“HE SPIT IN THEIR FACES WITH HIS LAST BREATH!” 🤬🤮🔥

Forget everything you thought you knew about Dezi Freeman’s surrender. He didn’t just walk out with a blanket—he walked out with a venom-filled manifesto. This is the side of Australia’s most wanted man the media didn’t dare show you. A rogue SOG operator has broken the code of silence to reveal the absolute vile insults Freeman screamed at officers before being gunned down. The newly leaked bodycam transcript exposes a man fueled by hate, right up until the second his heart stopped.

The Police Union is absolutely furious about this breach, calling it a total betrayal. But can you handle the absolute savagery of his final words? It changes everything.

READ THE FULL SHOCKING TRANSCRIPT RIGHT HERE 👇

LEAKED FROM THE FRONT LINE: The Vile Final Defiance of Dezi Freeman Exposed

THOLOGOLONG, VIC — “He didn’t want a way out. He wanted a war.”

Those are the haunting words of a member of the Victoria Police Special Operations Group (SOG), speaking on condition of anonymity following the violent conclusion of Australia’s longest and most expensive manhunt. For 216 days, Dezi Freeman—the self-proclaimed “Sovereign Citizen” who executed two police officers in Porepunkah last August—evaded a massive dragnet. But on the morning of March 30, 2026, his luck, and his life, ran out in a hail of tactical gunfire.

Now, a leaked transcript of the final bodycam footage, allegedly circulating within encrypted law enforcement forums and viewed by investigators, reveals the shocking level of vitriol Freeman spewed before he was cut down.

The Three-Hour Siege

According to the leaked logs, the standoff at the remote Murray River Road property began at 5:30 AM. Tactical officers had the perimeter locked down, using thermal drones and armored vehicles. Chief Commissioner Mike Bush later confirmed that police spent three hours pleading with Freeman to surrender.

However, the transcript paints a far more sinister picture. Instead of fear, Freeman reportedly responded with a barrage of “baroque” legal nonsense and personal insults. “You have no jurisdiction over a living man!” Freeman reportedly screamed from behind the walls of his makeshift fortress. “Tell [Officer Name Redacted] his blood tasted like victory!”

“The Bastard Until the End”

The most explosive detail comes from the final moments. As Freeman emerged from the white structure at approximately 8:30 AM, he was draped in a heavy doona (blanket).

“We thought he was coming out to give up,” the SOG member reportedly stated. “But as he dropped the blanket, he wasn’t just reaching for the stolen service pistol—he was laughing. His last words were a vile insult directed at the families of the officers he murdered in Porepunkah.”

The specific nature of the insult has been deemed too graphic for public release, but it has sparked an immediate and furious reaction from the Police Association Victoria.

Police Union in Uproar

The Police Union has slammed the leak of the bodycam details, calling it a “betrayal of operational security” and an “insult to the memory of Neal Thompson and Vadim De Waart.” Union officials are demanding an internal investigation into how the transcript reached the public domain.

“This man was a domestic terrorist fueled by a radical, anti-authority ideology,” a Union spokesperson said. “To give his final hateful rants a platform is to do the devil’s work. He died a coward, and he should be remembered as such.”

The Aftermath: Heroes or Executioners?

While the majority of Australians have reacted with relief, the “Sovereign Citizen” community on platforms like Telegram and X (formerly Twitter) is already spinning a different narrative. Pro-Freeman accounts are claiming the “vile insults” were fabricated by police to justify what they call an “extrajudicial execution.”

They point to the fact that Freeman was “cloaked” and claim the sudden hail of bullets gave him no chance to actually drop the weapon. However, Commissioner Bush remains firm: “I have seen the video. He presented a firearm at our officers. He was given every opportunity. He chose this end.”

The Unanswered Questions

As the coronial inquest begins, the focus shifts to the “Shadow Network” that kept Freeman alive for seven months. How did a man with no official income move 180km through rugged terrain and remain “well-fed and armed” for nearly a year?

The death of Dezi Freeman may have closed the book on the manhunt, but the investigation into his “Sovereign” accomplices is only just beginning. For now, the hills of Thologolong remain a grim monument to a man who, in the words of those who killed him, was “a bastard until the very end.”