and Bob Deards lift the drum of radioactive material from the highway to the shade of roadside trees.

 

Robert Neil DEARDS 013 - NSWPF 12819 - Died 11 March 2024

Robert Neil DEARDS 014 - NSWPF 12819 - Died 11 March 2024

 

Robert Neil DEARDS 010 - NSWPF 12819 - Died 11 March 2024

Robert Neil DEARDS 012 - NSWPF 12819 - Died 11 March 2024

Robert Neil DEARDS 06 - NSWPF 12819 - Died 11 March 2024
Robert Neil DEARDS   
AKA  Bob DEARDS

 

Robert Neil DEARDS 09 - NSWPF 12819 - Died 11 March 2024
Chris DEARDS & Robert Neil DEARDS   
AKA  Bob DEARDS

 


https://www.abc.net.au/listen/programs/pm/union-wants-toxic-dump-inquiry-expanded-to-cover/3963644


 

Police officers Bob Deards and Terry Clifton attended the accident. Deards said: “One of the drums was
ruptured. You can see in one of the photos some kind of material leaking out and changing the colour of
paint on the drum.”

That afternoon the police officers began vomiting violently and suffered severe headaches. It was the
first of many symptoms that would stay with them for several years. Deards suffered severe weight loss,
constant headaches and fainting spells. Clifton was forced to take powerful tranquillisers and both had
mental breakdowns. “I nearly pulled the trigger on myself once,” Clifton said.

Clifton said: “I had two boys and a girl at the time but I never had children again … I just wasn’t game.”
Likewise, Deards said: “The whole bloody thing was terrible. The specialist told me to have a vasectomy
and never have another child.”

Despite their conditions and attempts to seek specialist treatment or advice outside the police medical
officer, Deards and Clifton said they were abandoned by the police, “threatened” if they went to the
media and ultimately forced out of their job − Deards after four years and Clifton after six. “Nobody
wanted to do anything, they didn’t give a shit, it was all in the too-hard basket,” Deards said.

Dr. John McKay of Port Macquarie claimed that 16 people who attended the accident suffered from
symptoms of radioactive poisoning. Dr. McKay accused the Australian Atomic Energy Commission
(now ANSTO) of a cover-up.

Bob Deards and Terry Clifton in 1980. Photo: The Daily Telegraph788
Bob Deards and Terry Clifton in 1980. Photo: The Daily Telegraph  788

 

On 3 April 2012, five road workers were sent for medical treatment after displaying symptoms of
nausea, sore throat, dry mouth and vomiting when toxic material was unearthed during work on an
upgrade to the Pacific Highway in New South Wales. There was speculation that they had uncovered
radioactive material from the 1980 accident. A NSW government report later said there was no evidence
that radioactive material was buried at the site.

Articles about the Port Macquarie accident:

NFCRC-submission-FoEA-ACF-CCSA-FINAL-AUGUST-2015.pdf


 

There are, at minimum, two media video’s in relation to Bob DEARDS & Terry CLIFTON in relation to the disgusting manner in which the NSWPF, and some of the hierarchy of that time, treated these two men.

I have asked A Current Affair ( story aired on ACA on 25 May 2026 ) and Kim Mavromatis ( story covered in 2019 ) for permission to permanently embed their articles into this Memorial Post for Bob and a Dedication Post for Terry ( who is still with us and, after 40 years, has ONLY JUST RECEIVED his rightly due Police Pension.

 


Nuclear Waste Crash COVERUP – Poisoned Police Speak Out | Videos & Movies on Vimeo

 

As for Constable GRAHAM – whose name appears on the document authored by Dtr Maurice VANE – Police Medical Officer at the time, I have no further information on him / her or their condition from this incident.


 

10 Oct 1995 – BANKRUPTCIES ON DEBTORS’ PETITIONS – Trove

 


 

First published on 27 May 2026.

Updated 10 June 2026 with ACA News video.

 

 

 




John CLEAL

John CLEAL 

 

AKA Tex, Tex CLEAL     

* Nickname:  ?  

Late of Willow Tree, NSW  

 

Relations in ‘the job’   ?  

 

“possible” relation in ‘the job‘:    ?  

David CLEAL, NSWPF # 42879   ( confirmed No Relation )

 

NSW Police Training Centre – Redfern  –  Class #    ?  ?  ?   

 

New South Wales Police Force    

Uniform # 1514 and / or 244

Regd. #  8409   

 

 

Rank:  Commenced Training at Redfern Police Academy on Monday 9 July 1956 ( aged  21  years, 7  months,  17  days )    

Probationary Constable – appointed   ? ? ?  ( aged   years,   months,   days )    

Constable – appointed   ? ? ?  

Constable 1st Class – appointed   ? ? ?         

Detective – appointed   ? ? ?  ( NO )         

Senior Constable – appointed  9 July 1967    

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

Sergeant 3rd Class – appointed 14 October 1972   

Sergeant 2nd Class – appointed 13 October 1979   

 

Final Rank: =  Sergeant 2nd Class   

 

Stations:   Mounted Trooper – Mounted Unit ( 1956 -c1964 ? ), Sutherland ( 24 Division ), VKG1, Central ( 1 Division ), Hurstville ( 31 Division ), Quirindi ( 1977 ), Quirindi ( O.I.C. )( 1980 ), Gunnedah – Retirement          

 

 

Service ( From Training Date ) period: From  9 July 1956    to    31 December 1989 =   33  years,   5  months,   22  days Service     

Time employed ( Paid ) with NSW PoliceFrom: 9 July 1956    to    31 December 1989 =   33  years,   5  months,   22  days Service

 

 Time in Retirement from Police:     36  years,   1 months,   6  days    

Age at Retirement / Leaving: =  55 years, 1 month, 9 days  

 

Awards:  No Find on the Australian Honours system ( which is hard to believe ) – However: 

Police Long Service & Good Conduct Medal – granted 17 October 1979   

NSW Police Medal with 5th Clasp – granted 16 February 2015   

National Police Service Medal – granted 7 November 2017    

 

John CLEAL 01A - NSWPF 8409 - Died 6 Feb 2026
John CLEAL    
AKA Tex

 Born:  Thursday 22 November 1934 in Warialda, NSW   

Died on: Friday 6 February 2026   

Age:    91  years,   2  months,   15  days  

 

Organ Donor:  No – Age restrictive     

 

 

Cause:   Old Age   ?    

Event location:  Quirindi Hospital, NSW   

Event / Diagnosis date   ?     

 

Funeral date:  Friday 20 February 2026 @ 2.30pm   

Funeral location:  Acacia Function Centre, 415 Burmanns Lane, Hillvue, NSW  

Wake location:   ?

Wake date:    ???    

 

Funeral ParlourShaun Hamilton Funerals, 214 George St, Quirindi, NSW  

 

Buried at:  Cremated  

 

Grave LocationSection:          Row?         Plot

Grave GPS?,         ?  

 

 

Memorial / Plaque / Monument located at  ?  

 

Dedication date of Memorial / Plaque / Monument: Nil – at this time ( February 2026 )    

TEX is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance * NOT JOB RELATED    

 


 

FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.
If you have anything further to add to what is recorded here, please get in touch.

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


John CLEAL 01 - NSWPF 8409 - Died 6 Feb 2026

John CLEAL 06 - NSWPF 8409 - Died 6 Feb 2026
John CLEAL    
AKA Tex

 

John CLEAL 12 - NSWPF 8409 - Died 6 Feb 2026
?, John CLEAL, ?, ?, ? at Redfern Police Academy

 

John CLEAL 04 - NSWPF 8409 - Died 6 Feb 2026 (2)
unknown position in the photo – nor whom the others are.

 

John CLEAL 03 - NSWPF 8409 - Died 6 Feb 2026
John CLEAL    AKA Tex    3rd from the left at the Royal Easter show.

 

John CLEAL 02 - NSWPF 8409 - Died 6 Feb 2026
John CLEAL    
AKA Tex

 

John CLEAL 09 - NSWPF 8409 - Died 6 Feb 2026
John CLEAL    
AKA Tex

 

John CLEAL 05 - NSWPF 8409 - Died 6 Feb 2026
John CLEAL    AKA Tex    “possibly” a Medal presentation.  Un-named person on the left.

 

John CLEAL 14 - NSWPF 8409 - Died 6 Feb 2026
?, ?, ?, John Cleal, ?

 

John CLEAL 15 - NSWPF 8409 - Died 6 Feb 2026
John CLEAL, ?, ?, ? – Goulburn Police Academy, NSW

 

John CLEAL 10 - NSWPF 8409 - Died 6 Feb 2026
John CLEAL  & ? Outside of Quirindi Police Station, NSW

 

John CLEAL 13 - NSWPF 8409 - Died 6 Feb 2026
John CLEAL    
AKA Tex    
inspecting the troops near the Sydney Opera House.

 

John CLEAL 11 - NSWPF 8409 - Died 6 Feb 2026
John CLEAL    
AKA Tex    
with the Mounted Unit

 

John CLEAL 08 - NSWPF 8409 - Died 6 Feb 2026
John CLEAL    
AKA Tex

 

John CLEAL 07 - NSWPF 8409 - Died 6 Feb 2026
John CLEAL    
AKA Tex

 

 

 

https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=1328526868516542

 

https://www.facebook.com/reel/634215929569058


 

* Story behind any Nickname:    

 


 

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
13 February 2026 


 

 




Harris John LANDGRAF

Harris John LANDGRAF   

CURRENT SERVICE MEMBER  

 

Son to Steven LANDGRAF – NSWPF # 24519

Step Son to Renae Caroline LANDGRAF nee SPACKMAN – NSWPF # 36082

 

AKA Harris LANDGRAF   

* Nickname:  ?   

Late of Manilla, NSW – Formerly of Dubbo, NSW  

 

Relations in ‘the job’   ?   

Son to Steven LANDGRAF – NSWPF # 24519

Step Son to Renae Caroline LANDGRAF nee SPACKMAN – NSWPF # 36082

 

“possible” relation in ‘the job‘:    ?   

 

NSW Goulburn Police Academy –  Class #  356     

Last Class required to supply a Typing Certificate upon entry to the NSW Police Force. A Trial of the next 3 Classes will determine if it can be abolished.   

New South Wales Police Force    

 

Regd. #  57632   

 

Rank:  Commenced Training at Goulburn Police Academy on Sunday 1 May 2022 ( aged  21  years,  6  months,  12  days )    

Probationary Constable – appointed 9 December 2022  ( aged  22  years,   1  months,   20  days )    

Constable – appointed   ? ? ?   

Constable 1st Class – appointed   ? ? ?         

 

Final Rank: =  Constable  

 

Stations:    Dareton, Oxley Police District ( Manilla – Lock-Up-Keeper ) – Death         

 

 

Service ( From Training Date ) period: From  1 May 2022     to   28 January 2026   =    3  years,    8  months,    27  days Service     

Time employed ( Paid ) with NSW PoliceFrom: 9 December 2022    to  28 January 2026 =     3  years,    1  months,    20  days Service    

 

 Time in Retirement from Police:     0  years,   0  months,   0  days    

Age at Retirement / Leaving: =     25  years,   3  months,   9  days    

 

Awards:  No Find on Australian Honours system  

Harris John LANDGRAF 04A - NSWPF 57632 - Died 28 Jan 2026

 

 Born:  Thursday 19 October 2000        

Died on:  Wednesday 28 January 2026  

Age:   25 years,   3  months,   9 days  

 

Organ Donor:  Y / N /  ?  

 

Cause:  MVA – Rider on a ATV ( Injuries received from )  

Event location:     ?      

Event / Diagnosis date   ?     

 

Funeral date:    Friday 20 February 2026 @ 10.30am ( be seated by 10am )     

Funeral location:  Dubbo Turf Club, 11 Merrilea Rd, Dubbo, NSW  

Wake location:   ?

Wake date:    ???    

 

Funeral ParlourAbbey Funeral Home, 93 Wingewarra St, Dubbo, NSW   

 

Buried at:     ?      

 

Grave LocationSection:          Row?         Plot

Grave GPS?,         ?  

 

 

Memorial / Plaque / Monument located at  ?  

 

Dedication date of Memorial / Plaque / Monument: Nil – at this time ( February 2026 )    

 

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

HARRIS IS NOT mentioned on the Sydney Police Centre Memorial Wall, Surry Hills  BUT IS ENTITLED TO BE.  

 


 

FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.
If you have anything further to add to what is recorded here, please get in touch.

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


Our deepest condolences are extended to Harris’ father Steve LANDGRAF, partner Karen, brothers Connor LANDGRAF, Ethan LANDGRAF, James, sister Mackenzie LANDGRAF family, friends and colleagues, together with Harris’ mum – Jenni and Step-Dad David, step siblings Thomas & Sarah and Harris’ girlfriend Lucy.
If there is absolutely anything I can do for you in regards to this Memorial – please don’t hesitate in reaching out.
Love and respect.
Cal
NSWPF # 17463
1975 – 2003

9 December 2022
A very proud day for the Landgraf family, and a very proud day for NSW Police Legacy, as Police Legatee Harris Landgraf marched onto the parade ground with Class 356, and then walked off as Probationary Constable Landgraf 💙. Harris has been involved with Police Legacy for many years, including joining the Kokoda Trek in 2019 with brother Connor. Congratulations Harris, and the very best of luck with this momentous next step on your way!

Father & Son ( Steven LANDGRAF & Harris LANDGRAF )9 December 2022
Father & Son ( Steven LANDGRAF & Harris LANDGRAF ) 9 December 2022

 

?, ?, ?, Harris LANDGRAF, Steven LANDGRAF, Renae LANDGRAF9 December 2022
?, ?, ?, Harris LANDGRAF, Steven LANDGRAF, ?    9 December 2022

 

?, Connor LANDGRAF, Harris LANDGRAF, ?9 December 2022 Harris John LANDGRAF 01 - NSWPF 57632 - Died 28 Jan 2026
?, Connor LANDGRAF, Harris LANDGRAF, ?


Harris John LANDGRAF
Harris John LANDGRAF

 

Harris LANDGRAF - 25 January 2024


 

Harris John LANDGRAF 05 - NSWPF 57632 - Died 28 Jan 2026

 


Harris and Connor Landgraf speak about walking the Kokoda Track – 2019

 


 

* Story behind any Nickname:    

 


 

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
3 February 2026 

Updated 4 February 2026 with calculations, additional information and walking Kokoda Track in 2019.

Updated  7 February 2026 with Funeral details.


