Mercury (Hobart)

‘I do need help … I’m very sorry’

- PAUL TOOHEY

THE accused was led into a small room within the Darwin Correction­al Centre wearing a red T-shirt and white shorts. One hand was heavily bandaged. His head was a mess of scars. He faced the video monitor. “Yes, I can hear you,” he told Judge Elizabeth Morris.

Benjamin Glenn Hoffmann, 45, seemed anxious to talk, but this preliminar­y hearing did not require him to say anything. There would be no plea entered, no reading of the facts relating to his alleged twilight rampage on Tuesday when four men died and a woman survived after being shot in the legs.

Ms Morris, sitting 30km away in the Darwin Local Court, wanted to know whether Hoffmann was at risk — to himself, or from others — and asked whether she should make an order to that effect. His lawyer Peter Maley had nothing to say on that.

Hoffmann spoke. “I do need help,” he said. “And I have asked for help.”

He edged forward in his chair again. “I’m very sorry about what’s happened, I want to speak to Peter (Maley) as soon as I can.”

Hoffmann had been released on parole in January after serving four of his sixyear sentence for violent offences. He was under strict conditions, including that he commit no further crimes, wear an ankle monitor, have no control of a firearm and that he stay away from two people, whose names have been redacted.

Hoffmann, charged with four counts of murder, two counts of recklessly endangerin­g life and two counts of criminal damage, had his parole revoked.

“Yeah, OK, can I speak to Peter Maley as soon as I can?” said Hoffmann. Mr Maley told his client to say no more and he would be out to see him as soon as he could.

As far as could be told, there were no families of the victims in court, and no one supporting Hoffmann. He stood and left the 12-minute hearing. His alleged rampage had taken just 28 minutes.

Hoffmann’s charges have shut a legal gate on what can from hereon be said about his background, at least until his next hearing on September 18. It is understood from people close to Hoffmann’s case that he will plead not guilty when the time comes.

However, the evidence of Hoffmann as a longstandi­ng abuser of methamphet­amine is well establishe­d. And Police Commission­er Reece Kershaw said it was “likely” Hoffmann was on ice. It is understood he went to Royal Darwin Hospital the evening before seeking help, saying he felt unwell and thought someone had spiked his drink.

The court adjourned and Darwin was left coming to terms with the aftermath of one of its most savage events in living memory. DARWIN’s underbelly is different to the big capitals. There is none of the sophistica­ted criminal class of well-heeled untouchabl­es who sit back and hire hit men. There are bikies, there are kid gangs and there’s a number of loosely affiliated young men who are known as repeat violent offenders.

These men are unpredicta­ble because they tend to take matters into their own hands. Methamphet­amine has done its damage.

It is known that someone assisted Hoffmann in the alleged purchase of shotgun ammunition on the day. And a hunting knife. On the day of the murders, he had left Humpty Doo in the morning and had been pulled over and fined by police for speeding.

Speed cameras clocked him twice more as he drove to town. Somehow, he had acquired an illegal pump-action shotgun which was understood to have been stolen in 1997 and had since been circulatin­g in the undergroun­d.

Police have theorised that he was looking for someone when he went to the Palms Motel on the edge of Darwin’s CBD, just before 6pm. A group of Aboriginal visitors to town were sitting down smoking at a hostel across the road from the Palms. They heard shots — up to eight of them, they said — and witnessed a shooter prowling about with his gun pointed towards them. They ran for their lives inside the hostel. The first victim was taxi driver Hassan Baydoun, 33, who was killed inside the Palms.

Baydoun did not know the shooter. Friends of the Lebanese man kept a vigil until late at the nearby taxi depot, but they already knew the worst.

It is understood a woman, also unknown to the shooter, was shot in the legs after Hoffmann allegedly fired through a motel door. Then it is alleged

Hoffmann, driving a Toyota extended cab ute, drove around the corner to an address on Gardens Hill Rd. There, a 75-year-old man, Nigel Hellings, was shot dead inside his apartment. He had no associatio­n with Hoffmann but it is speculated the apartment, or one nearby, may once have been occupied by someone known to Hoffmann.

A short drive on, Michael Sisois, 57, was gunned down in the back carpark of the Buffs Club. He was known to Hoffmann, but any alleged motive remains unclear.

Then Hoffmann allegedly drove another 2km to an industrial area just off the main highway into town.

There, he entered an apartment and walked past Johnny Reid, who was sitting down watching television. Rob Courtney, 52, is believed to have engaged Hoffmann with a knife and stabbed him, but Hoffmann allegedly killed him with the shotgun.

Again, Hoffmann and Courtney were known to each other. Courtney, who worked as a security guard at the Mindil Beach Casino Resort, had been due the following day to appear in the Supreme Court for a mention relating to an attempted rape charge.

If this played any role in Hoffmann’s alleged motivation­s, police are yet to say.

After the alleged rampage, Hoffmann went to the police headquarte­rs at Berrimah. He banged on the door, with the shotgun in his right hand. The counter staff did not recognise the threat. He left.

He drove away and called Superinten­dent Lee Morgan, who negotiated with Hoffmann to surrender at the Daly St lights, just several hundred metres from where the killing began. He was put to the ground and tasered, his legs running with blood.

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