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CCTV shows fugitive hours before alleged triple murder

Warning: This article contains the name and image of an Indigenous person who has died.

CCTV footage of alleged shooter Julian Ingram reporting for bail at a police station hours before three people were found dead in a town in NSW's central west has been released by police.

The footage comes as the search for the alleged Lake Cargelligo gunman nears one week.

Police have today revealed they believe the 37-year-old is still alive and possibly being assisted by someone.

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Ingram was spotted at a police station on Janurary 22.

NSW Police Commissioner Mal Lanyon said high heat in the area meant police were actively searching for Ingram "in the most extraordinary conditions".

"This is the fifth day of over 40-degree temperatures, yet our police have been unwavering."

Police have been searching properties and public land, scouring an area the size of metropolitan Sydney, in the seven days since the shooting.

Officers have carried out more than 100 searches in vast country near Griffith.

Earlier today, police conducted a line search in Murrin Bridge on the Lachlan River, a known camping area about 12 kilometres out of town.

They are looking for any evidence that Ingram camped at the location, or the ute he was last seen driving.

Assistant Commissioner Andrew Holland said members of the public had been "very forthcoming with their information" following one confirmed sighting of the alleged offender at Mount Hope earlier this week.

"We believe that [Ingram] is still alive," Holland said.

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NSW Police Commissioner Mal Lanyon gives an update as the hunt in Lake Cargelligo.

"Our plan is to track him down and bring him forth before the courts."

Holland said Ingram's experience in the Lake Cargelligo area and in areas around Mount Hope while working with the council could be helping him evade police.

"He's aware where the water sources are, he's aware where the hidey holes are, such as caves."

Holland said that officers from the public order and riot squad are set to join the search this weekend.

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Julian Ingram

He also said that police have not ruled out the potential of Ingram being assisted by a member of the community. 

"We will be confident to say that he is possibly receiving help from people he knows in the community.

"Given the temperatures involved, he has to have access to food and water.

"He's out and about and moving around.

"I would suggest that he is using a vehicle.

The NSW Police Commissioner has asked anybody who could be assisting Ingram to "think about the broader community".

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Ingram has several tattoos on his arms.

"What he has [allegedly] committed here is an atrocity.

"What was certainly alleged is something that is completely unacceptable," Lanyon said.

Lanyon reassured the Lake Cargelligo community that the police force is behind them as the search for Ingram nears one week since three people were fatally shot.

"My commitment to you as the commissioner of the NSW Police is to keep you safe."

Lanyon said a significant policing presence will continue to oversee the rural town as authorities continue to scour the area.

The shoorting unfolded before 4.30pm on January 22, with police finding Ingram's ex-partner Sophie Quinn, 25, and her friend John Harris, 32, inside a car with gunshot wounds.

They were treated but died at the scene. Quinn was heavily pregnant and was due to give birth in March.

Shortly after, police responded to a second shooting at Walker Street in the same town.

Police found a 50-year-old woman and 19-year-old man shot in the driveway of a home.

The woman, who has been named as Sophie's aunt Nerida Quinn, died at the scene, while the man was taken to Canberra Hospital in a serious but stable condition.

Ingram is described as being Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander appearance, about 165cm-170cm tall, with a medium build, short dark hair and brown eyes.

The 37-year-old also has several tattoos on his arms.

Anyone who sees Ingram is being urged not to approach him and to contact police immediately. 

National Sexual Assault, Domestic Family Violence Counselling Service 1800RESPECT (1800 737 732).

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Scarlett had a shortness of breath. Years later, she was put on life support

Scarlett Hack was just 10 years old when she started experiencing a shortness of breath and heart palpitations.

Her symptoms were dismissed as anxiety, which she suffered with at the time, but her parents persisted and took her to several doctors before she was given an echocardiogram.

She was diagnosed with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, a genetic heart condition where the muscle thickens.

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Scarlett Hack.

"The heart disease was spontaneous in me. My entire family doesn't have any record of it, only me," she told 9news.com.au. 

"After the doctor's appointment, my parents were told by the doctor, 'You should learn CPR as this has no cure'."

Hack's symptoms only worsened over the next three years until she was diagnosed with a second heart disease called arrhythmia burden disease – the time the heart spends in abnormal rhythm.

She fainted often, which caused her heart to stop each time, and eventually had an internal defibrillator installed.

During a doctor's appointment, her heart started racing and she went into cardiac arrest.

"I was screaming to my dad, 'Don't let me die, don't let me die'," she said.

"It was very traumatising."

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Scarlett Hack

Hack was in cardiac arrest for 40 minutes and then put on life support.

Her parents had two choices: let her go or wait for a heart donor.

"I only had two weeks to get it. If not, I'd be declared brain dead," she said.

"On the eighth day, my parents got the call at 2am, and they had a heart for me, and then I went into surgery at 7am."

Now aged 18, Hack is studying nursing so she can care for other children who may be in the same position she was in.

New data by the Heart Research Institute found 144,000 Australians are living with a deadly heart disease, which claims nine lives and causes 170 hospitalisations each day.

Of those who survive heart failure, 65 per cent return to the emergency department within a year. 

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Scarlett Hack

Heart Research Institute chief executive Andrew Coats said many people were unaware their heart was failing to pump blood and oxygen around the body as it should.

"Heart disease can affect any one of us," he said.

"For too many Australians, it strikes without warning, taking the lives of loved ones far too soon."

Part of the issue is awareness.

Hack urged anyone with symptoms of heart disease to get themselves checked. 

"There's no harm in you getting checked out by a doctor," she said.

