“IT WASN’T JUST POLICE BULLETS!” 😱🩸🔥

The final autopsy report for Dezi Freeman just leaked, and it is NOT what the authorities told us. While the official story says he was “neutralized” in a shootout, the forensic evidence tells a much darker, more twisted tale. New findings on the body suggest that Freeman might have been dying long before the SOG pulled their triggers—or worse, that the fatal wounds don’t match the tactical team’s official positions.

Was he poisoned? Was it a “mercy kill” by an accomplice? Or is the coroner hiding something even more explosive? The “clear-cut” end to Australia’s biggest manhunt just became its biggest mystery. The investigation isn’t over—it’s just been blown wide open.

SEE THE SHOCKING AUTOPSY DETAILS & FORENSIC MAP HERE 👇

It was supposed to be the forensic “period” at the end of a long, bloody sentence. Instead, the final autopsy report into the death of Dezi Freeman has acted as a question mark that is threatening to de-rail the entire Victoria Police narrative.

The report, finalized this week and leaked to investigative circles, suggests that the “hail of bullets” at Thologolong on March 30 may not be the full story. While police confirmed Freeman was shot “more than 20 times,” the coroner’s detailed findings point to a series of medical anomalies that have experts—and the public—demanding answers.

The “Pre-Existing” Fatalities

The most explosive detail in the 45-page document concerns the timing of Freeman’s injuries. Independent forensic analysts who have reviewed the leaked data suggest that at least two of the wounds found on Freeman’s body showed signs of “early-stage healing” or “different coagulation rates,” implying they were sustained hours, if not days, before the final standoff.

“There is a significant discrepancy here,” said Dr. Aris V., a private forensic consultant. “The report indicates a high level of toxins in the bloodstream consistent with severe sepsis or potentially even deliberate poisoning. It raises a haunting question: Was Dezi Freeman already a walking ghost when he stepped out of that shipping container?”

Ballistics: A Mismatch in the Rain?

Further complicating the case is the trajectory of the fatal shots. The official police report stated that Freeman was shot from the front while charging at officers with a stolen service pistol. However, the autopsy allegedly notes that several of the most lethal rounds entered from a downward angle through the back and shoulder—trajectories that are difficult to reconcile with a face-to-face confrontation on level ground.

The Freeman family’s legal team has seized on this, claiming it supports their theory of an “execution-style” hit from elevated sniper positions rather than a defensive tactical response. “The ballistics don’t lie,” a family spokesperson said. “The police account says one thing; the body says another.”

The Mystery of the “Clean” Fugitive

Despite spending 216 days in the harsh Victorian High Country and the rugged terrain of the Murray River, the autopsy noted that Freeman’s nutritional state was “remarkably stable.” There were no signs of the chronic malnutrition or vitamin deficiencies typically seen in long-term fugitives living off the land.

This finding lends massive weight to the “Shadow Network” theory—proving that Freeman was being meticulously cared for by accomplices who provided not just food, but potentially medical treatment for the leg injury he sustained during his initial escape in August 2025.

Police Response: “Standard Procedure”

Victoria Police and the Coroner’s Court have refused to comment on the “leaked” specifics, citing the ongoing coronial inquest. A spokesperson for the force dismissed the brewing controversy as “speculative fiction,” stating that autopsy reports are complex documents often misinterpreted by laypeople.

“The cause of death was multiple gunshot wounds sustained during a lawful police operation,” the statement read. “Any suggestion otherwise is an insult to the forensic professionals working this case.”

The Sovereign Martyrdom

On encrypted messaging apps, the Sovereign Citizen movement is already using the autopsy report to crown Freeman as a martyr. They claim the “toxicology findings” prove he was “biochemically attacked” or “tortured” before his death. While these claims remain unsubstantiated, the lack of transparency from official channels has created a vacuum being filled by increasingly radical theories.

As the inquest prepares to go public next month, the “closed” case of Dezi Freeman is looking more like a Pandora’s box. If the shots that killed Australia’s most wanted man weren’t the ones the police described, the fallout could be more damaging than the manhunt itself.