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Barry Thomas PASSLOW

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Barry Thomas PASSLOW

aka  Paz    aka  Busy Baz

Police Academy Class  122

New South Wales Police Force

Regd. # 14109

Rank:  Sergeant 2nd Class – retired

Stations?, Griffith ( 1970’s ), Bankstown Traffic Office,

Nowra ( 1984 + ),  Wollongong, Miranda Police Stn ( 1995 – retirement )


ServiceFrom  to  11 January 2002 = 31 years Service

Awards:  National Medal – granted 20 August 1991

1st Clasp to National Medal – granted 2 December 1995

Born:  22 January 1946

Died on:  Friday  23 October 2015

Cause:  Bowel Cancer

Age:  69

Funeral dateWednesday  4 November 2015 @ noon

Funeral location:  Memorial Gardens & Lawn Cemetery, Worrigee ( Nowra )

Buried at? TBA

 Memorial at?

 

BARRY THOMAS PASSLOW NSWPF DIED 23 OCTOBER 2015 http://www.australianpolice.com.au/barry-thomas-passlow/

BARRY THOMAS PASSLOW NSWPF DIED 23 OCTOBER 2015 http://www.australianpolice.com.au/barry-thomas-passlow/


BARRY THOMAS PASSLOW NSWPF DIED 23 OCTOBER 2015 http://www.australianpolice.com.au/barry-thomas-passlow/

AUSTRALIAN GRAND MASTER PADDLING CHAMPIONS 2010, 2011 & 2012 BARRY THOMAS PASSLOW
KNEELING ROW – SECOND FROM LEFT.

 

BARRY THOMAS PASSLOW NSWPF DIED 23 OCTOBER 2015 LIONS MEMBER http://www.australianpolice.com.au/barry-thomas-passlow/

LIONS CLUB MEMBER BARRY THOMAS PASSLOW (l) WITH PAST PRESIDENT ASHLEY STEPHENSON – 2009

 

BARRY THOMAS PASSLOW ANZAC Day - 2011

BARRY THOMAS PASSLOW
ANZAC Day – 2011

 

Balranald NSW. Anzac Day, Easter 2011, march & service. Paz the 'Bagman'. BARRY THOMAS PASSLOW NSWPF DIED 23 OCTOBER 2015 LIONS MEMBER http://www.australianpolice.com.au/barry-thomas-passlow/ Balranald NSW. Anzac Day 2011 Barry PASSLOW

Balranald NSW. Anzac Day, Easter 2011, march & service. Paz the ‘Bagman’. BARRY THOMAS PASSLOW

 

Balranald NSW. Anzac Day, Easter 2011. Luncheon at Ex Services Club. Barry & Sandra Passlow BARRY THOMAS PASSLOW NSWPF DIED 23 OCTOBER 2015 LIONS MEMBER http://www.australianpolice.com.au/barry-thomas-passlow/ Balranald NSW. Anzac Day 2011 Barry & Sandra PASSLOW

Balranald NSW. Anzac Day, Easter 2011. Luncheon at Ex Services Club. Barry & Sandra Passlow

 

BARRY THOMAS PASSLOW NSWPF DIED 23 OCTOBER 2015 LIONS MEMBER http://www.australianpolice.com.au/barry-thomas-passlow/ Balranald NSW. Anzac Day 2011 Barry PASSLOW

Balranald NSW. l-r Graham 'Spag' or 'Slatters' Comitti, John Redenbach, Barry Dean, Pat Morton, Barry Passlow, Lou Gilligan, Mick Pietsch, John Pugh, Daryl Deckert, Johnny Russell, Mick Kean. (AWOL is Col Pugh) BARRY THOMAS PASSLOW NSWPF DIED 23 OCTOBER 2015 LIONS MEMBER http://www.australianpolice.com.au/barry-thomas-passlow/ Balranald NSW. Anzac Day 2011 Barry PASSLOW THE GUARDIAN NEWSPAPER ANZAC DAY 2011

Balranald NSW. l-r Graham ‘Spag’ or ‘Slatters’ Comitti, John Redenbach, Barry Dean, Pat Morton, Barry Passlow, Lou Gilligan, Mick Pietsch, John Pugh, Daryl Deckert, Johnny Russell, Mick Kean. (AWOL is Col Pugh) BARRY THOMAS PASSLOW

 

Kyalite NSW. Dawn service Anzac Day, Easter 2011. l-r standing - Graham 'Spag' Comitti, Pat Morton, Mick Pietsch, Daryl Deckert, Barry Passlow, Lou Gilligan, Colin Pugh, John Russell, Barry Dean, Mick Kean. kneeling - Billy Moore, John Pugh. BARRY THOMAS PASSLOW NSWPF DIED 23 OCTOBER 2015 LIONS MEMBER http://www.australianpolice.com.au/barry-thomas-passlow/ Balranald NSW. Anzac Day 2011 Barry PASSLOW THE GUARDIAN NEWSPAPER ANZAC DAY 2011

Kyalite NSW. Dawn service Anzac Day, Easter 2011. l-r standing – Graham ‘Spag’ Comitti, Pat Morton, Mick Pietsch, Daryl Deckert, Barry Passlow, Lou Gilligan, Colin Pugh, John Russell, Barry Dean, Mick Kean. kneeling – Billy Moore, John Pugh. BARRY THOMAS PASSLOW

 

BARRY THOMAS PASSLOW NSWPF DIED 23 OCTOBER 2015 LIONS MEMBER http://www.australianpolice.com.au/barry-thomas-passlow/ BACON: Barry Garratty, David Willshire and Barry Passlow from the Bomaderry Lions Club cook up a storm at the Ride for Mental Illness Awareness at the North Nowra Tavern on Sunday, August 11. http://www.southcoastregister.com.au/story/1697370/gallery-ride-for-mental-illness-awareness/#slide=5

BARRY THOMAS PASSLOW
NSWPF
DIED 23 OCTOBER 2015
LIONS MEMBER
http://www.australianpolice.com.au/barry-thomas-passlow/
BACON: Barry Garratty, David Willshire and Barry Passlow from the Bomaderry Lions Club cook up a storm at the Ride for Mental Illness Awareness at the North Nowra Tavern on Sunday, August 11.
http://www.southcoastregister.com.au/story/1697370/gallery-ride-for-mental-illness-awareness/#slide=5

BARRY is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance
  *NEED MORE INFO

 

 

 Funeral location ?

FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal

I have been informed that retired Sergeant Barry Passlow, former Wollongong police, passed away today.

Further details to follow.

Barry was a member of Bomaderry Lions Club, Nowra Waterdragons club ( Dragon boats ),

Bull Terrier Attack On Heart Patient

Sydney Morning Herald

Tuesday September 17, 1991

By SANDRA HARVEY

A bull terrier dog charged and attacked a 63-year-old man as he was strolling along a South Coast beach on Monday afternoon.

The attack occurred just one day after baby Joshua Williams was mauled to death by his family’s pet bull terrier in the backyard of their North Richmond home.

In the latest attack, Mr Leonard Crane was forced to use his walking stick to fend off the dog which charged at him from 40 metres on Collingwood Beach at Jervis Bay shortly before 5.30pm.

Sergeant Barry Passlow from Nowra police said Mr Crane was not injured by the dog but was extremely distressed by the attack.

“He had recently undergone heart surgery and his doctors had said: ‘no stress’. This was just what he didn’t need,” Sergeant Passlow said.

The white bull terrier was one of two unleashed dogs which arrived on the beach with a man and a woman as Mr Crane was taking a stroll.

Sergeant Passlow said the woman called the dog off Mr Crane, but she and the man with her refused to give Mr Crane their names.

Sergeant Passlow said the dogs were supposed to be restrained on leashes and police were making inquiries to try to find the owners.

The Federal Government is expected to announce within three weeks a ban on the import of dangerous dogs.

http://www.dogleashes.com.au/dog-leashes-articles/1991/9/17/bull-terrier-attack-on-heart-patient/

 

 


Ian Andrew BIRKBECK

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 Ian Andrew BIRKBECK

aka  Birky

Queensland Police Force

Regd. # 4005642

Rank:  Sergeant

Stations?, Coomera Police Stn,  Gold Coast Road Policing Unit

ServiceFrom  to  ?

Awards:  National Medal – granted 31 July 1999

Police Long Service Medal

Flood Citation,  Cyclone Citation

Born:  14 January 1961

Died on:  27 October 2015 @ 10.30am

Cause:  Pneumonia – complicated by Cancer

Age:  54

Funeral date:  Friday  30 October 2015 @ 11am

Funeral location:  Holy Family Catholic Parish, 16 Simbai St, Runaway Bay, Qld

Buried at?TBA

 Memorial at?

 


IAN is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance
  *NEED MORE INFO

Wall to Wall - Ride for Remembrance Page Liked · Yesterday · It is with a very heavy heart I advise that Ian "Birky" Birkbeck has passed away after a brave fight against cancer. Ian had ridden as part of the official Qps Wall to Wall party since 2011 and missed this year due to illness.. He was a true friend and an absolute gentleman. He will be missed by everyone.. RIP Birky .. Bradyn Murphy QPS

 

 Funeral location


FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal

It is with a very heavy heart I advise that Ian “Birky” Birkbeck has passed away after a brave fight against cancer. Ian had ridden as part of the official Qps Wall to Wall party since 2011 and missed this year due to illness.. He was a true friend and an absolute gentleman. He will be missed by everyone.. RIP Birky .. Bradyn Murphy QPS

Thomas Wood LEONARD

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Thomas Wood LEONARD

New South Wales Police Force

Regd. # 9062

Uniform #  A 1032

Rank:  Probationary Constable from 7 February 1910

Sergeant 3rd Class – retirement

Stations?, 11 Division ( Petersham ), Central ( 1 Division ), Regent St ( 2 Division ), Balmain, Narrandera

ServiceFrom  pre 7 February 1910  to  16 June 1946 = 36 years Service ( one day prior to his 60th birthday )

AwardsImperial Service Medal – granted 25 March 1947

Born:  17 June 1886 at Wingidgeon Station, Coonamble, NSW

Died on:  10 April 1957

Cause:  Heart failure

Age:  70

Funeral date?

Funeral location?

Buried at:  Cremated

Woronora Crematorium, NSW

Location BB, Section:  Rose Garden II,  Position:  0015

 Memorial at?

Thomas Wood LEONARD - NSWPF

 

THOMAS is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance
* NOT JOB RELATED

 

 Funeral location ?

FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal

Frank Thomas BYERS

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 Frank Thomas BYERS

( late of Kings Park, NSW )

New South Wales Police Force

Regd. # 7837

Rank: Probationary Constable – appointed 27 September 1954

Senior Constable appointed 27 September 1965 – retired

Stations?, Brewarrina, Revesby – Retirement

ServiceFrom  to  7 June 1988 = 33 years Service

Awards:  Queen’s Commendation for Brace Conduct – granted 24 May 1966 ( apprehension of armed man )

Born:  6 June 1930

Died on:  Wednesday  4 November 2015

Cause?

Age:  85

Funeral date:  Monday  9 November 2015

Funeral location:  West Chapel, Pinegrove Memorial Park Cemetery & Crematorium, Minchinbury

Buried at:  Cremated

 Memorial at?

 

FRANK is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance
* NOT JOB RELATED

 

 

FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal

Frank Thomas Byers

Late of Kings Park.

Loved husband to Diana. Adored father to William, Sharryn and Leanne, Anita and Paul. Treasured Pop to Michael, Will, Daniel, Ella, Liam, Hannah, Emma and their partners and special great granddaughter, Charlotte. Will be sadly missed by all his family, extended family and many friends.

Relatives and friends of Frank are warmly invited to attend his Funeral Service in the West Chapel, Pinegrove Crematorium, Kington Street (off the Great Western Highway), Minchinbury on Monday 9th November, 2015  commencing at 1:30pm.

http://www.hillsfamilyfunerals.com.au/tribute/frank-thomas-byers/

 

The Canberra Times     Wednesday  25 May 1966   p14 of 34

Policemen, citizen cited for bravery

SYDNEY, Tuesday. — Four policemen from country areas in NSW and one citizen from Robertson have been awarded the Queen’s commendation for brave conduct.

The awards were announced today by the Governor of NSW, Sir Roden Cutler.

Sergeant John Francis Stanley, Bathurst, was awarded the commendation for dealing with an emotionally disturbed man in possession of two loaded pistols and a .303 rifle.

He went to the man’s home and was forced to stand up against a hallway with the weapons pointed at him.

Sergeant Stanley struggled with the man and managed to disarm him.

Train crash

Sergeant Leonard George Valentine Jenkins and Mr Henry Edward John Donovan, of Robertson, risked their lives to save the crew of a locomotive which had crashed while hauling a number of petrol tankers.

Hundreds of gallons of petrol had escaped from the fuel tankers, creating extreme danger of explosion and fire.

Both men extinguished a fire burning adjacent to the locomotive, directly under a large fuel tanker.

 

Senior Constable Frank Thomas Byers and Constable Robert Reginald Lidden, both of Brewarrina, posing as kangaroo shooters, overcame a man who was armed with a shotgun and a .22 repeater rifle.

The man was later sentenced to twelve years hard labour on a charge of wounding another man with intent to murder.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/131774756

 

Alan James McLEAN

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Alan James McLEAN 

New South Wales Police Force

Regd. # 9038

Rank:  Sergeant 3rd Class – appointed on 24 August 1973

Senior Sergeant – retired

Stations:  , Sydney Traffic Patrol ( STP ), Central Police Stn ( 1 Division ), Kiama, Moruya, Boorowa, Culcairn, Bega & Narrandera ( Patrol Tactician ) – Retirement

ServiceFrom  30 June 1958  to  21 October 1989 = 31+ years Service

Awards:  National Medal – granted 3 September 1985

1st Clasp to National Medal – granted also on 3 September 1985

NSW Police Medal & Clasps

National Police Service Medal – granted 8 October 2015

Born:  21 October 1938

Died on:  Thursday  12 November 2015

Cause:  Cancer – diagnosed only 3 months ago

Age:  77

Funeral date:  Tuesday  17 November 2015 @ 12.30pm

Funeral location:  St Peter and Pauls Catholic Church, 92 Manning St, Kiama

Buried at:  Kiama Cemetery, Princes Hwy, Bombo, NSW

 Memorial at?

 

 

Alan McLEAN

Alan McLEAN


ALAN is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance
* NOT JOB RELATED

 

 Funeral location


FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal

Alan lost his life after a short battle with cancer.  He is survived by his wife Veronica, two daughter, Jenny & Maree and two sons – serving officers with NSWPF, Anthony & Michael.

May Alan forever Rest In Peace.

Isaac Thomas PARSONS

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Isaac Thomas PARSONS 

aka  Buddy

New South Wales Police Force – NON Sworn

Regd. # ?

Rank:  Aboriginal Community Liaison Officer  ( A.C.L.O. )

Stations:  Brewarrina & Dareton only

ServiceFrom  ? ? 1990  to  ?

Awards?

Born2 October 1945

Died on:  Tuesday  10 November 2015 at Buronga, NSW.

Cause:  Illness = Cancer

Age:  70

Funeral date:  Friday  20 November 2015 @ 11am

Funeral location:  Uniting Church-Churches of Christ and Indigenous Ministry, 61-69 Sturt Place, Dareton

Buried at:  Moonahculla Cemetery, Deniliquin on Monday 23 November 2015 @ 11am.

 Memorial at?

Buddy received this 22 year award in 2012

Buddy received this 22 year award in 2012

 

 

 Funeral location


FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal

PARSONS, Buddy (Isaac Thomas) –

Passed away at Buronga, New South Wales, on Tuesday, November 10, 2015.

Age 70 years.

Loved husband of Nina. Loved former husband of Yvonne. Loving father of Bradley, Warren, Lorraine, Kerry, Jason, Damion, Isaac, Katina, Scott and Adam. Father-in-law to Merv, Jon and Briana. Grandfather and great grandfather of their families. Son of Royce Hilton Parsons and Ivy June Handy. Brother, brother-in-law, uncle, nephew and friend of many.

A funeral service for Isaac will be held at the Uniting Church-Churches of Christ and Indigenous Ministry, 61-69 Sturt Place, Dareton, on Friday, November 20, 2015,
at 11am.

Burial and Service will take place at the Moonahculla Cemetery, Deniliquin, on Monday, November 23, 2015, at 11am.

14/11/2015  –  DEATH NOTICES

http://displayclassifieds.fairfaxrural.com.au/ad/list/119?pub_list=169

 

Buddy got this 22 year award in 2012 so he must have started work in 1990. He was stationed at Brewarrina and Dareton only. He was born on 2/10/1945. ACLO’s started off as Ministerial Employees but are apparently now Public Servants as a job is advertised at Bre with a Clerk Grade 3/4. He died from Cancer.

Sydney GALLAGHER

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Sydney GALLAGHER 

Victoria Police Force

Regd. # vp16140

Rank:  Senior Sergeant – retired

Stations?, Moorabbin ( O.I.C. ), Southern Metro Region ( formerly Region 5 South East )

ServiceFrom  to  ?

Awards?

Born?

Died on:  Tuesday  10 November 2015

Cause:  Illness = ?

Age:  65

Funeral date:  Wednesday  18 November 2015 @ 11am

Funeral location:  St Joseph’s Catholic Church, Station St, Chelsea, Victoria

Buried at:  Cremated

 Memorial at?

