The Arrest of the Accused, and the Time Spent at Granville Police Station
- At 1.05am police officers arrived at the accused's address in Bird Avenue, Guildford. The accused was not then at home. When he arrived home at about 1:59am, he was immediately arrested. His interactions with police were recorded by body worn cameras affixed to the uniforms of the officers who dealt with the accused. The accused can be seen walking along the street towards his home. He was intercepted by waiting officers, stopped, and told he would be searched. He was quiet and compliant, complaining only of the cold, and some aspects of the searching procedure. He sometimes laughed in circumstances that were manifestly not humorous. Nothing of interest was found in his possession. When formally arrested and cautioned, the accused responded, "I don't even know". [4]
- The lower legs of the accused's tracksuit pants and his shoes and socks were noted to be wet, although conditions were dry. When asked why he was wet the accused responded, "It's a jungle out there." Blood, almost certainly Grant Kelly's, was later detected on his right shoe, in significant quantities, with further blood on the laces of his left shoe. The accused was asked if he had been through nearby Duck Creek but said that his socks were wet from "water and residue". When searched for a second time prior to being loaded into a transport vehicle, the accused remained compliant, although he had a conversation in a foreign language with a female who was off camera. At one point he said:
"I can't even stand bro, I honestly feel like I've got a massive headache, like a trauma on my, my brain's just flogging, you know what I mean? You know what I mean? Like, never mind, it's …. it's flogging."
- The accused's hands were secured inside evidentiary bags, a procedure that was also filmed by body worn camera. [5] He muttered during this process and at one point said, "It's alright mate […] we're just sitting here screaming". He was taken to Granville Police Station.
- At the Station he entered the secure dock without incident. [6] His clothes were taken for forensic purposes, and the accused was cooperative with the process. [7] Sitting in the dock he laughed inappropriately from time to time. At one point, in an unresponsive comment, he said:
"I don't know, I don't know about you, but I can remember the whole fucken city through it, I really, and bring them back. Did you know that? On your fact sheet it's, it's all there big brother. All right mate, you don't know what I've been though Habibie. You know I love you too."
- The accused frequently gazed about, appearing to focus on vacant spaces, sometimes speaking unintelligibly towards the space, and smiling, muttering, and laughing. His conversation with detectives a little later that morning was focused on food and was, to a degree, rambling. [8]
- He told the custody manager that his "head, neck and brain hurts". An ambulance was called but paramedics, who arrived at 4:35am, found no sign of trauma. One of the attending paramedics advised the Custody Manager that there was "no reason why they would schedule" the accused. [9] The Custody Management Record later noted:
"5:10am 24/8/2020 - ambulance officers returned to confirm that police had not witnessed anything that would require mental health assessment. Confirmed neg". [10]
- On that assurance it seems that no formal mental state assessment was conducted. By 5:22am the accused was kicking the dock. [11]
- When in police custody the accused was by turns aggressive and calm. From time to time, he removed the evidentiary bags from his hands, sometimes being resistant to requests to replace them, whilst at other times cooperating. He was observed to rant nonsensically, and was recorded in the Custody Management Record as appearing to be irrational. The responsible officer noted that the accused "made some unusual comments about 'bombs', and his ability to access them". The accused reported a history of "depression" and commented that "he sacked his psychologist [and] could not remember her name". The Custody Management Officer noted that the accused was "somewhat erratic". When aggressive, the accused swore loudly and kicked at the dock in which he was secured. An officer left to monitor the accused heard him say, "I'm a killer, we kill for a living". He frequently mumbled to himself and at other times shouted aggressively. His own clothes having been taken by police for evidentiary purposes, the accused ripped the overall supplied to clothe him, such that it was rent almost in two, leaving him significantly exposed.
- One officer, attending to unrelated duties that afternoon in the accused's vicinity, overheard him say, "Is Grant dead? Am I here because he is dead?". When he said those words he looked directly at the officer, thereafter looking at the ceiling and using "rambling" words. The constable described the accused's actions, demeanour and general behaviour as like that of a person "having a mental health episode".
- The accused's solicitors arrived later on the morning of 24 August 2020, but the accused was adjudged unable to be interviewed due to his aggressive conduct. Later in the day, at 1:36pm, he was asked to consent to the examination of his hands but refused. After an order was obtained from a senior officer for the forensic procedure to be carried out without the accused's consent, the accused was advised that it would be done. The accused became so aggressive [12] that officers from the Regional Enforcement Squad were called in to restrain him, and the examination was conducted with the accused handcuffed (for the most part) to the rear, and physically restrained by two officers, with two more standing by. A recording of the procedure is in evidence as Ex. B.E. It shows the accused struggling against three officers as he was brought into the room in which the procedure was conducted. His overall was so torn as to hang from one shoulder, exposing his torso and one leg. After a few minutes the accused became quieter and ceased to struggle. Although he appeared to complain from time to time about the discomfit caused by the handcuffs, he remained calm for the balance of the 28 minute procedure. The Custody Management Records note that the accused was given food after the examination of his hands was completed. The entries thereafter record him as calm and cooperative.
- At about 1:30pm the accused was asked to consent to a further forensic procedure, the taking of a buccal swab. Footage of that encounter is also in evidence before the Court as Ex. B.E. It shows the accused, in fresh and entire overalls, calm and apparently fully able to comprehend and respond rationally to questions directed to him about the procedure. At one point he asked to consult a solicitor and, having done so, the accused returned to the recording suite and the procedure was carried out with consent and without incident.
- The accused was transferred to the custody of NSW Corrections at 23:42 that evening.