 

 




Peter Ronald MEAGHER

Peter Ronald MEAGHER  

6th named murder victim of the Bondi Beach Terrorist shooting

AKA Peter MEAGHER, Pete MEAGHER   

* Nickname: Marzo 

Late of   ?  

 

Relations in ‘the job’   ?  

 

“possible” relation in ‘the job‘:    ?  

 

 

NSW Goulburn Police Academy –  Class #  211  

 

New South Wales Police Force    

Probationary Constable # 96587  

Regd. #  22132       

 

 

Rank:  Commenced Training at Goulburn Police Academy on Tuesday 9 April 1985  ( aged  21  years,   2  months,  22  days )    

Probationary Constable – appointed Friday 21 June 1985  ( aged   21  years,   5  months,   3  days )    

Constable – appointed 21 June 1986  

Constable 1st Class – appointed   ? ? ?

Detective – appointed   ? ? ? ( YES )     

Senior Constable – appointed   ? ? ?    

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

Sergeant 3rd Class – appointed   ? ? ? 

Sergeant 2nd Class – appointed   ? ? ? 

Sergeant 1st Class – appointed   ? ? ? 

 

Final Rank: =  Detective Sergeant 

Stations:     ?, Randwick ( 15 Division )( c1980s ), ?,  Maroubra ( 15 Division ), ?, Waverley ( 10 Division ), ?, Serious Crime Directorate – State Crime Command ( SCC )( Homicide Squad )( Fraud Squad )( Arson Unit )( Sgt ) – Retirement          

 

Service ( From Training Date ) period: From 9 April 1985     to  23 July 2020   =    35  years,   3 months,  14 days Service    

Time employed ( Paid ) with NSW PoliceFrom: 9 April 1985     to  23 July 2020   =    35  years,   3 months,  14 days Service

 

 Time in Retirement from Police:     5  years,   4  months,   21  days    

Age at Retirement / Leaving: =    56  years,  6  months,   5  days    

 

Awards:  National Medal – granted 4 September 2001 ( Det SenCon )   

Peter Ronald MEAGHER 02 - NSWPF 22132 - Died 14 Dec 2025

 Born:  Saturday 18 January 1964  

Died on:  Sunday 14 December 2025     

Age:    61  years,   10  months,   26  days  

 

Organ Donor:  Y / N /  ?  

 

Cause:  Murdered – Shot – Bondi Beach Mass Shooting – Terrorist 

Event location:   Bondi Beach, Bondi, NSW  

Event / Diagnosis date: Sunday 14 December 2025  

 

 

Funeral date:    ? ? ? TBA  

Funeral location:      ? TBA  

 

LIVE STREAM      ? TBA  

 

 

Wake location:   ?

Wake date:    ???

 

Funeral Parlour:   ? TBA    

 

Buried at:     ?  

 

Grave LocationSection:          Row?         Plot

Grave GPS?,         ?  

 

 

Memorial / Plaque / Monument located at   ?  

 

Dedication date of Memorial / Plaque / Monument: Nil – at this time ( December 2025 )    

 

 

PETE is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance * NOT JOB RELATED    

 


 

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


 

A GoFundMe page has been established ( by others ) and can be found on this link:      gofund.me/774e84e0b

My name is David Vea and I represent the players, coaches and volunteers of Randwick Rugby Club and we are distraught at the loss of one of our most loyal clubmen ever in Peter Meagher or ‘Marzo’ as everyone universally called him.
Marzo was a much loved figure and absolute legend in our club, with over 40 years of voluntary involvement, he was one of the heart and soul figures of Randwick Rugby. He was also a highly respected long term referee who was well known in Sydney Rugby circles. In his professional life, Peter served for almost 4 decades in the NSW Police Force and retired as a Detective Sergeant, where he was hugely respected by his Police colleagues.
Tragically, Peter was one of the 15 victims of the Bondi Beach shooting and he was sadly lost while performing yet another voluntary role as a photographer to support the ill-fated Chanukah by the Sea event. Peter developed a close affinity with the Jewish Community and supported them for many years voluntarily photographing events and the like, as a result of his wife Virginia Wynne-Markham working at Kesser Torah College in Dover Heights. They both had a strong connection with Rabbi Schlanger, who was also tragically killed at Bondi.
While we are one of the best known clubs in rugby, at our roots Randwick Rugby is simply an amateur community club. Since this awful tragedy unfolded, we have had so many people reach out to see how they could support Marzo, so our player leadership group unanimously decided to it would seek to raise funds in his honour to help financially support his devastated wife, Virginia. Therefore, we have set up this GoFundMe Page to give people the most tangible way to do so.
Virginia is dealing with unimaginable grief and huge uncertainty with the loss of her much loved husband. While they were an uncle and aunt to many nieces and nephews, Peter and Virginia had no children of their own, so he is an irreplaceable hole in her life day to day.
The tragic irony is that Peter spent so long working in the dangerous front line as a Police Officer, but was struck down in retirement while voluntarily taking photos at what was supposed to be a joyful community event in his hobby. It is really difficult to comprehend.
How Your Donation Will Help
All funds raised will go directly to support Virginia who still works fulltime and will greatly help her long-term financial security and assist with many expenses that now confront her in the short term. She is the beneficiary and will receive the funds directly.
Please Give What You Can
No amount is too small and every donation will honour Peter’s legacy and will help support Virginia which we know would have been his greatest concern. If you are unable to give any money, then you can still help by sharing this page or promoting it to your family, friends colleagues and other networks.
Peter ‘Marzo’ Meagher has loyally served all parts of his community in both his professional life and voluntarily in so many areas and for so long. He has helped countless people and community groups, so selflessly over so many years and, in his family’s, darkest hour, it’s our turn to reciprocate and support them so please be generous. We also send our love to all the victims, their families and the Jewish Community at this tragic time.
Yours Sincerely
David Vea
On behalf of the Randwick Rugby Players Leadership Group

 

Peter Ronald MEAGHER 10 - NSWPF 22132 - Died 14 Dec 2025
Peter Ronald MEAGHER  
Randwick Rugby Club Monday 15 December 2025 Sydney · 💔💔💔💔💚💚💚💚🐎🐎🐎🐎 — at Coogee Oval.

 

Peter MEAGHER at his Academy Class 211 - 40th Anniversary at the Goulburn Police Academy in April 2025
Peter MEAGHER at his Academy Class 211 – 40th Anniversary at the Goulburn Police Academy in April 2025

 


Monday 15 December 2025

Vale Peter ‘Marzo’ Meagher

Tragically the events at Bondi yesterday have hit close to home. It is with an extremely heavy heart that Randwick DRUFC confirm the passing of the much loved First Grade Manager and loyal club volunteer Peter Meagher.

Our deepest condolences go to his wife Virginia, his brothers Greg, David, Andrew and Paul their extended families, friends across Randwick Rugby, NSW Police (where he served for 4 decades), Sydney Rugby Referees and our local community.

Our heart goes out the Jewish community and all those impacted by this terrible tragedy.

Rest in Peace ‘Marzo’


Vale Peter Meagher

Mon, Dec 15, 2025, 1:30 PM

Rs

by Rugby.com.au staff

The Rugby community is mourning the passing of Peter Meagher after the Bondi terror attacks. Photo Supplied
The Rugby community is mourning the passing of Peter Meagher after the Bondi terror attacks. Photo Supplied

The entire Rugby community is mourning the passing of Randwick Rugby stalwart Peter Meagher as part of the Bondi terror attacks

Meagher served as the club’s first grade team manager, taking up the role in 2018.

He was a beloved member of the famous club, named WT (Bill) Outterside Club Volunteer of the Year in 2020.

Meagher’s comes from Rugby royalty, with multiple generations involved in the game of Rugby Union.

He is the grandson of legendary Wallaby Wally, who was inducted into the Wallabies Hall of Fame in 2012 and also proved an integral part of the club’s early years and identity.

“’Marzo’ as he was universally known, was a much loved figure and absolute legend in our club, with decades of voluntary involvement, he was one of the heart and soul figures of Randwick Rugby,” the club said in a statement.

“For much of the last decade Marzo has been our trusted First Grade Manager and this news has already hit our players, coaches, managers, volunteers and supporters extremely hard. Prior to that he was also a highly respected long term referee who was well known and respected in Sydney Rugby circles.

“Our deepest condolences go to his wife Virginia, his brothers Greg, David, Andrew and Paul, their extended families and mountain of friends across Randwick Rugby, NSW Police, Sydney Rugby Referees and our local community.

“We obviously extend our deepest sympathy to all the other victims, their families and loved ones and those people traumatised by this barbaric act. We also sincerely thank and are in awe of all the first responders for their bravery and professionalism in dealing with such a dangerous and challenging situation to care for those in need.

“Rest in Peace ‘Marzo’ – we all love you and will miss you greatly. We are devastated.”

“Rugby Australia, NSW Rugby Union and the Waratahs join Randwick and the entire rugby community in mourning Peter Meagher, who lost his life during Sunday’s Bondi terror attack,” a joint statement said.

“Peter was a beloved member of the Galloping Greens, dedicating countless hours as first grade team manager and a volunteer referee, and followed in the footsteps of his father Ron and grandfather Wally, a Wallabies Hall of Famer, in serving the club.

“We extend our sincere condolences to Peter’s family, friends and clubmates as well as all the victims of Sunday’s tragedy.

“We also thank our first responders, emergency services and everyday citizens for their selfless heroism in the face of terror.

“Rest In Peace, Marzo.”

https://www.rugby.com.au/news/vale-peter-meagher-20251215


 

After Retiring from his 40 year employ with NSWPF, Pete ( a non Jew ) was a photographer with Marzo Photography ( his own business ) doing Corporate, Event & Architectural photography from Botany, NSW.

He was performing this task in Archer Park ( 25 Campbell Pde ), at Bondi Beach, NSW, for the Chanukah ( Hanukkah ) celebrating the first day of the Jewish holiday when he was gunned down and murdered, together with 15 others murdered and near 30 additional people shot, by two Terrorists who were father and son.

He was also the current Manager at Randwick Rugby Club.


Peter Ronald MEAGHER 01 - NSWPF 22132 - Died 14 Dec 2025

Peter Ronald MEAGHER 07 - NSWPF 22132 - Died 14 Dec 2025

Peter Ronald MEAGHER 06 - NSWPF 22132 - Died 14 Dec 2025

Peter Ronald MEAGHER 05 - NSWPF 22132 - Died 14 Dec 2025

Peter Ronald MEAGHER 03 - NSWPF 22132 - Died 14 Dec 2025


Further details to follow.


 

* Story behind any Nickname:    

 


 

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
14 December 2025 

Updated 21 December 2025 with GoFundMe details.


 

 




Gregory Scott BUTLER

Gregory Scott BUTLER   

 

AKA Greg BUTLER  

* Nickname:  Butto  

Late of   ?  

 

Relations in ‘the job’   ?  

 

“possible” relation in ‘the job‘:    ?  

 

 

NSW Police Training Centre – Redfern –  Class #  182   

 

New South Wales Police Force    

 

Regd. #   20227   

 

 

Rank:  Commenced Training at Redfern Police Academy on Monday 8 March 1982  ( aged 21 years,   3  months,  3  days )    

Probationary Constable – appointed 28 May 1982  ( 21  years,   5  months,   23  days )    

Constable – appointed 28 May 1983   

Constable 1st Class – appointed  28 May 1987   

Detective – appointed   ? ? ?     ( YES )   

Senior Constable – appointed   ? ? ?    

Leading Senior Constable – appointed   ? ? ?   

Sergeant 3rd Class – appointed   ? ? ?   

Sergeant 2nd Class – appointed   ? ? ? 

Sergeant 1st Class – appointed   ? ? ? 

Inspector – appointed   ? ? ? 

Chief Inspector – appointed ? ? ?

 

Final Rank: =  Detective Chief Inspector   

 

Stations:     ?, Bankstown ( 19 Division ), ?, Accident Investigation Squad ( A.I.S. ), Pt Kembla, ?, Warilla ( Detectives ), ?, Strike Force Maccine – Retirement          

 

 

Service ( From Training Date ) period: From 8 March 1982      to   11 October 2012    =   30  years,    7  months,  3  days Service    

Time employed ( Paid ) with NSW PoliceFrom:  8 March 1982   to  11 October 2012 =   30 years,    7  months,    3  days Service    

 

 Time in Retirement from Police:     12  years,   11  months,   15  days    

Age at Retirement / Leaving: =     51  years,   10  months,   6  days    

 

Awards:  National Medal – granted  20 November 1998 ( Det SenCon )   

Gregory Scott BUTLER 01 - NSWPF 20227 - Died 26 September 2025

 Born:   Monday 5 December 1960   

Died on:  Thursday 26 September 2025       

Age:   64   years,   9  months,   21  days  

 

Organ Donor:  No    

 

 

Cause:  Cancer  

Event location:   St Vincent’s Hospital, Sydney, NSW  

Event / Diagnosis date   ?  

 

From Julie:
Thank you all so much for all of you who have phoned, texted and sent messages of love and support for us all following Greg’s sad passing. We are so touched by your words, and Greg would be so humbled.
His funeral arrangements are now made, and we warmly invite you all, his family, his friends, and colleagues to join us in sending Greg on his way.

The funeral will be held at Hanson and Cole Funerals, 634 Northcliffe Drive, Kembla Grange, NSW 2526 on Tuesday 7th October at 12pm. Afters to be confirmed ASAP.

Funeral date:  Tuesday 7 O ctober 2025  @ noon 

Funeral location:   Hansen & Cole, Northcliffe Dve, Kembla Grange, NSW

Lake Illawarra PAC will provide an official Police Guard of Honour    

 

LIVE STREAM  – main Service was NOT Live Streamed.

Conclusion of Service was Recorded.

 

Wake location:   ?  TBA  

Wake date:    ???

 

Funeral ParlourHansen & Cole, 634 Northcliffe Dve, Kembla Grange, NSW   

 

Buried at:     ?  

 

Grave LocationSection:          Row?         Plot

Grave GPS?,         ?  

 

 

Memorial / Plaque / Monument located at   ?  

 

Dedication date of Memorial / Plaque / Monument: Nil – at this time ( September 2025 )    

 

BUTTO is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance * NOT JOB RELATED    

 

 


 

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


From Greg’s wife – Julie:
With a broken heart I ( Julie ) write to advise my darling man, my rock, Greg Butto ( Greg BUTLER ) Passed away peacefully after a long struggle at St Vincent’s Hospital on Thursday 26th September following complications in preparation for his Transplant.
The boys and I are broken.
Funeral details to come.

