
New details emerge as key witness fronts NT trial of Outback Wrangler Matt Wright
Michael Burbidge, pilot and director of Remote Helicopters, gave evidence at Wright's trial in the Supreme Court in Darwin on Friday.
Wilson was in a sling under a helicopter on a crocodile egg collecting mission when it crashed, killing him and injuring pilot Sebastian Robinson, who is now a paraplegic.
Wright has pleaded not guilty to three counts of attempting to pervert the course of justice following the February 2022 crash in a remote part of Arnhem Land in the Northern Territory.
The crown case is that Wright did not properly record helicopter flying hours and was concerned crash investigators would uncover the issue, triggering possible charges against him and his company.
Crown prosecutor Jason Gullaci SC has told the jury the charges did not relate to the cause of the accident and it was not alleged Wright was responsible for the crash or the death.
Burbidge, flying his own helicopter for egg collecting, was first onto the crash scene after contact was lost with Robinson's chopper.
Burbidge told the jury he landed near the crash site to find Wilson dead and Robinson critically injured.
He rendered first aid to Robinson and leaned inside the chopper to turn off the machine's master switch off.
Burbidge said he was on the scene for maybe an hour before other pilots and egg collectors alerted to the crash arrived but 'it felt like forever'.
Wright later flew in on his chopper with then police officer Neil Mellon, who removed items from Wilson's body, including his phone and a handgun.
Burbidge said he was given the mobile and said to Mellon 'Dani doesn't need to see what's on the phone', referring to Wilson's partner Dani Wilson.
He agreed he had got rid of the phone, 'ditched it, somewhere on the way home'.
Burbidge told the court he was later charged and fined for disposing of the phone after pleading guilty.
'I did it all on my own,' he said.
Burbidge said he had no recollection of inspecting the crashed chopper's fuel tank or detaching the craft's console along with Wright as other witnesses have reported.
The Crown has alleged that Wright wanted to look behind the console to check if the Hobbs flight-hour recording meter was disconnected.
It's been alleged Wright and his pilots regularly disconnected the meters to extend helicopters' flying hours beyond official thresholds and falsified logbooks and maintenance releases.
Burbidge said he did not disconnect Hobbs meters, but he had heard of the practice.
The court was played a covertly recorded phone call in which Burbidge told Wright he had heard there had been 'shit written' in a chopper's logbook saying 'clock found disconnected again'.
Burbidge told Gullaci the August 2022 call was just between friends about a rumour he had heard and he was concerned about putting the records right.
He denied that it might be evidence of Wright disconnecting a Hobbs meter.
Defence senior counsel David Edwardson KC has told the jury his client 'emphatically denied' trying to get Robinson to falsify flight records or telling an associate to 'torch' a maintenance release.
The trial before acting Justice Allan Blow is expected to take up to five weeks.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sydney Morning Herald
2 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
The ear in the freezer and the high-stakes inheritance battle
A Sydney man who cut off part of his late brother's ear before the funeral in the hope of using DNA evidence in a bitter inheritance battle has lost a court bid to obtain the human tissue from police for testing. Jian Zhong Li was charged with improperly interfering with a corpse after he surreptitiously cut off part of his brother Jian Ming's ear with pliers before his cremation in March 2022. Li kept the samples in two glass jars in his freezer. 'The coffin lid was then shut. The funeral ceremony began later without others, including the funeral director, knowing what had happened,' NSW Supreme Court Justice Michael Slattery said in a decision on Tuesday. 'The deceased's body was cremated the following day.' Li's brother had died of complications from COVID-19 and did not leave a will. Li had hoped DNA testing would prove his brother did not have a biological child. Under NSW succession laws that apply when a person dies without a will, his brother's only son, Cheng, stood to inherit his entire estate because the deceased did not have a spouse. But if his brother had no children, the family matriarch would have been entitled to the estate, which reportedly included a million-dollar property in Petersham in Sydney's inner west. In May this year, Li and the brothers' mother, Quin, applied to the Supreme Court for an order that the samples taken by Li be released to him by NSW Police to enable DNA testing to be conducted.

The Age
2 hours ago
- The Age
The ear in the freezer and the high-stakes inheritance battle
A Sydney man who cut off part of his late brother's ear before the funeral in the hope of using DNA evidence in a bitter inheritance battle has lost a court bid to obtain the human tissue from police for testing. Jian Zhong Li was charged with improperly interfering with a corpse after he surreptitiously cut off part of his brother Jian Ming's ear with pliers before his cremation in March 2022. Li kept the samples in two glass jars in his freezer. 'The coffin lid was then shut. The funeral ceremony began later without others, including the funeral director, knowing what had happened,' NSW Supreme Court Justice Michael Slattery said in a decision on Tuesday. 'The deceased's body was cremated the following day.' Li's brother had died of complications from COVID-19 and did not leave a will. Li had hoped DNA testing would prove his brother did not have a biological child. Under NSW succession laws that apply when a person dies without a will, his brother's only son, Cheng, stood to inherit his entire estate because the deceased did not have a spouse. But if his brother had no children, the family matriarch would have been entitled to the estate, which reportedly included a million-dollar property in Petersham in Sydney's inner west. In May this year, Li and the brothers' mother, Quin, applied to the Supreme Court for an order that the samples taken by Li be released to him by NSW Police to enable DNA testing to be conducted.


7NEWS
2 hours ago
- 7NEWS
Man pleads guilty to killing English teacher whose body was found in wheelie bin
A man has admitted to killing a teacher whose body was found inside a wheelie bin. Stephen Fleming formally entered a guilty plea to manslaughter in the Victorian Supreme Court on Thursday after he was originally charged with the murder of Annette Brennan. He admitted to killing the 67-year-old English teacher at Coolaroo in Melbourne's north on July 1, 2024. Tip workers found Brennan's body while moving green waste at a facility in Epping on July 3, the court was previously told. Fleming faced a sentence indication hearing on Tuesday but the court was closed to the media. Details of the manslaughter were not read out during Thursday's brief arraignment hearing. Justice Christopher Beale remanded Fleming in custody ahead of a plea hearing in September. The killer only spoke to formally enter his plea of guilty.