Police killed in Victoria, Tasmania loom large as Sydney gathers for National Remembrance Day

The ruthless allegation of the police murder in Victoria and Tasmania seemed to be great as they gathered in Sydney CBD to pay their respect for those killed on the task line.
Duzines police, political and social leaders, NSW police commemorated on the wall of the National Police Commemoration Day on Monday.
The gloomy event comes in June 2025, after the allegation of Tasmanian police officer Keith Smith, the country’s police forces come in a difficult time, especially for the police forces.
Death came only weeks before the murder allegedly kidnapped by the officers in Victoria Neal Thompson and Vadim de Waart-Hottart.
NSW police commissioner Peter Thurtell remembered that civil servants were killed and said to the packaged crowd: ız Our thoughts are today with their families and colleagues. ”
NSW Governor Margaret Beazley said that the deaths of civil servants were deeply felt by their families and “all of us”.

“Because we know that they are brave in this daily sense – what the courage means for the NSW police,” he said.
“And we remind you that every day, we remind our police officers that you take significant risks when you start work and take care of the office.
Senior priest Suzanne Avery urged the crowd to remember his colleagues between states to “upset the loss”.
“Our hearts and prayers go to these families as they agree with this tremendous grief,” he said.


“The road to the cat is difficult and sometimes traitor.
“If you are something like me, you will have days you feel invincible, and then you see a photo, you pass by a car that looks like theirs.
“You eat their favorite food and you are solved.”
Ms. Avery said that policing is a “challenging profession ve and that the society protects the society for“ the worst (and) that they have to protect us from ourselves ”.
‘Over again’: Minns’s Message
NSW Premier Chris Minns remembered the latest Police Academy graduation with the Minister of Police Yasmin Catley.
Ms. Catley joined the NSW police commissioner Mal Lanon on Monday.
Mrs. Minns, the age of the crowd of new graduates said: “Half of the parade was under 21 years of age.
“We both want our police officers to do extraordinary things in each shift.
“From you, NSW police force from women and women, on the other side of the knocked on the doors, when sick people lose control, variable people feel desperate and reckless, without thinking about the danger and evil.


Uz We want our officers to enter terrible situations as an ordinary part of their daily work, and the truth of the issue was that if there were an emergency tomorrow, we want them to do it again again. ”
The wall next to the NSW Art Gallery remembers 284 police officers who died during the task.
On Monday, the names of the eight officers who lost their lives in the service were added after the analysis of historical records.
They go from Constable James Coudy, who was killed in June 1870, to the Constable George Shiell, who died on December 7, 1912.
Stephen Nixon, a 32 -year -old North NSW police officer who died in November 2019, will also be added to the wall.

His family joined the political leaders in a wreath on the wall on Monday.
Each of the men was honored with a bell bell in addition to the civil servants allegedly killed in Tasmania and Victoria, and at the same time the former officers who died.
NSW Chief Public Prosecutor Michael Daley and opposition leader Mark Speakman attended the event on Monday.
Representatives of political representatives and state emergency services, judicial, police unions and agencies and Jewish MPs from the United States, England, New Zealand, Canada, Japan and Papua Yeni Guinea were also involved.