Gregory Scott BUTLER 02 - NSWPF 20227 - Died 26 September 2025

Gregory Scott BUTLER 03 - NSWPF 20227 - Died 26 September 2025

Gregory Scott BUTLER 04 - NSWPF 20227 - Died 26 September 2025

Gregory Scott BUTLER 05 - NSWPF 20227 - Died 26 September 2025

Redfern Police Academy Class 182 A & B

 

On behalf of all the troops that knew and worked with Butto, our deepest regrets and condolences are extended to Julie and their son’s on the loss of Butto.

May he forever be riding his sulky on smooth ground.


 

Greg had been suffering from Cancer for some time and was awaiting a bone marrow replacement surgery when he slipped into a coma.

 


 

* Story behind any Nickname:     Butto – Surname shortened.

 


 

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
29 September 2025 

Updated 29 September 2025 with funeral time / location.

Updated 2 October 2025 with last date of Service and associated calculations.


 

 




Raymond Douglas MILLINGTON

Raymond Douglas MILLINGTON  

 

AKA Raymond MILLINGTON, Ray MILLINGTON  

* Nickname: Millo, Paddo    

Late of   ?  

 

Relations in ‘the job’   ?  

 

“possible” relation in ‘the job‘:  

S. MILLINGTON, NSWP ‘Q‘ 5073  ( 1885 )   ?   

J. MILLINGTON, NSWPF # 4898   ?   

W. MILLINGTON, NSWPF # 10007   ?   

L. MILLINGTON, NSWPF # 13086   ?   

J. MILLINGTON, NSWPF # 18069   ?   

Rod MILLINGTON, NSWPF # 25432   ?   

Ben MILLINGTON, NSWPF # 34892  ?  

 

 

NSW Police College, Penrith –  Class #    ?  ?  ?  

 2nd last Class to be Sworn In at the Penrith Police college, NSW  

 

New South Wales Police Force    

 

Regd. #   7642     

 

 

Rank:  Commenced Training at Penrith Police Academy on Monday 26 October 1953 ( aged   21  years,   5  months,   11  days )

Probationary Constable – appointed ? November 1953  ( aged   21  years,   months,   days )    

Constable – appointed   ? November 1954   

Constable 1st Class – appointed   ? October 1959   

Detective – appointed   ? October 1961   

Senior Constable – appointed  26 October 1964   

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

Sergeant 3rd Class – appointed 1 January 1969  

Sergeant 2nd Class – appointed 31 January 1977  

Sergeant 1st Class – appointed   ? December 1979  

Inspector – appointed 26 May 1983   

Chief Inspector – appointed  6 November 1985   

 

Final Rank: =  Detective Chief Inspector   

 

Stations:  Daceyville ( 15 Division )( GDs )( ProCst ), Randwick ( 15 Division )( GDs ), Randwick ( 15 Division )( ‘A’ List ; precursor to becoming a Detective ),  Vice Squad ( Training )( Sept 1956 – Oct. 1958 ), Redfern ( 7 Division )( Relieving and Testing Duties )( Oct. 1958 – Feb. 1959 ), Paddington ( 10 Division )( C.I. Duties )( Feb. 1959 – Jan. 1961 ),  Liverpool ( 22 Division )( Dets )( Jan. 1961 – Jan. 1971  ),Merrylands ( 26 Division )( Dets )( Jan. 1971 – Mar. 1974 ), Fairfield ( 34 Division )( Dets )( Mar. 1974 – Dec. 1975 ), Central ( 1 Division )( Det )( Dec. 1975 – Jan. 1979 ), Hurstville ( 31 Division )( Dets – Divisional Det. Sgt )( Jan. 1979 – Jan. 1980 ), Bankstown ( 19 Division )( Det. Sgt 1/c )( Chief of Dets )( Jan. 1980 – Sept. 1981 ),  ‘ G ‘ District – Assistant to the Det. Insp. ( Sept. 1981 – June 1983 ), ‘ H ‘ District – District Detective Inspector – ( June 1983 –  ), Bureau of Crime Intelligence ( B.C.I. )( c1986 )( Det C/Insp ) – Retirement  

 

 

Service ( From Training Date ) period: From 26 October 1953      to       5 April 1988  ( optional Retirement )   =    34  years,    5  months,  10 days Service    

Time employed ( Paid ) with NSW PoliceFrom:  26 October 1953    to  5 April 1988 ( optional Retirement )    =     34  years,    5  months,  10 days Service    

 

 Time in Retirement from Police:     37  years,   3  months,  14  days    

Age at Retirement / Leaving: =     55  years,   10  months,  14  days    

 

Awards:  No Find on the Australian Honours system – however;  

won the Sir Robert Askin Memorial Award  

Commended for his part played in the search for Monica Schofield, missing from Heathcote Hostel from the 17th June, 1963, and in relation to inquiries which resulted in the arrest of her attacker, Barry Rodrick, and his subsequent conviction for murder.

Signed N. T. W. Allan. Commissioner of Police.

Raymond Douglas MILLINGTON 03 - NSWPF 7642 - Died 19 July 2025

 

 Born:   Sunday 15 May 1932   

Died on:  Saturday 19 July 2025   

Age:   93  years,   2  months,   4  days  

 

Organ Donor:  No – Age restrictive     

 

 

Cause Natural – Old Age  

Event location:     ?  

Event / Diagnosis date   ?  

 

 

Funeral date:  Thursday 31 July 2025 @ 12.30pm   

Funeral location:  South Chapel, Forrest Lawn Memorial Park, Camden Valley Way, Leppington, NSW

Liverpool PAC will provide an Official Police Guard of Honour

 

LIVE STREAM  can be found HERE    link expired before I had the chance to record it. 

 

Wake location:   ?  TBA  

Wake date:    ???

 

Funeral Parlour:   Simplicity Funerals, Bankstown, NSW

 

Buried at:     ?  

 

Grave LocationSection:          Row?         Plot

Grave GPS?,         ?  

 

 

Memorial / Plaque / Monument located at   ?  

 

Dedication date of Memorial / Plaque / Monument: Nil – at this time ( July 2025 )    

 

RAY is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance * NOT JOB RELATED    

 


 

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


Raymond Douglas MILLINGTON 01 - NSWPF 7642 - Died 19 July 2025

 

Raymond Douglas MILLINGTON 02 - NSWPF 7642 - Died 19 July 2025

 

 

Ray was the President of the Cabramatta Golf Club for 7 years.

He was a well known sportsman, footballer and Policeman.

 


 

On Saturday, 19 July 2025, retired Chief Inspector Raymond Douglas Millington 93 , past away after a short illness.

Ray was an outstanding man! A very good detective, outstanding Policeman and accomplished athlete, he played 1st grade rugby Union for Easts, 1st grade rugby league for Easts, he was an excellent basket ball player and was in the graded finals for selection for the 1956 Olympics!

Ray was a man of old fashion principles and integrity, he excelled as a policeman, teacher and a friend.

Ray worked at Central Dets in the 70’s and at Bankstown in the late 70’s where he was the boss.
He was a man of wisdom, intelligence and compassion.

He recently was awarded a special commendation where he and 3 other persons were recognised as being the only sportsman too play 1st grade in 3 disciplines, rugby Union, rugby and AFL, on the Sydney Cricket Ground. An amazing feat for an amazing man.

Australia has lost a great Aussie!


 

1953 October: Liverpool Police Officer – Probationary Constable Raymond. D. Millington a former Driver’s Assistant, Cabinet Maker, Tally Clerk and Labourer entered the Police College at Penrith and commenced his Initial Training.

This was the second last class to be attested at the Penrith College.

Then four weeks later, in 11/1953 he was attested as a Probationary Constable and stationed at No. 15 Division (Daceyville) on General Duties.

In 5/1954 he was transferred to Randwick Police Station (a sub-station of No. 15 Division) on General Duties, and after a short time he went onto the ‘A’ List, where in 10/1954 he was promoted to the rank of Constable.

In those days a prospective Detective was transferred either to the Vice Squad or No. 21 Division for Criminal Investigation Training.

In 9/1956 he was transferred to the Vice Squad. In 10/1958 he was transferred to No. 7 Division (Redfern) on Relieving and Testing Duties.

In 2/1959 he was transferred to No. 10 Division (Paddington) on Criminal Investigations, where in 10/1959 he was promoted to the rank of Constable 1/c.

Then in 1/1961 he was transferred to No. 22 Division (Liverpool) on Criminal Investigation Duties, where in 10/1961 he was designated a ‘Detective’. Around this
period Liverpool stretched from Guildford to Bargo, and the Police Station located within No. 22 Division were Liverpool (Head Station), Fairfield, Cabramatta, Guildford, Ingleburn, Campbelltown, Camden, The Oaks and Picton.

 

1961 January: Liverpool Police Officer – Detective Constable 1/c. Raymond D. Millington was transferred to No. 22 Division (Liverpool) on Criminal Investigation Duties, where in 10/1964 he was promoted to the rank of Detective Senior Constable.

In 7/1968 he was one of the Criminal Investigators involved in investigating the Wally Mellish Glenfield Siege.

In 1/1969 he was promoted to the rank of Detective Sergeant 3/c.

In 1/1971 he was transferred to No. 26 Division (Merrylands) on Criminal Investigation Duties.

In 3/1974 he was transferred to No. 34 Division (Fairfield) on Criminal Investigation Duties.

In 12/1975 he was transferred to No. 1 Division (Central) on Criminal Investigation Duties, where in 1/1977 he was promoted to the rank of Detective Sergeant 2/c.

In 1/1979 he was transferred to No. 31 Division (Hurstville) at the Divisional Detective Sergeant, where in 12/1979 he was promoted to the rank of Detective Sergeant 1/c.

In 1/1980 he was transferred to No. 19 Division (Bankstown) as the Divisional Detective Sergeant.

In 9/1981 he was transferred to ‘G’ District as the Assistant to the Detective Inspector, where in 5/1983 he was promoted to the rank of Detective Inspector.

In 6/1983 he was transferred to ‘H’ District as the District Detective Inspector.

 

SourceLiverpool Police History time line by Joe Stanioch.

 


 

Bankstown Detectives: Back Row ( L - R ) Det SenCon E. HAWRYSIUK, P.C.Cst 1/c I.B. KEENAN, P.C. SenCon STANIOCH, Det SenCon M.A. DONOVAN, P.C. Cst 1/c M. P. McGANN, Det SenCon U. BRAMANN, Det SenCon G.C. PRENTICE, Cst 1/c R.N. RYAN. Second Row ( L- R ) P.W Det SenCon M.A. WESTAWAY, Det SenCon Trevor Lyle BEAUMONT # 14058, P.C. Cst G.Md. ABEL, P.C. Cst 1/c J. KHALIFEH, P.C. Cst A.J. BICKHOFF, Det SenCon A.A. TOWNSEND, P.C. SenCst K.J. PLATT, P.C. Cst 1/c TUNNICLIFFE, P/W Cst 1/c G. M. LAPHAM. Front Row ( L - R ) Det Sgt 3/c A.R. LYTHALL, Det Sgt 3/c W. J. HADLEY, Det Sgt 3/c R.F. WEBSTER, Det Sgt 2/c R.N. MURRAY, Det Sgt 1/c R.D. MILLINGTON, Det Sgt 3/c R.E. LYNCH, Det Sgt 3/c J.D.G. BARTLETT, Det Sgt 3/c M. COUGHLIN.

Bankstown Detectives: C1979

Back Row ( L – R )
Det SenCon E. HAWRYSIUK, P.C.Cst 1/c I.B. KEENAN, P.C. SenCon Joe STANIOCH, Det SenCon M.A. DONOVAN, P.C. Cst 1/c Michael P. McGANN # 16758, Det SenCon Ulrich BRAMANN # 14184, Det SenCon G.C. PRENTICE, Cst 1/c R.N. RYAN.

Second Row ( L- R )
P.W Det SenCon M.A. WESTAWAY, Det SenCon Trevor Lyle BEAUMONT # 14058, P.C. Cst G.Md. ABEL, P.C. Cst 1/c J. KHALIFEH, P.C. Cst A.J. BICKHOFF, Det SenCon A.A. TOWNSEND, P.C. SenCst K.J. PLATT, P.C. Cst 1/c TUNNICLIFFE, P/W Cst 1/c G. M. LAPHAM.

Front Row ( L – R )
Det Sgt 3/c Allan R. LYTHALL # 9291, Det Sgt 3/c W. J. HADLEY, Det Sgt 3/c Ray F. WEBSTER # 10213, Det Sgt 2/c R.N. MURRAY, Det Sgt 1/c Ray D. MILLINGTON # 7642, Det Sgt 3/c R.E. LYNCH, Det Sgt 3/c J.D.G. BARTLETT, Det Sgt 3/c M. COUGHLIN.

