logo
Risk of ‘catastrophic consequence' in Bondi attack

Risk of ‘catastrophic consequence' in Bondi attack

Perth Now29-04-2025

The declaration of Westfield as a 'hot zone', which could have had 'a catastrophic consequence' in the fatal Bondi attack, is being probed, with questions raised about the adequacy of communications between police and ambulance.
Joel Cauchi, 40, killed six people and injured 10 during a stabbing rampage at the Westfield Bondi Junction shopping centre in Sydney's east on April 13, 2024.
Dawn Singleton, Yixuan Cheng, Faraz Ahmed Tahir, Ashlee Good, Jade Young and Pikria Darchia were all killed in the attack.
Inspector Amy Scott, working alone, shot Cauchi dead during the incident and is credited with saving multiple lives as a result. TOP, left to right - Jade Young,Dawn Singleton, Ashlee Good, Cheng Yixuan BOTTOM, left to right: Faraz Ahmed Tahir, Jade Young, Pikria Darchia. Credit: Supplied
A five-week coronial inquest into Cauchi's 'state of mind' both before the fatal attack and on the day, including whether he may have targeted any particular individuals or groups, began on Monday.
A senior police officer who attended the shopping centre following the attack, NSW Police Chief Inspector Christopher Whalley, was questioned about the communications between the police force and NSW Ambulance on the day.
Counsel assisting NSW state coroner Teresa O'Sullivan, Peggy Dwyer SC, suggested inter-agency communication could be improved going forward, with the court told police believed as of about 4.27pm there was only one armed offender.
However, just a minute earlier a NSW Ambulance directive was issued declaring the whole of Westfield was a 'hot zone'.
Under the directive, paramedics were ordered to leave the centre and 'stand down'. Chief Inspector Chris Whalley gave evidence on day two of the coronial inquest. NewsWire / John Appleyard Credit: News Corp Australia
While it is 'not suggested that there was any loss of life as a result', it is a learning exercise for any future mass tragedy, Ms Dwyer told the court on Monday.
'If there had been any severely injured individuals in need of urgent medical attention, any form of lockdown or restriction on access by first responders would obviously have the potential to compromise care and could've had a catastrophic consequence. Fortunately it did not,' she said.
Ms Dwyer questioned whether news there was just one offender should have been shared with NSW Ambulance earlier, potentially through a mechanism that allowed police radio messages to be provided to NSW Ambulance dispatches.
'I think there's the capacity for that to happen,' Inspector Whalley told the court.
'I'm also aware that Triple-Zero operators across the state were inundated with information in relation to this particular incident... but certainly yes, there's opportunity for that information to be shared, yes.'
The coroner then directly asked Inspector Whalley what he thought the best way to convey that information to NSW Ambulance at the 'earliest opportunity' would be.
'I think this incident, Your Honor, is very unique,' Inspector Whalley replied. Police Inspector Amy Scott shot killer Joel Cauchi dead. NewsWire / John Appleyard Credit: News Corp Australia
'There's possibilities... or rather opportunities, for information to be shared at various points.'
Cauchi was shot dead at about 3.38pm.
The court was told on Monday police radio broadcasts at 3.52pm and 3.58pm suggested police believed there may be a second offender, with the public order and riot squad acting on 'intelligence which suggested that there might be a possible offender on the rooftop car park' at about 4.15pm.
However, Ms Dwyer earlier noted the 'confusion' didn't appear to affect the 'survivability' of anyone.
Inspector Whalley arrived on the scene about 3.54pm that day, about 15 minutes after Cauchi was shot.
He told the court he met with Inspc Scott, and was 'satisfied that in her view...there was one offender'.
Witnesses from NSW Ambulance are expected to be called to give evidence on Wednesday.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Update for teen's alleged killer
Update for teen's alleged killer

Perth Now

time17 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Update for teen's alleged killer

