NSW police yet to withdraw protest charge against Hannah Thomas as promised as she pleads not guilty | New South Wales

The new Southern South Wales police have not yet accused Hannah Thomas, a pro -Filestin protester Hannah Thomas, which was rarely introduced after the 2005 Cronulla rebellions.
Thomas was arrested and on June 27, Mr. The 35 -year -old child was hospitalized, and his lawyers claimed that a police officer had punched him in his face. Last week, Thomas had a second surgical tour between what he was afraid of losing his opinion in his right eye.
Former Greens candidate, Stewart O’Connell’s Bankstown local court on Tuesday heard his job briefly.
Although Deputy Commissioner said that Brett McFadden said it would be last week, the last accusation has not yet withdrew.
McFadden, said in a statement to examine whether the charges against Thomas are relevant and appropriate, after the start of an investigation, the last accusation used to suppress the “large -scale public disorders ılan introduced after the Cronulla rebellions, he said. He said Thomas would face a movement on the direction instead.
On Tuesday, however, the court heard that Thomas was confronted with all three charges, and prosecutor Chris Allison said that none of them had yet withdrawn.
Allison, a lawyer for the NSW Public Prosecutor’s Office (ODPP), told the court that ODPP took over the issue of Thomas on Tuesday.
On Monday, a statement that requested the withdrawal of the charges against Thomas, O’Brien criminals and civil lawyers lawyers, a police officer punched him during the protest and claimed that he had “comprehensive and serious injuries in his eyes”.
Lawyers, the police after watching the body cam footage of the criminal proceedings against his clients, they took the step to comment on the case, he said.
Thomas ‘NSW province would sue for “NSW police officers’ concern, injury, detention and prosecution actions”.
Days after the arrest of Thomas, McFadden said that he watched the video of ABC Radio’s body worn and said, “There is no information that shows any abuse on behalf of my officers before me”.
The arrest of Thomas was declared a critical incident by the police, which means that the independent police observer would supervise the investigation.
Protesters claimed that the SEC coating produced parts used in the F-35 jet program. However, the SEC Covering rejected that this was the case.
After the bulletin promotion
The four protesters accused of Thomas heard their issues at Bankstown on Tuesday. They all argued that he was not guilty of various charges of protests and arrests.
This was confronted with a 26 -year -old Zack Schofield, not to obey a police direction and to resist the police. On Tuesday, he abolished a bail situation that restricted his participation in protests.
O’Connell, the lawyer of O’Brien criminals and civil lawyers, told the court to the court that moved on behalf of the five protesters.
“We say that [direction from police] clearly illegal. “
Outside the court on Tuesday, O’Connell said: “Every minute of these charges continue, another minute of injustice.” He said.
“The accusations are ridiculous.
“Hannah Thomas will do anything he can do to bring accountability to the NSW police and get justice.”
O’Connell claimed that the body wearing a video depicted a “brutal, cowardly and inferiority attack”.