 


The Glenfield Siege, 50 years ago….
In July 1968, small-time criminal Wally Mellish held his girlfriend Beryl Muddle and her child hostage in a fibro house in Sydney’s southwest. The bizarre turns of the eight-day siege captured the attention of Australians and made headlines around the world.
THE SYNOPSIS: Small-time criminal Wally Mellish, 22, was living in a house in Glenfield Road with his girlfriend Beryl Muddle, 19, and her 11-week old son when police arrived to talk about local car thefts.
Mellish told them to “go to hell”, fired a shot in the air and for the next eight days the house was surrounded.
Mellish forced Police Commissioner Norman Allan to arrange for his wedding to Beryl and to be best man. Allan provided the ring and the police canteen the wedding breakfast. Mellish forced police to give him an Armalite rifle and ammunition.
When the siege ended Mellish was taken by Commissioner Allan to Ingleburn Army Camp to enlist for service in Vietnam but he was rejected and committed to Morisset Psychiatric Hospital. No charges were ever laid. The marriage was annulled.
DAY ONE: July 2, 1968: On a cold winter’s morning local detective Ray Millington knocked on the door of the fibro cottage to talk to Mellish about car thefts. He was told to “go to hell” and a shot was fired.
Riot Squad police surrounded the house. Mellish threatened to kill Beryl and the child and more shots were fired. Detective Superintendent Don Fergusson, chief of the CIB, and Long Bay Jail chaplain the Rev Clyde Paton negotiated a truce.
Earlier, a detective in the house talking to Mellish was ordered out by Commissioner Allan when he phoned to talk to Wally.
DAY TWO: Commissioner Allan took personal charge and organised the wedding of the year. He got special dispensation to avoid the statutory seven-day waiting period. Rev Paton married Wally and Beryl with Allan as best man and Fergusson as a witness. Allan brought five rings so one would fit.
The mobile police canteen provided a curry wedding breakfast washed down with Coca-Cola. Mellish laid down his weapons for the wedding but Allan and Fergusson honoured their promise and didn’t grab him. The world began to follow the Glenfield Siege.
DAY THREE: Allan admitted to astonished pressmen that Mellish had been given an Armalite rifle and 200 rounds of ammunition because he wanted to match the fire-power of the police. Allan denied he was a hostage, claiming Mellish threatened the life of his wife and child. Police also gave Mellish food and a radio. Allan said Mellish claimed to have hand grenades and this was supported by Beryl.
DAY FOUR: Police stopped serving food to Mellish but continued to provide for the child. Plans to dope Mellish’s food were ruled out. Mellish would only communicate with Rev Paton. The use of tear-gas was ruled out because of the effects on the baby.
DAY FIVE: Mellish again refused food and cigarettes as police tried to wait him out. Police Association began to question handling of the siege by Commissioner Allan. Power to the house was cut and searchlights installed.
DAY SIX: As the waiting game continued, police defied orders and rained rocks on the tin roof of the house. “If we have to be awake so does he,” one detective said. Riot police were openly contemptuous of Mellish reading papers in full view of the siege house. Dr Tom Lonie, superintendent of Morisset Hospital where Mellish had been a patient, spoke to him.
DAY SEVEN: Mellish reported to be twice on the verge of surrendering after telephone talks with Rev Paton but was still in the house at the end of the day. Police Association censured Commissioner Allan for handing over the Armalite rifle.
DAY EIGHT: After 174 hours, on a sunny afternoon at 3.09 pm. Wally and Beryl walked out of the house with the baby. Wally went to Ingleburn and then to Morisset in Allan’s car. Police and press packed their gear and Glenfield returned to its quiet state.
THE AFTERMATH: The next day Beryl announced she was seeking to annul the wedding. Commissioner Allan, Rev Paton and Superintendent Fergusson were decorated for their bravery. Rev Paton moved into obscurity

 

^     ^     ^     ^    

 

 

Glenfield Siege. Liverpool Police attended premises in Glenfield Rd, Glenfield, the home of Wally Mellish (23old), to enquire about some stolen car parts and also execute an arrest warrant for car theft, initiating the siege.

After Detective Raymond Millington from Liverpool knocked on the front door he was told to “go to hell” and Mellish fired a shot in the air and the house was then surrounded for the next eight days.

NSW Police Commissioner Norman. T. W. Allan personally negotiated with a petty criminal Wally Mellish who defied police in a siege by holding his girlfriend Beryl Muddle and their 11 week old baby as hostages.

Having persuaded Mr Allan to arrange his marriage to Beryl and to provide the wedding ring and the feast, Mellish refused to surrender as promised.

Mr Allan acceded at gunpoint to the Mellish demand to be furnished with an Armalite rifle and 200 bullets.

The marriage celebrant Rev Clyde Paton persuaded Mellish to surrender 5 days later.

He was sent to the Morisset Mental Hospital. Soon after release from the Hospital, Mellish was arrested for demanding money with menaces, in an unrelated matter, and subsequently jailed for 3 years.

Detectives who complained about not been able to arrest Mellish following the siege were transferred to Uniform Duties by the Commissioner.

Commissioner Allan rewarded himself and Rev Paton with the Queen Medal for Bravery.

No charges were ever laid, and the marriage was annulled.

^     ^     ^     ^

 

Former Liverpool Police Officers – Detective Inspector Raymond. D. Millington was the Detective Inspector at ‘H’ District Office. He and Detective Chief Inspector Jim Loomes were chosen to commence an investigation into allegations of corruption ( bribery for early prisoner releases ) by former NSW Corrective Services Government Minister Rex Jackson.

Their initial investigation later lead to a Royal Commission, which resulted in Jackson’s conviction in 9/1987 and serving a term in prison. He was released from prison in late 1990. The Royal Commission also exposed a number of other high profile persons acting corruptly.

 

^    ^    ^    ^

 

Scholastic Achievement: Sir Robert Askin Memorial Award. This award was presented annually for attainment during the Senior Police Course. Detective Inspector Raymond. D. Millington, who was attached to the Bureau of Crime Intelligence at the time, was the recipient.

 

SourceLiverpool Police History time line by Joe Stanioch.


 

The three-code pioneer who paved the glittering path for Folau and Hunt

Footy fans everywhere are familiar with the code-hopping stories of Israel Folau and Karmichael Hunt. But the pair were beaten in playing all three football codes by a Sydney policeman sixty years earlier.

Ed Carmine

 

It was a balmy Brisbane night. The kind of night that has citronella candles flickering right along the river.

Israel Folau knew the kind well, never once batting his eyelids as the Lang Park crowd milled around him, many still in singlets and thongs.

But while the multi-million-dollar dynamo was on familiar ground, he was entering new territory. All 102 kilograms of him.

With two seasons as a Brisbane Bronco already under his belt, Folau’s bus ride down Caxton Street that night was filled with a smorgasbord of familiar sights and sounds. Maroon-clad fanatics downing mangos in the swamp. Saturday night specialists sipping on whiskey apples at Lefty’s. The riff-raff congregating suspiciously outside of Honey B’s.

Only this time, none of the locals would be cheering his name. Even if every last one of them had turned up, and paid up, to see him.

Sweaty shoulder to sweaty shoulder, 35,081 made their way through the Lang Park turnstiles on the 23rd of February, 2013. 35,081 were on hand to witness history.

Or so they had been told.

Spruiked as the first man to play Australian rules football, rugby league and rugby union at the highest levels possible in this country, Folau made his return to Suncorp Stadium after 905 days. His hand poised to re-write the history books.

Despite earning detractors along the way, the gravity of the then-33-year-old’s achievement couldn’t be understated. Folau’s ability to hop from the Melbourne Storm to the Broncos (NRL), then over to the GWS Giants (AFL) and jump into place with the New South Wales Waratahs (Rugby Union) had kids weaving several dreams into a singular naptime.

No longer were aspirations of becoming a Kangaroo, a Wallaby, or an All-Australian mutually exclusive.

Two years on from his rugby union debut, Folau would be joined in this rare club by Karmichael Hunt, after the Auckland-born, Australian representative made his way from Brisbane to Biarritz, then to the Gold Coast Suns and onto the Queensland Reds’ roster in 2015, all while changing gears – and gear – with relative ease.

Yet, for these Polynesian superstars to stake their claim across all three codes, earning a chance to stroll contentedly down streets paved with gold, their path first needed paving.

For eight years, footy fans from all three codes have been under the impression that Folau was the first man to spin a Steeden, shoot a Sherrin, and grab a Gilbert professionally, to be paid for the honour.

But what if this collective belief was wrong?

What if the history books had been etched incorrectly?

What if we told you that more than six decades ago, it took a Sydney copper to sprint, so Folau and Hunt could stroll?

As the maxim goes, truth is often stranger than fiction. But for Raymond Douglas Millington, this strange truth is his life’s work.

Not that many had noticed.

Unless you are a nonagenarian that packed scrums around suburban Sydney, chased leather in inner Melbourne, or featured in the Harbour City’s first-grade competition during the 1950s, it is unlikely you have ever heard the name, Ray Millington.

However, for the vast uninitiated, the New South Welshman – all 76 kilograms of him – became the first name to sit at the table of three when he completed the trifecta way back in 1957.

A feat completed to absolutely no acclaim.

Take a beat and check out Ray’s entry in any edition of The Encyclopedia of AFL Footballers. You will find it is only marginally larger than a jelly baby. Folau and Hunt’s by comparison? Theirs are more like mini Mars bars.

“I’ve had a pretty colourful sporting career,” Millington wryly told Zero Hanger from his home in Sydney’s West.

Now less than a month shy of his 91st birthday, and over 63 years since he hung up his boots for good, Ray Millington no longer moves like the whippet-like competitor he once was.

“I’m getting old. I say that every day and I don’t like it very well, but it creeps up on you and you have no alternative,” he admitted through a fatigued drawl.

“Don’t rush yourself, mate. It’s all I can say to you.”

But as whippet-like competitors of any age are prone to, Ray still has plenty to say.

Precursor to Pendles

You could be forgiven for believing that for someone to play VFL football, top-grade rugby union and pull on the Sydney Roosters‘ famous Tricolours in one lifetime, they must be a near-supernatural entity, an all-conquering athlete touched by the gods themselves.

Part Scott Pendlebury, with a touch of James Tedesco, and just a sprinkle of Roy Hobbs in there for good measure. What most would call a natural.

However, if you took the short odds to back Millington in as the most gifted galloper in the race, the bookie would be holding your hard-earned. That ticket would be worthless.

“No, no, no,” Ray rebuffed. “I was never a natural. I had to work pretty hard to get to where I got.”

Raised in the country surrounds of Grose Wold – an 80-minute drive north-west of Sydney’s centre – Ray spent the early years of his childhood playing cricket and rugby league with the 10 others in the school yard of his one-horse town. A town where, ironically, most blokes earned a crust as horse studs.

But with the Curtin government committed to sending fit men to war following the German’s march into France, the Millington family traded the sticks for the tight-knit, double-terraced streets of Paddington in 1942, after Ray’s father was asked to make the barracks on Moore Park Road home.

With rations, blackouts, and tightened purse strings the norm, 10-year-old Ray wandered to the end of the road and changed the course of his life.

Once located less than a Phil Manassa run from the SCG’s stately Members’ stand, the Moore Park Playground was filled with kids of the depression honing their sporting skills from dawn until dusk, each enjoying unfettered access to enough poles, goals, nets, bats, and balls to keep dreamers of every persuasion in business.

“The playground was only about three or four hundred yards from where I lived, so I’d go there straight after school and stay there until around 7 o’clock at night,” Ray recalled.

“We played cricket, rugby league, basketball, rugby union, tennis, baseball, and whatever else.”

It was on this field of dreams that Ray was moulded into the precursor to Scott Pendlebury, with his own basketball background fostered under the watch of Australian hoops royalty.

“We were always bouncing basketballs or swinging bats or something. That was seven days a week. That’s how I got my start,”

“We had a very, very, very good supervisor in Ray Rosbrook. His skills as a sports coach were of an international standard. He was a superb head coach of the New South Wales basketball team.”

The playground’s posts and courts are long gone now. Each removed or sealed over with bitumen and marked into multiple gridlocked lanes. These days, the junction of Moore Park Road and Dowling Street acts as the mouth to the Eastern Expressway – a route used by tens of thousands of Sydneysiders every day, and avoided by hundreds of thousands more.

“The place I lived in Paddington just sold for $3.5 million,” Millington sighed. “Such is progress, I guess.”

Like present-day developers, progression would soon become the name of Ray’s game, with all roads soon leading to the SCG’s greener pastures, and the playground fading fast in his rearview mirror.

Collate the history books, and they will say that Ray was the first person to play any form of Aussie Rules, rugby union, and rugby league on the cricket ground. Still, his first mark at the venue came without a ball at all.

During the summer of 1950, a time in which Menzies was still moving furniture into the lodge, Ray took on all comers during the NSW Junior Athletics carnival, heading home as state champion in javelin, hammer throw, and the pole vault.

A burly lad, by then on the verge of adulthood, Ray’s crowning vault wasn’t without misfortune, as he flew for the heavens, crashlanding like an ungainly Roy Cazaly.

Raymond Douglas MILLINGTON 05 - NSWPF 7642 - Died 19 July 2025
An 18-year-old Ray Millington tumbling from his pole at the SCG – February 25, 1950. Photo – supplied

“I’ve got a photograph of that. Me going through the air, arse upside down,” Millington said with a prideful chuckle, recalling with ease the events of an afternoon that unfolded more than 70 years ago.

“I think the bar was at about 10′ 6 – over three metres in today’s measurements – and the pole broke. In those days, the sandpit was just two inches of sand thrown on the grass.”

It was this size and courage that had served him well as he wandered into view of Australia’s own game. His sticky hands and high leap were more than handy, too.

“I wasn’t a natural, but just having a basketball in your hand every day gave you that hand-eye coordination and that’s why I adapted to Aussie Rules a lot easier than most,” he explained.

“I had good hands, very good hands, and because I used to compete in athletics carnivals, I could jump.”

“Learning to kick came with difficulty, but back then it wasn’t much of an issue, as everyone just went back and laced off big torpedo punts.”

Originally turning out for the now-defunct Dellmuth Football Club, Ray stab-passed his way around the ovals of suburban Sydney, eventually lining up with Eastern Suburbs – a club once home to Swans co-captain Dane Rampe and triple premiership Blue, Mark ‘Sellars’ Maclure.

Tasting grand final defeat in his first season at Trumper Park, the 17-year-old with the dukes and the hops had made waves since his rise to the seniors. Waves that would carry him into a sky-blue jumper and a date against a Hall of Fame spearhead.

Wollongong, October 1949 - A combined NSW side before their fixture against VFA premiers Williamstown - a 17-year-old Ray Millington can be found dead centre of the front row - PHOTO CREDIT - NSW Football History Society.
Wollongong, October 1949 – A combined NSW side before their fixture against VFA premiers Williamstown – a 17-year-old Ray Millington can be found dead centre of the front row – PHOTO CREDIT – NSW Football History Society.

 

“I was selected in a composite New South Wales team in 1949 to play Williamstown, who had just won the VFA competition down in Melbourne,” Ray said.

“We played them at Wollongong and the great Ron Todd was at full-forward for them. They only beat us by six points and I kicked three for the day.”

Ray’s goalkicking prowess would continue throughout the 1950 season, with the Sydney Morning Herald routinely reporting on his ability to “dazzle spectators with high marks and long kicks”.

An 11-goal outing against Balmain in late May saw him skyrocket into the state side, booking a place on the plane for the 1950 State Carnival.

“We went up to Brisbane for about 10 days or so. We played on what’s now the Gabba and beat Canberra and Queensland.”.

With the Waratah stamped on his chest, the pride that filled Ray way back when remains a sensation he can vividly recall today, even if his jaw may have been a bit jutted at the time.

“I was just a kid. I was overawed, but I was up myself…”

“You think that you’re Superman.”

“But I played alright. I played pretty well.”

Man of Steel or otherwise, avenues were beginning to open for the nippy forward with a bloodhound’s sense for goal.

Although the dog days of rationing and blackouts had been shrugged off by the spring of 1950, with the nation now finding itself on the doorstep of economic prosperity, VFL outfits still took a decidedly narrow view when it came to signing talent.

Time and again, the stars and also-rans of the day came from within the near reaches of all 12 clubs, or from the bush just beyond town. But whether city slickers or hayseeds, there was a tie that bound almost every teammate: the ‘Barassi Line’.

