A $100 MILLION MANHUNT… OR THE HEIST OF THE CENTURY? 💸🚨

“WHERE DID THE MONEY GO?” 📉 While Australia was glued to the TV tracking Dezi Freeman, the government was burning through $150,000 PER DAY. But the math isn’t adding up! 🛑🇦🇺

New leaked budget reports show millions spent on “unidentified contractors” and “black-site tech” that was never seen in the forest. Was Dezi just a convenient ghost used to drain the state treasury? 👻💰 The “termination” at Thologolong happened exactly 48 hours before a major financial audit was due to begin. Coincidence? Or the perfect way to bury the receipts forever? 🤫🔥

The shocking “financial black hole” and the politicians who are suddenly refusing to answer questions! 👇🔥

The shots fired at Thologolong may have silenced Desmond “Dezi” Freeman, but they have ignited a deafening roar in the halls of the State Parliament.

As the official “victory lap” continues, a devastating financial leak has surfaced, suggesting that the 216-day manhunt for the “Sovereign Citizen” fugitive may have been the most expensive—and least transparent—operation in Australian history. With total costs now projected to exceed $100 million AUD, taxpayers are asking: Was this a pursuit of justice, or a massive, state-sponsored exercise in budget diversion?

The ‘Black Hole’ Ledger

Internal Treasury documents, reportedly leaked by a whistleblower within the Department of Premier and Cabinet, reveal “highly irregular” spending patterns during the height of the search. While police claimed to be “scouring the bush,” the ledger tells a different story:

The ‘Ghost’ Contractors: Over $12 million was reportedly paid to “private security consultants” whose names do not appear on any official government tender list.

The Surveillance Gap: Despite a staggering $8 million spent on “advanced thermal drone arrays,” Freeman remained undetected for seven months. Critics are now asking if that technology was ever actually deployed—or if the funds were “vanished” into offshore accounts.

“You don’t spend $100 million to catch one man in a shipping container unless you’re buying more than just handcuffs,” says a senior financial analyst. “This level of expenditure suggests a paramilitary operation or, more likely, a massive diversion of public funds under the guise of an emergency.”

A Convenient Conclusion

Political pundits are pointing to a “suspiciously perfect” timeline. The operation to “neutralize” Freeman occurred less than 48 hours before a scheduled independent audit of the Victoria Police “Special Projects” budget.

By killing Freeman instead of capturing him, the state has effectively removed the only witness who could testify about the resources used—or not used—during his time on the run. Dead men don’t testify in budget inquiries, and “active crime scenes” allow authorities to keep the Thologolong site locked down, hidden from independent oversight.

The ‘Sovereign’ Distraction

The “Sovereign Citizen” narrative may have been the perfect cover. By painting Freeman as a radicalized, existential threat to the state, the government secured “emergency powers” to spend without traditional parliamentary approval.

“They used fear to open the checkbook,” says an opposition MP. “Every time we asked for a cost breakdown, they told us it was a ‘national security matter.’ Now the man is dead, the money is gone, and we have a $100 million hole in our infrastructure budget. It’s the ultimate gaslight.”

Public Fury at the NSW Border

In the Alpine towns of Corryong and Walwa, where roads were blocked and businesses shuttered for months, the news of the $100 million price tag has been met with cold rage. Local residents, who were told there was “no money” for road upgrades or bushfire recovery, are now seeing the staggering cost of a manhunt that many believe was “deliberately prolonged” to justify the spend.

The Widow’s Claim: Follow the Paperwork

In another twist, Freeman’s widow has hinted through her legal team that Dezi was “kept on a leash” by those who benefited from the ongoing search. While a sensational claim, it aligns with the “Network Theory” currently gripping the internet—suggesting that the “Sovereign Network” and certain state departments might be two sides of the same corrupt coin.

What’s Next?

As the calls for a Royal Commission into the Manhunt Finances grow louder, the government is doubling down on the “heroic” narrative of the SOG. But for the taxpayers of Victoria, the “victory” feels more like a heist.

The hunt is over, but the audit has just begun. Who really won the $100 million lottery?