2012

2012


SYD is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance
  *NEED MORE INFO

 

 

 Funeral location


FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal

GALLAGHER.
Funeral Prayers for the repose of the soul of Mr Syd Gallagher will be held in St Joseph’s Catholic Church, Station St, Chelsea on WEDNESDAY (Nov. 18, 2015) at 11 a. m.
Private Cremation
No flowers by request, donations in lieu to the Alfred Hospital would be appreciated. Envelopes available at the Church.
Funerals
Published in Herald Sun on 13/11/2015

– See more at: http://tributes.heraldsun.com.au/notice/220342019/view

Syd was also a Retired Ambulance Attendant at Paramedic Services, Victoria.

VALE
Syd Gallagher

It is with sadness that we advise the passing of retired member Syd Gallagher following an illness.

The Executive of the AEA-V, on behalf of its members, wish to express their sincere sympathy to Syd’s wife Chris, his family, friends and colleagues.

Syd was a member in the Private Sector and worked for PSV. He was also the OH&S Rep at PSV and worked tirelessly to improve working conditions.

Syd mentioned in his resignation letter to the Union upon his retirement that he had been a union member for his entire working life and strongly believed in the protection and improvement of workers welfare, conditions and industrial rights.

He will be sadly missed.

 

signature-steve-mcghie
Steve McGhie
General Secretary

http://www.ambulanceactive.com.au/av-state-025-vale-syd-gallagher/

 

GALLAGHER. Syd. Passed away peacefully on Nov. 10, 2015, aged 65 years. Darling husband and mate of Chris, loving and devoted father of Beth and Bridget. Love Forever The most perfectly perfect Dad. We love you to bits and we miss you so much. Neddy and Chicken.

Published in Herald Sun on 13/11/2015


GALLAGHER. Syd. The Executive and staff of the AEA are deeply saddened by the passing of their highly esteemed retired member and offer their most sincere condolences to his family, friends and colleagues. Rest In Peace

Published in Herald Sun on 17/11/2015

GALLAGHER. Syd. A Life Member of the Triumph Car Club of Victoria. Your friendship and knowledge will be missed by all. Heartfelt condolences to Chris, Beth and Bridget.

Published in Herald Sun on 17/11/2015

GALLAGHER. Syd. It’s with sadness we learned of Syd’s passing. He will long be remembered as the former Officer in Charge at Moorabbin whose sense of humour and wit amused so many. Condolences to Chris, Beth and Bridget.

Published in Herald Sun on 14/11/2015


GALLAGHER. Senior Sergeant Sydney vp16140 (Retired) On behalf of all Victoria Police Southern Metro Region staff and what was formerly Region 5 South East, express heartfelt condolences to Chris, Beth, Bridgette and family with Syd’s passing. A life devoted to commitment and service by a much respected work colleague and valued friend.

Published in Herald Sun on 14/11/2015


GALLAGHER. Syd. An active Triumph car enthusiast. He will be missed by all his friends at TEG. We will remember him always. Triumph Enthusiasts Guild.

Published in Herald Sun on 14/11/2015


GALLAGHER. Syd. Friend and confidant of our family for 30 years. Will be sadly missed both on and off the golf course. A true gentleman The Bushby family.
Published in Herald Sun on 13/11/2015

http://tributes.dailytelegraph.com.au/notice/221182028/view

Syd was also an avid Triumph Enthusiast and wrote the attached article:

Robert Edward CROWELL

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Robert Edward CROWELL – APM

aka  Bob   aka  Crasher

Northern Territory Police Force

Regd. # 156

Rank:  Senior Constable –

Stations?

ServiceFrom  31 October 1961  to  29 November 1995 = 34+ years Service

NASHOS

Service name:                Army 

Service number:           4/709064

Rank:                                Private

Date of birth:                 30 11 1935

Place of birth:                unknown

Date of intake:               1955

NS Training:                   11 N S T Battalion

Followup Training:      CMF Camps

Basic Training:              Wacol Qld

Next of Kin:                    Mr & Mrs Crowell

Medals                           ADM / ANSM

Police Awards:  National Medal – granted 22 September 1987

Australian Police Medal ( APM ) – granted 14 June 1993

Born:  30 November 1935

Died on:  Monday  16 November 2015

Cause?

Age:  79

Funeral date?

Funeral location?

Buried at?

 Memorial at?

 

Bob CROWELL

Bob is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance
  *NEED MORE INFO

 

 

 Funeral location ?

FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal

Robert Edward `Crasher’

Robert Edward ‘Crasher’ Crowell APM
30.11.1935 – 16.11.2015
Senior Constable Reg. No. 156
NT Police Force 31/10/1961 – 29/11/1995
The President, Committee and Members of the Retired Police Association of the Northern Territory extend their deepest sympathy to Crasher’s family, former colleagues and friends
May He Rest in Peace
Obituaries
Published in NT News on 19/11/2015

– See more at: http://tributes.dailytelegraph.com.au/notice/220722039/view

Senior Constable Robert `Crasher’

Senior Constable Robert ‘Crasher’ Crowell APM
30.11.1935 – 16.11.2015
Member of the NT Police Force  31.10.1961 – 29.11.1995
The President, Executive and Members of the Northern Territory Police Association express their condolences to Crasher’s family, friends and colleagues on their loss. Our thoughts are with you at this sad time.
Obituaries
Published in NT News on 20/11/2015

– See more at: http://tributes.dailytelegraph.com.au/notice/214892053/view

BOB “Crasher” CROWELL

BOB ”Crasher” CROWELL
Australian Police Medal recipient
We regret the passing of Retired Legendary Motor Cycle NT Policeman and dear family friend of the McMahon family.
We will miss our Friday nights attempts of sorting out the world’s problems.
Our deepest sympathy to all of the Crowell family from the McMahon family. Christmas days will never be the same.
Obituaries
Published in NT News on 19/11/2015

– See more at: http://tributes.dailytelegraph.com.au/notice/220722038/view

VALE
ROBERT EDWARD CROWELL  ”CRASH”
30.11.1935 – 16.11.2015
Our brother and dear friend has left us
R. I. P Old Mate
A life well lived
Remembered by his mates in Death Row
Macka, Nigel, Dave, Chinny, Theo, Scotty and Laurie
Obituaries
Published in NT News on 18/11/2015

– See more at: http://tributes.ntnews.com.au/notice/221372020

ROBERT EDWARD CROWELL
30.11.1935 – 16.11.2015
Rest in peace June and Greg
Obituaries
Published in NT News on 18/11/2015

– See more at: http://tributes.ntnews.com.au/notice/219852013


Ernest Robert DAY

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 Ernest Robert DAY

aka  Bob

New South Wales Police Force

Joined NSW Police Force via NSW Police Cadet system on 26 May 1941

Cadet #  334

Regd. # 4811

Rank: Probationary Constable – appointed 19 November 1945

Senior Inspector – appointed 28 August 1978

Assistant Commissioner ( Crime ) – retirement

Stations?

Former President & Life Member of RPA.

ServiceFrom  26 May 1941  to  22 May 1985 = 43+ years Service ( 4 days short of 44 years )

Awards?

Born:  23 May 1925

Died on:  Sunday  22 November 2015

Cause?

Age:  90

Funeral date:  Monday  30 November 2015 @ 11.30am

Funeral location:  Camellia Chapel, Macquarie Park Cemetery and Crematorium, Plassey Road, North Ryde

Buried at?

 Memorial at?

 

NSW POLICE CADET ERNEST ROBERT DAY

NSW POLICE CADET ERNEST ROBERT DAY

ERNEST ROBERT DAY

BOB is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance
* NOT JOB RELATED

 

 Funeral location ?TBA

FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal

Further information to follow when obtained.

Cal

23 November 2015

Despite the Official Police email stating that “Records indicate that Assistant Commissioner Day was performing duty as the Assistant Commissioner, Crime at the time of his retirement on 22 May 1985, completing 39 years service with NSW Police“is incorrect as other records show him starting as a NSW Police Cadet, starting at the Academy on the 26 May 1941 and finishing, upon Retirement, on 22 May 1985.  4 days short of 44 years Service.

John Benone ROSS

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 John Benone ROSS

( late of Willoughby and Balmain )

New South Wales Police Force

Sarah Ann ROSS – wife of John

Died on:  24 April 1885 ( 10 days after her husband )

Funeral date:  Sunday  26 April 1885

Regd. # ?

Rank:  Senior Constable

Stations?, Balmain ( during 1879 ), North Willoughby Station ( O.I.C. during 1884)

ServiceFrom  to  14 April 1885

Awards?

Born? ? ?, Caithness,   Scotland

Died on:  Tuesday  14 April 1885 at Police residence, Chatswood Police Stn, North Willoughby

Cause:  Typhoid Fever as did his wife Sarah 10 days later aged 30 and their infant daughter Sarah aged 1

Age:  32

Funeral date:  Wednesday  15 April 1885

Funeral location?

Buried at:  Pioneer Memorial Cemetery, corner Mowbray Road West and Pacific Highway, Chatswood. (opposite the Great Northern Hotel)

 Memorial at?

In Memory of Senior Constable John B. Ross  Died 14th April 1885 aged 32.  Also Sarah Ann, Wife of the above.  Died 24th April 1885 aged 30.  Also infant child Sarah.  Erected by his comrades & friends.


JOHN is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance
  *NEED MORE INFO

 

 

 Funeral location ?

FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal

NSW Fallen Police FB Group:

Grave discovered, on line, by Kevin Banister whilst doing other research on 23 November 2015.

From Linda Woods:  His funeral notice states that he had 5 children! I found his wife’s notice but no mention of an infant daughter around that time.

The Sydney Morning Herald          Wednesday  15 April 1885       P 1 of 16

ROSS. – April 14, at his residence, Police Station, North WilloughbyJohn Binnone Ross, aged 33 years, native of Caithness, Scotland, leaving a wife and five children and large circle of friends to mourn their loss.

ROSS. – April 14, at the Police Station, North Willoughby, Senior-constable John Ross ( late of Balmain ), leaving a wife and five children to mourn their loss.

In Memoriam.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/13579970

The Sydney Morning Herald          Wednesday  15 April 1885       P 16 of 16

THE FRIENDS of the late Mr. JOHN B. ROSS are respectfully invited to his Funeral ; to leave his residence, Lane Cove-road, THIS DAY Wednesday, at 3 o’clock, for the Wesleyan Cemetery, Willoughby.

W. H. HOWARD, Undertaker, Walker-street, St. Leonards.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/13579996

 

 

Balmain Observer & Western Suburbs Advertiser     Saturday  18 April 1885     P 3 of 4

Senior Constable Ross, well known in Balmain about four years ago and lately in charge of North Willoughby, died on Monday night, from, consumption.

It will be remembered that he made a very plucky rescue of two men from a well in the neighbourhood of Beattie street, in which was foul air while he was stationed in Balmain, the effects of which he has since suffered from.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/132245368

 

 

The Sydney Morning Herald        Saturday  25 April 1885       P 20 of 20

THE FRIENDS of the late Mrs. ROSS, widow of the late Senior-constable Ross, of Chatswood, are respectfully invited to attend her Funeral ; to leave her residence at 3 o’clock TO-MORROW, Sunday, for Wesleyan Cemetery.

W. H. HOWARD, Undertaker, Walker-street, St. Leonards.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/28361297

 

 

 

 

 

The Sydney Morning Herald          Saturday  30 May 1885       P 5 of 24

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW SOUTH WALES.

Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction.

In the Intestate Estate of JOHN B. ROSS, late of Willoughby, Senior Constable, deceased.

CREDITORS are to forward to me ( through the Post Office if they think fit ), at my office, in the Supreme Court, Sydney, their details for proof, verified by affidavit, on or before the fifteenth day of June next, or they will be excluded from all benefit from this estate.

THEO. POWELL,

Curator of Intestate Estates.

30th May, 1885.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/28362085

 

 

The Sydney Morning Herald          Saturday  1 May 1886       P 1 of 24

ROSS.— In remembrance of John Ross, who died April 13, 1885 and Sarah Ann Ross, wife of the above, who died May 1st,

1885, at their residence, Chatswood police station, North Willoughby.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/28356899

 


‘Balmain Association’ newsletter dated April 2001.

P o l i c e H e r o i c R e s c u e
A letter from Mrs Meg Chamberlin formally of Ferdinand Street, Balmain and now of Macley Island, Queensland, stated that some information on her family history could be of interest to the Association. While cleaning out a draw on a visit to her mother at the family home, a letter was found with an interesting PS, relating to a presentation of a gold watch to Constable John Benone Ross in 1879.

Constable Ross was stationed at the Watch House from 1879 to 1882 and lived in Darling Street, Rozelle, near Red Lion Street. He then moved to Chatswood where he, his wife Sarah Ann and a child died within a few days of each other in a Typhoid epidemic in April 1885. John was 32 years and Sarah was 30 years and daughter Sarah 1 year. They were buried in the church yard of the Methodist Church, Chatswood. Comrades and friends erected the headstone. Grandmother Sarah Ann Robinson reared the other four children.

In a report in the Sydney Morning Herald, Tuesday 21″ April 1879:

On Friday morning a man named Albert Drave was nearly suffocated by descending into a newly dug well 25 feet deep behind the Bellevue, now Sackville Hotel, Darling Street. A blast had just taken place at the bottom of the well and the smoke not having thoroughly cleared way before Drave descended, he was almost suffocated when he reached the bottom. His distress having been noticed by the proprietor of the allotment Mr Barthrope, he at once descended to retrieve Drave, but he was likewise became overpowered by the fumes of the powder. Constable Ross being near the spot, volunteered to descend and succeeded in bringing up to the surface first Drave, then Barthrope. Drs. Brennan and Evans were quickly on the spot and industriously applied the usual restoratives. Both men are doing well at the latest accounts.

Another lengthy report was in the SMH Tuesday 3″ June 1879:

On the presentation of the gold watch and chain and an address as an acknowledgement of Constable Ross, intrepid conduct rescuing two persons at the risk of his own life. Three cheers were given by the 50 residents attended the Balmain Council Chambers for the presentation.

The inscription: Presented to Constable John Benoni Ross by the inhabitants of Balmain, in admiration of his heroic conduct in rescuing two lives at a well accident, 18 April 1879. Balmain 2 June 1879.

A letter from the Inspector General of Police was noted at the 27 June 1879, Balmain Council meeting, having reference to the gallant conduct of Constable Ross at the recent well accident.
The watch remains in the Ross family treasures.

Goulburn Evening Penny Post ( NSW )      Saturday  26 April 1884    p 4 of 10

Suspicious Death.

ON Wednesday evening Senior-constable Ross, who is in charge of the North Willoughby station, received intelligence from a man named Henby that a death under suspicious circumstances had taken place in the district. He accordingly proceeded to a house near Burn’s Bay, Lane Cove Road, occupied by William Cox, who is stated to be an old resident of the district. In one of the rooms was found the body of Ann Sophia Cox in bed, looking to all appearance dead.

Dr. Rorke, of North Shore, was at once communicated with. He soon arrived, and expressed an opinion that deceased had probably met with her death in consequence of external injuries. The only female clothes in the house beyond those found on the woman were a chemise and another garment, both of which were stained with blood.

Under the circumstances the constable apprehended William Cox, the husband of the deceased, at a late hour last night, and he his now lodged at the St. Leonards police station.

Upon being questioned as to the occurrence the prisoner declared that he knew nothing of the cause of his wife’s death beyond that she had sustained a fall, and expressed ignorance concerning the garment stained with blood. It appears that Cox informed Henby of the death of the woman in the first place.

The police state that prisoner has been often seen of late under the influence of drink, and his domestic matters did not seem to have been of a happy character. He is described as of no occupation.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/98435914

 

 

 

Daniel Arthur STILLER

$
0
0

Daniel Arthur STILLER

aka  Dan

Queensland Police Force

Regd. # ?

Rank:  Sergeant

StationsHendra Police Station before transferring to South Brisbane Traffic as a Senior Constable.

2007 Dan was promoted to the rank of Sergeant and transferred to the Oxley District Division Traffic Branch, working out of Mount Ommaney Police Station – HWP Cyclist

ServiceFrom  ? ? 2002  to  1 December 2010

New South Wales Police Force

Regd. # ?

Rank?

Stations?

ServiceFrom  ? ? 1977  to  ? ? 1981 = 4 years Service with NSW Police force

Awards:  Queensland Police Service medal – posthumously

Queensland Police Service Award for Meritorious Service – posthumously

Born:  6 January 1977

Died on:  Wednesday  1 December 2010

Death location:  Bruce Hwy, approximately 15km south of Mt Larcom, Qld

Cause:  Motor cycle collision – rider -v- jacknifing semi trailer

Age:  33

Funeral date:  Thursday  9 December 2010 @ 10.30a,

Funeral location:  St Peter Chanel Catholic Church, Chaprowe Roadn  The Gap

Buried at:  Settlement Road, and on to a private interment

 Memorial at:  Sergeant Dan Stiller Memorial Reserve, Heathwood, 4110. Stapylton, Johnson & Paradise Rd & Logan Motorway, Qld

Lat: -27.6425
Long: 152.986389
Note: GPS Coordinates are approximate.

Sergeant Dan Stiller died when his motorcycle was struck by a truck.

Sergeant Dan Stiller died when his motorcycle was struck by a truck.