More than 30 years on from landing a league side to call their own, Sydney may as well have been on a different planet to Melbourne in those days, with few in the Harbour City caring for a game that remains more religion than sport south of the Murray River.

But this Millington kid had something. Something that was too sharp to ignore. From the sticks to the big smoke; from the playground to national recognition, a chance to travel to football’s Mecca would soon follow.

 

New South Wales' 1950 State Carnival Side on the tarmac at Mascot Airport - an 18-year-old Ray Millington can be found third from the left - PHOTO CREDIT: NSW Football History Society.
New South Wales’ 1950 State Carnival Side on the tarmac at Mascot Airport – an 18-year-old Ray Millington can be found third from the left – PHOTO CREDIT: NSW Football History Society.

 

Gorillas and Galloping Greens

1951 was the quintessential ‘almost season’ for the Fitzroy Football Club.

10 wins, six losses, and, peculiarly, two draws, saw the Gorillas – the club’s overtly aggressive mascot between 1939 and 1956 – finish just outside the top four, forcing them to watch on as the hated Pies, Cats, Dogs, and Dons did battle in September.

By then, it had been four years since the Roys had last punched a finals ticket – their last look coming during their preliminary final loss to Essendon in 1947. It had also been eight years since their last premiership – a drought that would remain unbroken throughout their final 45 years of existence.

Though little more than the tracks of a sliding door had kept Fitzroy from a spot in the four, the club’s brass sought an alternative fix for their marginal woes. One that would cost them a mere fraction of the hard-earned spent elsewhere.

In an effort to climb the ladder, the Gorillas looked north, asking a raw utility to trade pre-bohemian Paddington for Fitzroy, a suburb still light years away embracing frothed oat milk in their fairtrade coffees.

“I was approached by the president of the NSW Aussie Rules competition, Les Taylor, at the end of 1951. He must have been approached by Fitzroy because he told me to head down to Melbourne and sign with them,” Ray explained.

 

News report from The News of Adelaide - January 10, 1952. PHOTO CREDIT: Trove.
News report from The News of Adelaide – January 10, 1952. PHOTO CREDIT: Trove.

“There were articles in the paper down there about how Fitzroy’s officials met me at Essendon Airport because other clubs were interested in signing me. They never told me who those mystery suitors were.

“At that stage, I was the youngest from New South Wales to ever go down to Melbourne. I was only 19 at the time.”

Young, brash, and keen to get his hands dirty, Ray and his wife, Norma, made a home for themselves in the heart of Fitzroy, waking most days to the sound of trams thundering past their front door.

“We lived directly opposite the footy ground In Brunswick Street,” Ray explained.

“That was back when the Harveys were playing cricket with Fitzroy.

“We walked straight out the front gate and across the road into Brunswick Street Oval.”

Across the tram tracks and beneath the shadow of the old railyard silo, Ray rubbed shoulders with a strong and silky ilk, honing his craft alongside Team of the Century members, Bill Stephen and Allan ‘The Baron’ Ruthven, by then a Brownlow medallist and the Roys’ captain-coach.

There was also ‘Butch’ Gale and Norm Johnstone, two men that were more granite than flesh and bone. Around them was place-kicker Tony Ongarello, a dapper gent who would famously hide brandy in his walking stick later in life.

 

Though the new kid on the block, the teenaged Ray Millington matched it with these champions, seeing scribes from The Age dub him the Roys’ most impressive off-season recruit.

But even after training the house down over the summer, Ray was forced to uphold a time-honoured tradition: earning a spot in the seniors from the reserves.

At 176cm, Ray was deemed too short for a forward post. And though unfamiliar with the rough and tumble of life at the coalface, the Sydneysider was asked to cut his teeth in the middle.

“I used to be the centre-half forward or full-forward up in Sydney, but I was just too short. So, the club threw me in on the half-forward flank instead,” Ray recalled of his perpetually moving magnet.

At 0-2, the Gorillas’ 1952 season wasn’t off to a flier. And, after seeing gun centre-man Don Furness go down with injury, centre half-forward Ron Simpson hit for six with the flu, and their boom recruit earning rave reviews in the twos, Ruthven brought the kid into the big time.

At Princes Park in Round 3 against the capable Ken Hands, Ern Henfry, Bruce Comben and the guile of Ollie Grieve, Ray was quickly swept up in the rise in class, earning a reminder square between the numbers stitched onto his guernsey.

“My first game, I was 19th man and had to go on pretty early,” Ray recollected with ease.

“It would have been in the first quarter. By the time I got to my position, I was shitting myself.

“Here I am, a kid from Sydney playing in the big league in Melbourne, running on in front of the crowd at Carlton.”

“The first mark I went for, big ‘Chooka’ Howell, all six-foot-four of him, took a mark over the top of me and belted the shit out of me.

“I remember thinking, ‘Christ, I’m in A-grade here’.”

Though Ray would make the short walk back down Curtain Street a winner that early-May evening, he would be back kicking the dew off suburban ovals until mid-July.

In those days of ankle-high boots, training on a Thursday and full-to-the-brim ashtrays at half-time, back pocket, of all positions, was a specialist one. And at Brunswick Street Oval, the Roys had the best in the state in Bill Stephen.

A routine Victorian representative, Stephen would again don the Big V in 1952, travelling to face the Croweaters at Adelaide Oval. His void would be filled by the kid used to seeing his magnet flung about. A kid that would help hold the Tigers to just five goals at their Punt Road manor.

Forward, back, or in the guts, with two wins from two starts, Ray had moulded himself into the Roys’ lucky charm. And despite his past in baby blue, he too would familiarise himself with the Big V before too long.

“I made the Victorian seconds team that year,” Ray said.

“We played a combined Victorian country team as a curtain raiser to the major interstate match between Victoria and Western Australia at the MCG.

“They had me running in the centre that day, too.”

Sadly, that afternoon at Melbourne’s Mecca would act as Ray’s crescendo south of the Murray, as circumstances – both at home and across the road – would cap his VFL career at just two senior games.

Though the Gorillas would go on to taste September success that Spring, edging the Blues by a point in a semi-final bout for the ages before going down to the Magpies a week later, Ray would watch each final from the stands.

Still, whispers from the board room led Ray to believe the red carpet would be rolled out for him in 1953.

While the notion of a kid from the wrong side of the border taking the spot of the club’s playing coach and Brownlow medallist seems fanciful, according to Ray, it is one that was squarely on the Roys’ selection table.

“The selectors told me they wanted me to then play in the centre. I had played there all year in the reserves. Unfortunately, ‘Baron’ (Ruthven) was the starting centre,” he said.

“But the rumours were that he would retire and that I would have a genuine opportunity to play firsts in the middle. However, he played on for another two seasons, so I probably would have been left to cool my heels in the reserves.”

Happy news on the home front would help slam the door closed, with Norma falling pregnant and a move back to Sydney proving impossible to deny.

The cruellest blow of upping and leaving after only one winter came when Fitzroy refused to grant Ray a clearance, effectively tying the 20-year-old to the club even after he had left town.

Sporting careers are littered with ‘what ifs’, and although Ray would have plenty more chapters to write by the end of 1952, he remains steadfast in the belief that had he stayed on in Melbourne, he would have stacked up at senior level.

“Oh, yeah. I was told as much,” said Ray when asked whether he could have matched it with the VFL’s stars of the day.

“That’s why Fitzroy held my transfer up. The club didn’t want me to go.

“I was a bit of a victim of circumstance, really.”

Back on familiar ground, Ray returned to Easts for the ’53 season, tasting premiership success, and yet again, earning state honours.

But while the NSW police force recruit’s frame and nous had him dominating defenders at Trumper Park – and even the SCG – on Sundays, the lack of professional pathways placed a use-by-date on his Aussie Rules days.

A date that would have mates from a different code down the road soon calling for a helping hand.

The 1953 NSW carnival team in Brisbane. A more muscular Ray can be found in the front row, fourth from the right. Photo Credit - NSW Football History.
The 1953 NSW carnival team in Brisbane. A more muscular Ray can be found in the front row, fourth from the right. Photo Credit – NSW Football History.

 

“All my mates were playing rugby union at Randwick, so just to do something, I went out and trialled just to run around,” said Ray of his choice to head down to Coogee Oval.

“I played in two grade trials with them and played pretty well.”

Part Pendlebury, part Tedesco, with a sprinkle of Hobbs and a touch of Serge Blanco, Ray hit the ground running, winning the Galloping Green’s fullback position.

These were the days before Super Rugby clashes and World Cups. There were no central contracts, boot deals or battles across umpteen time zones, only fixtures between suburban Sydney sides. Gordon and Eastwood; West Harbour and Randwick. Fixtures filled to the brim with Wallabies.

At Coogee, Ray would share a dressing room with many of these stars, including those that would eventually have bricks and mortar named in their honour.

“I immediately made the first-grade side at Randwick, and Sir Nicholas Shehadie was captain. He was also the Australian captain. We were full of internationals in the forwards,”

“There were probably four to six internationals in the Randwick side when I played. We didn’t make the four because they were all forwards.”

Ray would also share the sheds with a man who would go on to raise polarising offspring, linking up with the father of Australia’s 30th Prime Minister, Scott Morrison.

“Johnny Morrison was a prop, and in the police force, too,” Ray said.

“He was a good bloke, Johnny. I knew him pretty well.

“He went into politics himself and finished up as the Mayor of Waverley Council.”

Ray’s two seasons at Coogee Oval followed a familiar trend. Not only did he make his presence known, scoring freely by hand and by boot, but he would again shift around the park, plugging holes at centre, first-five and at the back.

His wares wouldn’t go unnoticed by rep selectors either, returning to the SCG to play in a curtain raiser before the eyes of many of his more experienced teammates.

“I got picked for the rugby union city colts. We played Duntroon College on the cricket ground before Australia in Fiji during June of 1954,”

But with the cost of living growing as his young family expanded, Ray eventually made like Morrison junior, trading the amateur 15-man game in for rugby league’s relative riches.

Chooks, pies and Venetian blinds

They say there is no such thing as a free lunch, and with the force providing little for a cop that kept his nose clean, Ray was again left to cash in on his dash and dare.

“My sporting life hit a crossroads in 1956 and the juxtaposition of my sporting interests with the needs of a young family was thrown into clear relief,”

“I was back playing Aussie Rules, but a mate was playing lower-grade rugby league with Eastern Suburbs (nowadays the NRL‘s Sydney Roosters) and receiving a small amount of payment.

“I got nothing in Victoria, and up here, all I got was a pie for lunch or something.”

“I had three children I was raising on a police salary, which was not exactly generous. In fact, you could say it was very poor.”

Lured in by the promise of two pounds (four dollars) for every 3rd-grade appearance, and five (10 dollars) in the reserves, Ray made the short trek back to Moore Park, entering the Roosters’ coop in 1957.

“I hadn’t played rugby league since I was 15, so I was an older recruit with Easts, by then a 25-year-old,” Ray said of his choice to try out a third code.

Though he would spend the vast majority of his first two seasons in Tricolours playing reserve grade, sporadic shots in the firsts  – and the accompanying 17-pound (34 dollars) payday – would arise.

On the 25th of August, 1957, before 11,360 at the old Sydney Sports Ground, Ray made his first-grade debut for the Roosters, running in 13-6 loss to Manly.

Ray’s set was complete. Not that anyone had noted.

But it would take a toe-to-toe battle against one of rugby league’s immortals before Ray’s spot in the seniors became his, and his alone.

“Our first-grade fullback was a bloke named Tony Paskins. He was the captain of New South Wales. He was just a great player,”

“In ’58, we were to play Souths at Redfern Oval and I was down to play second grade. I arrived there and was told Tony was injured and couldn’t play,”

“They threw me the boots and said, ‘Right, you’re playing, Ray’.”

“The fullback for Souths that day was Clive Churchill. That was his last year. It was one of the best games of football I played to the point that at training on the following Tuesday, one of the selectors came over and told me I had held my spot.

“I held it for the rest of the year.”

In all, Ray would don the Roosters‘ famed chevrons during 18 first-grade games, including a match-of-the-day clash at the SCG against the immortal might of Reg Gasnier, Norm Provan, Johnny Raper, and the Dragons pack.

Pies may have been off the menu, with some folding stuff finally coming Ray’s way, but – far from the property portfolios, fast cars, and diamond earrings accrued by Folau and Hunt over the years – Ray’s earnings only covered simple furnishings.

“In 1959, I played a full season of first-grade, earning total payments of 310 pounds (640 dollars in today’s currency) for the year,”

“As a result, we could indulge in Venetian blinds in our house at Mount Pritchard.”

And while his family would be sheltered from the summer sun, the 9-to-5 grind – a grind unfamiliar to those that would walk in his wake – put an end to his playing days for good.

“I couldn’t get to training. I was transferred out West as a detective. It would have been unfair,” he remembered.

“If I was working at 5 o’clock and we had a serious case and I said, ‘Look, fellas, I’ve got to go. I’m going to footy training,’ it would have gone down like a lead balloon.

“It took an hour and a half to get to the old Sydney Sports Ground, so I just packed it in.”

There would be attempts to lace them up again after making contact with clubs closer to home, but just as Ray found when he made the move home from Melbourne, his skillset would come at a price.

“I asked for a transfer from Easts in the hopes of joining Parramatta, but the club put a £300 transfer fee on my head to discourage other clubs from signing me,” He recalled, the last note of dismay still lingering.

There would be no seasons on the Basque coast, nor homecomings before tens of thousands of singlet-clad fans. Ray’s days in the arena were over.

Still, even after all these years, Ray knows his place as a true pioneer, just as he knows where he would be lining up in today’s game.

“Nah, they couldn’t. It’s impossible,” Ray said when asked whether a fourth name could ever repeat his code-hopping deeds.

“The players these days train seven days a week. They do weights and sprints. We never did any of that. If some of the blokes I played with back in the day trained like the players today, they would have succeeded.

“But none of us would survive today. They’re too tough. They’re too quick. Too everything.

“I wouldn’t even be the ball boy these days.”

And though Ray set the table for Folau and Hunt’s future feast, creating legacies and bottom lines that will serve their circles for some time, the man that sat at the table’s head alone for nearly six decades isn’t giving his seat up for anyone.

“Israel Folau couldn’t play Aussie Rules. He was awful. Karmichael Hunt could play a bit, though. He wasn’t a bad footy player,” Ray said without wavering.

“They only went over for a bit of publicity. The Giants wouldn’t have signed Folau if they needed him to actually play footy. He couldn’t catch a ball.

