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Jury acquits NT police officer accused of murdering Aboriginal teenager

A jury has found Northern Territory Police Constable Zachary Rolfe not guilty of murdering Kumanjayi Walker after he fatally shot the Aboriginal teenager during an outback arrest.

Mar 11, 2022, updated Mar 11, 2022
Zachary Rolfe departs the Supreme Court of the Northern Territory in Darwin. (AAP Image/Aaron Bunch)

Zachary Rolfe departs the Supreme Court of the Northern Territory in Darwin. (AAP Image/Aaron Bunch)

Constable Rolfe, 30, denied murdering Kumanjayi Walker after the teen stabbed him with a pair of scissors on November 9, 2019.

He also pleaded not guilty in the Northern Territory Supreme Court to the two alternative charges of manslaughter and violent act causing death.

The jury on Friday also acquitted the constable of those offences.

Outside court, Rolfe said the jury had made “the right decision”.

“A lot of people are hurting today, Kumanjayi’s family and his community, and it did not need to get to this point, so I am going to leave this space for them,” he said.

Defence lawyer David Edwardson QC said Rolfe should not have been charged and the investigation into his actions was appalling.

“A number of public figures have had a lot to say before he was charged and again that is regrettable,” he said.

“Consequences will flow.”

Mr Walker’s cousin Samara Fernandez Brown said the community was saddened by the result and she did not believe the trial had been fair.

“Throughout the trial Kumanjayi has been depicted solely as a dangerous individual … he has been criticised and picked apart by people who did not know him,” she said.

“They saw only his flaws and wish to put him at trial for his own death and that is disgusting.”

Walker died after Rolfe fired three shots into the 19-year-old’s back and torso as he resisted arrest in Yuendumu, 290km northwest of Alice Springs.

The Crown conceded the first shot, fired while the teen was standing and wrestling with Sergeant Adam Eberl, was justified.

But it said the second and third shots, which are the subject of the murder charge, went “too far”.

Jurors at the four-and-a-half week trial heard evidence from about 40 witnesses. Police body-worn camera footage of the shooting was also shown to the court.

The court heard senior police sent Rolfe and four other officers from Alice Springs to patrol the community of about 800 on the evening Walker died.

They were also ordered to gather intelligence about the teen’s location and arrest him early the following morning when he was likely to be sleeping and easily taken into custody.

Instead, they tracked Walker down at his grandmother’s home within 15 minutes of leaving the Yuendumu police station.

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A video of the incident showed Walker lying about his identity before Rolfe and Sgt Adam Eberl, then a constable, attempted to handcuff him about a minute later.

A scuffle broke out and the teen stabbed Rolfe in his shoulder with a pair of scissors before the constable fired one shot into his back.

He fired the next two shots in quick succession 2.6 seconds later.

Walker died about an hour after the second shot ripped through his spleen, lung, liver and a kidney.

Prosecutor Philip Strickland SC said Sgt Eberl was effectively restraining Walker on the ground when the fatal second shot hit him.

Rolfe was on a mission to track the teen down after watching a video of him violently threatening other officers with an axe on November 6, he said.

The constable also did not have an honest belief he needed to fire the second and third shots to protect himself, or that they were a reasonable response.

His state of mind was that if Walker showed any resistance or pulled out a weapon he would draw his gun and if necessary, fire it, he said.

Rolfe told the jury he felt Walker’s hand on his police pistol and spotted him stabbing Eberl in the chest and neck, and that he feared for his and his partner’s lives.

His lawyer David Edwardson QC said Rolfe had no choice but to pull the trigger and Walker had a lengthy and violent criminal history.

He said Rolfe was defending himself and his partner when he fired all three shots and that he was performing his duty as a police officer, and acting in good faith in that role.

The jury agreed.

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