 

Dan STILLER - QPOL - Killed 1 December 2005

 

DAN IS mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance

Details of Death:

On 30th November 2010 Sergeant Stiller departed Brisbane on escort duty with another officer, escorting an oversized load from Brisbane, destined for Rockhampton in central Queensland. Sergeant Stiller was riding a Qld Police Service motorcycle and the other officer was in a marked police sedan. That afternoon they rested at Miriam Vale over night and recommenced at 6am on 1st December 2010. In this escort, Sergeant Stiller was the lead escort, behind a pilot vehicle which was approximately 500 metres in front, and the police sedan was to the rear of Sergeant Stiller. Approximately 15 kilometres south of Mt Larcom on the Bruce Highway, in heavy rain, at 7am on 1st December 2010 three articulated vehicles were travelling south and were advised by the pilot of the load travelling north that there was an oversized load ahead, and to pull to the side of the road to make room. In doing so one of the articulated vehicles, whilst braking, lost control of the vehicle, causing it to ‘jack knife’, and travel onto the incorrect side of the road. The articulated vehicle collided head on with Sergeant Stiller, who was travelling in the centre of the northbound lane. Sergeant Stiller was killed instantly as a result of the impact. Sergeant Stiller has been posthumously awarded the Queensland Police Service Medal and the QPS Award for Meritorious Service.


 

 Funeral location ?

FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal

Police officer killed while escorting wide load

Date
Cameron Atfield
A police officer has been killed while escorting an oversized truck along the Bruce Highway in central Queensland.

Sergeant Dan Stiller, 33, was killed when the motorcycle he was riding was struck by a truck on the highway about 15 kilometres south of Mount Larcom at about 7am.

The crash closed the highway in both directions near Mount Larcom for more than five hours.

Deputy Commissioner Ross Barnett said it appeared the truck jack-knifed before it hit Sergeant Stiller, who was escorting a wide load and convoy along the Bruce Highway.

‘‘The tragic loss of a young promising officer of Sergeant Stiller’s calibre will be felt right throughout the organisation, particularly among those who were fortunate enough to work with him,’’ he said.

Mr Barnett said another police officer, in a police sedan, was also involved in the wide load escort but that officer was not injured.

Sergeant Stiller’s wife, also a police officer, was ‘‘naturally devastated’’ and was receiving the support of her colleagues and close friends, Mr Barnett said.

Premier Anna Bligh said Sergeant Stiller’s death was a ‘‘tragic reminder’’ that police put their lives on the line every day.

“Our thoughts, my thoughts, and think those of all Queenslanders are with his family. This is a very sad day for them,’’ she said.

“It’s also a very sad day for the police service. It’s been almost four years … since we’ve seen a Queensland police officer lose their life in the course of their duties.

Opposition leader John-Paul Langbroek also paid tribute to Sergeant Stiller.“This is a very sad day for our state’s police service and our greater Queensland community,” he said.

“I know each day that every one of Queensland’s 10,702 police officers go to work, they work in challenging and sometimes dangerous situations.’’

Police will prepare a report for the coroner.

The 33-year-old sergeant, originally from New South Wales, was an officer with the Oxley District Traffic Branch. Police are investigating the death of their colleague.

The investigating will be overviewed by the Ethical Standards Command.

11 comments so far

  • To my mate Dan,
    You were a great guy, an excellent policeman and will be truly missed.

    My condolences to your lovely wife Julie and your family.

    Commenter
    Ben G
    Location
    Sydney
    Date and time
    December 01, 2010, 2:06PM
  • My deepest condolences to his family. I am very very sorry for your loss.

    Commenter
    Marie
    Location
    Brisbane
    Date and time
    December 01, 2010, 2:22PM
  • My deepest sympathies go out to this young man’s family and friends. My respect and condolences go to all his brothers and sisters in the force.

    Commenter
    Roy
    Location
    Brisbane
    Date and time
    December 01, 2010, 2:56PM
  • Dan. Incredibly sad to hear this news, you were a great guy and I will always remember your smile. Condolences to Julie and Dans family.

    Commenter
    Steven Cooper
    Location
    Melbourne
    Date and time
    December 01, 2010, 3:18PM
  • Proud to have served with Dan in NSWPF, a friendly, lovely, smiling man taken from this world too soon. Our thoughts are with his family and friends. xoxo

    Commenter
    Kate Y
    Location
    Sydney
    Date and time
    December 01, 2010, 4:10PM
  • My Deepest sympathies to those who have lost a loved one, while serving the community.
    Something must be done about the way these extra wide loads are allowed to travel at high speed along the highways. The escort system and rules are NOW Broken and Inadequate. Attitude seems to be anything goes as long as there is an escort. As a regular car driver on the Burnett and D’Aguilar highways, I have often seen very close calls several times as the escorts often do not give enough warning to oncoming vehicles for a heavy load that now often spreads across the two lanes , travelling at maximum legal speed. The loads seem to be getting wider and larger and more frequent with all the huge mining plant being shipped to and from Central Qld mines.
    I was almost unable to pull up recently travelling north at Collinton, almost running into the bridge as I tried to avoid a large load, with an escort barely 100m in front of it. If I had been in a semi, I or the escort most likely would not be here. The wide load was simply going too fast downhill to be safe.
    Most escorts do a fine job, but the loads are just getting too big and fast to be safely controlled, in all circumstances. Cars can pull up safely, but heavy vehicles coming in opposite direction must often have difficulty stopping and getting off the road.

    Commenter
    Vini Vidi
    Location
    Queensland
    Date and time
    December 01, 2010, 4:57PM
  • Such a tragic loss of a great police officer and all round good bloke. Dan, I’m proud to have called you a colleague and friend. My thoughts and prayers are with your family and friends. You will live on in our hearts.

    Commenter
    Refidex
    Location
    Queensland
    Date and time
    December 01, 2010, 5:22PM
  • The military and emergency services are two of few workplaces in this country where families and colleagues send their loved ones and mates out to the job with a greater fear that they will not return safely than most of us can understand. You have my profound thanks and my deepest respect.

    Commenter
    Les Hawken
    Location
    Melbourne
    Date and time
    December 01, 2010, 6:36PM
  • a terrible loss that should have been avoided. why was a motorcycle doing this duty with the poor weather we have been experiencing lately. these wide load escorts are normally two pilot vehicles and three patrol cars. also in this weather the shoulder on most central queensland roads is far too soft to move a semi trailer off the bitumen onto grass where they get stuck as has happened on the beef road recently and had to get towed back onto the road by the prime mover pulling the wide load. not really an acceptable situation. who would have accepted responsibility if the the semi had tipped over in the mud.

    Commenter
    andrew
    Location
    brisbane
    Date and time
    December 01, 2010, 7:47PM
  • The Police Force has lost another great Officer. Dan, you gave us plenty of laughs and you will be missed. NSW Police Force Class 272 – Delta (PREP of 1997) will always remember you. Our thoughts are with your wife, family, and friends. Rest easy now mate, your shift is done. We’ll take it from here.

    Commenter
    Rebecca C
    Location
    Wollongong NSW
    Date and time
    December 02, 2010, 8:53PM

 

Rest in Peace my mate Sgt Dan Stiller. You will never ever be forgotten. A great Police Officer. A great Highway Patrol Officer. A true professional in every way. A loving husband that will be truly missed. My thoughts and prayers are with Julie, both families, your QPS mates and your NSWPF mates. I am shattered. Till we meet again.

Commenter
Dean L
Location
NSW
Date and time
December 03, 2010, 12:16AM

 

 

 

 

 

This has been issued to all media on behalf of Sergeant Dan Stiller’s wife, Julie;

 A born and bred Brisbane-boy, Dan Stiller grew up knowing one day he would be able to combine his love of motorbikes with his job. In 2007, after 10 years as a police officer, he did just that when he was promoted to a Sergeant at the Oxley District Traffic branch.

On Wednesday December 1, Sergeant Dan Stiller paid the ultimate sacrifice doing what he loved.

 

Dan Stiller was born on January 6, 1977 in Brisbane to a large family. 

An exceptional swimmer, Dan still holds the swimming record at Nundah Primary School – something he continued to boast about even as an adult – and received a scholarship to Nudgee College because of his swimming talents.

Growing up, Dan knew he wanted to become a police officer, and in 1997 he was accepted by the New South Wales Police Force, where he served for four years before applying and being accepted to the Queensland Police Service.

On graduating into the QPS in 2002, Dan served at the Hendra Police Station before transferring to South Brisbane Traffic. In 2007 Dan was promoted to the rank of Sergeant and transferred to the Oxley District Division Traffic Branch, working out of Mount Ommaney Police Station.

I can still recall the first time we met, which was during orientation at the Hendra Police Station.  I saw him across the room and I was immediately attracted to him. 

It wasn’t long after that we were sharing our first motorbike together, and we have been inseparable since. We married on August 9 2008. Coming from a large family, Dan was ecstatic on hearing that he was going to be a dad. 

No words aptly describe Dan. He was a fun person, extremely loving and caring and had a fabulous sense of humour. 

His quirks and comments made me laugh. He was capable of making anyone laugh or feel better on a down day, and I learnt very early in our relationship that he was just as beautiful on the inside as he was  on the outside. 

 

Queensland Police Service Our apologies to those who commented on this previously. We’ve had a technical hitch, and had to repost it, which means your comments were lost.

Gary Anthony Hiles

Gary Anthony Hiles As a member of the Oxley District Traffic Branch, I am very proud to say that I knew Dan and can say that he was an outstanding Police Officer. He was professional, knowledgeable and helpful. He died doing what he loved and has left a hole in our office. You will never be forgotten. Rest in peace mate.

Orson Milligan
Di Mills
Nikki Bee

Nikki Bee What beautiful words! He was obviously loved! Condolences to his wife, family and the force!

Miche Maraea

Miche Maraea I have a large family myself, so I can acutely imagine their loss and how it is to be without one of your own, especially during this festive season! I wish his entire family peace and love!

Taleah Richters
Jason Saunders
Jason Saunders he may be gone but will never be forgotten.
my condolences to his family and fellow officers
Chloe Kavanagh

Chloe Kavanagh He looks so happy in that photo, what a great police officer.He will be missed by all.

Tia Paget

Tia Paget how sad its not fair

John Marks

John Marks I am a Police Officer too and will never forget that feeling when I knew what I was heading out to that morning. My sincerest heartfelt condolences go out to Dan’s family, friends & colleagues. RIP Sgt Dan STILLER.

Shane Drew

Shane Drew I’m so sorry to hear this. Condolances to his immediate family, and also his police family. Please take care…

John Marks
Jenelle Reghenzani

Jenelle Reghenzani So so sad what a fine young man to loose his life at such a young age…….RIP and my sincere condolences to his family. May god look over you and protect you in this sad time! I have so much respect for the QPS they have helped me over the years in some very hard times and I truly appreciate their dedication and hard work!

Roxy-lee Hodges

Roxy-lee Hodges goodbye so so sad just doing your job i really feel for your wife and family be a policeman in heaven now r.i.p

Barbara Ann Johnston

Barbara Ann Johnston My heartfelt sympathy to Dan Stillers family and loved ones and work mates. Carry on and live with the pride and happy memories of life shared with him…. as i am sure he would want you to do. Sometimes a loved one is taken from us way too early, but the love in our hearts and the happy memories, nothing or no one can ever take away. RIP young man…. another QPS HERO

David Wicks

David Wicks My thoughts are with his family. Yet another life lost doing a thankless motorcycle officers job. RIP. To the others still riding – be safe.

Desmond Goulding

Desmond Goulding May God Bless you and your family RIP

Vicki Lee

Vicki Lee the tears in your eyes can be wiped away but may the love in your hearts always stay…sincerest condolences to all Dan’s family, friends and colleagues, a special heartfelt one to his wife and unborn child. xo

Jack McRuff

Jack McRuff Vale Sgt. Stiller. You served, when others could not. May you live long in Heaven.

Lisa Richards

Lisa Richards Heart breaking for all involved. reading those beautiful words you can feel the love they shared for each other. im sure their child will bring joy and love to sgt stillers wife and their family. Taken way to soon. RIP SGT DAN STILLER

Tanya Cashin

Tanya Cashin My thoughts are with you Julie and Dan’s family. He truly was a lovely man who will be greatly missed. RIP Dan.x

Lisa Rosier

Lisa Rosier Heartfelt condolences to Dan’s wife and his family both personal and professional. Dan has crossed over to the other side where he watches over his loved ones and waits to guide them on their journey to the other side.

Cheryl Wk
Cheryl Wk it is always heart breaking when we lose one of our finest.
Julie, you will be able to tell your little one that their daddy was the best. Condolences to you and Sgt Stiller’s family,his friends and colleagues.
Lou Lou Black

Lou Lou Black RIP Baby Dan, thoughtts are with Julie and yr family xoxoxo

Barbara Stone

Barbara Stone Sgt Dan Stiller will always be remembered with pride and love. He was certainly taken too soon. My thoughts and prayers are with the Stiller family, their colleagues and friends at this very sad time.

Christopher Stokes
Rob Woodman

Rob Woodman Sgt STILLERs family can take pride from the fact he was”ä good bloke” and devoted family man. condolences to his family and friends.

Sam Harrison

Sam Harrison frown emoticon. Everything that can be said, has.

Catherine Shrimp
Sandy Duvall
Carrie Davidson

Carrie Davidson Julie…words cannot describe how sorry I am for your loss. My thoughts are with you and Dan’s family, friends and collegues. The Police service will not be the same without him.

Sharon Miller

Sharon Miller Very very sad. My thoughts and prayers are with his family.

Stephen Bottom

Stephen Bottom why dose it take something like this for us all to realize how much police do for us . Don’ t wait, If you see a cop , just say thanks.

Elle Oz

Elle Oz Dan – The Man!!!! Remember……..Oh I really couldn’t believe it when I turned on the TV that day, I still can’t believe it. You were always the life of the class with that smile that lighted up any room. I am so proud to have gone through the NSWPOL Academy with you it is yet another tragedy where a great Police Officer was once again taken from us. I will be thinking of you this Thursday as I attend the Remembreance Day Parade here in Townsville I will be thinking of you, Glen and Pete xo

Tim Rob

Tim Rob The Dan Stiller Reserve is a fitting monument to this man. If you don’t know where it is, Google it and visit it! If you love bird watching, 105 species have been seen there in the last year or so. No facilities and unfortunately the reserve is over-run by morons on trail bikes during the weekend, but it is one of the special places of Brisbane, wild yet accessible.

Tim Rob

Tim Rob Some complete moron(s) has/have destroyed the memorial. I dont have words – well polite ones anyway – to describe what I think about these idiots. This is a senseless act of vandalism that demonstrates just how moronic they are. If you destroyed the memorial and are reading this then please know that any reasonable person thinks that you are a complete f-wit.

Maria Markos

Maria Markos Thoughts are with his loved ones, mates and colleagues today. Lest We Forget.

Jillian Oliver
Jillian OliverI had the honour to work with Dan when he first started. He was a great officer and great person. It was a highlight to be working the truck with him. I valued his friendship and think of him often. My prayers and thoughts are with his family.

Wildlife corridor to be named after fallen policeman Dan Stiller, killed by jack-knife truck on highway

A FALLEN policeman will have a wildlife corridor in Brisbane’s southwest named after him. Dan STILLER 7 - QPOL - Killed 1 December 2005

Sergeant Dan Stiller, 33, died on duty last Wednesday while leading a police escort along the Bruce Hwy in central Queensland.

He was killed when a semi-trailer jack-knifed and collided with him, becoming the first officer in over three years to die on the job.

Brisbane Lord Mayor Campbell Newman today bestowed on Stiller the rare honour.

“Sergeant Dan Stiller coordinated combined police and council enforcement operations against illegal trail biking while working at the Oxley Traffic Branch,” Cr Newman said.

“It is therefore fitting that we name the 122 hectares we’ve protected against illegal trail biking the Sergeant Dan Stiller Memorial Reserve.

“It will be a place not just to remember Sergeant Stiller, but other members of the police force who have been killed on duty.”

The reserve lies at Larapinta, near Parkinson, and is bounded by the Logan Mwy, Johnson Rd and Paradise Rd.

Police Commissioner Bob Atkinson said Stiller’s wife Julie and the entire police service appreciated the honour.

“The QPS is very appreciative of this recognition by the Brisbane City Council,” Mr Atkinson said.

“It is a fine and fitting tribute to a very professional and dedicated officer and will help in terms of his colleagues dealing with his loss.

“Having discussed this with Dan’s wife Julie, I believe she is also very grateful for this initiative.”

Cr Newman said the bushland would be transformed into a valuable environmental and wildlife corridor and is currently being fenced and marked as bushland reserve.

The land was acquired by council over the past two years, primarily to protect it against illegal trail bikers.

The land grab was part of the Bushland Acquisition Program, which protects vital wildlife corridors in some of Brisbane’s most environmentally sensitive areas from future development.

Council expressed its sympathy to Stiller’s wife Julie, his family and to his colleagues in the police force, particularly the Oxley Traffic Branch.

The  funeral for Sgt Stiller will be marked by a motorcade and mounted police this Thursday.

His death sent shockwaves through the Queensland Police Service.

This Thursday’s funeral will be at St Peter Chanel Catholic Church, The Gap, at 10.30am.

“The cortege, including the QPS Pipes and Drums, the Mounted Police Unit and a procession of motorcycle police, will proceed from the church on Chaprowe Road to Settlement Road, and on to a private interment,” police said today.