“Still, it’s not bad company for a boy from Paddington, is it?”

Regrets, I’ve had a few

None of us really know our parents. Not in totality, anyway.

We never knew them in the prime of their lives. We vaguely recognise them in fading photographs. More vibrant people, still yet to be burdened with the weight of mortgages, pickups, dropoffs, and tedious parent-teacher evenings.

We know the people in front of us, at least we tell ourselves we do. We know they are the ones that fed, clothed, and put a roof over our heads. We remember them instilling life lessons, either by hook or crook.

But at the end of the day, even the dying ones, we are left only with memories and moments, each thatched together with our own particular cross-stitch. Memories and moments that mean something to us.

And though Ray’s three children – Mark, Peter, and Robyn, now parents and grandparents themselves – knew their father as an Aussie Rules pioneer, a union transplant, a late-in-life league import, and a copper, there are still tales untold within the Millington clan.

“I talk to my kids, and I ask them, ‘Do you know what I did for work?’ They have no idea. Not a clue,” Ray said down the phone line.

“I’ve had an interesting life.”

A beat cop-cum-detective in Sydney’s wild West, taking every grizzly case home to the dinner table was never an option. Even those involving gunfire and shotgun weddings.

Ear massages from defenders, and hip-drop tackles from forwards are one thing, but in 1968, Detective Millington found himself in the line of fire when pulling up one morning to a fibro cottage in the suburbs of Sydney’s sprawling West.

Knocking on the door, Ray found a man inside with a woman, a baby, and a shotgun. The man was Wally Mellish, described as an unintelligent psychopath and the centrepiece of the infamous Glenfield Siege.

Shots were fired, threats were made and while the big guns would replace Ray on the front line, it would take police – including Commissioner Norm Allan – eight days and a wedding before Mellish was removed for sentencing.

After acting as Mellish’s impromptu best man, Commissioner Allan would promptly nominate himself for a Medal of Valour. A film depicting the unbelievable events would eventually be released, but as had become customary, Ray’s role would go uncredited.

Later in life, after his badge and gun were handed back and the golf course lured him like a trout to a fly, Ray would reprise his competitive spirit, shaving stroke after stroke off his golf handicap when playing alongside Norma and his two sons, Mark and Peter.

Although, as Sinatra crooned in his trademark track of a life lived, Ray’s life hasn’t unfolded without regrets on either side of the boundary line.

“I made a lot of mistakes in my life. I should have just played one sport. I played too many.”

“I should have concentrated on those where I had a natural flair. I became quite accomplished at Aussie Rules, but I gave it away at the very time when greater performances beckoned.

“Let me express a heartfelt mea culpa. I regret that my abiding interest in all things sporting meant that my wife and children went through life without my involvement at the level that it should have been.

“In short, I was selfish and I deeply regret this failure. I am sorry.”

Less than a month out from his 91st birthday, the former footballer, the ex-cop, the keen golfer, and the man known simply as ‘Millo’ is still keeping himself busy, taking time to mail this writer snippets and photographs from days gone by; even calling for a friendly chat about the weather.

While Ray’s records can be found etched in several yellowing record books, little has been done to collate them, bringing what is a truly unique journey across codes and lines, both real and imagined, to life.

Still sharp as a tack straight off the production line, Ray could have kept his yarn rolling for some time, however, he has never lost a wink of sleep over the fact that others have been championed for the barriers he hopped first.

“It doesn’t worry me, mate,” Ray Millington declares.

“My days were a long time ago.”


 

* Story behind any Nickname:    

 


 

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
25 July 2025 

Updated 28 July 2025 with date calculations.


 

 




Keith Anthony SMITH

Keith Anthony SMITH

 

AKA  ?  

* Nickname:  Smithy    

Late of   ?   , Tasmania

 

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   ? ? ?  ( aged   ? years,   ? months,   ? days )    

Probationary Constable – appointed   ? ? ?  ( aged   ? years,   ? months,   ? days )    

Constable – appointed   ? ? ?

Constable 1st Class – appointed   ? ? ?

Detective – appointed   ? ? ?    

Senior Constable – appointed   ? ? ?    

Leading Senior Constable – appointed   ? ? ? 

 

Final Rank: =   Constable   ?  

 

Stations   ?, Northern Crime Management Unit ( ? – 2020 ), Ulverstone ( GDs )( 2020 ) – Death 

 

 

Service ( From Training Date ) period: From   ? ? ?     to   16 June 2025    =   25 years,   ? months,   ? days Service    

Time employed ( Paid ) with NSW PoliceFrom:   ? ? ?   to  16 June 2025 =   25 years,   ? months,   ? days Service    

 

Retirement / Leaving age: =    57 years,   ? months,   ? days    

Time in Retirement from Police:     0 years,   0 months,   0 days    

 

Awards:  No Find on the Australian Honours system – however:

Commissioner’s Medal – granted ? ? 2011  

National Medal – granted ? ? 2016  

Police Service Medal – granted ? ? ?

20 year Clasp to the Commissioner’s Medal – granted ? ? 2021 

 

Keith SMITH 01 - TasPol - Murdered 16 June 2025

 

 Born:   ? ? ?  

Died on: Monday 16 June 2025 

Age:   57  years,   ? months,   ? days  

 

Organ Donor:  Y / N /  ?  

 

 

Cause:  Murdered, Shot serving a Warrant 

Event location:  Allison Rd, N orth Motton, Tasmania  

Event / Diagnosis date:  Monday 16 June 2025 @ 11am  

 

 

Funeral date:    ? ? ? TBA 

Funeral location:      ? TBA  

 

LIVE STREAM      ? TBA  

 

 

Wake location:   ?

Wake date:    ??? 

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 ( June 2025 )    

 

KEITH WILL BE IS mentioned on the Tasmanian Police Wall of Remembrance    

KEITH WILL BE IS mentioned on the National Memorial Wall,Canberra     

 


 

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


 

 

 

In short:

Constable Keith Anthony Smith, 57, is being remembered by his Tasmania Police colleagues as “a respected and committed officer”.

Constable Smith was fatally shot while serving a court-issued warrant for the repossession of a house in the state’s north-west on Monday. His death marks Tasmania’s first active-duty fatal police shooting in more than 100 years.

What’s next?

The 46-year-old alleged offender remains in Launceston General Hospital, under police guard, having undergone surgery for non life-threatening injuries. An investigation into the incident continues.

Tasmania’s police commissioner has named the officer fatally shot on Monday while on duty as Constable Keith Anthony Smith, a 25-year veteran of the police service.

Constable Smith, 57, was shot dead while taking part in “routine duties” at a rural property at North Motton in the state’s north-west.

“Keith was a respected and committed officer, and his loss will be deeply felt across our policing family and the wider community,”

Commissioner Donna Adams said.

“My heart goes out to Keith’s wife and family. We will be supporting them in every way we can during this incredibly difficult time.”

Constable Smith was shot as he approached a house on Allison Road with another officer to execute a court-ordered warrant to repossess the home.

Special Operations Group (SOG) police who were in attendance shot the occupant of the residence in the hand, after which he surrendered, police said.

Constable Smith died at the scene.

The 46-year-old alleged offender remains in Launceston General Hospital, under police guard, having undergone surgery for non life-threatening injuries.

No charges have yet been laid.

An investigation into the incident is underway.

Fallen officer ‘admired by colleagues’

Wreaths are being laid outside the Ulverstone Police Station where Constable Smith was stationed.

Commissioner Adams said Constable Smith was “highly regarded and admired by his colleagues”.

She said Constable Smith had a distinguished career and received the Commissioner’s Medal in 2011 and 20-year clasp in 2021, as well as the National Police Service Medal for 15 years of service in 2016.

Constable Smith joined the police force in September 2000.

He served in the Northern District in the Northern Crime Management Unit and uniform roles until 2020, when he transferred to Ulverstone and served in uniform until his death on Monday.

Smith ‘told me to keep my head high’

Nineteen-year-old Jyron Flannery was among the many community members who dropped off flowers outside the station on Tuesday morning — with Tuesday also being the inaugural National Police Legacy Day honouring the legacies of police families left behind by tragedy.

Mr Flannery said he had great “respect” for the Constable Smith, who had looked after him over the years.

“When I was growing up, I was a little bit naughty,” Mr Flannery said.

“I got myself into a little bit of trouble and he always kept me out of it. Always told me to steer clear and keep my head high.

“He was always a good officer and looked out for us people in the community and us young people.”

Floral tributes, including one by Premier Jeremy Rockliff, pictured outside the Ulverstone Police Station where Constable Smith was stationed. (ABC News: Mackenzie Heard)
Floral tributes, including one by Premier Jeremy Rockliff, pictured outside the Ulverstone Police Station where Constable Smith was stationed. (ABC News: Mackenzie Heard)

Constable Smith has also been remembered for his love for cycling, with him participating in charity rides including the 2011 Charity Trust bike ride.

“Today we remember a customer Keith, always with a smile and up for a chat,” bike store Ulverstone Bicycles wrote in a social media post.

“We send condolences to all his family, friends and the whole emergency service family,” the store wrote.

Police Association of Tasmania president Shane Tilley said he had met with Constable Smith’s family, which has asked for privacy.

“His wife is distraught, they’re in a space they never expected to be in,” Mr Tilley said.

Mr Tilley said Constable Smith had also left behind a “young daughter”.

“We’ll wrap our arms around them and support them as much as we can going forward,” he said.

He said the surviving officer who attended the North Motton property with Constable Smith was “devastated”.

“He turned up to that job with his colleague and he didn’t leave the address with him.”

Keith SMITH 01 - TasPol - Murdered 16 June 2025A floral tribute was left outside Devonport Police station after Constable Smith's death. (ABC News: Meg Fergusson)
A floral tribute was left outside Devonport Police station after Constable Smith’s death. (ABC News: Meg Fergusson)

‘One of the best of us’, police minister says

Tasmania’s political parties, at the start of a five-week state election campaign, have suspended campaigning for the day in light of the tragedy.

Police Minister Felix Ellis, who lives in the state’s north-west, said he had met Constable Smith “on a couple of occasions” and spoke with his family on Tuesday morning.

“Here in Ulverstone, we’re a close-knit community and this has affected so many people, so deeply,” Mr Ellis said during a press conference at Ulverstone on Tuesday.

“He’s one of the best of us and that’s a reminder of what we’ve lost today.

“An extraordinary Tasmanian who’s serving his community, serving with humility and with distinction. We just grieve for his loved ones and families.”

Questions remain around why SOG officers, who were at the residence to support Constable Smith and the other uniform officer in executing the court-ordered warrant, were waiting at the end of the property’s long driveway.

Mr Ellis was asked why the SOG officers didn’t have the lead on executing the warrant.

“Investigations are underway and I’m not going to pre-empt them,” he said.

“An event like this is incredibly rare.

“Our police do some of the most dangerous and difficult jobs in our community, but for something like this to happen to a serving police officer, is just so out of the blue. That’s partly what makes this tragedy so unimaginable.

“I want to thank all of our police officers who run towards the danger while others are going away.

“I think all of us who have police in our families will be hugging them a little tighter tonight because this is just so incomprehensible.”

Encouraging those impacted to ‘reach out’

Premier Jeremy Rockliff, who also lives in the state’s north-west, reiterated that the Tasmanian government stood ready to provide any support needed.

“Tasmania Police is just not a service,” Mr Rockliff said.

“As the commissioner said last night, it is indeed a family and when one of their own is injured or falls, there is a ripple right throughout the entire Tasmania police service through every rank and every station.

“To every serving police man and woman who knew and served alongside your friend and colleague, the love and the support of our entire state of Tasmania is with you.

“We stand ready to provide any support possible. Any support needed to our Tasmania Police and our entire community at this very sad and tragic time.”

Central Coast Mayor Cheryl Fuller said the council worked regularly with Western District officers and “we thank them for their service”.

“They provide service above and beyond, and we’re thinking of them all today,” she said.

“I encourage those who are impacted or seeing that impact in others to reach out to support services and take care of themselves and each other at this time.”

By chance, Tuesday marks the inaugural National Police Legacy Day.

The day of remembrance will recognise and acknowledge the eight police legacy charities in Australia that provide care to the families of fallen officers.

To mark the first Legacy Day, the sails of the Sydney Opera House will be lit up on Tuesday night with images of the flower of St Michael, the patron saint of police.

Tasmanian police officer shot dead in North Motton named as Constable Keith Anthony Smith – ABC News


 

Tasmania Police mourns fallen officer

Keith SMITH 01 - TasPol - Murdered 16 June 2025

Investigations continue today into the tragic shooting death of a Tasmania Police officer in the state’s North-West on Monday.

With the permission of the officer’s family, Tasmania Police Commissioner Donna Adams has confirmed the officer is Constable Keith Anthony Smith, a 25-year veteran of the police service.

Constable Smith, 57, was shot and killed at a rural property in North Motton on Monday morning as he and a fellow officer attended the premises to serve a court-ordered warrant to repossess the home.

Commissioner Adams said Constable Smith was a dedicated officer over a distinguished career with Tasmania Police, who was highly regarded and admired by his colleagues.

Constable Smith had worked in communities across the North and North-West and, for the past five years, was an officer working at Ulverstone police station.

“Keith was a respected and committed officer, and his loss will be deeply felt across our policing family and the wider community,” Commissioner Adams said.

“My heart goes out to Keith’s wife and family. We will be supporting them in every way we can during this incredibly difficult time.

“The Blue Family will come together today, and over the next days and weeks, and will support the family and each other.”

The family of Constable Smith has asked for privacy at this time.

Constable Smith joined Tasmania Police on September 25, 2000, graduating on May 11, 2001, as part of Course 3/2000, and was a passionate cyclist, participating in the 2011 Charity Trust bike ride.

Constable Smith served in Northern District in both the Northern Crime Management Unit and uniform roles until 2020, when he transferred to Ulverstone uniform.  He received the Commissioner’s Medal in 2011 and 20-year clasp in 2021, as well as the National Police Service Medal (15 years) in 2016.

Commissioner Adams acknowledged emergency services who responded to the incident and assisted at the scene on Monday.

She praised investigators and forensics officers who examined the scene and worked late into the night, through difficult weather conditions, gathering evidence.

“While no other staff have been injured in this terrible incident, all will be impacted by their involvement in such a tragic event,” Commissioner Adams said.

A 46-year-old North Motton man remains in Launceston General Hospital, under police guard, having undergone surgery for non life-threatening injuries.

No charges have yet been laid.