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Call to name ‘silent killer’ claiming Australian lives

A politician's provocative campaign has reignited the debate to name heatwaves like meteorologists do cyclones, as the number of heat-related deaths continues to climb.

The Bureau of Meteorology picks out names for cyclones from a predetermined list for communication purposes – to raise public awareness and reduce confusion when there are several cyclones at once.

Spain was the first in the world to use the same method for heatwaves in 2022, which sparked calls to follow suit in Australia, where heatwaves lead to more deaths and hospital admissions annually than any other hazard.

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SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - NOVEMBER 27: A packed Bondi Beach at sunrise on November 27, 2024 in Sydney, Australia. Some Australians experienced temperatures of 40 degrees plus last weekend.

Independent MP Monique Ryan has taken the push a step further, calling for heatwaves to be named after companies that produce coal and gas.

"Extreme heat is a health crisis and a communications failure … Every heatwave is a potential mass casualty event; by naming them, we can save Australian lives," she said.

UNSW researcher Samuel Cornell said while an approach to name heatwaves after climate polluters may detract from the public messaging, there was a case to name heatwaves.

"They are our greatest environmental threat in the sense of the number of lives that they take each year," he said.

"They're quite a silent killer. They're not a very visible natural hazard, unlike things like floods or cyclones.

"If you give something a name, it helps to stick in people's minds, it helps the media to report on it."

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Australians are used to blistering temperatures, so what's the fuss all about?

A heatwave is more technical than just a spate of hot days.

The Bureau of Meteorology declares a heatwave when the maximum and minimum temperatures are unusually hot compared to the local climate over three days, and the mercury fails to adequately cool overnight.

These typically come with fire bans, as heatwaves create the perfect environment for bushfires. 

In the 10 years to 2022, the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare found extreme heat accounted for 293 deaths and 7104 hospitalisations. 

Cornell said some people can be unaware that there is a heatwave going on, like the elderly, who have worse thermal regulation and may not feel rising temperatures and take adequate precautions.

But the Bureau of Meteorology said it had no plans to start naming heatwaves. 

"This is due to the complex nature of heatwaves," a spokesperson said, pointing to the differing levels of severity, simultaneous heatwaves and changing conditions.

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Others also believe naming heatwaves could be unnecessary. 

A UK study in 2025 found naming heatwaves had little effect on the perceived risk and did not encourage people to take safety precautions, while the World Meteorological Organisation found it misdirected public and media attention away from the people in danger.

But Cornell said the matter was still worth exploring as the climate crisis fuels more and more heatwaves.

The Earth experienced its third-hottest year on record and its warmest decade on record in 2025, according to the Copernicus annual global climate report.

CSIRO research engineer Dr Annette Stellema said rising temperatures around the world were leading to new heat records.

Just in the past week, a South Australian town and the state of Victoria recorded their hottest days on record. 

"Australia's climate has warmed by an average of 1.51 degrees since national records began in 1910, which has led to an increase in the frequency of extreme heat events," Stellema said.

"It's expected that in the coming decades, Australia will experience ongoing changes to its weather and climate, with a continued increase in air temperatures, with more heat extremes."

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What goes into a terrorism declaration? Questions arise after Perth bomb attack

It took police more than 48 hours to announce it was investigating a man allegedly hurling a homemade bomb into an Invasion Day rally in Perth as a "potential terrorist act".

The 31-year-old was charged with unlawful act or omission with intent to harm (endangering life, health or safety of any person) and making or possession of explosives under suspicious circumstances after throwing the device into a crowd of 2500 people on Forrest Place on Monday.

Indigenous leaders, rally organisers and politicians were among the growing voices who called for the incident to be treated as terrorism before police confirmed the Joint Counter Terrorism Team was investigating the incident last night.

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Independent Senator Lidia Thorpe questioned why police have not shared information about the accused's motivation or ideology.

"On its face, this appears to be a targeted, racist terror attack against First Peoples on our Day of Mourning. That possibility must be taken extremely seriously, not avoided or downplayed," she said.

The Greens' First Nations justice co-spokesperson Jess Beckerling criticised the "soft language and low-level charge" by police.

WA Police said they could not comment as the matter was before the court. 

But Australian Strategic Policy Institute national security program director John Coyne explained that police needed to prove "beyond a reasonable doubt" that the motivation was to commit terror and for the device to detonate in order to make a declaration.

"Some people will say it's self-evident," he said.

"The police and the prosecutors will need to be able to go into a courtroom and prove beyond reasonable doubt that their motivation was to create terror and fear based on an ideology.

"That takes a while to gather that sort of information."

READ MORE: CCTV shows alleged shooter hours before triple murder as manhunt nears one-week mark

The crowd was evacuated from Forrest Place around 12.30pm yesterday following bomb fears.

Coyne said there was an air of caution to declare an incident terrorism and pointed to the bombs found inside a caravan in Dural, Sydney, in January last year.

The incident was declared terrorism, but police later found the caravan never intended to detonate and was created to sow fear. 

"We want to make sure that the decision is made with as much information as possible. We don't want to potentially derail future prosecutions. We don't want to have undue worry in the community," Coyne said.

Police alleged the "rudimentary" bomb thrown in Perth contained ball bearings and screws, which were wrapped around a liquid in a glass container.

Officers arrested the man, who allegedly indicated the device may contain explosives.

It failed to detonate, but the crowd was evacuated. No one was injured.

The 31-year-old has been remanded in custody and will face the Perth Magistrates Court on February 17.

The accused's identity has been suppressed by the court due to concerns for his safety.

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