The interment is for close friends and family only.

Sgt Stiller is survived by his wife Julie, also a police officer, who is pregnant with their first child.

Mr Atkinson has previously described Stiller as ” a dedicated traffic officer, committed to the safety and security of all Queenslanders”.

Fallen officer ‘always wanted to be a policeman’

Date 
Dan Stiller was so determined to become a police officer that he didn’t let an initial knock-back extinguish his dreams, mourners in Brisbane have been told.

Hundreds of people, including his pregnant wife Julie, gathered today to farewell Sergeant Stiller, who died when a truck jackknifed and hit him as he escorted a wide load south of Rockhampton last week.

He was the first Queensland police officer killed on the job in more than three years.

Queensland Police Commissioner Bob Atkinson told mourners of the 33-year-old’s efforts to join the service.

‘‘His initial knock-back from the police service only hardened his resolve, and extra study saw his future guaranteed,’’ Mr Atkinson said.

‘‘In the words of his wife Julie: ‘As a boy, Dan always wanted to grow up and be a police officer. This, mixed with his ultimate love of motorcycles, made the traffic branch the place he was destined to be’.’’

Sgt Stiller met his future wife, a police detective, during a posting at Hendra police station in Brisbane’s inner north in 2002.

‘‘She remembers well the first motorcycle ride they shared soon after (meeting) and they were inseparable ever since,’’ Mr Atkinson said.

The couple married on August 9, 2008 and only recently announced they were expecting their first child.

Sgt Stiller was overjoyed about becoming a father and wasn’t shy about showing his love for his wife, Mr Atkinson said.

‘‘His love for Julie was complete and total,’’ he told mourners.

Mr Atkinson described Sgt Stiller as a dedicated, competent traffic officer whose work helped lower the road toll.

Sgt Stiller started his career with the NSW police service in 1997.

He moved back to his home state of Queensland in 2001 and joined the service as a recruit.

He was sworn in in early 2002 and two years later was transferred to the south Brisbane traffic branch where he was promoted to senior constable.

‘‘He achieved his destiny when he passed the police motorcycle course and became a full-time police motorcyclist in the traffic branch,’’ Mr Atkinson said.

‘‘His outstanding policing skills and leadership were rewarded in 2007 when he was promoted to the rank of sergeant and transferred to the Oxley District Traffic Branch.’’

www.brisbanetimes.com.au/queensland/fallen-officer-always-wanted-to-be-a-policeman-20101209-18qj9.html

Sgt Dan Stiller memorial unveiled

REMEBERED: A monument dedicated to Sergeant Dan Stiller, who died last December, was unveiled at a ceremony attended by his wife Julie Stiller last Wednesday. Sgt Stiller's family and friends also planted trees as a living memorial.

REMEMBERED: A monument dedicated to Sergeant Dan Stiller, who died last December, was unveiled at a ceremony attended by his wife Julie Stiller last Wednesday. Sgt Stiller’s family and friends also planted trees as a living memorial.

AN environmental corridor in Pallara has been named in honour of fallen policeman Sergeant Dan Stiller in a moving ceremony held last week.

Sgt Stiller’s wife Julie, along with his family, friends and colleagues gathered for the official naming of the 122 hectare Sergeant Dan Stiller Memorial Reserve on Wednesday afternoon, which also included the unveiling of a memorial.

Sgt Stiller’s brother, John Stiller addressed the crowd and said his family were truly honoured by the mark of respect the memorial offered.

“If you knew Dan you’d know that whatever he put his mind to he committed to it 110 per cent,” he said.

“I am extremely proud of my brother, and this reserve will serve as a lasting tribute.

“It will also serve as a place for friends and family to visit and share quiet thoughts.”

The memorial was unveiled by Lord Mayor Campbell Newman and Parkinson Councillor Angela Owen-Taylor.

The Lord Mayor said Dan had been instrumental in working with council to deal with illegal trail biking while working at the Oxley Traffic Branch.

“Sergeant Dan Stiller co-ordinated combined police and council enforcement operations against illegal trail biking while working at the Oxley Traffic Branch,” he said.

“It is therefore fitting that the 122 hectares we’ve protected against illegal trail biking be named the Sergeant Dan Stiller Memorial Reserve.

“It will now be a place not just to remember Sergeant Stiller, but also other members of the police force who have been killed on duty.”

Cr Owen-Taylor said she had worked closely with Sgt Stiller on road safety and illegal trail biking and she felt this was a fitting tribute.

“The dedication of this bushland to Sergeant Dan Stiller is significant as it is the place where Operation Trailblazer started in July 2008,” she said.

Sgt Stiller was killed on December 1, 2010, by a jack-knifing truck while escorting a wide load on the Bruce Highway near Mount Larcom.

City police salute lost colleagues

The Police Remembrance Day march and ceremony held at Browns Park in North Ipswich on Thursday.

The Police Remembrance Day march and ceremony held at Browns Park in North Ipswich on Thursday.

IPSWICH police paid tribute to fallen detective Damian Leeding and Sergeant Daniel Stiller in a moving Police Remembrance Day ceremony yesterday.

A strong contingent of about 100 uniformed, plain-clothed and dog-squad officers gathered at the North Ipswich Reserve from about 9.45am, marching to the beat of the Salvation Army drummers along The Terrace, past Riverlink Shopping Centre, then up Downs St to Browns Park.

Ipswich’s Police Remembrance Day ceremony is held each year at the James Sangster Memorial, which was built in honour of the police officer who died in an attempt to rescue members of the Jackson family from floods in 1893.

There are now 139 names on the Queensland remembrance list – dating back to Laidley Constable Matthew Connolly in 1861 – all of whom died in the line of duty.

However, it was the two most recent additions to that list that drew special mention at the ceremony, led by Southern Region police chaplain Malcolm Twine.

The chaplain began with a prayer for all the men and women who have given their lives while serving the community.

Detective Senior Constable Damian Leeding was shot in the face with a shotgun after responding to an armed robbery at the Gold Coast suburb of Pacific Pines, on May 29 this year.

Family members turned off his life support three days later.

Sergeant Daniel Stiller was killed in a traffic crash while assisting in an oversized-vehicle escort near Rockhampton on December 1, 2010.

The 33-year-old’s wife was pregnant with their first child at the time. Superintendent Garth Pitman said the rain which persisted through the ceremony could not drown police pride.

“We’ll march in the rain if we have to,” he said while delivering the commissioner’s address.

Representatives of Ipswich City Council, the Ipswich RSL, Queensland Fire and Rescue Service and Neighbourhood Watch joined retired police and members of the community in laying wreathes next to the Sangster monument

Policeman Dan Stiller memorial vandalised at Pallara

Sgt Dan Stiller, tragically killed on duty in a traffic accident, and his wife Julie.

Sgt Dan Stiller, tragically killed on duty in a traffic accident, and his wife Julie.

A MEMORIAL commemorating a police officer killed in the line of duty has been vandalised.

Oxley detectives are investigating after the memorial to Sergeant Dan Stiller, located in a reserve on Wadeville Rd, Pallara, was damaged late Tuesday.

Sergeant Stiller, 33, killed in 2010 at Mt Larcom when the wide load truck he was escorting crashed and hit his police motorcycle.

Police said the statue was damaged shortly after 5pm, when a thick glass panel covering a photograph of Sgt Stiller was smashed.

Investigators are now looking to identify three teenaged boys who were seen in the area at the time. Two of the boys were on scooters and the third on a skateboard.

They were last seen walking towards Lillypilly St, Heathwood.

In 2010, the park was renamed Sergeant Dan Stiller Memorial Reserve in tribute to the well-respected traffic officer.

 A memorial dedication and bushland reserve naming of 122 hectares bordered by Paradise Road, Johnson Road, Stapylton Road and Wadeville Street occurred on 9 March 2011 in honour of fallen Police Officer, Sergeant Dan Stiller.

   

A number of Dan's colleagues turned up in honour of the occasion

A number of Dan’s colleagues turned up in honour of the occasion

Lord Mayor Campbell Newman and I unveiled the memorial in Dan's honour.

Lord Mayor Campbell Newman and I unveiled the memorial in Dan’s honour.

 

 

 

Unveiling the Bushland Reserve Sign, named after Sgt Dan Stiller

Unveiling the Bushland Reserve Sign, named after Sgt Dan Stiller

The bushland reserve dedication and naming was commemorated with a planting

The bushland reserve dedication and naming was commemorated with a planting

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

http://www.angelaowentaylor.com.au/PhotoGallery/tabid/65/AlbumID/430-133/Default.aspx

 

SERGEANT DAN STILLER MEMORIAL UPDATE

A 17 year old male has been ordered to pay full restitution to restore the Sergeant Dan Stiller Memorial at Heathwood.

The Brisbane City Council memorial in honour of Sergeant Dan Stiller was unveiled in March 2011.

It was an absolutely despicable act by vandals to destroy a public memorial, let alone a memorial dedicated to a Police officer who put his life on the line for our community each day he stepped out in uniform.

I worked closely with Sgt Dan Stiller to tackle illegal trail bike riding in Parkinson Ward and the Oxley Police District, and our community owes him for the service and care he provided us.

Residents have indicated to me they have supported the public appeal to assist Police.

Further to a thorough investigation by Queensland Police, the offender was brought to justice in the Richlands Magistrates Court on Tuesday 28 August, and ordered to pay full restitution.

I conveyed to Police the full cost of the damage and now the offender is being made to face the full consequences under law for his disgraceful behaviour.

I assure residents and Dan’s family, friends and work colleagues, we are working is to ensure restoration of the memorial occurs as quickly as possible and it will be as protected as much as possible.

Brisbane City Council dedicated the 122 hectares of bushland within the reserve in recognition of Sgt Dan Stiller’s commitment to the community in reducing illegal trail bike riding which was impacting severely on residents’ peaceful enjoyment of their own homes.

I met on site with Police Superintendent Maurice Poiner and stonemason Pete Macfarlane ahead of the photo of Sgt Dan Stiller being reinstalled into the memorial.

The Sergeant Dan Stiller Memorial Reserve is bordered by Wadeville Street, Paradise Road, Johnson Road and Stapylton Road.

Coroner to examine police officer’s highway death

THE State Coroner has begun investigating a fatal crash involving a police officer escorting a wide load on the Bruce Highway at Mount Larcom.

Coroner Michael Barnes began hearing evidence in Brisbane on Wednesday into the adequacy of police investigations into the collision which killed Dan Arthur Stiller.

Sgt Stiller, who was escorting a wide load carrying a large piece of mining equipment, died when a prime mover jack-knifed about 7am on December 1, 2010, on the highway between Gladstone and Rockhampton.

Mr Barnes will examine the “adequacy and appropriateness” of regulations and guidelines surrounding wide-load transports within Queensland.

He will also investigate whether police motorcycles should be used as wide-load escorts.

John Edward Dodd, the truck driver involved in the crash, was found not guilty of careless driving by a Brisbane magistrate handed last month.

Magistrate Jacqueline Payne found Dodd had reacted as any reasonable and prudent driver would have.

The inquest is set down for three days.

Coronor recommends wide-load changes after Stiller death

THE State Coroner has recommended a raft of reforms on how wide loads are escorted on busy Queensland roads following two fatal crashes within six months involving oversized escorts.

Queensland Police Sergeant Daniel Stiller was escorting a wide load on the Bruce Hwy at Mount Larcom when a prime mover jack knifed and crashed into his motorbike.

The 33-year-old died at the scene on December 1, 2010.

About six months later on May 17, 2011, Kenneth Roland Owens was travelling on a single lane section of the Bruce Hwy at Glenorchy, near Maryborough, with his wife and two friends.

A prime mover was travelling in the opposite direction and carrying a miner’s hut, which was so wide it protruded into the southbound lane.

Mr Owens hit the corner of the hut and was killed.

Following an inquest into the deaths, State Coroner Michael Barnes handed down his findings on Friday.

He was satisfied in Mr Owen’s case the driver transporting the wide load was safe and the oversized load satisfied guidelines.

Mr Barnes said while it was likely the lights and markers on the wide load could have distracted Mr Owens, there was no evidence to show why he did not avoid the corner of the miner’s hut.

But in Mr Stiller’s death, Mr Barnes found the blame for fatal accident could be partially contributed to how the wide load escort was carried out.

He found radio communications from the lead escort to other trucks approaching the wide load was confusing and trucks were not given clear instructions.

“Those escorting the wide load gave insufficient regard to the need for other vehicles to get completely off the road when the highway was only of two lanes and the difficulty this would pose for heavy vehicles,” Mr Barnes states.

Mr Barnes also found the driver behind the wheel of the truck which crashed into Sergeant Stiller did not slow sufficiently as he approached the wide load.

The State Coroner recommended wide load grants should not be issued if other transport is available, such as shipping to Gladstone and Mackay ports.

He has also recommended a review of placing police on motorcycles for wide escorts because of the increased risk of death or injury.

Mr Barnes also recommended a public awareness campaign about dealing with wide loads and more explicit signage.

Dan Stiller Reserve, Parkinson Qld

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timrob
timrob's picture
Dan Stiller Reserve, Parkinson Qld

A new section has been added to Dan Stiller Memorial Reserve in Parkinson to the south of Brisbane.  It is well worth a look as it has good tracks and an interesting lagoon in the north-eastern corner.  We recommend a weekend walk as there is quite high road noise from Logan Motorway in places.

“Dan” is a very interesting reserve that we have visited numerous times, and currently 152 bird species have been recorded there.  Interested people may like to download our (updated today) birders guide from:

http://www.vk4yeh.com/birding%20downloads.html

Photo of a female fairy wren taken at the lagoon yesterday.

Reflex
Reflex's picture

Thanks Tim. I’ll have a wander around one day.

Samford Valley Qld.

Devster
Devster's picture

Very informative information Thanks Tim

timrob
timrob's picture

My wife Marg and I will be leading a BQ walk to “Dan” on May 10th, and will be delighted to meet you.

Tim

Quote from BQ website

” This will be the fist BQ visit to Dan Stiller Reserve for 2015. Meet at 7 am at the gate near the end of Axis Place (UBD 239, E6). This section of the reserve is relatively new and until recently had no good tracks. BCC has made a loop track that includes a section with close proximity to a lagoon on a minor tributary of Oxley Creek. It is also possible, time permitting, to see a large ex-sandmining lake that apparently will become part of an expanded reserve in the future. The track is well made and an easy walk. Boots are recommended for safe access to the edge of the lagoon. There are no toilet facilities in this reserve.

We will meet for morning tea at the park on Lincoln Green Drive (UBD 238, H16) where toilets are available.”

Woko
Woko's picture

Great to learn of the extension to the reserve, Tim.

Reflex
Reflex's picture

Sounds good Tim.

Killed just for doing their jobs

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Killed just for doing their jobs: The heroic police who put their lives on the line – only to be ambushed in lonely alleys and hacked to death with machetes by angry young men

  • National Police Remembrance Day will honour 757 police killed on duty
  • Ceremonies across the nation and the south Pacific will respect the fallen
  • Police remembered include those shot or stabbed while investigating crimes
  • Constables Steve Tynan and Damian Eyre were gunned down in Melbourne’s infamous Walsh Street shootings while investigating an abandoned car
  • Constable David Carty was stabbed to death by men in a Sydney car park 
  • Geoffrey Bowen was killed by a parcel bomb during an Adelaide drug case

They went off to work for the day and never came home to their wives or families.

Constables Steven John Tynan, 22, and Damien Jeffrey Eyre, 20, were ambushed and shot by one of Melbourne most notorious crime families after they were deliberately lured to abandoned car and gunned down.

The two young Victorians are among 757 police officers killed in the line of duty who will be honoured across the nation today in a series of ceremonies to mark National Police Remembrance Day.

The Australian Federal Police will host a dusk service at the National Police Memorial on Monday evening to honour all Australian police officers who have lost their lives while serving the Australian community.

Mounted police line up at the National Police Memorial to commemorate the 757 Australian police officers who have died in the line of duty while serving the community in each state and territory

Mounted police line up at the National Police Memorial to commemorate the 757 Australian police officers who have died in the line of duty while serving the community in each state and territory.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Each state and territory police jurisdiction across Australia will pay tribute to the fallen officers, as well as those in Papua New Guinea, New Zealand, Samoa and the Solomon Islands.

The National Police Memorial lists every Australian Police officer who has been killed or who has died as a result of their duties, starting with Constable Joseph Luker in 1803.

Luker was set upon while investigating burglaries on the night of August 25, 1803 in East Sydney and beaten to death, having a piece of his own sword embedded in his skull.

The 756 police officers who have followed Luker to the grave died from several different causes – car accidents while doing their job, plane crashes en route to a crime investigation and murder, by being shot, stabbed or blown up in a targeted letter bomb.

Despite constant calls from senior police or politicians to jail police killers for life, some of the most shocking murders have resulted in short sentences or acquittals.