Tasmania Police mourns fallen officer – Tasmania Police


 

* Story behind any Nickname:    

 


 

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
17 June 2025 


 

 




Daniel Robert SKELLY

Daniel Robert SKELLY

Serving Member 

 

AKA  Dan SKELLY, Danny SKELLY    

* Nickname: 

Late of Eleebana, NSW    

 

Relations in ‘the job’:  Daniel SKELLY, Victoria Police # ????? 

 

“possible” relation in ‘the job‘:    ?

 

Goulburn Police Academy-  Class #  268    

 

New South Wales Police Force

 

Regd. #  31521  

 

Rank:  Commenced Training at Goulburn Police Academy on Sunday 17 November 1996 ( aged 33 years, 4 months, 28 days ) 

Probationary Constable – appointed Friday 16 May 1997 ( aged 33 years, 10 months, 26 days )  

Constable – appointed ? ? ? 

Constable 1st Class – appointed ? ? ? 

Detective – appointed ? ? ?

Senior Constable – appointed ? ? ? 

Leading Senior Constable – appointed ? ? ?

Sergeant 3rd Class – appointed 28 September 2004

Sergeant 2nd Class – appointed ? ? ?

Sergeant 1st Class – appointed ? ? ? 

Inspector – appointed 3 May 2015

Chief Inspector – appointed ? ? ? 

 

Final Rank: =  Chief Inspector 

 

Stations:  Lane Cove ( GDs )( ProCst )( 16 May 1997 – 13 May 2000 ), Lake Macquarie ( GDs )( 14 May 2000 – 23 July 2004 ), Lake Macquarie ( 24 July 2004 – 2010 )( E.D.O. – Education & Development Officer )( Sgt ), Tuggerah Lakes P.A.C. )( GDs – Supervisor )( 22 August 2010 – 2015 ),  Dubbo ( Duty Officer )( 3 May 2015 – 8 August 2020 ), O.I.C. Wellington, Narromine, Warren, Port Stephens – Hunter Police District ( Commander – Maitland – Raymond Terrace )( 9 August 2020 – 24 December 2024 ), Non Operational ( 25 December 2024 – Death ).

  

Time employed ( Paid ) with NSW PoliceFrom: 17 November 1996   to  13 January 2025 =  28 years, 1 month, 27 days Service

Service ( From Training Date ) period: From  17 November 1996   to  13 January 2025 =  28 years, 1 month, 27 days Service

 

 

Retirement / Leaving age: =  61 years, 6 months, 24 days 

Time in Retirement from Police:  0 

 

Awards:  No Find on the Australian Honours system but obviously received:

National Medal with 1st Clasp – granted ? ? ?

National Police Service Medal  – granted ? ? ?  

NSW Diligent and Ethical Service Medal with 3rd Clasp – granted ? ? ?  

Sesquicentenary Medal – granted ? ? ?

Daniel Robert SKELLY 05 - NSWPF 31521 - Died 13 Jan 2025
Dan SKELLY
c2019

 Born:  Thursday 20 June 1963  

Died on:  Monday 13 January 2025 

Age:  61 years, 6 months, 24 days

Organ Donor:  Y / N /

 

Cause:  Cancer – Leukaemia  

Event location: Home, surrounded by family

 Diagnosis date:  December 2019 

 

Funeral date: Thursday 23 January 2025 @ 11am

Funeral location:  Sacred Heart Catholic Cathedral, 841 Hunter St, Newcastle West, NSW

All those attending are requested to be seated by 10.30am  

 

 

Wake location??? 

Wake date??? 

 

 

Funeral ParlourPettigrew Family funerals,  02 4951 1166  

 

Buried at?

Grave LocationSection:          Row?         Plot?

Grave GPS?,       ?

 

Memorial / Plaque / Monument located at

Dedication date of Memorial / Plaque / Monument: Nil – at this time ( January 2025 )

 

DAN IS NOT mentioned on the Sydney Police Centre Memorial Wall, Surry Hills    But is Entitled to 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

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

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

Australian Police YouTube Channel


 

Daniel Robert SKELLY 06 - NSWPF 31521 - Died 13 Jan 2025

 


 

Daniel Robert SKELLY 07 - NSWPF 31521 - Died 13 Jan 2025

Daniel Robert SKELLY 08 - NSWPF 31521 - Died 13 Jan 2025

Daniel Robert SKELLY 09 - NSWPF 31521 - Died 13 Jan 2025

 


 

Daniel Robert SKELLY 26 - NSWPF 31521 - Died 13 Jan 2025
Student Police Officer Daniel Robert SKELLY

 

Daniel Robert SKELLY 14 - NSWPF 31521 - Died 13 Jan 2025
Probationary Constable Daniel Robert SKELLY

 

Daniel Robert SKELLY 25 - NSWPF 31521 - Died 13 Jan 2025 Constable Daniel SKELLY ( VicPol ) & father - Daniel Robert SKELLY ( NSWPPol )
Constable Daniel SKELLY ( VicPol ) & father – Daniel Robert SKELLY ( NSWPol )

 

Daniel Robert SKELLY 24 - NSWPF 31521 - Died 13 Jan 2025 Constable Daniel SKELLY ( VicPol ) & father - Daniel Robert SKELLY ( NSWPol )
Constable Daniel SKELLY ( VicPol ) & father – Daniel Robert SKELLY ( NSWPol )

 

Daniel Robert SKELLY 22 - NSWPF 31521 - Died 13 Jan 2025
Constable Daniel SKELLY ( VicPol ) & father – Daniel Robert SKELLY ( NSWPol )

 

Daniel Robert SKELLY 19 - NSWPF 31521 - Died 13 Jan 2025

Daniel Robert SKELLY 16 - NSWPF 31521 - Died 13 Jan 2025

Daniel Robert SKELLY 15 - NSWPF 31521 - Died 13 Jan 2025

Daniel Robert SKELLY 17 - NSWPF 31521 - Died 13 Jan 2025

Daniel Robert SKELLY 18 - NSWPF 31521 - Died 13 Jan 2025

Daniel Robert SKELLY 21 - NSWPF 31521 - Died 13 Jan 2025

Daniel Robert SKELLY 27 - NSWPF 31521 - Died 13 Jan 2025

Daniel Robert SKELLY 20 - NSWPF 31521 - Died 13 Jan 2025
Farewell


 

NEW FACE: Chief Inspector Alan Janson ( # 28475 ) with the new officer in charge at Raymond Terrace, Inspector Daniel Skelly ( # 31521 ).
NEW FACE: Chief Inspector Alan Janson ( # 28475 ) with the new officer in charge at Raymond Terrace, Inspector Daniel Skelly ( # 31521 ).

 

10 August 2020

👮‍♂️NEW INSPECTOR FOR PORT STEPHENS-HUNTER PD👮‍♂️

A new senior officer will start his duties today, as Inspector Daniel Skelly opts for a sea change and takes over as the officer-in-charge of the Raymond Terrace sector.

Inspector Skelly has moved from Dubbo up to the Port Stephens-Hunter PD, as Chief Inspector Al Janson ( # 28475 ) takes up a position further south on the Central Coast.

Inspector Skelly says he is looking forward to getting to know the local community and improving the liveability of the area.

“I’m eager to start and take on the role of Raymond Terrace OIC, whilst looking at parts of customer service to help ensure the community receives the best service when dealing with local police.”

Commander, Superintendent Gillies, would like to thank Chief Inspector Janson for his years of service and wealth of knowledge at Port Stephens-Hunter PD and wishes him all the best with his new appointment.

(6) Facebook

 


 

 


 

Great experience: Inspector Dan Skelly finishes duties at Dubbo Police Station, counting his five years working in the city a "privilege". Photo: BELINDA SOOLE
Great experience: Inspector Dan Skelly finishes duties at Dubbo Police Station, counting his five years working in the city a “privilege”. Photo: BELINDA SOOLE

 

NSW Police Inspector Dan Skelly embraced his role as a country cop but with life throwing him a “curveball” recently he’s reluctantly saying goodbye to the region.

Inspector Dan Skelly leaves to undergo leukaemia treatment | Wellington Times | Wellington, NSW


 

EMERGENCY SERVICES Inspector Dan Skelly departs Dubbo

PHOTO: DUBBO PHOTO NEWS/JOHN RYAN

Dan Skelly says he didn’t want to move here, but now calls Dubbo home.

DAN SKELLY leaves Dubbo after five years as a police inspector working in the Orana Mid-western Police District.

From a media perspective, he’s taken phone calls night and day, on or off-duty and has been willing to help at any time to get the best messages out to the community.

He’s also been involved in plenty of behind the scenes community work and he’ll be sorely missed by the many people he’s assisted, on the job or not, during that time.

Most cops who grow up on the coast don’t put in transfers to come out west, where the summers are hot and the beaches are, almost non-existent.

Inspector Dan Skelly hadn’t heard of Dubbo’s Sandy Beach until he arrived in town so after having Newcastle and the Central Coast beaches his playground, he didn’t think much of it.

“I was transferred into Dubbo from Wyong and when I first got here, being a boy from Newcastle, my goal was to get back. Every time I’d travel back to the coast I’d pass the 100k speed sign at the bottom of Mugga Hill thinking, ‘one day I’m going to pass this for the last time’.

“Five years later it’s a different ball game. I’ve called Dubbo my home, I’ve got my immediate family here, my wife and my son, but when I pass that sign this week going back to work on the coast I’ll pass it with a heavy heart because I’ve been privileged to work with some great people in Dubbo and I’ve also been privileged to make friends with a lot of good people,” he said.

He said Dubbo’s community vibe has really hit home, with so many locals he’s met who spend so much of their time working for the betterment of the city rather than for their own personal gain.

He says that volunteer work makes the city far more liveable.

“When I first came here I couldn’t wait to go. Now, I wish I could stay,” he said.

Inspector Skelly said it’s a story you hear from so many police who grew up in Sydney or along the coast and then get told they’ll be working west of the Sandstone Curtain. They loathe those travelling orders but then after being thrown in the deep end, they make it work better than they ever believed possible.

He says while it can be difficult initially, being transferred as part of the job can be a blessing in disguise, forcing you out of your comfort zone and never regretting it.

“I’d never been to Dubbo in my life. I had to look on the internet to see the best way to get here, but yes, it does force you out of your comfort zone and it makes you go out and experience other things, it becomes the new normal in your life,” he said.

Dan Skelly is leaving town not for a promotion or the prospect of an exciting new job, but for medical reasons.

He had a sudden and surprising diagnosis of Leukemia in December last year and he’s preparing for a stint at Sydney’s Royal Prince Alfred Hospital next month for treatment.

“Because of that treatment I’ll be off work for six months and the police have been kind enough to transfer me back to the Newcastle area where all my extended family live,” he said.

“The support I’ve had has been tremendous. I can’t speak highly enough of my boss, superintendent Peter McKenna and western commander Geoff McKechnie, all the senior management staff at Dubbo and all the troops at Dubbo police station have all been fantastic with their support.

“All the other people that I’ve met in the community have also been great, they’ve really rallied and been very interested in my progress during this time of adversity,” he said.

Inspector Skelly said he’ll get better, and he’ll be back, waiting until the travelling and gathering restrictions brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic have eased.

“When all the embargoes have been lifted as far as social distancing is concerned, I certainly will be having a few drinks with some people back here in Dubbo,” he said.

“Where I come from in Newcastle, I was lucky enough to grow up when it was still really a large country town and people had attitudes similar to those in Dubbo where everyone says g’day as they walk down the street.

“The good part of the community here is 100 per cent behind the police. People are always there willing to help us, it’s just a different and slower pace of life out here that I’ve become accustomed to and really cherish,” he said.

PressReader.com – Digital Newspaper & Magazine Subscriptions


 

DRIVING DOWN CRIME: Orana Mid-Western Police Inspector Dan Skelly is the new officer in charge of the Narromine, Warren and Wellington sectors. Photo: JENNIFER HOAR
DRIVING DOWN CRIME: Orana Mid-Western Police Inspector Dan Skelly is the new officer in charge of the Narromine, Warren and Wellington sectors. Photo: JENNIFER HOAR    13 February 2018


 

* Story behind any Nickname:

 


 

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
15 January 2025


 

 




Brendan WIBLEN 

Brendan WIBLEN

Brendan is the 2nd rider that we have lost during a Wall to Wall Ride for Remembrance of Fallen  Police.  The First being Vic KOSTIUK in 2018   

 

AKA  ?  

* Nickname: Brendo, Wibo 

Late of  ?  

 

Relations in ‘the job’:

“possible” relation in ‘the job‘:    ?  

 

QLD Police Training Centre-  Class #  ? ? ? 

 

Queensland Police Force  

 

Regd. #  4010344   

 

Rank:  Commenced Training at Queensland Police Academy  on Monday 11 March 1996 ( aged ? )  

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: =  Senior Sergeant 

 

Stations ?, Southport – O.I.C., Central Patrol Group, District Officer – Gold Coast – Death

  

Time employed ( Paid ) with NSW PoliceFrom:  11 March 1996   to  11 September 2024 = 28 years, 6 months, 0 days

Service ( From Training Date ) period: From  11 March 1996     to    11 September 2024   = 28 years,  6 months, 0 days Service

 

 

Retirement / Leaving age: =  58 years, ? months, ? days 

Time in Retirement from Police:  0

 

Awards:  No Find on the Australian Honours system

Brendan WIBLEN 02 - QPol - Died 11 Sept 2024

 

 Born:   ? ? ?  

Died on:  Wednesday 11 September 2024 around 3.20pm

Age: 58 years,

Organ Donor:  Y / N /

 

Cause:   MVA – Motor cycle rider – Off Duty

Event location:  Gwydir Hwy, approx. 20 kms east of Glenn Inness, NSW

Event / Diagnosis date:  Wednesday 11 September 2024 around 3.20pm

 

Funeral date:  Friday 4 October 2024 @ 10am

Funeral location:  Dream Centre Christian church, 1/3 Chisholm Rd, Carrara, Qld 

LIVE STREAM    ?

 

 

Wake location??? 

Wake date??? 

 

 

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 ( September 2024 )

 

BRENDAN is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance, Canberra * NOT JOB RELATED

BRENDAN IS NOT mentioned on the Queensland Memorial Wall, but will 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

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

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

Australian Police YouTube Channel


Dan Purdie MP:

Dan Purdie (Police Minister), Liam (Brendan's son), Shane Chelepy (A/Commissioner), Kane (Brendan's son), Justine (Brendan's sister)
Dan Purdie (Police Minister), Liam (Brendan’s son), Shane Chelepy (A/Commissioner), Kane (Brendan’s son), Justine (Brendan’s sister)

Liam and Kane lost their dad, Senior Sergeant Brendan Wiblen, during last year’s Wall to Wall – Ride for Remembrance.
Today ( Wednesday 10 Sept. 2025 ), they begin the 1,000km journey carrying his ashes to Canberra – they’ll be among thousands of riders joining the annual “ride for the fallen” 👮‍♂️
We will never forget.

