Australian police have shot and killed Dezi Freeman after the double-murderer spent seven months on the run.
A well-known conspiracy theorist, Freeman gunned down two police officers on his property in the small Victorian town of Porepunkah last August, before fleeing into dense bushland and evading extensive searches.
Victoria Police say a man was shot dead after an hours-long standoff at a rural property in the state's north-east on Monday morning. Chief Commissioner Mike Bush said the man is believed to be Freeman, 56, but formal identification is still underway.
Today an evil man is dead, said Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan. It's over.
Police say they surrounded a building - described as a cross between a shipping container and a long caravan - on a rural property around 5:30 local time.
After three hours and multiple police pleas, a man believed to be Freeman came outside and was shot dead.
Details are still being confirmed, Bush told reporters, but he believes Freeman emerged wrapped in a blanket and armed with a gun, possibly one taken from one of the slain officers back in August.
Our ultimate goal was to arrest the person, Bush said. There was an opportunity for him to surrender peacefully but he did not.
No officers were hurt during the operation, police said, which will be investigated as is standard in police shootings. The squad sent to Freeman's property on 26 August was there to search it over an investigation into sex offences when two senior constables - Neal Thompson and Vadim de Waart - were killed by Freeman.
Their families were the first to be told about Freeman's death, Bush said, adding that it would take 24 to 48 hours to confirm the identity of the body.
Should [his identity] be confirmed… this brings closure to what was a tragic and terrible event, he added.
Investigators believe Freeman was helped while he was on the run, and detectives will now focus on working out who gave him aid, Bush added.
It would be very difficult for him to get to where he was... without assistance, Bush said. If anyone was complicit, they will be held accountable.
In a statement on Monday, the Police Association of Victoria said Freeman's death was a step forward - but not quite closure. It doesn't lessen the trauma, give back the futures that were callously stolen or lessen the collective fear and grief that this tragic event has instilled in police and the wider public, they said.
Freeman, whose real name was Desmond Filby, was a self-described sovereign citizen, part of an anti-government movement that rejects authority and laws.
Locals in Porepunkah - an alpine tourist town beneath Mount Buffalo - said he had lived on his property with his wife and two children. After the double murder, police shut down the area, offered a A$1m (£525,000, $709,000) reward, and spent months scouring steep and rocky terrain riddled with caves and mineshafts for Freeman, who had extensive bush survival skills.
Last month, police renewed their search and brought in cadaver dogs, saying they strongly believed Freeman was dead.
Bush on Monday said there was a lot to suggest that Freeman had taken his own life, but officers had kept an open mind. He would not reveal what led police to his location.
Freeman was no stranger to run-ins with authority, his sovereign citizen beliefs well documented in online posts, videos, and court documents. Locals in Porepunkah have told media Freeman's extremist views hardened during the Covid-19 pandemic, amid government rules that were particularly strict in his state of Victoria.
He called police terrorist thugs, tried to arrest a magistrate during court proceedings and made headlines in 2021 with an attempt to have then-Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews tried for treason - a case which was thrown out.
Their deaths revived questions about how Australia deals with growing sects of anti-government conspiracy theorists - who federal police have described as a group with an underlying capacity to inspire violence. Helen Haines, the local MP for Porepunkah, said a dark cloud had hung over the town since last August and Freeman's death draws this prolonged and devastating incident to a close.



