These are the police murders which shocked the nation:

Constable Steven John Tynan was just 22-years-old when he and fellow officer Damian Jeffery Eyre, 20, were lured to a street where they were ambushed and shot in a deliberate murder by one of Melbourne's most notorious criminals, Victor Peirce

Constable Steven John Tynan was just 22-years-old when he and fellow officer Damian Jeffery Eyre, 20, were lured to a street where they were ambushed and shot in a deliberate murder by one of Melbourne’s most notorious criminals, Victor Peirce

It was 4.50am on October 12, 1988, when Constable Damian Eyre and his fellow officer went to investigate an alleged abandoned car in the Melbourne suburb of South Yarra. Both were shot in the back of the head at close range and as Eyre lay dying, his service revolver was take from its holster and he was again shot in the head

It was 4.50am on October 12, 1988, when Constable Damian Eyre and his fellow officer went to investigate an alleged abandoned car in the Melbourne suburb of South Yarra. Both were shot in the back of the head at close range and as Eyre lay dying, his service revolver was take from its holster and he was again shot in the head.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Shot in the back of the head: Constable Steven John Tynan (above, left) was just 22-years-old when he and fellow officer Damian Jeffery Eyre, 20, (right) were lured to a street where they were ambushed and shot in the head in a deliberate murder by one of Melbourne’s most notorious criminals, Victor Peirce

The Walsh Street killings
At 4.50am on Wednesday October, 12, 1988,  Constables Steve Tynan and Damien Eyre responded to a report about a suspicious abandoned vehicle on a street in the inner south Melbourne suburb of South Yarra.

The two young officers turned up at 222 Walsh Street, unaware that they had been deliberately lured there by members of the notorious Melbourne crime family, the Pettingills.

One of four sons of the infamous Kath Pettingill – the former brothel owner upon whom the crime matriarch played by Jacki Weaver in the film Animal Kingdom is based –  was Victor Peirce.

Peirce, who was shot dead in 2002, planned the ambush, according to an interview with his widow, Wendy, who said he had deliberately lured police to the scene for the purpose of murdering them.

Both Tynan and Eyre were shot in the back of the head at close range; while Eyre lay dying, his service revolver was taken from its holster and he was again shot in the head.

Peirce, his brother Trevor Pettingill and two other men, , Anthony Leigh Farrell and Peter David McEvoy, went on trial for the murders, but were acquitted in the Supreme Court of Victoria.

 

 

 

 

Kicked to death: Constable David Carty, 25, was set upon by young men a western Sydney tavern in April, 1997. He had earlier reprimanded for using obscene language. The men kicked him and struck him with bottles and machetes he lay in the tavern car park in what was later described as a 'brutal, ferocious and savage' attack. His killer is now out of prison

Kicked to death: Constable David Carty, 25, was set upon by young men a western Sydney tavern in April, 1997. He had earlier reprimanded for using obscene language. The men kicked him and struck him with bottles and machetes he lay in the tavern car park in what was later described as a ‘brutal, ferocious and savage’ attack. His killer is now out of prison.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The brutal slaying of David Carty

On duty in the western Sydney suburb of Fairfield on April 17, 1997, Constable David Carty and other police spoke to a number of people on the street while conducting foot patrols.

When they had signed off for the evening, Carty and fellow officers went to the nearby Cambridge Tavern to relax over a few drinks.

Carty, 25, who was engaged to be married, was the among the last of the officers to leave the hotel at around 2.10am.He was set upon by a number of men in the tavern car park, among them some of the individuals he had reprimanded for using obscene language while on his earlier foot patrol.

During the attack, which was later described by a judge as brutal, ferocious and savage, Carty was fatally stabbed in the heart and then kicked, punched and stomped on by a group of men as he lay on the ground.

Senior Constable Michelle Auld who went to his assistance was also seriously assaulted.

According to his post mortem, Carty had several incised wounds to his head, bruising and trauma consistent with kicking, blunt trauma consistent with having been hit with a beer bottle, part of his earlobe has been cut, and he had a ‘scalping’ wound to the back of the head, possibly caused by a a sharp-edged machete.

Edward Esho, then aged 21, was convicted and sentenced to six years and five months for the killing and has since been released from prison.

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In the early hours of Sunday, August 16, 1998, Victoria Police Officers Sergeant Gary Silk and Senior Constable Rodney Miller (pictured) were staking out the Silky Emperor Restaurant in Moorabbin, in Melbourne's south-eastern suburbs during an investigation into a spate of armed robberies when they were gunned down at close range

In the early hours of Sunday, August 16, 1998, Victoria Police Officers Sergeant Gary Silk and Senior Constable Rodney Miller (pictured) were staking out the Silky Emperor Restaurant in Moorabbin, in Melbourne’s south-eastern suburbs during an investigation into a spate of armed robberies when they were gunned down at close range.

 

Father of six Bandali Debs (pictured) was convicted of the murders of Gary Silk and Rodney Miller, who were shot at close range when the police officers were closing in on an investigation into armed robberies in Melbourne's south-eastern suburb in August, 1998

Father of six Bandali Debs (pictured) was convicted of the murders of Gary Silk and Rodney Miller, who were shot at close range when the police officers were closing in on an investigation into armed robberies in Melbourne’s south-eastern suburb in August, 1998.

Apprentice builder Jason Joseph Roberts is serving life in prison for the shooting murders of two police officers who were investigating a string of armed robberies

Apprentice builder Jason Joseph Roberts is serving life in prison for the shooting murders of two police officers who were investigating a string of armed robberies.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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The Moorabbin police murders

In the early hours of Sunday, August 16, 1998, Victoria Police Officers Sergeant Gary Silk and Senior Constable Rodney Miller were staking out the Silky Emperor Restaurant in Moorabbin, in Melbourne’s south-eastern suburbs during an investigation into a spate of armed robberies.

At 12.20 am, the two officers were gunned down at close range and the shooters fled.

Evidence at the crime scene included pieces of glass, which police later matched to a Hyundai hatchback and were eventually able to track down the exact model – and the vehicle, which was registered to the daughter of a known criminal, Bandali Debs.

Debs and an apprentice builder, Jason Joseph Roberts, were charged with the murders and with a string of armed robberies and in 2002 were found guilty and sentenced to life imprisonment.

Debs  was subsequently convicted of two more murders, of sex workers, Kristy Harty, 18, and Donna Hicks, 34, during the 1990s, and is currently under investigation for the 24-year-old cold case murder of Sarah MacDiarmid, who disappeared from a railway station in 1990 and whose body has never been found.

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Killed by the mafia: Geoffrey Bowen was a senior investigator into Italian organised crime in Australia when he targeted the alleged financier of a cannabis operation. Weeks later he opened a parcel delivered to crime headquarters in Adelaide and it blew up, killing him.

Killed by the mafia: Geoffrey Bowen was a senior investigator into Italian organised crime in Australia when he targeted the alleged financier of a cannabis operation. Weeks later he opened a parcel delivered to crime headquarters in Adelaide and it blew up, killing him. Officers, who will wear ribbons (above, right) for National Police Remembrance Day, have never solved his murder.

Police officers around Australian and the south Pacific region will wear ribbons (pictured) for National Police Remembrance Day, which commemorates the more than seven hundred officers who have died while on duty

Police officers around Australian and the south Pacific region will wear ribbons (pictured) for National Police Remembrance Day, which commemorates the more than seven hundred officers who have died while on duty

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Death by letter bomb

 Detective Sergeant Geoffrey Bowen was a Western Australian police officer who on March 2, 1994, was on secondment to the National Crime Authority in the NCA’s office in the Adelaide central business district.

St the time, he was investigating a man called Domenic Perre over a suspected mafia drug operation.

Detective Bowen was a senior investigator exclusively involved with Operation Cerberus, the investigation into Italian organised crime in Australia.

Two years earlier, police had uncovered a huge cannabis growing operation and charged men of Calabrian decsent who were believed to be members of the secret mafia society, ‘Ndrangheta.

Bowen had concluded that Perre was the financier and controller of the operation and the man was due to face court, when a parcel addressed to Bowen slipped through the security system at the NCA office and blew up in Bowen’s hands.

Neither Perre, nor anyone else, has been convicted for Bowen’s murder.

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Lyncon Williams and his partner arrived to investigate a shooting in north Adelaide and had just pulled up the patrol car when a 17-year-old shot and killed him

Lyncon Williams and his partner arrived to investigate a shooting in north Adelaide and had just pulled up the patrol car when a 17-year-old shot and killed him.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The shooting of Lync Williams

Lyncon Williams did not even have the chance to get out of his patrol car when he arrived with his junior partner at the scene in Blair Athol, in northern Adelaide on August 29, 1985.

The police officers were responding to reports of gunfire when they pulled up on Ross Avenue and a 17-year-old shot him.

Police arrested and charged the shooter with murder. He was convicted and sentenced to imprisonment at the Governor’s pleasure.

Police Association president Peter Alexander later reflected on Williams’ death, saying ‘I didn’t know Lync Williams but ’ I’ll always remember the circumstances of that murder.

‘I remember the shock of it and the grief for his family and workmates. It was a tragedy that was reflected right across the job.’

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Constables Robert Spears (above, left) and Peter Addison (right) went to investigate a domestic violence matter at Crescent Head on the Mid North Coast of NSW and were shot by a drunken John McGowan who lay in wait dressed in camouflage gear and armed with a .223 calibre Ruger Rifle.

Constables Robert Spears (above, left) and Peter Addison (right) went to investigate a domestic violence matter at Crescent Head on the Mid North Coast of NSW and were shot by a drunken John McGowan who lay in wait dressed in camouflage gear and armed with a .223 calibre Ruger Rifle.

Senior Constable Peter Addison

Senior Constable Peter Addison

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Peter Addison and Robert Spears

At 12.35am on July 9, 1995 Constables Peter Addison and Robert Spears were on the night shift at at the Kempsey Police Station on the NSW Mid North Coast.

They were called to a malicious damage and domestic violence complaint at the nearby coastal town of Crescent Head, where they attended one address and then drove to a house on Main Street.

They parked the car and began to walk towards the front door; they were unaware that a drunken man called John McGowan was lying in wait in the carport dressed in camouflage gear and armed with a .223 calibre Ruger rifle.

Neither of the officers had bullet proof vests or carried sufficient weaponry and in the next few moments they were ‘outgunned’.

McGowan shot Spears dead. At 1.22am, Senior Constable Addison radioed a message for urgent assistance.

Addison managed to enter a house across the road to use a phone for help, when he was told there was not one he left the house only to be shot himself.

McGowan then shot himself.

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Attacked with a knife: David Thomas Barr responded to a domestic scene and was stabbed through the heart by his attacker and later died in hospital. He was the father of two young girls

Attacked with a knife: David Thomas Barr responded to a domestic scene and was stabbed through the heart by his attacker and later died in hospital. He was the father of two young girls.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Father of two knifed through the heart

 On July 29, 1990, South Australian police officer David Thomas Barr was responding with his partner, officer Jamie Lewcock, to a report of a man threatening a woman.

The father-of-two young girls, Barr was attacked soon after he arrived at the scene as he attempted to arrest the man who was wielding a knife and refusing repeated requests to lay down thew weapon.

The man plunged the knife deep into the Barr’s heart. Barr was rushed to hospital, where doctors tried desperately to save him.

As his wife Gwenda waited in a room, Barr succumbed to massive loss of blood and died.

Gwenda Barr, who had been married for nine years and had daughters Nicola and Sarah, then aged eight and six, later described how devastated she had been by the death.

‘I was shocked stunned and numb’ she said. ‘I couldn’t believe it. I didn’t want to believe it either. It was terrifying.’

Barr’s murderer was sentenced to life imprisonment. Barr was later awarded posthumously the Australian Bravery Medal.

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Detective Inspector Bryson Charles Anderson was stabbed to death while attending a siege in Oakville, 50km north-west of Sydney's CBD on December 6, 2012

Detective Inspector Bryson Charles Anderson was stabbed to death while attending a siege in Oakville, 50km north-west of Sydney’s CBD on December 6, 2012.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

When residents on a property complained to police that a number of arrows had been fired from a neighbouring farm, senior police officer Bryson Charles Anderson attended the scene.

It was shortly after 4.15pm on December 6, 2012 and Detective Inspector Anderson went to the property and was speaking with a man who was at the back door of the residence.

The man produced a knife and stabbed him to the face and chest. Anderson assisted other officers in subduing the offender and a female accomplice before he collapsed from his injuries.

He was unable to be revived and died at the scene.

Anderson had been a police officer for 26 years.

At a ceremony in Queensland on Monday, Police Commissioner Ian Stewart highlighted the inherent risks faced by police officers everyday as they provide for the safety and security of Queensland and acknowledged the tireless work of all QPS members, across a diverse state.

‘Our thoughts are with the families, friends and colleagues of those officers who have made the ultimate sacrifice, as we honour their memories on National Police Remembrance Day,’Commissioner Stewart said.

‘The QPS operates 24 hours-a-day, 365 days-a-year; and we have at least 15,000 interactions with the public every day, with each police officer swearing an oath to protect and serve the community,’Commissioner Stewart said

‘There are times however, when no matter how dedicated, committed and courageous our officers are, they face unbeatable odds.’

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2773110/Killed-duty-National-Police-Remembrance-Day-honour-officers-murders-doing-everyday-job-shocked-nation.html

 

 

Gloria GORDON

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Gloria GORDON – wife of Lindsay

( late of Kiama )

New South Wales Police Force – wife

Stations:  ?, Warilla ( Lake Illawarra )

ServiceFrom  to  ?

Awards?

Born?

Died on:  Monday  7 December 2015

Cause?

Age:  81

Funeral date:  Friday  11 December 2015 @ MD

Funeral location:  Stan Crapp Funeral Home, 125 Manning Street, KIAMA

Buried at?

 Memorial at?

 

 

 

 Funeral location


FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal

THURSDAY 4 SEPTEMBER 2014 RETIRED POLICE DAY HELD AT LAKE ILLAWARRA POLICE STATION, OAK FLATS. LINDSAY GORDON HIS WIFE, GLORIA, DIED ON MONDAY 7 DECEMBER 2015 - AGED 81

THURSDAY 4 SEPTEMBER 2014
RETIRED POLICE DAY HELD AT LAKE ILLAWARRA POLICE STATION, OAK FLATS.
LINDSAY GORDON
WHOSE WIFE, GLORIA, DIED ON MONDAY 7 DECEMBER 2015 – AGED 81

Donald BRATTAN

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 Donald BRATTAN

New South Wales Police Force

Regd. # 9228

Rank:  Sergeant

Probationary Constable – appointed on 2 March 1959

Sergeant 3/C – appointed on 3 April 1974

Stations?, Euabalong ( approx 1968/ 70 ), Ashford

ServiceFrom  pre  2 March 1959  to  ?

Awards:  National Medal – granted 15 September 1980

1st Clasp to National Medal – granted 15 May 1986

Born:  11 October 1932

Died on:  Tuesday  8 December 2015

Cause:  Stroke

Age:  83

Funeral date:  Friday  11 December 2015 @ 10am

Funeral location:  Ashford Cemetery, Ashford Cemetery Road., ASHFORD

Buried at:

Ashford Cemetery, Ashford Cemetery Road., ASHFORD, NSW

 Memorial at?

Don BRATTAN

Don BRATTAN

 

DON is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance
* NOT JOB RELATED

 

 Funeral location


FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

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May you forever Rest In Peace Don.

Lance Ian FERRIS

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 Lance Ian FERRIS

aka  The Pelican Man

( late of Ballina )

New South Wales Police Force

Regd. # ?

Rank?

Stations?, Casino

ServiceFrom  to  ?

Awards:  National Medal – granted 18 November 1982

Born?

Event date:  Suffered Stroke on Saturday 13 October 2007

Died on:  Sunday  14 October 2007

Cause:  Stroke

Death location:  Lismore base Hospital

Age:  60

Funeral date?

Funeral location?

Buried at:  Cremated Lismore.  Seabird Rescue Centre

 Memorial at:  Lance Ferris Wharf, Fawcett Park, Ballina, NSW

 

 

LANCE is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance
* NOT JOB RELATED

 

 Funeral location ?

Richmond River Historical Society – Index to Obituary / Death Notices

LH  370

http://www.richhistory.org.au/RRHS%20Index%20D-G.pdf

FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal

15 October, 2007 10:47AM AEDT

If pelicans could cry – the passing of the pelican man

 

 

A Bird in the Hand

PROGRAM TRANSCRIPT: Monday, 23 June , 2003

REX HUNT: Hello. I’m Rex Hunt. Tonight’s Australian Story is about a man who has dedicated his life to solving the problems sometimes unwittingly created by us anglers. He is Lance Ferris – known as ‘The Pelican Man’ for his incredible work in saving these magnificent birds from terrible injuries. And his efforts are changing attitudes on the water. This is Lance’s story.

EVAN KOSACK – VET:Lance and the fishermen in the area started out being at loggerheads a little bit.

LANCE FERRIS: I don’t think they believed that the problem was as bad as it was. Pelicans torn to pieces, basically, by fishing tackle.

EVAN KOSACK – VET: Lance was telling people, basically, that their beloved hobby was causing a lot of damage and that they were acting irresponsibly. Lance is not the norm.

ANTHONY MUYT: He’s very independent, he’s very focused, he thinks outside of the square. He’s a bit of a mad scientist. He was just some joker who rolled up and was jumping off boats into pelicans. They thought he was nuts at first – thought he was a madman. He is extremely professional. He likes perfection. He’ll work at something until he has it.

DEBBI DEVINE – SAM’S MUM :I look at him sometimes and I think, “Wow. This grown man – the way he is with these animals.” It’s amazing. It’s like they’re his children.

