With AAP.
On February 10, 2015, Courtney Topic was shot dead by police, while standing outside a Hungry Jack’s in Hoxton Park in Sydney’s western suburbs.
She was just 22 years old.
Shortly before the shooting, Courtney was seen carrying a 20cm knife in her right hand, while drinking from a takeaway cup in her left.
Now her parents hope a coroner’s recommendations will be heeded so that no other family suffers their heartache.
“With better resourcing, better training and better applications through NSW Police… fingers crossed this will never happen again,” Ronny Topic said outside Glebe Coroners Court on Monday.
Courtney was most likely suffering a psychotic episode due to undiagnosed schizophrenia and probably was unable to understand that police were telling her to put down her knife, Deputy State Coroner Liz Ryan said.
Errors – including a failure by responding police to factor in strong indications of her mental disturbance – “made the resort to lethal force a tragic inevitability”.
Ryan made 10 recommendations mainly dealing with police mental health training – including for radio operators.
“If changes are not made there will be more deaths like Courtney’s,” the coroner said.
Nearly 42 per cent of the people shot by police between 1989 and 2011 in Australia were suffering from a mental illness, the court heard.
Outside court, Courtney’s mother Leesa Topic noted mental health issues were growing in society and police need to be fully trained to deal with it.