🚨 “IF THIS FOOTAGE IS REAL… EVERYTHING CHANGES.” — The Dezi Freeman case is exploding online as viewers focus on one chilling detail 👀

A new wave of viral claims has swept social media, centring on unverified footage allegedly showing a figure limping slowly through the darkness near the Murray River in New South Wales. Some online commentators insist the man matches key descriptions of Dezi Freeman (real name Desmond Filby), including a distinct right-leg injury, prompting speculation that the official account of his death may not be the full story.

Image
ichef.bbci.co.uk

Image
c.files.bbci.co.uk

Dezi Freeman, 56, a self-described sovereign citizen and conspiracy theorist, was wanted for the fatal shooting of two Victoria Police officers — Senior Constable Vadim de Waart-Hottart and Detective Leading Senior Constable Neal Thompson — and the wounding of a third officer on 26 August 2025 at a property in Porepunkah, northeast Victoria.

FULL STORY: {link}

What the circulating footage allegedly shows

Posts describe a shadowy figure moving along a remote highway or area near the Murray River, appearing to limp and matching Freeman’s general build and appearance. Witnesses (according to unverified social media reports) have highlighted the “distinct injury” as too coincidental to ignore. The theory suggests this could mean Freeman survived the police operation at Thologolong or that the announcement of his death was part of a larger tactic.

However, as of mid-April 2026, no mainstream Australian media outlet, Victoria Police statement, or official source has confirmed the authenticity or existence of any such video showing Freeman alive after the incident. The claims appear to originate almost exclusively from certain Facebook pages, conspiracy-oriented accounts, and viral posts pushing a “Ghost Trap” or “police lied” narrative.

Image
content.api.news

Image
content.api.news

The two officers killed in the Porepunkah shooting.

The established facts of the case

On 30 March 2026, after a seven-month manhunt involving hundreds of officers, police located Freeman at a remote rural property in Thologolong (near Walwa, close to the NSW border). He had been hiding in a modified shipping container set up for off-grid living.

After a three-hour standoff involving an armoured vehicle, negotiations, flashbangs, and smoke, Freeman reportedly emerged wrapped in a blanket and presented a firearm (believed stolen from one of the slain officers). Specialist officers from the Special Operations Group fired, striking him multiple times. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

Victoria Police formally identified the body through forensic and coronial processes by early April 2026. The coroner is conducting an independent investigation into the circumstances of the shooting.

Image
live-production.wcms.abc-cdn.net.au

Image
content.api.news

Aerial views of the Thologolong property showing the shipping container hideout, police armoured vehicle, and scene after the incident.

Why the theory is gaining traction — and why caution is needed

The “limping man” claims tap into existing public scepticism in some circles, especially given Freeman’s anti-authority beliefs and the high drama of the manhunt. Questions legitimately remain about how he evaded capture for so long in rugged terrain and whether he received assistance (police have investigated possible supporters).

That said, the “dead man walks” or “Ghost Trap” theory currently lacks any credible supporting evidence. Official records, multiple independent news reports, and forensic identification all point to Freeman being the man shot dead at Thologolong.

Sensational unverified videos and eyewitness anecdotes shared on social media should be treated with strong caution, particularly in high-profile cases involving police shootings. Misinformation can spread rapidly when emotions and distrust run high.

This remains a deeply tragic case: the murders of two police officers, the wounding of another, a massive resource-intensive manhunt, and the fatal confrontation with the suspect. The coronial inquest will examine all available evidence, including any credible new footage if it emerges and is verified.

The families of the fallen officers continue to grieve, as does Freeman’s family. The focus should stay on established facts and the formal investigative processes.

Images are from public news coverage of the Porepunkah shootings, the manhunt, and the Thologolong operation. This is a developing story under coronial review.