LANCE FERRIS: We were on an excursion with the children from the special school. I noticed a pelican in a park that had a hook buried in its leg. So, I grabbed some fish from a bait shop and the bird came up to me and I grabbed it, held it and looked down at it, and I thought, “The hook’s in the left leg. “I’m sure the bird that I saw “before I got the bait had a hook in the right leg.” I was absolutely positive of it. I made up some posters to hang in shop windows – “Wanted, a pelican with a hook in its leg.” I thought, “There’s another bird out there. I know there’s another one.”

MARNY BONNER: There are many, many people that would go, “Oh, gee. “Gee, fancy seeing two pelicans in one day, you know, “both with hook injuries,” and continue about their business. But the interesting thing is that it engaged Lance’s curiosity such that he went out and searched to see if there was an even bigger problem.

LANCE FERRIS: That led us into going out on the island to see if there were other pelicans out there. 108 birds on the island, there were, with 37 tangled up in fishing line on our first visit.

MARNY BONNER: For Lance, standing there with binoculars in hand observing bird after bird after bird coming into his vision with crippling, cruel injuries would be very overwhelming.

LANCE FERRIS: I was in shock and horror. I couldn’t believe how bad the situation was. I went back to the boat and cried for half an hour. I just couldn’t believe… I’m no bronze Anzac hero. I might have been in the police force, but that doesn’t mean to say you don’t get cut up when you see so much damage. There were some with amputated wings and gangrene in their legs. It was a horrible thing. Being a wildlife carer for some years, at that stage, I was just amazed that I wasn’t aware of it and nor had it been brought to our attention by any member of the public or any other wildlife people.

ROCHELLE FERRIS: He was so devastated by that, but he was also looking at the bigger picture, and he sat back and thought, “You know, how many estuaries are there in Australia “that are so populated by humans? “And I’m only looking at this one.” And the problem just blew out in his head.

LANCE FERRIS: I knew we had a major problem on our hands. I had caught a couple and I’d caught them, I suppose, relatively easily, but when I saw so many I just got back to the boat and thought, “How do I cope with so many injured? “How can I catch that many? “They’re everywhere.”

MARNY BONNER: Lance fell asleep that night surrounded by crippled and injured birds and woke up and he was still surrounded by crippled and injured birds, and was compelled to do something – to start action right there and then.

LANCE FERRIS: It was three months and I had that 37, but as I was getting that 37, more became entangled as I went.

ROCHELLE FERRIS: The focus on getting out there and attending to all these sick pelicans really did take over his life.

MARNY BONNER: That was the dawning of the obsession and the birth of Australian Seabird Rescue.

LANCE FERRIS: I didn’t really think about it changing my life at that time.

MARNY: In the early days, some of these injuries were quite old. They had had longstanding chronic injuries and they did require a lot of treatment. And to his amazement, the local vets were extremely interested and extremely supportive.

LANCE FERRIS: I had to look closely at the pelicans to see a line trailing under a wing, or a hook somewhere.

MARNY BONNER: Because it’s difficult to see injuries on pelicans, people don’t notice. I believe pelicans don’t look sick when they are injured. Pelicans can’t cry.

LANCE FERRIS: Everybody believed that the hook would rust away in two or three days. We’ve done some tests on all different sorts of hooks and it’s at least six months before the hooks rusted away. So there were lots of things that make people not sort of bother.

ROCHELLE FERRIS: He was so concerned and frustrated by the lack of interest from the community that these birds were just all being tangled and no-one seemed to care.

LANCE FERRIS: But it’s not all bad out there. There are some people who really have the right concept. If the bird’s quiet and fairly well under control, we give everyone that opportunity to, say, pat a pelican or to have a close contact with it.

MARNY BONNER: Lance experienced quite a lot of loneliness in his childhood. He didn’t have a lot of affection in it. He is essentially a shy person and a bit of a loner.

LANCE FERRIS: I can remember vividly as a boy, after I’d found a little frog with a broken leg, I think we taped it up with a matchstick, and for the life of me I can’t remember whether it survived or not.

MARNY BONNER: That’s what I saw in Lance when I first met him, was this uncanny ability to really spend a lot of time thinking about how he could improve life generally for a particularly severely disabled child. Lance had his fairly demanding job of teacher’s aide with disabled children. The realisation of the enormity of the problem on Pelican Island did change Lance’s life, but I don’t think he was conscious of that at that time. He was merely solving the problem on the day.

LANCE FERRIS: But then there were cutbacks with the school and then came the word that said, There’s no more work. I’m sorry, we have to put you off. There’s no more funding. We don’t have enough children. And I had to drive away from the place. And I…I won’t forget that day.

I wept all the way home. I was at a little cattle dairy, a converted place. The very next day the landlord drove down the paddock and I went up and I said, “About the rent…” He said, Oh, yeah. He said, I was gonna tell you about that. He said, I really like what you’re doing with the pelicans and things. That’s fantastic, that’s a really good thing. And he said, And you’ve rescued my cattle out of the bogs here from time to time, “and I’ve decided not to charge rent anymore. Oh. You know, sort of looking around waiting for lightning to strike and pinching myself to see if I was awake. I was just ecstatic.

MARNY BONNER: Days rolled into weeks, and weeks rolled into months, and he was spending more and more time doing everything he possibly could to catch all the birds. And so it just became increasingly consuming of his time and his resources – all his resources. So it became a situation for Lance where if there was a choice of providing food for himself or getting fish to catch an injured pelican, the fish for catching the injured pelican always came first.

LANCE FERRIS: And I thought, “Oh, no, what am I doing?” And I thought, This is absolutely crazy. No-one would ever believe this, for starters, and this is just madness. I looked at the pelicans in the cage and they were eating, you know, the best fish at 10 a box and I just thought, I don’t think I can do this anymore. But then I took my shoes off and plodded round in the grass under the tree and found a bowl of bush nuts, macadamia nuts. I pigged out till I just couldn’t eat another macadamia and I’m sitting there going, Yes. Yes, I’m right. I looked at the pelicans. It’s alright, fellas. Everything’s under control.

MARNY BONNER: When I first met Lance he was living very, very frugally. And if he was unable to pay his electricity bill or his gas bill he would simply accept that and go scrummage around the tip or something and come out with some ingenious way of getting hot water for himself. Or he would just not eat cooked food.

LANCE FERRIS: And I thought, Well, I’ve got no power. And the answering machine – it was the biggest problem, because it was the mainstay of Seabird Rescue when I wasn’t there. I had some electronic knowledge and I had a little solar panel. And I had an old battery. It worked like a dream. Nobody knew my predicament. Nobody knew how we were running the show. It still looked OK on the surface. You know, if we sort of still had some credibility – I had an answering service – Oh, well, they must be alright. You know, so it gave me a feeling of, I suppose, wellbeing.

That first one, as I held it in my arms, I was awe-struck by the majesty of it. I think the immense size of the bird, no-one would realise that a pelican is as gentle as it is.

MARNY BONNER: A beautiful, benign creature that doesn’t deserve the treatment that it gets. If pelicans could cry, there would be a wailing across the nation that could not be ignored. We could open a tackle shop on the hooks and line and sinkers and traces and lures that we have extracted from the pelicans we’ve caught to date, easily.

LANCE FERRIS: Everyone loves Percy Pelican, and they don’t want to see anything injured irrespective of what species it is.

ROCHELLE FERRIS: And pelicans were dying and, you know, no-one really counted and knew how vast the problem was. The people from one estuary don’t really communicate with the people from the next estuary what they’ve seen.

In a small percentage of cases, there are people who deliberately hook pelicans. But again, it’s never an approach of accusing or retribution – always a case of education. And for him to do something about that, he needed money to do it. You know, it’s not… He was broke as it was. So he needed to get that information out there to make them aware.

MARNY BONNER: Lance’s move from the dairy to the house on the same property was quite timely in a way because Seabird Rescue really required a bit more space to accommodate volunteers. But clearly there’s no point continuing to rescue birds if you don’t do something about the cause of it. How do you start re-educating millions of fisherfolk and hundreds and hundreds of waterside residents in such a way that they stay on your side, that they will work with you and not be offended? There is no room for blame or guilt or anything else.

LANCE FERRIS: I had to get volunteers and I had to get public support to address the whole of the coastline, and I knew that media was the way to go. So I hammered every media outlet – television, newspaper – everything that I could get my hands into. A lot of it was rejected. Then one of the local papers said, Would you like to do a column? So I got the column going and things just took off from there. Quite often we were getting phone calls from the TV stations locally, and saying, Can we do a story on this?

ROCHELLE FERRIS: After Dad’s first media exposure and the call backs he got from that, and people recognising him in the street and patting him on the back and saying, Good job, he twigged. He said, I’m onto something here, and this is going to make the difference. From that day on, every time there was a really badly injured pelican, he would be on the phone to them so quick. So this media coverage that went to all those communities was priceless in being part of the solution and making them open their eyes and, yeah, pick up their tackle.

LANCE FERRIS: I could see that educating the children was really important.

MARNY BONNER: Kids these days are growing up with the environmental message. Getting to the kids and educating the kids is one of the most important activities that we do. They’re the ones that will carry that message. On many an occasion we see them run off and tug on Dad’s shirt or Mum’s shirt and say, You mustn’t drop that, Mum. Mustn’t drop that, Dad. Have to pick this up now. And….the parents are kind of shamed into being more environmentally responsible than they might otherwise have been.

ROCHELLE FERRIS: I guess when Dad started to realise that the problem was so national, he knew he needed volunteers. He couldn’t pay them – he can’t pay himself. Once word got out, it definitely made a difference. There was some real dedicated people.

LANCE FERRIS: The volunteers come from all walks of life. They all have their own areas of expertise, if you like. We’ve got Jenny, who’s just absolutely marvellous. She’s got a lovely, lovely rapport with the birds.

MARNY BONNER: Young Sam in particular was a fairly troubled child when Lance first met him – so much so that Lance thought that he was even beyond his ability to rescue him, if you like.

SAM DEVINE: I was just playing up in class, then he just started doing talks at the school about Seabird Rescue. I could talk to him and he would help me with my work… ..when I was having trouble.

MARNY BONNER: He’s turned around from a child who did not want to cooperate or be involved in school work or achieve anything.

SAM DEVINE: If it wasn’t for Lance I probably would be in a behavioural class.

LANCE FERRIS: Anthony was a person that came up here to study science with a background of being a member of the police SWAT team.

MARNY BONNER: He was a very quick learner, but more importantly, he was most definitely an action man. He’s almost a younger, more energetic Lance, if you like.

It’s very important to have volunteers that won’t be too offended if we’re not always as socially adept as we ought to be. We both suffer from burnout, from exhaustion, and in so doing, Lance in particular might sometimes forget to pay attention to his manners or be as thoughtful of that person or as considerate of that person as he…as he might be.

He is consumed by this calling. The unfortunate consequence of that kind of dedication is that Lance can neglect important relationships in his life.

ROCHELLE FERRIS: Having Marny in Dad’s life has been his Rock of Gibraltar. And, you know, they’ve had their quarrels, and people do. If Marny wasn’t in his life – God, I would have so much on my hands.

MARNY BONNER: It’s been very difficult for everyone that’s close to Lance. Even acquaintances frequently become offended, um, by his lack of presence.

ROCHELLE FERRIS: I wanted to throw a tantrum and get so angry because he’d missed my birthday or he’d forgotten Mother’s Day or, you know, just everything else in his life seemed to fade out.

MARNY BONNER: Those of us that are close to Lance can really joke that, you know, maybe if we pierced our ears and hung a jag hook in one and a lure in the other, he might look at us intensely and say, How are you?

LANCE FERRIS: We started recording all the problems that happened to the pelicans. It was very difficult for us to convince National Parks or Fisheries or anyone in the first few years that there was a problem.

ROCHELLE FERRIS: He gathered so much information over time about pelican behaviour, but he needed that notoriety from the scientific community to understand what he was talking about and for him to be able to approach them on their terms, academically.

LANCE FERRIS: Marny’s got the letters after her name, so too has my daughter, being a marine biologist, and that was a blessing to me. I had the information. They basically put it together and shaped it.

ROCHELLE FERRIS: It was really good for our relationship, writing that paper together, to get a bit of recognition from him from what I’d studied and learnt. And I wasn’t this little girl anymore who was wide-eyed and looking at everything he did, and I…I had something to give him.

LANCE FERRIS: When the report on the impact of fishing was accepted, or when they called for more copies at NSW Fisheries, I was just overjoyed. I thought, Finally! We’re gonna have to start working fairly quickly. As fast as we catch ’em, they’re getting entangled now. RecFish Australia included some of our concepts in their code of conduct for fishermen, and NSW Fisheries handed us one of their ex-service boats. Petrol companies offered fuel for the vehicle. A telephone company offered us a mobile phone. The council offered us free ferry journey. And the Coastcare, under the Natural Heritage Trust, gave us two grants so far of 26,000, which has enabled me to get to the schools and teach the children. I look back at the road we’ve travelled and people are taking more care. Well, I mean, some fishermen who used to say, Shoot the bastards… ..come up to me in the pub and say, You owe me a beer, mate. I caught one of your bloody pelicans. And don’t tell anybody about it either. I gave him a fish too after I took the hook out.

MARNY BONNER: People began to call us when they noticed other things on the beach. Well done. And so the turtles were added to the repertoire of pelicans, seabirds.

LANCE FERRIS: To see trained personnel at strategic locations all around the coast of Australia – that would be the ultimate goal. In July we have to vacate the premises we’re in at the moment. We were in big trouble. It was very, very heart-warming to realise the strength of the support we got from the council. The council has offered us some land for free and also a second-hand house. It’s been a fairly hard road. I guess Marny and I will have to start really getting on really, really well together, and not fighting on occasions.

MARNY BONNER: I do have grave concerns about his emotional and physical health because there is so little balance in his life. He does not take the time to rescue himself, I suppose. But I can’t live that life for him. The best thing that I can do is be his best friend.

LANCE FERRIS: I couldn’t have done this without her – there’s no doubt about that – irrespective of the rocky road that we’ve been along.

MARNY BONNER: He’s extremely important to me. He sets a fine example constantly of what can be achieved with patience, sheer determination, a great deal of tolerance and, above all, extraordinary compassion for creatures that can do nothing to alleviate their own suffering.

CAPTION: Lance and SeaBird Rescue are currently homeless while they wait for clearance of the council owned land and rebuilding. The latest injured pelican tally is 595.

http://www.abc.net.au/austory/content/2003/s923592.htm

 

 

 

 

 


Elle UNDERHILL

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Elle UNDERHILL –  4 y.o. daughter to Sgt Steve UNDERHILL

New South Wales Police Force

Regd. # ?

Rank?

Stations?, Casino

ServiceFrom  to  ?

Born?

Died on:  Friday  18 December 2015

Cause:  Passenger – Motor vehicle collision

Age:  4

Funeral date?TBA

Funeral location?TBA

Buried at?

 Memorial at?

Elle Underhill

Elle Underhill

 

 

 Funeral location ?TBA

FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal

$11,000 raised in 21 hours for crash victims family

AN online fundraising campaign for the Underhill family, who lost their four-year-old daughter in an horrific crash on the Bruxner Highway, has raised more than $11,000 in less than a day.

About 1.20pm on Friday a red Mazda 323 was travelling west on the Bruxner Highway, about 10km east of Casino, when it collided with a white Subaru Liberty.

As a result of the collision the Mazda was torn in half.

Sergeant Steve Underhill’s four-year-old daughter in the back seat received fatal injuries and died at the scene.

Sgt Underhill’s other daughter, aged two, who was also in the back seat received serious injuries and was taken to Lismore Hospital before being transferred to Lady Cilento Children’s Hospital where she has since regained consciousness and is speaking to her parents.

News of the crash sent shock waves around the Northern Rivers and across Australia when it was revealed Sgt Underhill attended the scene of the incident.

To help the family deal with their grief and ease any financial burdens, Tammie Valle launched a GoFundMe webpage for people to donate to.

“The Underhill family suffered a major tragedy and as a community we all felt helpless in what we could do and many were asking where they could donate to ease the burdens,” she wrote.

The 18-year-old female driver of the Mazda was taken to Lismore Hospital with a laceration to her arm.

The seven-year-old female front seat passenger was also taken to Lismore Hospital suffering shock.

The driver and front seat passenger were unrelated to the back seat passengers.

The 81-year-old male driver of the Subaru, who was the sole occupant, was taken to Lismore Hospital with sternum injuries.

Police are appealing for any witnesses of the crash to call Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

http://www.northernstar.com.au/news/11000-raised-in-21-hours-for-crash-victims-family/2879423/

 

 

 

Policeman called to crash site finds girl who died is his daughter

 

A four-year-old girl, the daughter of a policeman, died in the two-car crash. Picture: Channel 7

A four-year-old girl, the daughter of a policeman, died in the two-car crash. Picture: Channel 7

IT’S the phone call every parent dreads.

But when Casino police called the father of a toddler killed in a horror road smash on Friday, they were calling one of their own.

Richmond police sergeant Steve Underhill rushed to the scene of the two-car crash on the Bruxner Highway in NSW to find his two young daughters in the wreckage.

Carnage... A girl, 4, died and her two-year-old sister was critically injured.

Carnage… A girl, 4, died and her two-year-old sister was critically injured.

The car they were travelling in had been ripped in half.

Sgt Underhill’s four-year-old girl died at the scene, while his two-year-old was rushed to Brisbane’s Lady Cilento Hospital in a critical condition.

In a ray of light for a town gripped in grief, the girl later emerged from a coma.

