THE DEAD DON’T WALK… OR DO THEY? 🚨👣

THE INTERNET IS MELTDOWN! A chilling new video just surfaced of a man looking EXACTLY like Dezi Freeman limping near the NSW border—days after police said he was “dead”! 😱🇦🇺

Was the Thologolong shootout a massive cover-up, or is there a “Ghost of the Murray River” haunting the highways? 🌲🕵️‍♂️ Witnesses are coming forward with heart-stopping accounts that change EVERYTHING we thought we knew about the final standoff.

The footage the authorities DON’T want you to see and the truth behind that “limp”! 👇🔥

Is the most dangerous man in Australia actually six feet under, or is he walking among us?

Just one week after Victoria Police declared the 216-day manhunt for “Sovereign Citizen” killer Desmond “Dezi” Freeman officially over, a bombshell video has surfaced that threatens to ignite a national security crisis and a firestorm of conspiracy theories. The footage, which has gone scorched-earth across X (formerly Twitter) and Telegram, purportedly shows a man matching Freeman’s exact description—limping heavily and appearing battered—traversing a desolate stretch of highway near the New South Wales border by the Murray River.

The Sight of a Ghost

The grainy, heart-stopping clip was reportedly captured by a passing motorist who recognized the distinctive rugged features of the man who allegedly gunned down two police officers in August 2025.

“He was limping badly, like his right leg was injured,” one eyewitness told local outlets, their voice trembling. “It wasn’t just a resemblance. It was the eyes. It was that survivalist stare. We all saw the news that he was shot at Thologolong, but seeing this… it makes your blood run cold.”

The injury described—a severe limp in the right leg—has sent online sleuths into a frenzy. Critics of the official police narrative are pointing out that the SOG (Special Operations Group) tactical team reported “neutralizing” Freeman in a shipping container standoff. If the man in the video is indeed Freeman, it suggests he survived the hail of bullets or, more controversially, was never there at all.

Social Media Meltdown: ‘The Great Alpine Hoax’

On Reddit’s r/Australia and various True Crime Discord servers, the “Body Double” theory is gaining dangerous momentum. Within hours of the video’s release, hashtags like #DeziLives and #TheMurrayGhost began trending.

The Skeptics: Many are accusing Victoria Police of a “theatrical ending” to save face after 216 days of failure and millions of taxpayer dollars wasted. “They needed a corpse to stop the bleeding of the budget,” one viral post on X claimed. “A closed-casket funeral and a quick press release? It’s the oldest trick in the book.”

The Believers: Law enforcement supporters argue the video is likely a “cruel prank” or a “lookalike” seeking 15 minutes of fame. “People want him to be a folk hero,” said a retired detective on Sky News. “This is a man who killed two fathers. To suggest he’s a ghost is an insult to the fallen.”

A Frontier Divided

The Murray River region is currently on a knife-edge. Local NSW and Victorian border patrols have reportedly been flooded with “sightings” since the video went viral. The atmosphere in the Alpine towns, once one of relief, has curdled back into a thick sludge of paranoia.

“We stopped locking our doors three days ago,” says a shopkeeper in Corryong. “Now? I’ve got the shotgun by the bed again. If he’s out there, and he’s hurt, he’s more dangerous than ever.”

The Official Silence

As of Tuesday afternoon, Victoria Police have maintained a stony silence regarding the “Highway Video.” Their last official statement remains the March 30th declaration of Freeman’s death. However, sources close to the NSW border patrol suggest that “unmarked units” have been spotted moving toward the coordinates mentioned in the viral video.

Is it a case of mass hysteria, a sophisticated hoax, or the greatest law enforcement failure in the history of the Commonwealth?

What’s Next?

As the video continues to rack up millions of views, the pressure is mounting for authorities to release body-camera footage or forensic DNA evidence from the Thologolong site. Until a body is seen or a limp is explained, the “Ghost of Dezi Freeman” will continue to haunt the Australian wilderness—and the fragile trust between the public and the police.

The hunt may be “over,” but the truth is just beginning to run.