Cheers and shouts of 鈥淛ustice for Walker!鈥 erupted at the Alice Springs courthouse on聽October 26, as Local Court Judge John Birch committed a police officer to stand trial for the murder of Kumanjayi Walker.
Family and community members had travelled from the remote community of Yuendumu, where Walker was shot by Constable Zachary Rolfe in November 2019. On hearing the news, one community member told the gathered crowd of supporters: 鈥淭his is what we needed鈥, .
The decision to commit Wolfe to trial is an historic moment for the Northern Territory. As Thalia Anthony and Eddie Cubillo noted in a聽few days later: 鈥淚t is the first time a police officer in a First Nations death in custody case since the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody in 1991.鈥
Rolfe fatally shot Walker on November 9 when he, along with聽four other officers, entered Walker鈥檚 house to arrest him.
During Rolfe鈥檚 committal hearing in September, the court heard that the arrest was expected to be potentially dangerous, with prosecutor : 鈥溾楾here was a careful plan put in place by [a local sergeant] which involved the deceased being arrested whilst he was asleep at five in the morning鈥.鈥
That plan was ignored, however, and Walker died after Wolfe shot him during the attempted arrest.
Protests calling for justice for Walker and solidarity with the Yuendumu community took place around the country days later on November 13, and that day Rolfe was charged with murder.
But within hours of being charged, Wolfe was released on bail, after applying for it via telephone.
Marty Aust from the NT Criminal Lawyers Association described this as unusual: 鈥淚t鈥檚 very unusual in the extreme that a homicide charge would be the subject of a successful bail application via telephone, given the presumption is against bail,鈥欌 the .听
As : 鈥淭he freedom that Rolfe enjoys on bail contrasts with the high remand rates for First Nations people (85%) in the NT. Rolfe has also been stood down from the police force while on bail, but is still receiving pay.鈥
While the community welcomed Wolfe鈥檚 arrest, and cheered at Birch鈥檚 decision that there is sufficient evidence against Wolfe for the matter to proceed to trial, their calls for justice since Walker鈥檚 tragic shooting have been more far-reaching.
In the aftermath of his death, the community called for police there to be disarmed. Community leaders have also pointed to the NT intervention and its continuing legacy of over-policing in NT communities.
, speaking at an event to mark the 13th anniversary of the intervention earlier this year, said: 鈥淭he biggest lot of money ever spent on Yuendumu was more than $7 million to build a new police station.
鈥淲e have more police than ever and more people in jail than ever. The welfare mob keep taking children away and don't respect our extended families.听
鈥淲e want our local council back, we want our houses back, we want police to respect us and stop wearing guns.鈥
Rolfe鈥檚 bail has been extended, and he will face the Supreme Court on November 25.
Meanwhile, the Yuendumu community held Walker鈥檚 funeral service on October 17, days before hearing the news that Rolfe will stand trial.