 

 

Sgt Underhill is a local officer who has responded to accidents on the very stretch of road where his daughter died.

The young sisters and another eight-year-old girl were passengers in a car driven by their babysitter, Courteney Matthews, an 18-year-old ballerina who had just finished high school at a respected private school.

Courteney Matthews, 18, was driving the car with the young girls inside when the tragic accident occurred.

Courteney Matthews, 18, was driving the car with the young girls inside when the tragic accident occurred.

The dedicated community worker, who raised money to help people in Third World countries, escaped with minor arm injuries in the crash.

At the scene, local woman Tazman Currie rushed to help the girls tangled in the wreckage.

 

We were driving and heard a big bang and smoke, so we got out of the car to see what had happened. One half of the car was on the right side of the road and the other half on the other side,” she said.

“The little girl kept saying her back hurt so I got her to sit down and tried to settle her down.”

Tragic... Toddler’s car set in the road.

Tragic… Toddler’s car set in the road.

 

High impact... The scene following the collision.

High impact… The scene following the collision.

 

A mother herself, Ms Currie described the moments when Sgt Underhill arrived.

“He was speechless, he was so shocked and upset. He wanted to know what had happened,” she said.

She said he tried desperately to help but was suffering from shock.

Ms Currie said the girls’ mother also soon arrived and was devastated to see her family torn apart.

She said the teenage driver was also devastated.

“She didn’t really care about herself, she wanted the little girls to be OK,” she said.

The scene of the fatal crash near Casino. Picture: Adam Head

The scene of the fatal crash near Casino. Picture: Adam Head

 

Flowers have been left at the scene of the fatal crash. Picture: Adam Head

Flowers have been left at the scene of the fatal crash. Picture: Adam Head

Ms Currie said the community, a tight-knit town of 10,000 people, was shocked and upset about the incident.

The driver of the second vehicle, an 81-year-old retired pharmacist, was taken to Lismore Base Hospital suffering internal bleeding and sternum injuries. The man’s son yesterday told The Sunday Mail his father was shaken by the accident but recovering.

The NSW Police Association sent officers from Sydney to help Sgt Underhill, his family, and his colleagues through the ordeal.

Police are investigating the cause of the crash and a report will be prepared for the coroner.

The girl’s death is the first since police launched Operation Arrive Alive on Thursday.

 

May God give the family strength to overcome this terrible tragedy.   Our prayers go out to you and we are thinking of you all.  The little girl is safe in the arms of God now.  God Bless You All.

it is a proven fact that more people have died on the road in the last 12 months ( texting ) then driving under the influence….?

% 95 of Accidents are Caused through someones Mistakes…..

lets just hope that no-one was texting or otherwise distracted in this tragedy.

rip little one

The shock, & horror Sgt Underhill has had to go through, is beyond imagination.

He will need every ounce of support that’s possible, from all, for a long time.

My deepest condolences on such a sorrowful situation.

RIP, little one……

Ann

Ann

Shocking. No one can imagine how this father and mother feel. I’m a nana and it breaks my heart when I hear or read about a little one like this. So so very sorry for your loss. There’s a new star in the sky shining down.

Steve

Steve

What can anyone say about this story except why? Why do bad things happen to good people and the innocent while murderers, child molesters and those that prey on the weak live healthy, selfish and care free lives contributing nothing while taking whatever they can.

I’m an ex-cop and someone who believes in a merciful God but these things, and I’ve seen them happen time and time again, test my faith every time. This accident has pushed it to the limit once again.

ROCHELLE

ROCHELLE

I hope this will make people take more care on the roads this holiday season. It can happen to anyone, RIP little one, may your family recover from this terrible loss.

steve

steve

I hope you’re okay Steve.  My sincerest condolences to you and your family.  Hopefully the Police family will help to look after you.  All the best.

Peter J

Peter J

The pain and heartache is beyond words. Sadly, the policeman and his family will suffer this for a lifetime. Praying for speedy recovery for the injured.

Paula

Paula

I could not imagine anything worse than attending something like this and finding out it’s your family…….sincere condolences to the officer and his wife at this sad time……..

HEREWEGOAGAIN

HEREWEGOAGAIN

A sad day for the township, but even a sadder time for the Sergeant Underwood and his family.  I could not imagine the grief all these people are feeling at this time.

Heather

Heather

Tears in Heaven RIP darling. Praying the 2 yr old will fully recover and others involved can go on.

S

S

How tragic such an awful thing to happen at anytime but right on Christmas.

The poor policemen that responded my heart breaks for you and your family

Colin

Colin

OMG. Please support this guy and his family. The stuff of nightmares. God love

Mae

Mae

One of those articles we wish we didn’t have to read. So dreadfully sad, my heartfelt sympathy to the Police officer and his family. Nothing will change the circumstances, but please know you have the support and thoughts of thousands.

It is refreshing to see below, that at this time all comments are of sympathy and support, nobody opining their speculative solutions.

troy

troy

I could not imagine anything worst, as this must be the  nightmare every emergency worker thinks of before attending an accident. My heart goes out to the officer and the family involved. R.I.P. little one

Brenden

Brenden

Police have to attend all sorts of grisly events, but to arrive at the scene of a car accident only to discover your young daughter was a fatal victim is way off the scale.

My heartfelt sympathies to the officer and his family. There will be no Christmas for them this year.

Martyn

Martyn

Sympathy to the Family, Friends & the people of the region. Hats off to our Emergency Service’s

Paul

Paul

Deepest sympathies to all involved just horrific so close to Christmas.

Michelle

Michelle

Deepest sympathies to the families involved especially the police officer so very sad.

Jacqueline

Jacqueline

Another Angel in heaven. Another family who’s Christmas will never be the same. My thoughts and prayers are with them.

Greg

Greg

I hope the Police, the community and everyone that can give this policeman and his family all the support they can in this awful tragedy

James

James

My condolences to that police officer and his family….working in the emergency services can deal up some pretty hard calls at times…but a call like this officer faced is a call that know one in emergency service wants to face….one can only imagine what’s going threw that police officers mind ATM.

Hang in there…

barry

barry

There will be a time and a place for answers Bruce but at the moment it is the time to be supporting the families involved. I have no doubts the police will be putting the utmost efforts in determining what happened. Such tragedies deserve respect to the families. It looks like the reporters are showing their respect to the families and police by allowing them to investigate the scene whilst not interfering or nagging police during such distressing times .

Empathy is what should be our focus at the moment. In time Bruce there will be answers.

Wendy

Wendy

My heart goes out to the Officer that would be one of the worst things that anyone would have to face. Bad enough going to these accidents but to find your little child would be beyond pain. I am sure his mates would of taken care of him. God Bless to all of them and I hope the others in the car make a full recovery. Rest in peace little girl and hugs to your family..

ian Oz

ian Oz

This is so sad and tragic and especially this time of the year. My families condolences to this poor family, I can’t even begin to imagine their pain.

Sharon

Sharon

This is a tragic event ,Our thoughts are with them and I pray that the media leave him and his family alone to grieve in peace

Laurie

Laurie

It must be every country coppers nightmare when attending accidents, to come across a loved one or family friend…

Ros

Ros

They see such awful scenes in all parts of their work – but this is the worst of them.

Really feel for them.

Jason

Jason

My sympathy to the officer and their family after suffering such a tragic acident.Country police always get called to those that they know and love. God bless.

Jim

Jim

Our prayers go out to the policeman who lost his daughter in the horrific car accident.What a tragic thing to happen , going to the scene of an accident and finding one of your family members deceased RIP

 

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/policeman-called-to-crash-site-finds-girl-who-died-is-his-daughter/story-fni0cx4q-1227670867572

 

 

 

 

 

Policeman’s Christmas heartbreak: Off-duty officer arrived at crash scene to find his daughter, 4, dead inside and his youngest girl, 2, in critical condition… as police chief begs drivers to slow down

  • Police Sergeant Steve Underhill arrived at car crash near Casino, NSW
  • His two daughters were still trapped inside the vehicle at the time
  • His four-year-old daughter Elle died at the scene on Friday, 1.20pm
  • Car was being driven by their 18-year-old babysitter Courteney Matthews
  • Three other people across Australia died in road accidents on Wednesday
  • Police increasing safety operations over Christmas with double demerits

A grieving police officer who was called to the crash site where his four-year-old daughter perished and his two-year-old daughter suffered critical injuries will be offered more than $50,000 in donations.

Police Sergeant Steve Underhill arrived at the scene at Bruxner Highway near Casino in northern NSW on Friday while his two daughters were still trapped inside the Red Mazda 323 which split in half in the two-car collision, Daily Telegraph reports.

Sgt Underhill was off-duty at the time, local police confirmed to Daily Mail Australia, and had to be restrained after his colleagues called him to the horrifying scene, Nine News reports.

His four-year-old daughter Elle died at the scene, and his two-year-old daughter was airlifted to Lady Cilento Children’s Hospital in South Brisbane in a critical condition.

She had emerged from a coma the following day in a remarkable recovery, NSW Police told Daily Mail Australia.

She will reportedly remain in hospital for a week as a precaution.

The car was being driven by the girls’ babysitter, 18-year-old Courteney Matthews. She suffered lacerations to her arm in the accident.

The little girl’s death just a week before Christmas comes as three others died on Australian roads on the first day of the holiday season on Wednesday.

A passenger died in a two-car crash on the Bruce Highway, about 20km north of Gin Gin in central Queensland, about 12.45pm on Wednesday.

A motorcyclist aged in his 20s was killed hours later after he collided with a taxi in Albert Park, in Melbourne’s inner south.

Police believe the taxi was doing a U-turn when the man crashed into it just before 5pm.

Another man later died in Tasmania after his car collided with a vehicle travelling in the opposite direction south of Somerset.

Speed and alcohol may have contributed to the crash, Tasmania police believe.

Police around Australia are increasing safety operations over the Christmas period, including stepping up drug and alcohol testing.

Double demerits will also be in place from Thursday, December 24 to Sunday, January 3.

They will target speeding, illegal use of mobile phones, not wearing a seatbelt and riding without a helmet.

Tasmanian Police say there’s an eight-hour period on Christmas Eve when motorists are most likely to have a road accident after examining crash statistics from the past five years.

‘The most likely time for a crash to occur during the Christmas and New Year period is on Christmas Eve between midday and 8pm,’ assistant commissioner Donna Adams said.

It comes as heartfelt tributes rolled in for ‘beautiful girl’ Elle on the GoFundMe page set up for her family.

‘Such a beautiful girl and friend to our daughter, you will be greatly missed,’ one person wrote.

‘Our hearts go out to you for your loss of beautiful Elle and our prayers will be sent for her sister. We have only just been touched by tragedy ourselves and wish to pay forward some of the beautiful kindness we have also received,’ another said. ‘Stay strong for each other.’

‘Constantly in our hearts,’ another person who donated wrote.

The staff at Tweed Byron Police donated $1,000 to the family on Wednesday.

Altogether, more than $50,000 for the family in just three days, after family friend Tammie Valle launched the fundraiser.

The Casino local wrote that the community ‘felt helpless in what we could do’ to help the Underhill family following the tragedy.

‘The funds raised will go towards helping this family with assisting with the funeral, memorial, and help with accommodation, medical expenses and travel costs,’ the page reads.

Police Commissioner Andrew Scipione said the force was grieving with the family.

‘We care and we hurt,’ he told Nine News.

Three others were hospitalised when the two cars collided around 1.20pm on Friday.

A seven-year-old girl in the passenger seat of the same car was taken to Lismore Base Hospital suffering shock.

The 18-year-old woman driving, a babysitter, was taken to the same hospital, two hours south of Brisbane, with a laceration to her arm.

Neither the driver nor the seven-year-old girl are related to the two and four-year-old girls, who were sitting in the back seat of the car.

An 81-year-old man, the driver and sole occupant of the second vehicle, a white Subaru Liberty, was taken to hospital with sternum injuries and is understood to have been released from hospital on Saturday.

That day, a NSW Police spokesman said there was ‘good news’ for the two-year-old girl amongst the tragedy.

‘She’s out of the coma and breathing on her own now and talking to her parents.’

A toddler’s car seat, children’s toys and clothing could reportedly be seen in the wreckage near Irvington Wharf Road, about 10km east of Casino.

‘It’s an absolute tragedy that someone so long has been lost,’ NSW Police Traffic and Highway Commander Acting Assistant Commissioner Hartley said on Friday.

‘Let this time be one of celebration, an occasion where all the seats at the Christmas table are filled.’

Diversions were put in place away from the crash site for around seven hours on Friday.

The Crash Investigation Unit is investigating the crash with the assistance of local police.

They are appealing for any witnesses who have not yet spoken to police to come forward.

A report will be prepared for the coroner.

You can donate to the family at the GoFundMe page.

Daily Mail Australia has contacted Tammie Valle.

Police are urging anyone with information in relation to this incident to call Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3371635/Police-officer-four-year-old-daughter-died-two-year-old-suffered-critical-injuries-receive-50-000-donation.html

 

 

https://www.gofundme.com/snf8fzwk

 

 

 

Elle Underhill: Family asks police to watch over her body as they hope and pray for their injured younger daughter

THE heartbroken family of car crash victim Elle Underhill have asked police to ensure their daughter’s body is not left alone as they keep vigil at the hospital bedside of their younger­ daughter.

Police Commissioner And­rew Scipione said Sergeant Steve Underhill and his wife Michelle had asked him to ensure Elle was “not by herself” while they were with their two-year-old daughter in Brisbane.

Mr Scipione also revealed the heartbreaking moments when Sgt Underhill arrived at the crash scene and had to be held back by colleagues as he realised four-year-old Elle and her sister were involved.

The two girls were in the back seat of a red Mazda 323 when it and a white Subaru Liberty collided about 1.20pm last Friday 10km east of Casino on the north coast.

Their babysitter Courteney Matthews, 18, and a seven-year-old girl, sitting in the front seats, suffered minor ­injuries and shock.

Elle’s sister was flown to the Lady Cilento Children’s Hospital where she was “on the mend”, Mr Scipione said.

Mr Scipione, who spent time with the Underhill family this week, said it was a “tragedy from start to finish”.

“It’s so horrific it’s difficult to even talk about,” he said.

“We deal with these matters every day but when it’s one of your own and when it’s so graphic, it’s difficult to tell other people. “In their conversations with me, it’s clear that they were mourning the loss of their angel. They were mourning the loss of their little girl, they didn’t want her to be alone.

“They were saying ‘Commissioner, will you please make sure she’s not by herself’.”

The drivers involved are receiving counselling and friends are rallying behind Ms Matthews. Retired analytical chemist John White, 81, suffered a fractured sternum and internal bleeding in the crash but is expected to be released soon from hospital.

Mr Scipione said police were investigating the cause of the accident.

“We have to get to the bottom of that,” he said.

THE tragic death of Elle Underhill has “cut deep to the bone” for the north coast and police communities who are now praying for her sister / Picture: SuppliedSource:Supplied

THE tragic death of Elle Underhill has “cut deep to the bone” for the north coast and police communities who are now praying for her sister / Picture: SuppliedSource:Supplied

Tributes left at the crash scene in Casino / Picture: Supplied

Tributes left at the crash scene in Casino / Picture: Supplied

http://www.news.com.au/national/nsw-act/elle-underhill-family-asks-police-to-watch-over-her-body-as-they-hope-and-pray-for-their-injured-younger-daughter/news-story/066c2802bb125b87d3ff30bf578bf6c8?sv=8ec421be2f26b506327a5e7663502d9d

 

 

 

Roderick Ventry LEWIS

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 Roderick Ventry LEWIS

aka  Ventry

( late of Warregah Island on the Clarence River )

New South Wales Police Force

Academy Class 129 of 1971

Regd. #  15063 – can’t find in 1979 Stud Book.  May have left ” the job ” prior to 1979

Rank?

Stations?, Manly & Mona Vale ( 14 Division ) on GD’s & STP / HWP.

ServiceFrom  13 December 1971  to  ?

Awards? – nil National

Born?

Died on:  Friday  1 January 2016 at MacLean Hospital

Cause:  Cancer

Age:   61 – 62

Funeral date:  Saturday  9 January 2016

Funeral location?TBA

Buried at?

 Memorial at?

 

 

Roderick Ventry LEWIS NSWP Died 1 January 2016 from Cancer No find in 1979 Stud Book http://www.australianpolice.com.au/roderick-ventry-lewis/ Roderick pictured with former SenCon Dick Winn at HWP reunion at Huntingwood.

Ventry LEWIS with Tony WRIGHT at Huntingwood HWP reunion


VENTRY is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance
  *NEED MORE INFO

 

 

 Funeral location ?TBA

FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal

Ventry is survived by his wife Donna and two daughters Julia and Loretta.

May you forever Rest In Peace.

At the time of his death, Ventry was a cane farmer living on Warregah Island on the Clarence River near Maclean in Northern NSW.

Articles found involving Ventry:

Companies fined $92k for pollution

THE pollution of Ashby’s Sandy Creek with 690,000 litres of waste water from the Harwood Sugar Mill in 2009 has proven costly for three companies operating in the Lower Clarence as fines of more than $92,000 were handed down at the Maclean Court House on Tuesday.

Magistrate David Heilpern imposed the fines on the NSW Sugar Milling Co-operative, Lewis Brothers (Chatsworth) Pty Ltd and BD and MC Lewis Pty Ltd after they pleaded guilty to charges including polluting waters and transporting waste to an unlawful facility.

