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I yelled out ‘mate': Hero police office Amy Scott reveals moment she faced Bondi killer

I yelled out ‘mate': Hero police office Amy Scott reveals moment she faced Bondi killer

The Age29-04-2025

NSW Police Inspector Amy Scott, the heroic police officer who shot dead Bondi Junction Westfield attacker Joel Cauchi, has detailed for the first time the moment she faced down the killer, ending his deadly spree.
Cauchi, 40, was armed with a Ka-Bar USMC military knife when he stabbed 16 people, killing six, in the crowded shopping centre on April 13, 2024.
The attack lasted just over three minutes before Inspector Scott, who was near the centre for other duties, heard an emergency call over the police radio, a coronial inquest into the massacre heard on Tuesday.
'Eastern Suburbs car, any car in the vicinity, we're getting multiple calls, multiple stabbings, multiple locations, at Bondi Junction Westfield,' the voice on the scanner broadcast just after 3.30pm, the inquest heard.
'I knew right then that it was very real,' Scott said.
People were pouring out of the centre and flagged down Scott's car. Two French nationals and a security guard were among the group begging the lone officer for help.
'People were saying 'there's a guy in there with a knife, he's stabbing people, killing people … you've got to help us, please get in there',' Scott recalled.
The inspector concluded it was an active-armed offender, and she could not wait for backup. She unclipped her service pistol and raced inside, accompanied by a small group of civilians.

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Mr Despreaux, 33, who grew in Ukraine as a youngster with his father who was a charity worker, said "adrenaline" drove them to act tradies were at the mall to buy a new laptop but their day quickly turned into a blood-soaked episode when they saw Mr Cauchi stab a few victims and stood only a few metres away from them before the lone police officer, Ms Scott, killed him. The fallout from the mass stabbing is being examined in an ongoing coronial inquest. "In the hour of danger when dozens of lives were at risk... they ran towards the violence, they chose to put their lives on the line," Premier Chris Minns said. "The sad and hard truth is we don't know how bad this tragedy could've been without their intervention. "(You) will always be heroes of this state." French Ambassador Pierre-Andre Imbert, who presented the blue coloured medals to the two French friends, praised them for their humility and deliberately staying out of the limelight after the events. 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Together they keep me going forward with courage, pride and hope." Lifeline 13 11 14 beyondblue 1300 22 4636 Armed with bollards and bravery, French nationals Damien Guerot and Silas Despreaux confronted Joel Cauchi amid his stabbing rampage at a busy mall in broad daylight where he killed six dead in five minutes. They were awarded the Ordre National du Merite, one of France's highest distinctions, on Thursday at NSW parliament for their courageous efforts on April 13, 2024. Footage of the construction workers coming face to face with the attacker atop an escalator during his killing spree at Westfield Bondi Junction went viral. Cauchi, who had a history of acute mental health disorders and was off his medication, knifed 10 other victims in the indiscriminate attack before being shot dead by Inspector Amy Scott. "We were defending ourselves because we were thinking he (Cauchi) was coming after us and the first thing we saw were the bollards," 32-year-old Mr Guerot told AAP. 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