Tasmanian Police – Michmutters
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Australia

Tasmania police launch new Kia Stinger highway patrol car, which crashes two days later

A Tasmanian police officer has been taken to hospital after his new patrol car crashed into another vehicle traveling in the same direction on Tasmania’s main highway on Friday night.

Police said the acting sergeant in his late 50s was flown to the Royal Hobart Hospital by helicopter and was being treated for non-life threatening injuries.

The three occupants of the other car were not injured.

Police said crash investigators were conducting inquiries and the Tasmania Police Professional Standards Unit would monitor the investigation.

The crash comes two days after Tasmania Police publicly launched its new Kia Stinger highway patrol vehicles, which it said were “adding to the wide range of high-visibility resources available for the new Road Policing Services unit”.

The car involved in Friday’s crash is the same car police featured in their announcement on Wednesday.

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On Thursday, it was announced Inspector Gary Williams had “begun in the brand-new role of state road safety coordinator.”

“We’re throwing everything we can at making our roads safer, including these brand-new highway patrol vehicles, and we’re using other resources like drones and our community evidence portal to help us track down traffic offenders,” Inspector Williams said in a statement on Thursday.

“Talk to your family, talk to your friends, talk to your children, about making the right choices on our roads and make it clear that none of us should be taking risks or thinking we’re above the rules.

“Being ‘a good driver’ is irrelevant. It’s time for everyone to take road safety seriously.”

It is unclear how many of the new Kia patrol cars police have on Tasmanian roads.

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Categories
Australia

Wife of missing man Bruce Fairfax faces seven-year wait or Supreme Court for death certificate

The wife of a man missing since 2017 says she feels hamstrung by the fact she cannot obtain a death certificate and move forward with her life, almost five years after they were separated on a bush path in far southern Tasmania.

Louise Fairfax was with her husband Bruce when the pair set out to walk the track at Duckhole Lake, a flooded sinkhole surrounded by dense forest south of Hobart on October 14, 2017.

The pair, who were experienced hikers, were with their dog when they became separated on the path. The dog was later found.

A search involving police, SES volunteers and hikers was launched, with helicopter flyovers employing thermal detection methods to try and penetrate the thick scrub.

No trace of Mr Fairfax has ever been found.

Mr Fairfax, 66 at the time he disappeared, had Parkinson’s disease and would be unable to survive without his medication for more than a week, Tasmania Police said.

a woman in a pink top on top of a very tall mountain, with ocean and hills in the background
Louise Fairfax on top of Precipitous Bluff in south-west Tasmania.(Supplied: Louise Fairfax)

This week, police featured Mr Fairfax as one of the seven “long-term” missing people as part of Missing Person’s Week.

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