Between November 27 and December 8, Lewis Brothers transported the waste water – which contained dirt, sugarcane fibre and sugarcane juice – to Wilcocks Quarry on Tullymorgan Rd at Ashby.

As instructed by Stephen King from Harwood mill, the water was spread over a grassed area at the quarry.

From there the water ran into Sandy Creek and deoxygenated the water – confirmed in readings taken by the Department of Environment, Climate Change and Water.

An affidavit from Ventry Lewis of Lewis Brothers stated he spoke with Mr King, who said he had spoken with the EPA about renewing a licence for disposal and he felt because the water was non-toxic a licence wasn’t needed.

In his written judgment, Mr Heilpern stated: “It was incumbent upon all corporate citizens to keep up to date with modern pollution prevention regulations.”

The NSW Sugar Milling Co-operative has two prior convictions for similar offences.

In 1991 the co-operative was fined $60,000 for two breaches of the Clean Waters Act, and in 1995 the mill was fined $37,500 for a similar offence at its Condong mill.

 

James Patrick Arthur ROBB

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 James Patrick Arthur ROBB

aka  Jim

New South Wales Police Force

Regd. # 6001

Rank: Probationary Constable – 19 January 1948

Sergeant 2nd Class – 1 December 1976

Sergeant 2nd Class – Retired

Stations?, Vice Squad 1963, C.I.B. – Retirement

ServiceFrom  ? pre 19 January 1948  to  13 September 1979 = 31 years Service

World War II

Royal Australian Navy

Regiment?

Enlisted:  27 February 1941

Service #  S5194

Rank:  Able Seaman

Embarkation?

Next of kin:  Arthur ROBB

Religion?

Single / Married?

Returned to Australia ?

Awards? – Not found on Itsanhonour

Born:  14 September 1919 in Warminster, England

Died on:  Tuesday  5 January 2016

Cause?

Age:  96

Funeral date:  Monday  11 January 2016 @1.30pm

Funeral location:  St Patricks Catholic Church, 72 Skinner Street, SOUTH GRAFTON

Buried at:  Clarence Lawn Cemetery

 Memorial at?

 


JAMES is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance
  *NEED MORE INFO

 

 

 Funeral location


FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal

ROBB, James Patrick Arthur (Jim)

Late of South Grafton,

passed away peacefully at home surrounded by his loving family on 5th January, 2016, aged 96 years.

Much loved husband of Doreen, cherished father and father-in-law of Diane, Christine & Les Hayes, Robert & Nicole, treasured granddad of Jodie & Jason, Kellie & Mark, James, greatgranddad of Matilda, Mckenzie, Lachlan, Elisa, Stevie and Charlie, loved brother, brother-in-law and uncle.

Relatives and friends are respectfully invited to attend Jim’s funeral service to be held at St. Patrick’s Catholic Church, Skinner Street, South Grafton, on MONDAY (11th January, 2016), prayers commencing at 1.30 pm.

The funeral will then proceed to the Clarence Lawn Cemetery.

Ex-service men and women are warmly welcome to attend.

Sharon Ross

CLARENCE VALLEY FUNERALS

http://www.dailyexaminer.com.au/classifieds/ad/2419642/

 

1941 NAVAL Record

1941 Naval record

1941 Naval record

 

Naval record

Naval record

 

 

Wilfred TUNSTALL

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 Wilfred TUNSTALL – QGM

aka  Bill

New South Wales Police Force

Joined NSW Police Force via NSW Police Cadet system on 5 January 1959

Cadet # 1481

Regd. # 9862

Rank:  Cadet – 5 January 1959

Probationary Constable – 9 February 1961

Sergeant 3rd Class – 3 April 1977

Detective Sergeant – Retirement ? / Resignation ?

Stations?, Central ( 1 Division ) 1970’s, Special Bomb Squad ( 1980’s ), Penrith ( 1982 )

ServiceFrom  5 January 1959  to  ?

Awards:  Queen’s Gallantry Medal QGM – granted 1 October 1976 ( apprehend an armed man )

National Medal – granted 6 November 1980

Born:  9 February 1942

Died on:  Friday  8 January 2016

Cause?

Age:  73

Funeral date?TBA

Funeral location?TBA

Buried at?TBA

 Memorial at?

 


BILL is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance
  *NEED MORE INFO

 

 

 Funeral location ?TBA

FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal

May you forever Rest In Peace.

The Canberra Times ( ACT )      Tuesday  13 May 1975      p1 of 18

Man shot dead in Sydney siege

SYDNEY, Monday. — Police used tear gas to force a man from a Sydney house today and shot him dead as he ran out firing a high powered rifle.

The man, 55, had held police at bay in the house in Glanville *( possibly Granville ) for nearly three hours.

He wounded a policeman ( Wilfred TUNSTALL ) in the arm before he was shot dead.

Another policeman suffered from gas inhalation when two cannisters of gas were lobbed into the house.

Earlier witnesses reported that a woman *( Nadia Wehbe ) staggered out of the house wounded and collapsed in the gutter. A man who went to her aid was ordered away.

The woman and the policemen are in a satisfactory condition.

 

The wounded policeman ( left ) is led away from the siege in Sydney.

The wounded policeman ( left ) is led away from the siege in Sydney.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

.

 

 

 

The Canberra Times ( ACT )      Thursday  15 May 1975      p3 of 26

Recovering

SYDNEY, Wednesday. — Detective Bill Tunstall, who was shot in the arm during a two-hour siege at a Western Suburbs house on Monday afternoon, has left hospital. The condition of Mrs Nadia Wehbe, 40, who was hit in the right shoulder and later underwent emergency surgery, is satisfactory.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/110637767?searchTerm=%22detective%20tunstall%22&searchLimits=sortby=dateAsc#pstart12743938

 

 

 

 

 

The Canberra Times ( ACT )      Wednesday  31 December 1980      p3 of 20

New code name for bomber sought

SYDNEY: Sydney police have appealed to the Woolworths bomber to give them a new code name to avoid confusion with hoax callers.

Many of the hoax callers have used the bombers code name – “Mr Dunmore” – since it was published in a Sydney newspaper on Monday.

Police said yesterday that they believed the bomber has not made contact with Woolworths for at least 48 hours.

“Even though his code name has been revealed there are many many other ways he could establish that he is the real bomber when he makes contact with Woolworths again”, a detective said.

“It is his turn to make a move now – although we are still following several leads which might prove fruitful”.

Woolworths received more than 20 hoax bomb threats against its Sydney stores yesterday, despite a police warning that hoaxers could be sent to jail.

The threats were mostly against suburban stores but the main city store, which was the scene of the Christmas Eve blast, was evacuated for more than an hour while police carried out a search after a threat.

Heavy city traffic was slowed to a crawl as police blocked part of George and Park Streets and diverted traffic around the area.

Detective Sergeant W. Tunstall, of the special bomb squad, said any person caught making hoax threats would be charged with creating a public mischief.

“This is a very serious charge carrying a penalty of six months in jail and a $1,000 fine”, he said.

The bomb hoaxes have fully extended police manpower.

Police estimated that more than 200 uniformed police have been taken from other duties to patrol Woolworths stores and carry out the searches after many of the threats.

“It is most frustrating”, they said. “Every hoax has to be checked out thoroughly and in many of the cases the stores have to be evacuated of staff and customers causing great inconvenience”, they said.

The Acting NSW Minister for Police, Mr Hills, said yesterday that no stone would be left unturned by police to bring those responsible for the Woolworths bombings and extortion demands to justice.

The total resources of the police force would continue to be available to protect the public and employees of the company from those responsible.

A special task force was working around the clock on the case.

A 19-year-old man was arrested yesterday at Ringwood, Melbourne, after a hoax call to a Woolworths store, police said last night.

They said that the man was arrested after   increased activity by Telecom to help catch hoax callers. He is due to appear in court today charged with making a menacing phone call and a false report to police.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/126166721?searchTerm=%22sergeant%20tunstall%22&searchLimits=sortby=dateAsc#pstart13922622

.

The Canberra Times ( ACT )      Tuesday  3 February 1981      p1 of 22

.

The Canberra Times ( ACT )      Thursday  23 April 1981      p10 of 22

COURT REPORTS

Charged man said ‘You’re kidding’,

SM told

SYDNEY: An entertainer told a detective, “You’re kidding”, when informed he would be charged over the Woolworths extortion attempt, Central Court was told yesterday.

Detective-Sergeant Wilfred Tunstall said this was the reaction of Mr Larry Burton Danielson, 48, of Huskisson, who, with Mr Gregory Norman McHardie, was appearing before Mr Webb, SM, charged with conspiring to demand money with menaces and by force between July 1 last year and January 13, 1981.

Each is also charged with attempting to steal $500,000 in cash, 22 diamonds and 10 50-ounce gold bars, the property of Woolworths, on January 13. Mr Danielson is further charged with breaking into Pro Diving Services at Huskisson on October 15, 1980, and January 13, 1981.

No plea has been entered.

Sergeant Tunstall said he had   interviewed Mr Danielson at Nowra police station on January 29. He had also played tapes of two telephone calls made to Woolworths employees by an

extortionist.

“1 told him he would be charged in relation to these matters”, Sergeant Tunstall said. “He said, ‘You’re   kidding’ “.

Earlier, evidence was given that on January 17 Mr Danielson had bought a diver’s oxygen tank from a shop at Rushcutter Bay, Sydney. That night the shop had been broken into and other diving equipment stolen.

Mr Christopher Charles Benning, diving instructor, of Manly Vale, said he had locked the shop when he left it at 10.30pm. After the robbery, diving gear and a diver’s propulsion unit had been missing.

Mr Benning said a propulsion unit produced in court was of the same colour and type as the one stolen.

Mr John Pritchard, for Mr Danielson, objected when the police prosecutor, Sergeant Garry Wells, tried to tender the propulsion unit as an exhibit. He said there was nothing to connect his client with the unit.

Sergeant Wells said the unit had been found in Sydney Harbour about a mile from where a diver, alleged to be Mr McHardie, had tried to collect a bag of extortion money from under a wharf at Taronga Park.

Mr Webb said he would admit the exhibit, but was doubtful about its value. He adjourned the case until 10am today.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/126835233?searchTerm=%22wilfred%20tunstall%22&searchLimits=sortby=dateAsc#pstart13925989

 

 

 

The Canberra Times ( ACT )      Tuesday  18 May 1982      p3 of 20

 Workmen patch the hole in the roof of Woolworths store in Liverpool yesterday after an early-morning bombing. Store staff rearrange stock to allow the store to open in the afternoon.

Workmen patch the hole in the roof of Woolworths store in Liverpool yesterday after an early-morning
bombing. Store staff rearrange stock to allow the store to open in the afternoon.

Escaper, store bomb linkSYDNEY: Police are “keeping an open mind” on the possibility of a link between convicted Woolworths bomber Mr Graham McHardie and an explosion at the Woolworths variety store at Liverpool early yesterday.

Detective Superintendent Noel Morey, of the Sydney CIB, confirmed that two sticks of gelignite had   exploded, causing damage estimated at about $10,000.

Police intensified their search for Mr McHardie, 28, who escaped from Parramatta jail last month during his trial   for the extortion bombings of three Woolworths stores in 1980. The police believe Mr McHardie or some of his associates could be responsible for yesterday’s explosion.

They also have not ruled out the possibility that the explosion was intended as revenge. “We are keeping an open mind,” a police spokesman said.

Detectives from the Special Breaking Squad, which investigated the 1980 bombings, spent several hours in the store yesterday, with members of the Police Scientific Squad, after it was found that the explosion was similar to previous Woolworths explosions.

Police said last night that the explosion had been caused by two sticks of gelignite which blew a hole three metres by one metre in the roof of the store about 4.40am. It also blew a hole in the wall of a second-storey office and was heard five kilometres away.

The means of detonating the explosive had not been discovered, although the area was searched yesterday by an officer from the Army Bomb   Disposal Unit.

The bomb could have been placed on the roof, or thrown up, since there was no sign of breaking and entering, or theft.

Police said blasts at Woolworths stores in Warilla and Maitland in 1980 were caused by gelignite bombs placed on the roof.

The store opened to the public at 3.30pm after workmen had repaired the damaged corrugated-iron roof and cleared debris.

A spokesman for Woolworths, Mr John Hendry, said security would not be increased “because previous experience shows it to be at a pretty high level”.

No ransom demand had been made by last night to Woolworths, and Detective-Sergeant Bill Tunstall, who   investigated the previous Woolworths bombings, said that at that time demand letters had not come for two days. If the style was to be the same this time “we might not get any letter for a few days yet”, he said.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/126896567?searchTerm=%22sergeant%20tunstall%22&searchLimits=sortby=dateAsc#pstart13937840

 

 

 

The Canberra Times ( ACT )      Thursday  23 December 1982      p6 of 22

Valuable paintings recovered

SYDNEY: Two valuable Australian paintings, stolen in 1976, have been recovered in a raid on a Darling Point house in Sydney.

The raid was carried out on Sunday by the Penrith-based regional crime squad, led by Detective-Sergeant Bill Tunstall.

Six paintings by well-known Australian artists were stolen from the   Manly Art Gallery in May, 1976.

The recovered paintings were an oil by Tom Roberts, painted in 1895, and entitled ‘The Flower Seller’ and a Norman Lindsay water colour entitled   ‘Swans and Peacocks’.

No arrests were made and inquiries are continuing in relation to the other paintings.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/130838568?searchTerm=%22sergeant%20tunstall%22&searchLimits=sortby=dateAsc#pstart12857246

 

 

 

The Canberra Times ( ACT )      Saturday  9 July 1988      p10 of 68

Rogerson used false name, bank man says

SYDNEY: Former Sydney detective Mr Roger Rogerson had used a   false name for an account he opened at a Penrith bank in July 1985, Glebe Local Court heard yesterday.

A former Westpac Bank branch manager, Mr Albert Blatch, told the court that Mr Rogerson had opened an account at his bank using the name Robert Tracey with a $58,000 bank cheque on July 9 that year.

Mr Blatch was giving evidence at committal proceedings against Mr Rogerson and two others charged with conspiring to pervert the course of  justice.

He said that Mr Rogerson had come into the bank with Detective Sergeant Bill Tunstall — whom Mr Blatch knew — and two others to discuss opening the account.

Mr Blatch said the cheque represented the balance of an account from another bank. Mr Rogerson had said he was not happy with the service.

Mr Rogerson had been introduced to him as Mr Rogerson, but had indicated he would like to keep his account   in the name of Robert Tracey.

Mr Blatch said he understood the account was opened to hold funds “coming from Mr Rogerson refurbishing motor vehicles that had been sold”.

Mr Blatch said that Mr Rogerson had telephoned three days after the account had been opened and inquired about withdrawing $40,000.

Mr Blatch said the funds subsequently had been transferred to the Taxation Department.

Earlier yesterday, “Miss Jones”, the protected witness giving evidence about a drug deal she allegedly made with Mr Rogerson in May 1985, broke down and wept after she was questioned about fears for her safety.

Under cross-examination by counsel for Mr Rogerson, Miss Jones said she feared for her safety after the death of Mr Dennis Allen, who died in April last year.

She told the court she feared one person and she wrote that name on a piece of paper.

Mr Rogerson, Sydney businessman Mr Maurice Nowytarger and Mr Nick Paltos have been charged with conspiring with Mr Ross Karp between May 1985 and March 1986 to pervert the course of justice.

The hearing resumes on Monday.

http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/102031470?searchTerm=%22sergeant%20tunstall%22&searchLimits=sortby=dateAsc#pstart11012867

 

 

 

 

Lyndall Margaret DURBRIDGE

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Lyndall Margaret DURBRIDGE  – nee HARRIS ( wife to John DURBRIDGE from BCI )

New South Wales Police Force

Police Academy Class 209

Regd. # ?

Rank?

Stations?, Eastern Suburbs District Office ( 1990’s )

ServiceFrom  to  ?

Awards?

Born:  26 January 1962

Died on:  Wednesday  6 January 2016

Cause:  Cancer

Age:  53

Funeral date:  Wednesday  13 January 2016 @ 1.30pm

Funeral location:  St Judes Church, 106 Avoca St, Randwick

Buried at?

 Memorial at?

 

Lyndall DURBRIDGE - nee HARRIS - NSWPF - Died 6 Jan 2016

LYNDALL is NOT mentioned on the Police Wall of Remembrance
  *NEED MORE INFO

 

 

 Funeral location


FURTHER INFORMATION IS NEEDED ABOUT THIS PERSON, THEIR LIFE, THEIR CAREER AND THEIR DEATH.

PLEASE SEND PHOTOS AND INFORMATION TO Cal

via Graham Maranda – RRRR FB page

Lyndall Durbridge nee Harris passed away last Wednesday night after a long battle with a very complicated type of cancer. Lyndall worked in the Eastern Suburbs District Officer in the 1990s.

Her funeral will be held next Wednesday the 13th January 2016 at St Judes Church, 106 Avoca St, Randwick at 1.30pm and afterwards at Randwick Golf Club.

Posted on behalf of Kara Leonard.
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On a personal note, my work over a number of years required continuous interactions with Lyndall whilst she worked at the District Office. Lyndall was simply a lovely young lady who always offered a smile, was soft spoken, sincere and loved a giggle. Lyndall was a loyal and professional Police Officer.

 

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