
Former cop who shot dead 19-year-old Aboriginal man during arrest attempt reveals his surprising next move
A former NT police officer who fatally shot an Indigenous teenager during an arrest attempt will speak on a panel for an upcoming networking event.
Zachary Rolfe, who was acquitted of murder in 2022 after shooting Kumanjayi Walker three times in 2019, is among eight speakers at the Frontline Summit: Purpose in Service and Beyond being held in Parramatta, west of Sydney, on Saturday.
The event held at Parramatta Barracks between 9am to 5pm promises 'expert speakers, practical sessions, and networking opportunities'.
Announcing the summit, organisers said it aimed to 'create a community, helping our colleagues find purpose in service and transition when leaving the job'.
Mr Rolfe described the event in a post online as a 'solid day with the right people, pushing the culture in the right direction', as reported by The Guardian.
The former NT officer could reportedly be paid up to $10,000 for talks on 'leadership, crisis management and ethical decision-making'.
Online ticket sales for the summit appear to have been suspended on Tuesday.
A protest calling for an end to black deaths in custody is being held at Parramatta Square on the same day, with the march scheduled to finish at the Barracks.
The rally is calling for justice for Kumanjayi White – a 24-year-old man from Yuendumu who died in an unrelated incident while in police custody inside Coles in Alice Springs on May 27.
No charges have been laid, no cause of death has been determined, nor have the officers allegedly involved in the incident been stood down.
In November 2019, Mr Rolfe fatally shot Mr Walker during a botched arrest attempt in the rural town of Yuendumu, 290km northwest of Alice Springs.
Mr Rolfe was stabbed with scissors during the arrest.
He was found not guilty of all charges following a high-profile five week trial in the Supreme Court in 2022.
The former police officer is now represented by by Robert Joske Management whose clients include former Foreign Affairs minister Alexander Downer and former Queensland premier Anna Bligh.
In an online bio for Mr Rolfe, it reads his life 'took a dramatic turn' following Mr Walker's death.
'Throughout this gruelling process, he (Mr Rolfe) exhibited remarkable resilience, navigating legal complexities with the same focus and determination that characterised his military and policing careers,' the bio read.
'(Mr Rolfe) will offer compelling insights into critical aspects of modern corporate leadership through his engaging talks.'
The inquest into Mr Walker's death began following Mr Rolfe's acquittal.
When Mr Rolfe gave evidence at the inquest, he claimed there was 'racist awards' within the NT Police Force.
Meanwhile, Ian Freckleton, representing the NT Police, alleged Mr Rolfe was a 'racist', reported NT News.
Coroner Elisabeth Armitage is due to declare her findings on July 7.
Daily Mail Australia has contacted Mr Rolfe and a representative for the Frontline Summit for comment.
Hashtags

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


Daily Mail
23 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
The disturbing find customs allegedly made in Aussie tourist's luggage as he returned from the Philippines sparks sickening accusation
An Australian man has been charged after authorities allegedly found child abuse material on his phone when he returned to the country from overseas. The 63-year-old Queensland man's phone was seized by Australian Border Force (ABF) officers on December 25, 2024, after he landed on an international flight at Cairns Airport, in the state's north. Officers also allegedly discovered child abuse material on the man's laptop and two hard drives and referred the matter to the Australian Federal Police (AFP). AFP executed a search warrant at the man's Cairns homes the following day and seized several more devices. On Wednesday, the AFP confirmed its Northern Command Joint Anti-Child Exploitation Team had on May 6 charged the man with one count of possessing, controlling, producing, distributing or obtaining child abuse material outside Australia. It's alleged the 63-year-old produced the abuse material in the Philippines. The offence carries a maximum of 15 years behind bars if convicted. He fronted Cairns Magistrates Court on Wednesday for a brief hearing. The prosecution requested the matter be adjourned as it was still waiting to receive a full brief of evidence. The case will return to court next month. AFP Detective Superintendent Adrian Telfer said law enforcement would continue to crack down on child abuse material made in Australia and overseas. 'Online child abuse material is a borderless crime, which is why this criminality remains a strong focus for the AFP and our state and Commonwealth and international law enforcement partners,' he said. 'Creating this material is a serious offence. Investigators are relentless and will pursue anyone producing, sharing or accessing child abuse material – regardless of where it is from.'


