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Coroner hands down findings over Indigenous death in custody

Premium Content Subscriber only THE NT Coroner Judge Greg Cavanagh has found police need sufficient training of cultural protocols to effectively communicate with Indigenous families during investigations after an inquest into the death of an NT station hand and father of five, who was poised to become a future leader of his community . Kumanjayi Bloomfield, 42, died in a crash on the Plenty Highway near Harts Range after he tried to evade a roadside breath test (RBT) in July 2019. The inquest heard police called off the pursuit a short time after but later found Mr Bloomfield s body and the car wreckage.

Three Aboriginal deaths in custody in one week in Australia

Three Aboriginal deaths in custody in one week in Australia After days of official cover-ups, it has been revealed that three Aboriginal people recently died in custody in one week alone. The latest death occurred on March 7. An indigenous man died in Ravenhall Correctional Centre in the western suburbs of Melbourne, the Victorian state capital. On March 5, in New South Wales (NSW) a 44-year-old woman serving an eight-month sentence was found unresponsive in Sydney’s Silverwater Womens Correctional Centre. Her subsequent death followed that of a 35-year-old man who suffered from a pre-existing medical condition and was found unresponsive in Sydney’s Long Bay Jail Hospital on March 2. The cause of death is currently unknown.

When will we have peace? Grief and outrage at three Indigenous deaths in custody in a week

A 36-year-old Anaiwan Dunhutti man, Nathan Reynolds, died in 2018 gasping for air on a prison floor from an asthma attack after guards took an “unreasonably” long time to come to his aid. The NSW deputy coroner Elizabeth Ryan said the “confused, uncoordinated and unreasonably delayed” response by prison guards and health staff deprived Reynolds of “at least some chance” of survival. Reynolds’ family, who have waited almost three years for answers as to how and why he died – and, crucially, for somebody to be held responsible – heard the NSW deputy coroner give a brief summary of her findings on Thursday.

People die : Taking on Australia s biggest off-road race

Premium Content Subscriber only CONQUERING Australia’s biggest off-road race comes with an immense sense of relief more than anything else according to Fernvale glazier Lincoln Via. He knows the feeling well as he gets set to take on the Finke Desert Race for the ninth time later this year. The iconic two-day race, which sees bikes, cars, buggies and quads race from Alice Springs to the small Aputula community and back, spans 460km. Fernvale glazier Lincoln Via is preparing for the 2021 Finke Desert Race. Mr Via, who is originally from Alice Springs, finished 93rd out of 612 competitors in 2019 after a nine-year hiatus.

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