Coroner to remain: Rolfe must take the stand in the inquiry into the death of Kumanjayi Walker
Kumanjayi Walker’s family are a step closer to the truth behind his death, after Coroner Armitage yesterday dismissed a request from former Constable Zachary Rolfe to remove herself from the inquest.
Rolfe had made an application for the Coroner to recuse herself based on perceived bias against him, just weeks before he was due to give evidence. This follows previous unsuccessful attempts by Rolfe to avoid giving evidence at the inquest into the police-shooting death.
On 9 November 2019, Warlpiri and Luritja teenager Kumanjayi Walker was killed after Rolfe shot him three times at close range in his home community of Yuendumu. Rolfe was charged with murder after the shooting but acquitted at trial.
The inquest commenced in September 2022 and the Coroner has so far heard hundreds of hours of evidence from Kumanjayi Walker’s family, community members, Aboriginal leaders and police officers. The Coroner has also watched hours of video evidence and read thousands of pages of witness statements. Rolfe and his former colleague Sergeant Lee Bauwens are the last two scheduled witnesses.
Quote from Samara Fernandez-Brown, cousin of Kumanjayi Walker:
“Although the constant disruptions in our journey for justice have been difficult and frustrating, we are hopeful that this decision will mean that Zachary Rolfe finally faces the inquest. To learn the truth about our loved one’s death and for change to come, Rolfe must answer for his actions. There is no moving forward without full truth and accountability.”
Quote from Jared Sharp, Acting Principal Legal Officer, North Australian Aboriginal Justice Agency (NAAJA):
“We stand with the Aboriginal communities of the Northern Territory and more specifically with the family and community of Kumanjayi Walker as they fight for long overdue justice and accountability. They deserve to know the full truth about how and why their loved one died. It is time for Rolfe to take the stand in this inquest and provides answers on his actions.”
Background
The North Australian Aboriginal Justice Agency (NAAJA), with support from the Human
Rights Law Centre, have intervened in the coronial inquest to highlight systemic injustices
experienced by Aboriginal people in the Northern Territory. They are calling for:
-
an end to discriminatory policing and excessive use of force by police;
-
independent and robust police accountability mechanisms; and
-
proper resourcing for self-determined solutions including community-led alternatives to police.
A copy of the Coroner’s decision can be found here
Media Contact:
Thomas Feng
Media and Communications Manager
Human Rights Law Centre
0431 285 275
thomas.feng@hrlc.org.au

Aboriginal human rights experts take Australia’s racist youth justice policies to the UN
Aboriginal leaders are calling on the United Nations to take urgent action to address Australia’s discriminatory and punitive youth justice policies
Read more
Allan Government hands police excessive stop and search powers
People could be stopped and searched at any time and for no reason for up to six months in designated areas of Victoria under expanded police search powers passed by the Allan Government today, says the Human Rights Law Centre.
Read more
Bail saves lives, but Allan Government’s proposed bail laws repeat past failures
The Allan Government has proposed reviving the worst of dangerous and discriminatory bail laws which will harm Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and generations of Victorian children.
Read more