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Death in custody probe after officers restrain man

Death in custody probe after officers restrain man

West Australian28-05-2025

A pathologist will conduct an autopsy on a young Aboriginal man who died after being taken to the ground by plain-clothes officers following an alleged shoplifting incident.
The two Northern Territory officers were in the Coles supermarket in Alice Springs about 1.10pm on Tuesday when they were alerted to a confrontation between the 24-year-old and a security guard in a shopping aisle.
"The male behaved rather aggressively and was placed onto the ground by those police officers, he was later identified as losing consciousness," Assistant Commissioner Travis Wurst told reporters.
It was reported the young man was "placing items down the front of his clothing" and he had assaulted the security guard when confronted, he said.
After being restrained by the officers the man stopped breathing and was given CPR before being taken to Alice Springs Hospital where he was pronounced dead about 2.20pm.
A pathologist was flying to Alice Springs to perform an autopsy on Wednesday, with police treating the incident as a death in custody and preparing a report for the coroner.
When questioned by reporters on Tuesday, Mr Wurst was unable to say if the man had signalled he could not breathe, whether the officers were on top of him or how long he was restrained.
"The investigation is only in its preliminary stages, there's lots of work to be done by our investigative team to collect the evidence from those involved," he said.
"I pass on my condolences to the family of this person, it's a tragic set of circumstances.
"It will also have a significant impact on the security guards and the police officers."
13YARN 13 92 76
Lifeline 13 11 14

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"The politicisation of this issue helps no one," the chief minister said. "It does not support our police to do their important work or the coroner to do her important work, families who are grieving, communities who want answers." Ms Finocchiaro urged people with the power to influence to use their voice to reinforce the strength of institutions, particularly NT Police. Acting Commissioner Martin Dole said NT Police had a statutory responsibility to investigate all crimes in the territory "so it's not simply a matter that we can call in an external body that doesn't have any powers". He said strict protocols were in place when investigating deaths involving police and the NT's ombudsman, anti-corruption agency and the coroner all had oversight. Many Indigenous advocacy groups have backed independent inquiries into deaths in custody and over the weekend rallies were held across the nation calling for justice for Mr White. 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Calls for external death-in-custody inquiry 'appalling'
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Calls for external death-in-custody inquiry 'appalling'

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