“IT WASN’T A HIDEOUT… IT WAS A FORTRESS!” – THE CONTAINER OWNER BREAKS HIS SILENCE! 🏚️📦🇦🇺

The “Bushcraft Ghost” saga just hit a terrifying new level of pre-meditation! The owner of that filthy, blood-stained shipping container has finally spoken, and his testimony is pure NIGHTMARE fuel! 😱💥

Was Dezi Freeman just a lucky fugitive? NO. New leaked intel from his closest “friends” reveals a disturbing, decades-old link between the cop-killer and the exact patch of border bushland where he was gunned down. 🌲💀 This wasn’t a random choice—it was his “Kill Zone” prepared years in advance!

Every supply drop, every solar panel, and every inch of that container was part of a dark “Sovereign” blueprint. The police thought they were hunting a man; they were actually walking into a trap set long before the first shot was ever fired in Porepunkah. 🛡️🚫

Nothing is coincidental. The border wasn’t his escape—it was his stronghold.

See the NEVER-BEFORE-SEEN interior photos of the “Death Container” and the secret border map below! 👇👇👇

As the forensic teams finish scrubbing the grime from the shipping container where Dezi Freeman spent his final hours, the man who owns the property has finally broken his silence. His testimony, combined with “chilling” new revelations from Freeman’s former associates, suggests that the 216-day manhunt didn’t end at a random location—it ended exactly where Dezi Freeman had planned for it to end, possibly for over two decades.

“He Treated it Like a Sovereign Embassy”

The owner of the Thologolong property, who has remained anonymous until today for his own safety, described the shipping container hideout not as a temporary refuge, but as a “pre-positioned fortress.”

“He didn’t just show up there in August,” the owner revealed in a leaked statement. “Dezi had been ‘maintaining’ that container and a series of underground caches in the surrounding bush for years. He called it his ‘Sovereign Embassy’—a place where the laws of Victoria didn’t apply.”

The owner claims he was “coerced” into silence through the Sovereign Citizen network, confirming the theory that Freeman had a logistical “safety net” waiting for him long before he murdered two police officers in Porepunkah.

The Border Link: A Lifelong Obsession

While the public viewed the Thologolong border region as a remote wilderness, to Dezi Freeman, it was home turf. Close friends of the family have uncovered a “disturbing link” between Freeman and this specific stretch of the Murray River.

Records now show that Freeman spent significant time in the 1990s and early 2000s mapping the “blind spots” of the border—areas where radio signals drop and police patrols are thin. “Nothing in this story appears coincidental,” says a local tracker who assisted in the search. “He chose Thologolong because he knew the geography better than the tactical teams hunting him. He wasn’t running; he was lured them to his home ground.”

The “Death Container” Interior: New Details

Forensic photos leaked from the site reveal a level of preparation that has left Taskforce Summit reeling. Inside the “filthy” container, investigators found:

Pre-Staged Ammo Caches: Thousands of rounds of ammunition hidden behind double-lined steel walls.

Border Radio Jammers: Crude electronic devices designed to interfere with police drone frequencies.

A “Treason Log”: A diary documenting every police movement he observed from his vantage point over the last 7 months.

The most shocking detail? A handwritten note dated July 2025—one month before the Porepunkah shootings—detailing a “Final Stand” protocol. This suggests the murders of Detective Neal Thompson and Constable Vadim De Waart-Hottart may not have been a heat-of-the-moment reaction, but the trigger for a long-awaited confrontation.

The “Shadow” Network’s Masterpiece

The arrest of Freeman’s son and the two “shadow” associates now makes perfect sense in light of these border ties. They weren’t just helping him hide; they were part of a long-term “Sovereign” project to create a lawless zone in the heart of the Australian bush.

“We were looking for a fugitive in a bushland,” a senior police source admitted off-the-record. “We should have been looking for an insurgent in a fortress.”

A Dark Legacy

With the container owner’s revelation, the “execution” theory championed by Freeman’s widow, Amalia, faces a new hurdle. If Freeman had spent years turning Thologolong into a combat-ready bunker, the police’s decision to “open fire without mercy” may be viewed by the coronial inquest as a necessary response to an entrenched, domestic terrorist threat.

The “Bushcraft Ghost” is dead, but the realization that a citizen spent 20 years preparing for a war against the state has left the nation looking at the remote border bushland with a new sense of horror.