The legal team for a man accused of murdering Melbourne teenager Isla Bell will seek to probe expert witnesses during a hearing later this year, a court has heard. Marat Ganiev and Eyal Yaffe appeared in Melbourne Magistrates Court on Friday afternoon, more than six months after their arrest over their alleged roles in the death of the 19-year-old last year. Mr Ganiev has been accused of murdering Ms Bell on October 7 last year at his St Kilda East apartment, while Mr Yaffe has been charged with assisting an offender after the fact. Both Mr Ganiev and Mr Yaffe watched on via videolink as their matters were mentioned in court on Friday afternoon, while Ms Bell's friends and family sat inside the courtroom. Isla Bell, 19, was allegedly murdered in October last year. Supplied. Credit: Supplied The court was told that lawyers for both men were expected to make applications to cross examine a series of police and expert witnesses during a four-day committal hearing on September 22. Following that hearing they will learn whether they will be committed to face trial. The two men were arrested on November 19 last year after police discovered Ms Bell's remains at a Dandenong waste management facility. According to court documents, police allege Ms Bell met Mr Ganiev on October 5 and began staying at his apartment. It's alleged CCTV captured her entering Mr Ganiev's apartment at 9.27pm and she never left. It has been alleged that she contacted a friend saying she had met the 'best Russian sugar daddy' and he was 'lavishing her with gifts'. Marat Ganiev. Credit: Supplied Eyal Yaffe. NewsWire/David Crosling Credit: News Corp Australia Police allege CCTV captured a fight shortly before 1am on October 7, followed by extensive cleaning by Mr Ganiev over the next few days. It's alleged that on October 9, Mr Yaffe arrived towing a black fridge on a trailer which was then swapped out eight days later with a fridge wrapped in plastic and black tape. Police alleged the fridge contained Ms Bell's remains and was moved across several locations in Melbourne's southeast over the following month. According to police, on November 18 a man opened the fridge, finding a bag with a 'foul smell' which he threw into a rubbish bin believing it was animal remains. Both Mr Ganiev and Mr Yaffe will return to court on July 1.

Father dies in hospital after arrest
Father dies in hospital after arrest

Perth Now

time20 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Father dies in hospital after arrest

An Adelaide man has died in hospital following an arrest attempt. The 42-year-old father was involved in an incident with police on May 29, and early Friday his life support system was switched off. Gaurav Kundi leaves behind two children and a wife. In a statement on Friday, South Australian Police remained adamant officers did not force a knee onto Mr Kundi's neck during the arrest. 'The senior investigating officer conducting the (police) Commissioner's inquiry has reviewed body worn vision and it has been confirmed that at no time was a knee applied to Mr Kundi's neck,' the statement reads. Adelaide father Gaurav Kundi, 42, has died in an Adelaide hospital. Supplied Credit: Supplied 'His head was not forced into the car or roadway at any point. However, the use of restraints during this incident will be closely examined during the Commissioner's inquiry.' Investigations and inquiries into the incident will have 'several layers of independent oversight', police say. Mr Kundi's wife, Amritpal Kaur, filmed portions of the arrest. The footage shows a standing Mr Kundi being restrained by two officers. One officer uses their own foot to trip or push Mr Kundi to the ground; Mr Kundi then falls on the bitumen. His wife told Channel 9 she panicked and stopped filming, and alleges an officer put a knee into her husband's neck after she had stopped filming. Mr Kundi became unresponsive some time after he was taken to the ground by the officers. Ms Kaur told Channel 9 her husband was drunk, and they had a minor altercation on the roadside before police arrived. Police arrived at the incident at Payneham Road, in the suburb of Royston Park, about 2.45am on May 29. The death is being investigated as a death in police custody. NewsWire / Naomi Jellicoe Credit: News Corp Australia Mr Kundi 'became unresponsive' as he was arrested, police said at the time. Paramedics took him to Royal Adelaide Hospital in a critical condition. He died in hospital in the early hours of Friday, June 13. Police are investigating the incident as a death in custody. 'Major Crime Investigation Branch will continue to investigate the cause and circumstances of his death and prepare a report for the State Coroner,' a police spokesperson said on Friday. 'The investigation and inquiries of this incident will have several layers of independent oversight, including the Director of Public Prosecution, Office of Public Integrity and the State Coroner.' South Australian Police have also been providing updates directly to the Indian Consulate. The largest English-language Indian news outlets have been covering Mr Kundi's death closely. South Australian Senator, and Foreign Affairs Minister Penny Wong, made assurances to Australia's Indian community, but would not comment until investigations were concluded. 'More broadly what I would say to the Indian community here in Australia, and the broader Indian community, this is an investigation that will be done properly and be assured of our friendship certainly with India, but also the importance of the Indian diaspora here in Australia,' she said.

