Australian Police Ambush: 'No Match' for Delusional Beliefs of Train Family
In a shocking turn of events, three years ago on a remote Australian property, a trio of conspiracy theorists lay in wait for a confrontation with Queensland police. The ensuing hours-long gun battle resulted in the deaths of six people, including four officers and two civilians.
The state coroner, Terry Ryan, has accepted evidence by a forensic psychiatrist that the Train family's actions were driven by a "folie à trois" - a shared psychotic disorder based on the paranoid delusions of Gareth Train. His wife, Stacey, and brother, Nathaniel, who was once married to each other, adopted these delusions, which turned a routine response to a missing person's report into a deadly confrontation.
The forensic psychiatrist, Dr Andrew Aboud, described the Trains as "morally insane" and stated that they did not know what they were doing was wrong. According to Ryan's findings, the Train family believed they were serving "God's will" and that police wore "meat suits" and were demons. Their actions were deemed justifiable by them, but were fundamentally understood - by themselves - as defensive.
In contrast, the Queensland Police Service described the incident as a "religiously motivated terrorist attack." Associate Prof Josh Roose of Deakin University argued that online radicalism has to be taken into account by emergency services, and believes an increasingly older cohort of men are likely to carry out violent acts.
Coroner Ryan's inquest found that at least some of the firearms used by the Trains was lawfully obtained, but his recommendations were focused on improving information sharing between state police services, adding aerial resources, and better training for emergency service operators. The coroner rejected calls for additional police equipment, finding it difficult to see how officers could have been adequately equipped to respond to the events as they unfolded.
The victims' families expressed disappointment with the coronal recommendations, stating that they come too late and may have prevented Matt and Rachel Arnold's deaths if better processes had been in place.
In a shocking turn of events, three years ago on a remote Australian property, a trio of conspiracy theorists lay in wait for a confrontation with Queensland police. The ensuing hours-long gun battle resulted in the deaths of six people, including four officers and two civilians.
The state coroner, Terry Ryan, has accepted evidence by a forensic psychiatrist that the Train family's actions were driven by a "folie à trois" - a shared psychotic disorder based on the paranoid delusions of Gareth Train. His wife, Stacey, and brother, Nathaniel, who was once married to each other, adopted these delusions, which turned a routine response to a missing person's report into a deadly confrontation.
The forensic psychiatrist, Dr Andrew Aboud, described the Trains as "morally insane" and stated that they did not know what they were doing was wrong. According to Ryan's findings, the Train family believed they were serving "God's will" and that police wore "meat suits" and were demons. Their actions were deemed justifiable by them, but were fundamentally understood - by themselves - as defensive.
In contrast, the Queensland Police Service described the incident as a "religiously motivated terrorist attack." Associate Prof Josh Roose of Deakin University argued that online radicalism has to be taken into account by emergency services, and believes an increasingly older cohort of men are likely to carry out violent acts.
Coroner Ryan's inquest found that at least some of the firearms used by the Trains was lawfully obtained, but his recommendations were focused on improving information sharing between state police services, adding aerial resources, and better training for emergency service operators. The coroner rejected calls for additional police equipment, finding it difficult to see how officers could have been adequately equipped to respond to the events as they unfolded.
The victims' families expressed disappointment with the coronal recommendations, stating that they come too late and may have prevented Matt and Rachel Arnold's deaths if better processes had been in place.