Locals react to the death of Dezi Freeman
The epic hunt for Dezi Freeman saw police search more than 100 homes and properties, as well as steep, rocky terrain around Mount Buffalo in northeast Victoria.
Following the news that the 56-year-old fugitive had been shot dead, locals said they felt relief that the saga was over.
‘When you’ve got an unresolved event like that, when somebody is clearly still being searched for, it’s going to keep coming up,’ Bright Brewery owner Scott Brandon told ABC News.
‘So I think it is a relief just to have an end to all of that.’
Horse rider Steve, from Bright, said the hunt for Freeman had left him and his friends on alert during every trip up Mount Buffalo.
‘After such a long period of uncertainty, riding up the mountains, never knowing what’s there, what’s not,’ he told ABC Radio Melbourne.
‘One of the riders said to me this morning … (they were) always thinking about the smell in the air, even as to whether there was a body there.
‘The people of Porepunkah have been hit really hard and it would be wonderful, despite everything else that’s going on, to see everybody return and give the town the economic boost it deserves.’