Police strike back in Sydney gangland war as five charged following daylight shooting at home of alleged local Alameddine crime boss
Police strike back in Sydney gangland war as five charged following daylight shooting at home of alleged local Alameddine crime boss

Sky News AU

timea day ago

  • Sky News AU

Police strike back in Sydney gangland war as five charged following daylight shooting at home of alleged local Alameddine crime boss

NSW Police has charged five men following a brazen daylight shooting at the home of an alleged local Alameddine crime boss, days after a car outside his house was firebombed. According to a police statement, officers were called to Earl Street in Marylands around 9.20am following reports of a shooting. No one was home at the time and there were no reports of injuries. Gangland war on the streets of Sydney has seen another dramatic shooting as police charge five men following the brazen daylight attack. Picture: NSW Police According to The Daily Telegraph, police have speculated Ali Elmoubayed has been overseeing the Alameddine crime gang's million-dollar drug enterprise in recent years after Rafat Alemeddine fled overseas. Thursday's shooting took place at his home. As bullets were being fired into his home, the Telegraph reported Mr Elmoubayed was on his way to Parramatta Local Court to ask for his bail to be varied. He faces some 40 charges including supplying a large commercial quantity of a prohibited drug, dealing with the proceeds of crime, kidnapping, and knowingly directing the activities of a criminal group. He is yet to enter pleas. SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - NewsWire Photos JUNE 12, 2025: Ali Elmoubayed at Parramatta Court on Thursday. Elmoubayed is set to ask a magistrate to relocate him from his home after it was shot at on Thursday morning. Picture: NewsWire / Nikki Short Superintendent Jason Box said gang crime has not escalated, based on the figures, but there is a 'concern that it is happening'. A short time after Mr Elmoubayed home was shot up, a burnt-out Porsche was found on Beverly Crescent, Chester Hill. Upon leaving Chester Hill, the group travelled in a Hyundai and were tracked by a police helicopter before being arrested about 20 minutes later. The men were arrested while fleeing on foot along McMahon Road in Yagoona. Three men aged in their early twenties, were taken to Granville Police Station and charged with conspire to discharge firearm and other offences, including participate in a criminal group. One of the men, 22, was also charged with acquire etc pistol-subject to firearms prohibition order. The trio were refused bail to appear in court on Friday. Around the same time, a Ford Territory was seen driving erratically before crashing on Prospect Road in Greystanes. The occupants of the vehicle, two 17-year-olds, were detained by community members before police arrived. They were subsequently placed under arrest. During a search of the vehicle, jerry cans containing fuel, bleach, balaclavas, and a knife were seized by police. The teens were charged under Taskforce Falcon with take and drive conveyance without consent of owner, accessory before the fact to damage property by fire, custody of a knife in public place and participate in a criminal group. One of the males was also wanted for allegedly being involved in a home invasion in Ermington in February and received additional charges, including commit serious indictable offence-inflict actual bodily harm and accessory before and after the fact to an aggravated break and enter. The two teens were both refused bail to appear in a Children's Court today. One of the men who made a citizen's arrest told the Telegraph the teen he managed to apprehend begged to be let go. 'I was stuck in traffic and I looked to my right… and I saw two guys running away from the car that was smoking up,' the man said, adding how he jumped out of his car and chased them. 'He was begging, begging me, 'please, please my mum is sick, they're going to kill me if they find out.''

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store