Murder charges in alleged DV deaths, response probe
Source: X/Anthony Albanese
An independent probe will look at why it took an hour for NSW police to respond to a call to help a woman who died after a violent assault.
A man has been charged over the murder of a woman in northern NSW with police launching an investigation into a one-hour delay after first receiving a call for help.
Officers arrived at a home in Casino, in the Northern Rivers region, about 2.27am on Saturday after receiving a call over welfare concerns.
They found a woman, who is yet to be formally identified but thought to be in her 40s, with “obvious injuries” to her head caused by a physical assault, NSW Police Assistant Commissioner Peter McKenna said.
“She was unconscious but breathing,” he told reporters on Saturday.
“Police assisted her and called for an ambulance immediately. [It] arrived very shortly after but unfortunately her condition deteriorated and she died at the scene.”
A 31-year-old man was arrested at the scene and taken to Lismore Police Station, where he was subsequently charged with one count of murder.
He is believed to have been in a relationship with the woman for some months, McKenna said.
A crime scene has been set up and a regional critical incident team will investigate all circumstances surrounding the case, including the police response.
A triple-zero call was made just after 1.30am but it took until 2.25am for police to acknowledge the call, with officers in Casino arriving at the scene two minutes later, McKenna said.
“The delay in the timing of police acknowledging that call and attending the scene has given me enough concern that I’ve asked for an independent review of this investigation as to what that delay was and if it was justified,” he said.
“We want to see what happened from the time that call was made, how the radio operator dispatched that call, the circumstances around the timings till it was acknowledged and until police attended.”
The independent critical incident probe will look at whether the call was allocated the right priority and if it was acknowledged as such.
Homicide squad members are separately working with local officers to investigate the woman’s death.
McKenna said police took domestic violence seriously and the issue was at the “top of our priority list”.
“It is one of the most serious crimes there is and we will do everything we can to take this as seriously as we can and make sure people are held to account and put before the courts,” he said.
Fatal stabbing in rural Qld town
A man has been charged with domestic violence-related murder after he allegedly sparked a crash and shut down a major Queensland highway.
A 51-year-old woman was stabbed to death at an property in the rural town of Mighell, near Innisfail, in northern Queensland on Friday afternoon.
The 51-year-old Mighell man, who police will allege knew the woman, is accused of fleeing the scene in a car before police arrived.
The car then collided with a truck on the Bruce Highway at Sandy Pocket, with the man fleeing on foot and allegedly trying to carjack a woman before he was arrested near the road.
Both the truck driver and female driver were uninjured.
Police charged the man with one count of domestic violence-related murder on Saturday and are working to determine whether he might have committed other offences.
They are appealing for witnesses, particularly those with relevant CCTV or dash-cam vision, to immediately come forward.
The man is expected to face Cairns Magistrates Court on July 1.
1800 RESPECT 1800 737 732
Lifeline 131 114
-AAP