 


 


Brendan WIBLEN 01 - QPol - Died 11 Sept 2024


12 September 2024
It is with great sadness that we share the passing of Senior Sergeant Brendan Wiblen, a valued member of the Queensland Police Service. Brendan tragically lost his life in a motorbike accident near Glen Innes while participating in the Wall to Wall Ride, a charity event honouring fallen officers across Australia.

With 28 years of dedicated service, Brendan was a District Duty Officer on the Gold Coast and previously the Operations Leader of Central Patrol Group. Known for his leadership, quick wit, and unwavering commitment to the community, he was deeply respected by his colleagues and loved ones.

Our thoughts are with Brendan’s family, friends, and fellow officers during this incredibly difficult time. We will continue to honour his service and legacy, and as his family has requested, the Wall to Wall Ride will continue in his memory. 💙

https://bit.ly/4geHKOG                                                     Facebook

 

Queensland Police Service mourns the loss of Senior Sergeant Brendan Wiblen

Brendan WIBLEN 03 - QPol - Died 11 Sept 2024

The Queensland Police Service (QPS) is deeply saddened to confirm the death of Senior Sergeant Brendan Wiblen, 58, following a single-vehicle motorbike crash near Glen Innes in New South Wales yesterday.

Senior Sergeant Wiblen was participating in the annual Wall to Wall Ride charity event, which honours fallen police officers across Australia, at the time of the tragic incident.

With a distinguished career spanning 28 years after joining the Queensland Police on March 11, 1996, Senior Sergeant Wiblen served as a District Duty Officer stationed at the Gold Coast. Prior to this, he held several key roles within the Service, including Operations Leader of Central Patrol Group, where he was known for his leadership and commitment to the community.

South Eastern Region Assistant Commissioner Brian Swan expressed his deepest sympathies to Senior Sergeant Wiblen’s loved ones and colleagues.

“Our thoughts are with Brendan’s loved ones, who are dealing with this tragic loss. The police family stands together in grief and will continue to support Brendan’s family during this unimaginable time.

“Brendan was a dedicated officer who served with distinction throughout his career. He was highly thought of by his colleagues and was known for his attention to detail and quick wit.  His service to the community will not be forgotten, and our thoughts are with all those who knew Brendan during this incredibly difficult time,” Assistant Commissioner Swan said.

Commissioner Steve Gollschewski offered his condolences to all who have been impacted by Senior Sergeant Wiblen’s tragic loss.

“The Service stands in solidarity with Brendan’s family, friends and colleagues to provide support during this time of grief,” Commissioner Gollschewski said.

“It is absolutely devastating that Brendan lost his life during an event honouring our fallen members.

“This is a heartbreaking loss for our entire Service, particularly for Brendan’s colleagues on the Gold Coast, who worked closely with him day in and day out. His passing will have a significant impact on officers who not only valued his leadership but also considered him as a dear friend.”

Senior Sergeant Wiblen’s family has indicated they wish for the officers to continue the ride to completion.

 


https://www.facebook.com/7NEWSBrisbane/videos/891100262962887/


 

Gold Coast police officer dies near Glen Innes during motorcycle Wall to Wall Ride for Remembrance

  • By Alexandria Utting

  • ABC Gold Coast

  • Topic:Road Accidents and Incidents

A veteran Gold Coast police officer has been killed in a crash on an annual police remembrance ride for members who have died in the line of duty.

Gold Coast district duty officer Brendan Wiblen was an avid motorcyclist and had served with the Queensland Police Service (QPS) since 1996.

Senior Sergeant Wiblen died in the single vehicle crash on the Wall to Wall Ride for Remembrance near Glen Innes in New South Wales on Wednesday.

Senior Sergeant Wiblen’s family say they wish for the officers to finish the ride.

The Queensland group left from Brisbane for Canberra on Wednesday.

New South Wales Police said the crash happened about 3:20pm on the Gwydir Highway as the 58-year-old motorcyclist attempted to overtake another rider, lost control and went down an embankment.

“Members of the public administered CPR until NSW Ambulance paramedics arrived, however, the man died at the scene,” they said.

Top brass pay tribute

QPS said in a statement Senior Sergeant Wiblen had a distinguished career holding roles including officer in charge at Southport Station.

South Eastern Region Assistant Commissioner Brian Swan expressed his deepest sympathies to Senior Sergeant Wiblen’s loved ones and colleagues.

“The police family stands together in grief and will continue to support Brendan’s family during this unimaginable time,” he said.

“Brendan was a dedicated officer who served with distinction throughout his career. He was highly thought of by his colleagues and was known for his attention to detail and quick wit.

“His service to the community will not be forgotten, and our thoughts are with all those who knew Brendan during this incredibly difficult time.”

Queensland Police Commissioner Steve Gollschewski offered his condolences to all who have been affected by Senior Sergeant Wiblen’s loss.

“The Service stands in solidarity with Brendan’s family, friends and colleagues to provide support during this time of grief,” he said.

“It is absolutely devastating that Brendan lost his life during an event honouring our fallen members.

“This is a heartbreaking loss for our entire Service, particularly for Brendan’s colleagues on the Gold Coast, who worked closely with him day in and day out.

“His passing will have a significant impact on officers who not only valued his leadership but also considered him as a dear friend.”

Tributes in Queensland parliament

The Queensland Premier Steven Miles has expressed his condolences to the family of the officer in parliament today.

Police Minister Mark Ryan also told parliament “life can be cruel in the most shockingly unexpected ways”.

“This morning like so many Queenslanders I’m struggling to come to terms with the loss of a much-loved member of the QPS,” he said.

“It is almost beyond comprehension that this off-duty officer should lose his life just as he is engaged in a memorial event in honour of other fallen police officers.

“For the officer’s family, this must be the most extraordinarily difficult time.

“I know that the police family will offer them every support and I know too that there will be every support for the officer’s colleagues and friends who were riding with him.

“This is a tragedy on so many levels. A family has lost a loved one, police have lost a colleague, and Queensland has lost a dedicated police officer.”

Union says healing will ‘take time’

Queensland Police Union President Shane Prior was on the memorial ride.

He said the loss was being felt deeply across the state.

“Today our hearts are heavy,” Mr Prior said.

“All of our colleagues are devastated, the colleagues on the Wall to Wall but also our colleagues around the state. This is going to take a long time to heal.

“Our pain, however, is really insignificant when we think about his family today.

He said NSW police will investigate.

A report will be prepared for the NSW coroner and officers from New England Police District have begun an investigation into what happened.

“It is so sad that one of our colleagues has lost his life, but we know that everything that could’ve been done to save his life was done,” Mr Prior said.

Gold Coast police officer dies near Glen Innes during motorcycle Wall to Wall Ride for Remembrance – ABC News

From Ron DeLord5 May 2015 Nathan Robnett and I split at Johnson City with the Aussies who continued on to Candlelight service with Rick Van Houten and Rene. To Mick Barnes Liam Wiblen Brendan Wiblen and Les Murphy you are always welcome in the Republic
From Ron DeLord
5 May 2015
Nathan Robnett and I split at Johnson City with the Aussies who continued on to Candlelight service with Rick Van Houten and Rene. To Mick Barnes Liam Wiblen Brendan Wiblen and Les Murphy you are always welcome in the Republic.

 

From Ron DeLord3 May 2015 - Fredericksburg, TX, United States · Ride for the Fallen crowd after nice day riding headed to Kerrville — with Liam Wiblen and 7 others at Fredericksburg Brewing Company.
From Ron DeLord
3 May 2015 – Fredericksburg, TX, United States ·
Ride for the Fallen crowd after nice day riding headed to Kerrville
— with Liam Wiblen, Brendan Wiblen and 6 others
at Fredericksburg Brewing Company.

 


Mick Barnes15 September 2021 - Brisbane, QLD · — with Andrew Frick and 2 others at Queensland Police Service Wall of Remembrance.
from Mick Barnes
15 September 2021 – Brisbane, QLD ·
Brendan WIBLEN — with Andrew Frick and 2 others
at Queensland Police Service Wall of Remembrance.


 

Queensland Police identified the officer as Senior Sergeant Brendan Wiblen, 58, who had served for 28 years before his death on Wednesday. Picture: David Clark/News Limited
Queensland Police identified the officer as Senior Sergeant Brendan Wiblen, 58, who had served for 28 years before his death on Wednesday. Picture: David Clark/News Limited

 


Brendan Wiblen13 October 2020
Brendan Wiblen
13 October 2020


 

* Story behind any Nickname:

 


 

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
13 September 2024

Updated 10 September 2025 with new photo of Brendan’s family.


 

 




Un-named W.A. Detective

Un-named W.A. Detective

 

AKA  ?  

* Nickname: 

Late of  ?  

 

Relations in ‘the job’:

“possible” relation in ‘the job‘:    ?

 

W.A. Police Training Centre –  Class #  ? ? ? 

 

 

Western Australia Police Force

 

Regd. #  ????? 

 

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

Probationary Constable – appointed ? ? ? 

Constable – appointed ? ? ? 

Constable 1st Class – appointed ? ? ? 

Detective – appointed ? ? ? ( YES )

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 ?, Homicide Squad ( Hatch Building ) – Death

  

Time employed ( Paid ) with NSW PoliceFrom:   ? ? ?   to  9 September 2024 =  ? years,

Service ( From Training Date ) period: From   ? ? ?     to   9 September 2024 ? years,  Service

 

 

Retirement / Leaving age:?

Time in Retirement from Police: 0

 

Awards:  National Medal – granted ? ? ? TBA

1st Clasp to National Medal – granted ? ? ?   TBA

2nd Clasp to National Medal – granted ? ? ?   TBA

 

 

 Born:   ? ? ?  

Died on:  Monday 9 September 2024 about 1am

Age: 45 years,

Organ Donor:  Y / N /

 

Cause:  Depression – Suicide –

Event location: Homicide Squad Police Premises, Hatch Building, Stirling St, Perth, W.A.  

Event / Diagnosis date: Monday 9 September 2024 about 1am

 

Funeral date ? ? ?  TBA

Funeral location ?

LIVE STREAM    ?

 

 

Wake location??? 

Wake date??? 

 

 

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 ( September 2024 )

 

 

UNKNOWN  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

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

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

Australian Police YouTube Channel


 

Tragedy for WA Police as homicide squad detective takes own life at police facility

Rebecca Le May
The Nightly

It is understood the male officer fatally self-injured in the early hours of Monday morning.

In a statement, police said the death was being considered non-suspicious.

Commissioner Col Blanch extended his condolences to the officer’s family, his colleagues and everyone who knew him.

“Information regarding this officer’s death has been shared with his colleagues, and health and welfare support has been offered to all police officers and staff who may be impacted by this tragedy,” Mr Blanch said.

WA Police Union president Paul Gale said the whole force and membership were distraught by the loss.

“All of our members both here and across Australia will be affected by this,” Mr Gale said.

Police are investigating the circumstances surrounding the man’s death and compiling a report for the coroner.

Lifeline 13 11 14

Tragedy for WA Police as homicide squad detective takes own life at police facility | The Nightly

 


 

WA Police officer dies at work in presumed suicide

By Rebecca Peppiatt

 

A WA Police officer has died overnight in a Perth facility in what is thought to be suicide, with an investigation under way into how the tragedy unfolded.

WA Police confirmed the news on Monday, stating that the man’s death was non-suspicious and that a report would be prepared for the coroner.

This terminology is generally understood to relate to a self-harm incident.

Police Commissioner Col Blanch extended his condolences to the family of the officer, his colleagues and all who knew him.

“Information regarding this officer’s death has been shared with his colleagues, and health and welfare support has been offered to all police officers and staff who may be impacted by this tragedy,” a WA Police spokeswoman said.

WA Police Union president Paul Gale said the whole force and union membership were distraught.

“All of our members both here and across Australia will be affected by this,” he said.

A St John Ambulance spokeswoman said three ambulances attended a Stirling Street building just after 1am on Monday.

 

WA Police officers who have taken their own lives in the line of duty include officer Darren Igglesden, 50, who was found by colleagues at Cockburn police station in 2018 after suffering a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

 

Gang Crime Squad detective sergeant Scott Blanchard, a married 45-year-old father of three, took his own life while travelling in a convoy en route to Kalgoorlie in 2015. In her findings, deputy State Coroner Evelyn Vicker concluded Blanchard had become overcome by his perceptions of his work and private responsibilities, and delusional about a medical condition.

 

If you or someone you know is in need of support contact Lifeline on 13 11 14 or Beyond Blue. In the event of an emergency dial Triple Zero (000

Perth police officer dies on duty


Police officer who took his own life at work stopped at airport days before death

A police officer who took his own life at work was stopped at an international airport days before he took his own life, police have said.

 

A police officer who took his own life at work was stopped at an international airport days before his death.

WA Police commissioner Col Blanch told 6PR the officer was a 45-year old Homicide Squad detective who had returned from a family event overseas.

The officer took his own life at a Perth police facility on Monday morning.

Mr Blanch said it was not clear if the incidents were connected in any way, but it was a focus of the police investigation.

“It is not unusual for Homicide Squad detectives (to access the armoury out of hours) because as you would appreciate they are called in at all hours of the day or night,” he said.

“All of those detectives have access to the building including the armoury for exactly that reason.”

Mr Blanch said sadly, when he talked to families of police officers who had died through suicide, work was always a contributing factor.

“It is a tough job,” he said.

“There are often multiple factors … and many many issues within people’s lives that leads them down this path.

“We understand and acknowledge it is a very difficult job for police.”

Mr Blanch said he had focused on building the health and welfare section of the force, with more support available to officer’s than ever before.

He said right now the priority was the welfare of the officer’s family, his colleagues and the staff who were in the building at the time.

“We have a lot of support from our health and welfare area being deployed throughout the agency to give that support to the officers and to the family,” he said.

“Police Legacy are also involved to provide support to the family when officers pass away.”

In a statement released by police, a spokesperson said the death was not being considered suspicious.

“Information regarding this officer’s death has been shared with his colleagues, and health and welfare support has been offered to all police officers and staff who may be impacted by this tragedy,” the statement said.

Police officer stopped at airport days before taking own life | news.com.au — Australia’s leading news site

 


 

* Story behind any Nickname:

 


 

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
10 September 2024