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Ep:3 The Blue Wall of Silence: When the Man Hitting You Wears a Badge
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Ep:3 The Blue Wall of Silence: When the Man Hitting You Wears a Badge

The man hitting you has a badge. A gun. And a network of silence behind him.

⚠️ Content Warning

This article discusses domestic and family violence, police misconduct, firearm violence, and institutional betrayal. For support, contact 1800RESPECT (1800 737 732).


In 2024, NSW Police Senior Constable Beau Lamarre-Condon allegedly murdered his ex-partner Jesse Baird and Jesse’s new partner Luke Davies using his service-issued Glock. It was officially classified as a domestic violence incident.

That classification should have triggered a reckoning.

It didn’t.

The case was consumed by media obsession with celebrity connections. But beneath the gossip was a truth the public missed — and survivors have known for years:

Australia’s police forces have a domestic violence problem. And they’ve been protecting perpetrators in their own ranks.


The Murders That Should Have Sparked Reform

Lamarre-Condon wasn’t an outlier. His alleged behaviour — coercive control, stalking, threats — fits a pattern reported in station files across the country. Internal records now under scrutiny reveal red flags were raised but ignored.

“This wasn’t unpredictable,” said one senior domestic violence advocate. “It was preventable.”


Known to the System, Protected by It

Between 2017 and 2024, at least 120 NSW Police officers were charged with domestic and family violence offences. Most remained on duty, armed, and institutionally protected.

According to the LECC Annual Report (2023):

  • 60 officers involved in DV-related incidents

  • 17 criminally charged

  • 11 had prior complaints

  • Failures in firearm removal and complaint handling

And according to Freedom of Information data published by The Sydney Morning Herald:

MetricFigureOfficers Charged (2019–23)76DV-Related Offences336Common Assault Charges74Stalking/Intimidation63Suspended Without Pay6

In 2024 alone, another 42 officers were charged with domestic violence offences.


“You’re Reporting the Whole Force”

Survivors describe the process of reporting a police abuser as a risk to their safety, livelihood, and credibility.

“You’re not just reporting your abuser,” said Josie, a survivor. “You’re reporting the whole police family.”

Another survivor’s safety plan was leaked. One kept a burner phone and a go-bag in her car, knowing her former partner had access to her private records through station systems.

Verified whistleblowers, including Michelle Carlon, have publicly described a culture of retaliation, DARVO tactics, and internal psychological abuse when they attempted to raise concerns from within.


Recommendations Ignored

The LECC’s 2023 findings confirmed what advocates had been warning for years:

  • Complaints are handled by colleagues of the accused

  • Officers often retain firearms after risk assessments

  • Complaints are downgraded, dismissed, or disappear

NSW Police rejected a key LECC recommendation for independent oversight of DV complaints against officers, calling it "not operationally practical."


Policy Reform or PR?

Following public outrage, NSW introduced a slate of reforms. But frontline workers say these were more performative than protective.

What’s Been Introduced:

  • Criminalisation of Coercive Control (2024)
    – Recognises patterns of non-physical abuse
    – $5.6 million for training and education

  • Stronger ADVO Penalties (2024)
    – Up to 5 years for repeat breaches

  • Bail Reform (2025)
    – Bail decisions moved from police to magistrates
    – $39 million for court expansion

What’s Still Missing:

  • No law mandating firearm surrender upon charge

  • No independent body required to investigate police DV

  • No automatic suspension for officers charged


International Benchmarks: Australia Lags Behind

Country/StateBest PracticeNew ZealandIndependent Police Conduct Authority (IPCA) handles all complaintsCanadaMandatory firearm surrender when chargedVictoria (AU)Dedicated Family Violence Units (under-resourced)


Still Wearing the Badge

In late 2024, NSW Police Minister Yasmin Catley confirmed:

57 currently serving officers had been charged with DV offences. Three were already convicted.

“It was always going to take a cop killing someone for people to finally believe us,” said one survivor and whistleblower.

But even after a double murder — committed with a police-issued firearm — the institution refused to admit systemic failure.


Final Word: If the Uniform Is a Weapon, Then Journalism Is Our Shield

This crisis isn’t about one officer. It’s about a culture that trains, protects, and promotes them.

A badge can be a weapon — not just against partners, but against anyone who dares to speak out.

Until we have:

  • Mandatory disarmament upon charge

  • Independent investigation of officer-perpetrated DV

  • Automatic suspension for perpetrators

  • National data collection on police-perpetrated violence

…survivors will remain trapped in the crossfire.


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