“THE SHADOW NETWORK IS FALLING APART!” 🕸️🚔🔥

He didn’t survive in the bush on berries and rainwater. Dezi Freeman had help—and the first arrests have just been made. While the country thought he was a lone wolf, a secret trail of accomplices was keeping Australia’s most dangerous fugitive “well-fed and armed” right under the police’s noses. Victoria Police have just executed a series of raids, uncovering a hidden network of “Sovereign Citizen” sympathizers who turned a remote Thologolong property into a tactical safehouse.

Internal sources say the evidence found in that shipping-container-bunker is “chilling,” pointing to a much larger conspiracy than anyone dared to imagine. Who else is on the list? Are there more “ghosts” hiding in the High Country? The deeper they dig, the darker this story gets.

SEE THE NAMES AND THE HIDDEN BUNKER PHOTOS HERE 👇

In a series of high-stakes raids following the fatal March 30 standoff, Victoria Police have confirmed the arrest of two individuals—believed to be hardcore members of the “Sovereign Citizen” movement—for allegedly providing material support to Australia’s most wanted man. The arrests mark the beginning of what authorities call “Operation Sentinel’s Wake,” a massive effort to dismantle the underground network that fueled a seven-month reign of terror.

The Thologolong “Safehouse” Exposed

When tactical officers breached the makeshift structure at Thologolong, they expected a desperate man in rags. Instead, they found what Chief Commissioner Mike Bush described as a “sophisticated, long-term habitation.”

Leaked details from the crime scene suggest the “shipping container caravan” was stocked with professional-grade solar power, encrypted communication devices, and enough non-perishable food to last a year. Even more chillingly, investigators reportedly found “scout logs”—handwritten notes detailing police movements and drone schedules around the Mount Buffalo region.

“He wasn’t just hiding; he was being managed,” a source close to the investigation told The Age. “Someone was his eyes and ears on the outside. Every time the SOG closed in, he was already moving because someone had tipped him off.”

The Secret Trail: How He Moved 180km

The central mystery of the manhunt was how Freeman, heavily armed and with a distinct limp, managed to move from the Porepunkah murder scene to Thologolong—a distance of nearly 180 kilometers through some of Australia’s most treacherous terrain.

Police now believe Freeman was transported via a “relay system” of private rural properties owned by anti-government sympathizers. “We are looking at a trail of private gates and back-roads that bypass every major highway and thermal camera,” Commissioner Bush stated. Detectives have seized several high-clearance vehicles from a property near Wodonga, currently undergoing forensic testing for Freeman’s DNA.

“Chilling” Evidence of a Larger Plot

The most disturbing revelation comes from the “Sovereign Manifesto” allegedly found at the Thologolong site. According to internal memos, the documents don’t just rant about tax laws—they outline a “hit list” of judicial and law enforcement figures.

The Police Union is reportedly in an uproar over the discovery, demanding that the names on the list be given 24-hour protection. “This wasn’t just one man’s madness,” a Union representative said. “This was an organized ideological cell that viewed Freeman as their ‘General.’ He was the tip of the spear.”

A Community Divided

The arrests have sent a shockwave through the rural communities of Victoria’s High Country. While many express relief, a dark undercurrent of support for Freeman remains in the “fringe” corners of the internet. On Telegram, sympathizers are already calling the arrested pair “political prisoners,” claiming the “secret trail” is a fabrication by the state to justify a wider crackdown on the “Sovereign” lifestyle.

What Happens Next?

As the two suspects await their first court appearance under heavy security, the focus has shifted to the “Financiers.” Police are tracing a web of cryptocurrency donations and cash transfers that allegedly funded Freeman’s lifestyle on the run.

“We are not done,” Commissioner Bush warned. “If you gave him a meal, if you gave him a map, if you gave him a place to sleep—we are coming for you. You don’t get to hide behind ‘sovereign’ beliefs when you’re aiding a double murderer.”

The trial of the “Thologolong Two” is set to be the most explosive legal proceeding in Victoria’s history, promising to pull back the curtain on a hidden world of radicalization that lived right next door.