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Oklahoma strives to become American hub for critical minerals processing
LAWTON, Oklahoma, June 18 (Reuters) - Nestled beneath Oklahoma's Wichita Mountains sits a two-story warehouse containing the only machine in the United States capable of refining nickel, a crucial energy transition metal now dominated by China. The facility, owned by startup Westwin Elements, aims to help Oklahoma become the epicenter for U.S. critical minerals processing, a sector the country largely abandoned decades ago. The state will have to overcome several obstacles to get there, including a lack of major critical mineral deposits, a weak education system and its location at the center of the United States - far from international shipping lanes. Yet Oklahoma's push into minerals processing marks an unexpected twist in the country's efforts to wean itself off Chinese rivals who have blocked exports. President Donald Trump has said he wants to boost U.S. production of minerals used across the economy. In Oklahoma, the country's only nickel refinery, its largest lithium refinery, two lithium-ion battery recycling plants, a rare earths magnet facility, and several electronic waste collection facilities are under construction or in operation - more than in any other state. They join a Umicore ( opens new tab site that produces germanium crystals for solar panels. An aluminum smelter - the country's first since 1980 - is set to break ground next year at a site bordering an Arkansas River tributary. "I've strategically made a conscious effort to go after some of these new industries that I think are going to be critical," Governor Kevin Stitt, a Republican, told Reuters. "There's money flying into critical minerals from the investment side, so it might as well be located in Oklahoma." Investors and corporate executives say the state's location, lack of mineral deposits, and other detracting factors are outweighed by a string of positives: Oklahoma has railways and highways bisecting the state en route to the three U.S. coasts, a workforce with deep energy experience, state rebates and other financial incentives, a large inland port with access to the Mississippi River watershed, and accommodating regulators. Officials boast on social media that Oklahoma is a "one phone call state," a description meant to evoke what they see as a streamlined regulatory process. Australia-based MLB Industrial, a startup that supplies lithium-ion batteries to the locomotive industry, expanded its business to Oklahoma earlier this year for that very reason. "Other states were looking for a large, established company to invest, rather than a company with a growth profile," said Nathan Leech, MLB's CEO, who moved his family to Oklahoma. "We intend to grow in Oklahoma." A nickel refinery, in particular, has been sought by Washington for years but Chinese market dumping had scared away would-be entrants, said a source familiar with the Trump administration's minerals policy. KaLeigh Long founded Westwin and named it after her desire for the U.S. to shake off Chinese minerals dependence - as she puts it, "The West will win." The firm has built a demonstration facility 85 miles (137 km) south of the state capital that it says can refine 200 metric tons of nickel annually and will expand to produce 34,000 metric tons per year by 2030. If successful, the Westwin facility would refine 10% of America's annual nickel needs, demand projections from Benchmark Mineral Intelligence show, drawing on rock taken from Turkish and Indonesian mines, as well as recycled U.S. batteries. Even as Oklahoma promises state tax rebates and other incentives, Westwin is lobbying Washington not to eliminate a federal production tax credit heavily opposed by Republicans along with other green energy subsidies enacted by former President Joe Biden, as Reuters reported earlier this month. Westwin is in negotiations with the Pentagon for a nickel supply deal that would keep metal inside the United States to make batteries for military drones and other equipment, according to a source familiar with the deliberations. Roughly 220 miles (354 km) northeast, a lithium refinery under construction from Stardust Power (SDST.O), opens new tab aims to produce 50,000 metric tons of the battery metal per year, about a fifth of what the U.S. is expected to need by 2030. Japan's Sumitomo (8053.T), opens new tab signed a preliminary agreement in February to buy up to half of the facility's output. Stardust aims for the plant to filter lithium from brines - something that has yet to happen at commercial scale - and will have roughly the same capacity as Tesla's (TSLA.O), opens new tab refinery under construction in Texas. It will be powered in part by renewable energy; nearly half of the state's electricity is generated by wind turbines. "That was a huge draw," said Roshan Pujari, Stardust's CEO. The company is pushing forward even after rival Albemarle (ALB.N), opens new tab paused plans to build a large U.S. refinery, citing weak lithium prices. "During these down cycles is the best time to be developing, because why do we want prices to be high when we have nothing to sell?" Pujari said. USA Rare Earth (USAR.O), opens new tab, which went public earlier this year, chose Oklahoma over Texas for its rare earths magnet facility given what it felt was the personalized support from Stitt and other officials, said CEO Josh Ballard. Magnets made from rare earths turn electricity into motion for EVs; the U.S. stopped making them in the 1990s. Ballard says the facility is slated to open early next year and initially produce 1,200 metric tons annually, enough magnets to build more than 400,000 EVs. That supply is already highly sought after in the United States since China placed export restrictions on rare earths in April. Ballard said he has been fielding "a lot of phone calls" since April from prospective customers. The company on Tuesday signed a preliminary supply agreement with Moog (MOGa.N), opens new tab for magnets used in AI data centers. "We can do this quickly. It's just a matter of how do we do it, and can the government help be a catalyst?" said Ballard. The company could get a boost from legislation introduced earlier this month by three U.S. senators - including Oklahoma's Markwayne Mullin - that would provide a tax credit for roughly 30% of the cost to manufacture a magnet made from rare earths. Elsewhere, two