close
close

The last final moments of a “bloody and crying” indigenous teenager, supposed to be beaten with a pole revealed- as a CCTV haunt of Cassius Turvey appears

The last final moments of a “bloody and crying” indigenous teenager, supposed to be beaten with a pole revealed- as a CCTV haunt of Cassius Turvey appears

The local teenager and crying, native, Cassius Turvey, left Bushland and told his colleagues that he was not seriously injured after being attacked with a metal pillar, a murder process was said.

Ten days later, the 15 -year -old Noongar Yamatji boy died in the hospital, with prosecutors claiming that he was watched, beaten and “deliberately hit” in the eastern suburbs of Perth, on October 13, 2022 .

Aleesha Louise Gilmore, 23, her lover Jack Steven James Brearley, 23, and her colleagues Lee Palmer, 29, and Mitchell Colin Forth, are tried in the Supreme Court of Western Australia accused by the killing of Cassius.

A young woman, who cannot be appointed for legal reasons, told the jury on Tuesday that two men had faced two students she was.

Comes as CCTV from Cassius in the school uniform that walks in a bus A few minutes before being watched and beaten to death, after the shootings were played by the jury last week.

The Court previously said to Cassius and a group of other students left in an open space, after school, to watch a fight and then fled to a bushes area, after three men raised in -A ute.

“The weak and the tall guy, the bigger guy … they ran into the bush,” said prosecutor Ben Stanwix.

The last final moments of a “bloody and crying” indigenous teenager, supposed to be beaten with a pole revealed- as a CCTV haunt of Cassius Turvey appears

Cassius Turvey, aged 15, was beaten with a metal pillar on October 13, 2022. He is captured on the CCTV bus shortly before the alleged attack

CCTV captured the moments before the alleged attack in which the boy Noongar Yamatji came out of a bus before other teenagers attack him in Perth's eastern suburbs

CCTV captured the moments before the alleged attack in which the boy Noongar Yamatji came out of a bus before other teenagers attack him in Perth’s eastern suburbs

She said the weak man was carrying a pillar.

The witness, who was 16 years old at the time of the alleged incident and was 18 years old, said he saw that Cassius leaving the bush.

“I saw Cassius crying, he was on his own, he was heading for everyone … They said he was bleeding, but he said it was good,” she said.

– His ear was like half.

A young man, who also cannot be named, told the court that he was assaulted by one of the three “white leather” men who arrived in the “black off-road”.

He said that one of the men is weak, the other wore a “commercial” shirt and that he had blond hair, and the third was “a kind of chubby” and short.

“Everyone began to run, except for the two girls,” he said, adding that he was still using crutches to move.

“The weakest and the one in the commercial shirt had both pillars.

“The weak hit me on my nose and began to act aggressively.”

He said that one of the men took crutches and a hat he had wore and put in the ute.

A witness to the alleged attack said that Cassius was watched in a tufiş by a tall teenager carrying a metal pillar

A witness to the alleged attack said that Cassius was watched in a tufiş by a tall teenager carrying a metal pillar

“My nose like a week,” he said.

The boy, who was 13 years old at that time, said he went to a college Tafe near the bush to find his friends who fled and saw Cassius on the ground.

“He was bleeding from his ear and the tip of his head,” he said.

Mr. Stanwix previously said that Gilmore left Brearley, Forth and Palmer before facing a large group of teenage students, who gathered in an open space after school.

He assumed that Brearley followed Cassius and hit him at least twice. One shot divided his left ear in half and the other left his forehead.

Mr. Stanwix said that Brearley “was full of anger in relation to his broken car windows”, which happened a day earlier and about the threats communicated through social networks as a group of “children” could damage the house he shared with Gilmore.

Brearley was supposed to praise him later by his “vigilant violence”, saying, “He was just sitting on the field and hitting him with the troop pole so loud that he learned the lesson.”

Prosecutors say Forth, Palmer and Gilmore helped Brearley and knew his intention.

Four people are now judged for the killing of Cassius in the Supreme Court of Western Australia

Four people are now judged for the killing of Cassius in the Supreme Court of Western Australia

The windows of the crushed cars were part of a series of incidents to climb the title that started on October 9, when some of the accused would “snatch two children on the street” and detained them illegally, hitting, hitting and stabbed one of Well.

The incidents were triggered by a “love triangle” that involved Gilmore’s 14 -year -olds and another similar -age teenager and social media exchanges about boys’ struggles.

The process continues.

13YARN 13 92 76

Lifeline 13 11 14