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Two men arrested in cop-killer Dezi Freeman probe

Two men have been arrested as part of the investigation into Dezi Freeman's deadly shooting of two police officers.

Freeman led police on one of the nation's largest manhunts after he killed Senior Constable Vadim de Waart-Hottart and Detective Leading Senior Constable Neal Thompson while they were serving a warrant at his home in Victoria's High Country in August 2025.

The 56-year-old fled the scene and evaded capture until he was traced to a remote property at Thologolong near the Victoria-NSW border in March, when he was shot and killed by police.

Task force detectives arrested two men as part of their investigations into the police deaths at Porepunkah, 310km northwest of Melbourne.

The men, aged 48 and 45, were arrested on Tuesday at separate locations in northeast Victoria.

Police did not confirm why the men had been arrested, but they said the duo would be interviewed as part of the ongoing investigation.

The arrests come a day after a directions hearing was held ahead of inquests into the deaths of Freeman and the two officers killed at Porepunkah.

The hearing revealed that specialist police continue to work without body-worn cameras, eight years after a state force began to roll out the technology.

None of the officers who gunned down Freeman in March at a remote property in Thologolong near the Victoria-NSW border were wearing the devices.

The officers were members of Victoria Police's special operations group, who conducted covert surveillance on the fugitive's location for days before moving in and attempting to negotiate with him over several hours.

Victoria Police confirmed to AAP on Tuesday body-worn cameras currently in use were not compatible with the officers' specialist operational equipment, although a trial was nearing completion.

"Findings from this evaluation will inform any future decisions regarding broader implementation across the unit," a spokesperson said.

The slain officers were executing a warrant relating to Freeman's alleged sexual assault of a child and alleged attempt to involve a child in the production of abuse material.

Seven months later, officers tracked the fugitive to a shipping container in Victoria's remote northeast.

Counsel assisting the state coroner, Lindsay Spence, on Monday said Freeman was later seen wrapped in a doona or blanket and emerged from the container with a green bag over his hands before dropping it and revealing a firearm.

He shot at police and eight members returned fire, fatally wounding him, Mr Spence told the pre-inquest hearing.

As specialist police were not equipped with body-worn cameras, the inquest into Freeman's death will rely on officers' testimony and footage captured from a police helicopter.

Body-worn cameras were trialled by Victoria Police in 2017 before they were rolled out to all frontline officers from mid-2018 to November 2019.

Camera data analysed from March 2021 by the state's auditor-general found officers activated their devices in 83.6 per cent of required instances.

A NSW police watchdog in 2025 recommended officers activate their body-worn cameras for any incident where they were likely to use their powers.

Police in that state are advised - but not required - to record as much of an incident as possible.

Premier Jacinta Allan would not say whether the situation was acceptable.

"We need to let that independent (inquest) process do its work and provide further recommendations," she told reporters.

Freeman activated the voice memos function on his mobile phone, capturing 23 minutes of audio from inside the shipping container.

The shooting deaths of the two officers were captured on body-worn camera footage, Mr Spence confirmed.

State Coroner Liberty Sanger will eventually hold separate inquests looking at the deaths of the two police officers and Freeman's fatal shooting, but dates for full hearings have not been set.

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