Oklahoma battery processing facilities - from Green Li-ion and Blue Whale Materials - will break down lithium-ion batteries into copper and other building blocks for new batteries. Natural Evolution, in Tulsa, is spearheading a push to expand electronic waste recycling. Green Li-ion, which has a recycling facility in Atoka - Country music star Reba McEntire's hometown - has held talks with Glencore (GLEN.L), opens new tab as well as Westwin about buying a recycled version of battery scrap known as MHP, or mixed hydroxide precipitate, that can be used to make nickel products, according to two sources familiar with the negotiations. Glencore declined to comment. Most of the country's recycled batteries are exported now to China in the form of black mass, essentially shredded battery parts. Green Li-ion, which is headquartered in Singapore, moved its U.S. operations to Oklahoma given the state's history with oil and gas extraction, skills it sees as complementary to black mass processing. "This state has a lot of chemical engineers," said Kevin Hobbie, the company's senior vice president of operations. Oklahoma's foray into the energy transition hasn't been all smooth sailing. Tesla supplier Panasonic (6752.T), opens new tab in 2022 chose Kansas over Oklahoma for a battery plant after the Sunflower State wooed it with $1 billion in incentives. In January, EV startup Canoo ( opens new tab filed for bankruptcy despite a $1 million state grant and Stitt's commitment for his administration to buy 1,000 of the company's vehicles. Canoo, which had several production facilities in Oklahoma, blamed uncertain demand for its cargo vans. State officials say they are trying to recoup the funds. Stitt said he is not bothered by the bankruptcy. "We're going to keep swinging for the fences," he said. The state's education system has also generated negative headlines, due in part to a battle over low standards that could make it difficult to convince high-tech talent and their families to relocate to Oklahoma. The state's pre-kindergarten through twelfth grade educational system, for instance, is ranked 48th out of the 50 U.S. states by U.S. News and World Report, and many schools have moved to a four-day week to save money. Alphabet's (GOOGL.O), opens new tab Google, which built an Oklahoma data center in 2011, donated funds to the local school district in part to attract faculty. Oklahoma's superintendent of schools is an elected position over which Stitt has no control. The governor successfully pushed for a school voucher system that he said should attract more families. "If I create competition, and now a public school has to compete for a student, it's going to make all boats rise and bring more talent to Oklahoma," Stitt said. The governor said he is focused on helping the minerals refiners in his state grow and is lobbying Trump to require federal contractors to increase the percentage of minerals they buy that are processed in the country. That's a key desire also for Long, the Westwin founder, who spent her youth herding cattle, an experience she said inspired her interest in refining and a reticence for mining. "After seeing the beef and meat industry, I learned that the packer is the one that seems to take the least amount of risk and yet makes the most amount of money," she said. "When I saw mining, I was like, 'The miner is the rancher and the refiner is the packer.' So I decided I want to be the packer."


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Outback Wrangler Matt Wright hit with new bombshell charges over the helicopter crash that killed his co-star and paralysed the pilot
Matt Wright is facing two further criminal charges in the Northern Territory Supreme Court following a fatal helicopter crash that killed his co-star Chris 'Willow' Wilson. The TV personality and crocodile wrangler had been scheduled to front Darwin court in early July over one count of attempting to pervert the course of justice. But during a pre-trial hearing via Teams on Wednesday, the charges changed. A Director of Public Prosecutions spokesperson said Wright is facing three counts of attempting to pervert the course of justice rather than one, reported. The charges are related to events which allegedly took place following the helicopter going down in West Arnhem Land in February 2022. Mr Wilson plunged to his death in a remote area of the Northern Territory while dangling from a helicopter owned by Wright as he collected crocodile eggs. He is survived by his wife Danielle and their two young sons. The pilot, 28-year-old Sebastian Robinson, was seriously injured during the crash and has been left a paraplegic. Wright was not aboard the helicopter. Following the incident, Wright and his pilot Michael Burbidge were allegedly first on the scene, with former NT police officer Neil Mellon. The three were later charged over their alleged actions following the crash. Burbidge was fined $15,000 after he pleaded guilty to destruction of evidence, for disposing of Mr Wilson's phone. Mellon was sentenced to eight months behind bars after pleading guilty to offences including, six counts of disclosing confidential information, destroying evidence and obtaining a benefit by deception. Charges against both men of attempting to pervert the course of justice were withdrawn. Wright has consistently denied all allegations against him. His legal team declined to comment when contacted by Daily Mail Australia. During the hearing, Justice Blow heard that the prosecution expected to call 56 witnesses for the eight-week trial, NT News reported. Defence barrister Luke Officer told the court that it was 'inconceivable' to complete preparations within four weeks before the trial was due to begin. Prosecutor James Moore argued the defence did not adequately engage when it was finalising the list of matters. Justice Blow set the trial date to July 28. Wright was also facing an additional six charges which are understood to have remained before the Local Court. They include one count of menacing or intimidating chopper pilot Sebastian Robinson, one count of making a false declaration, one count of fabricating evidence, one count of destroying evidence and two counts of unlawful entry. Wright is yet to enter pleas to those charges but, in a statement released in 2023, he said he was 'hopeful the remaining charges will all be withdrawn once this charge (of perverting the course of justice) is dealt with'.