The Gold Coast Bulletin

Inspector and shoppers show we can be heroes

- Tim Blair

t wasn’t just me,” hero cop Amy Scott told NSW police minister Yasmin Catley on Saturday night.

The pair spoke mere hours after Scott had pursued and eliminated murderous Westfield maniac Joel Cauchi, and the two-decade police veteran wanted to give credit where it was due.

“There were a whole lot of bystanders assisting and helping people,” she told Catley.

Police Inspector Scott is too modest, but she is also even more of a hero for highlighti­ng the role of her spontaneou­sly formed civilian support team. From the very outset, Westfield’s rapid response volunteers were committed to ending the evil that invaded their city.

“This bloke walks around the corner, just really casually … and I notice a massive Rambo knife in his hand,” shopper Ryan Bramble told 2GB on Monday.

“I look him in the eyes. He looked at me, we were only a few metres apart, but he looked at me and just kept going.”

Cauchi possibly moved on because Ryan is male, and the killer seemed intent on attacking female victims. At that point, Inspector Scott arrived – on foot and flat out.

CCTV footage from inside a coffee shop shows Cauchi moving past. Scott next comes into view, running at a great clip.

Then follows Bramble and the team. Cauchi left the dead, dying and injured in his bloody wake, but Sydney was fighting back. Shopkeeper­s provided sanctuary. Members of the public steeled themselves and became instant paramedics.

And then there were the tradies, Frenchmen Damien Geurot and his mate Silas Despreaux, who took up bollards and blockaded the killer on an escalator.

“I didn’t know the situation, I didn’t know who he was, I just saw someone doing something crazy stuff,” Geurot told 7News. That’s often when people clear the zone.

But just like the team who’d chased Cauchi through the shopping centre, Geurot and Despreaux went directly towards the threat.

(Incidental­ly, Cauchi notably took a step backwards when confronted by Geurot and a bollard. A genuinely crazy person may not have been so suddenly cautious. Refer again to Ryan Bramble’s comment about Cauchi not taking him on.)

It is impossible to calculate how many lives were saved by the combined actions of Inspector Scott and her civilian allies. Let’s put it at “a lot”, and reflect on our great fortune to be protected not only by police but also by random folk in shops.

Sydney has shown its collective fearlessne­ss before. In 2019, 20-yearold Mert Ney stabbed Michaela Dunn to death in a Clarence St apartment, then attacked York St pedestrian Linda Bo with the same 20cm murder weapon.

Passers-by mobilised immediatel­y, chasing Ney and calling out his location and movements as others joined the hunt. Makeshift weapons were gathered along the way.

They came in handy. By the time police arrived at Ney’s Wynyard Lane capture point, he’d been swatted to the ground with a chair and pinned down with a milk crate.

Time was when civilians were advised to avoid challengin­g armed idiots. Bravery, we were told, could get additional innocent people killed.

Which is both true and beside the point. Yes, one or a number of the Westfield responders could have been injured or killed by Joel Cauchi. Yes, they would have been safer outside the shopping centre.

But lives were not only saved by the Westfield team and their attitude of energetic engagement. Lives were enhanced. Amid all of Saturday’s terror and distress, Sydney was elevated by those who acted so quickly and fearlessly on behalf of their fellow citizens.

Or, as NSW Premier Chris Minns put it: “It has been incredible to see complete strangers jump in, run towards the danger, put their own lives in harm’s way to save someone that they’ve never met before.”

Sadly, we’ll likely need a great deal more of this. As Sydney and other cities suffer downturns in safety and civility, we will need further Westfield volunteers to step up and take a stand.

“Westfield volunteers”, of course, being potentiall­y any of us who is present at a moment of danger and decides to get involved.

The ancient shouldn’t feel left out. As a mate who’s even older than me points out, he’s still able to block a bullet or blade. He just won’t be talking about it much afterwards.

 ?? ?? Hero police officer Amy Scott who brought down the Westfield stabber.
Hero police officer Amy Scott who brought down the Westfield stabber.
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