Dezi Freeman is not the first fugitive to flee the Australian bush

Dezi Freeman is not the first fugitive to flee the Australian bush

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The Australian Bush has served as a hiding place for fugitives from the law for centuries, because the police are looking high and low for a “modern Ned Kelly” accused of killing two officers in cold -blooded blood.
Dezi Freeman fueled a huge manhunt after reportedly shot the dead detective, leading senior agent Neal Thompson and senior agent Vadim de Waart.
He was last seen that Tuesday morning in Duilde Bushland fled after the officers and eight others tried to serve a house search order in a Porepunkah -property in the High Land of Victoria.
The dangerous and complex bushterrein hinders search efforts, the police admit.

The 56-year-old suspect, who is considered potentially armed, knows the “bush like the back of his hand” and is a “modern Ned Kelly”, the local population has told AAP.

Kelly and other bush rangers operated in the countryside in the late 18th and 19th centuries, hid and escaped in the bush after committing crimes.

In more modern times, accused murderers have used the same tactics to avoid the law.

Malcolm seams

Malcolm seams was on the run for seven years after neighbor Kristy Scholes was discovered, strangled in the bedroom of the house of his grandparents in Dubbo in June 2005.
His cousin Latesha Nolan, also 24, was missing in January that year, with the mother of Four’s Bones in 2016.

Between 2005 and 2012, seams broke out in different properties, while hiding in the bush, thousands of food and clothing items, as well as different weapons.

In 2016, the police confirmed that a bone was found near a Dubbo River to Lateesha Nolan. Source: MONKEY / Vision Communicators / Brian Harvey

In 2011, the police were closely driven him in the vicinity of a campsite at Nowendoc, but he escaped in the shoulder after shooting a police officer.

A reward of $ 50,000 for information that led to the conquest of seams rose to $ 250,000 by the time he was finally arrested in 2012 for private property near Gloucester, in Mid-North NSW.

The former Shearer and Abattoir employee was sentenced to life imprisonment after he was found guilty of the murders in 2005.

Gino and Mark Stocco

Former father-en-son fugitors Gino and Mark Stocco flee for eight years from the police for the violations and other crimes.
They opened the fire on Highway Patrol officers to prevent arrest in the neighborhood of Wagga Wagga, which caused a large knock hunt in October 2015.

The couple was followed to a high -quality home in the center of West NSW and arrested by heavily armed officers.

A man in a baseball cap with a towel that is draped over his shoulders is accompanied by two police officers in the Blo's. He is fascinated and seems to have a bruised face.

Gino Stocco and his son Mark were arrested on October 28, 2015 in Dunedoo in Northwest-NSW. Source: MONKEY / David Moir

Detectives later discovered the body of missing the caretaker Rosario Cimone born in Italy.

Gino later told a psychiatrist that he and his son started working on farms on farms after a bitter separation of his wife and the prison sentence of the couple for burglary.

He said that he was “relieved that it is completely over” before the father and son were sentenced to a respective 40-year prison.

James d’Ezilva

James d’Zilva repeatedly avoided the police in the Yarra Ranges Bushland to the east of Melbourne after putting senior agent Chris Bullen at a gas station in Healesville on December 7, 2010.
An officer said the dreadlocked, Barefoot Bushman had the speed and the endurance to run at the Olympic Games.
D’Zelva was eventually picked up by the police in the center of Melbourne of Richmond on January 5, 2011.
The police said that D’Zelva, who had schizophrenia and was eventually sentenced to 604 days in prison, occasionally seemed to make in the edge of the city to steal food without any help or a permanent camp.

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