Warning: contains graphic details of violence which could be distressing.
It was an ordinary day. So ordinary. A man orders a cup of tea and a piece of chocolate cake, sitting by himself in the busy Lindt Cafe before asking cafe staff to move him to a different table.
And then all hell breaks loose.
Graphic details have been heard on the first day of the coronial enquiry into the deaths of three people in the Sydney siege including barrister and mother-of-three Katrina Dawson, cafe manager, Tori Johnson and gunman Man Monis.
State Coroner Michael Barnes took the court through Monis’ movements on that fateful Monday in December when the siege began before a court packed with journalists, lawyers representing the families of the victims as well as the surviving hostages.
Katrina Dawson’s family had a solicitor there to represent them. So did Tori Johnson’s family and there were two solicitors representing two of the police officers who stormed the cafe at the end of the siege and whose names have been suppressed. The partner of Man Monis also had a solicitor there to represent her.
The only hostage attending today was John O’Brian. For those unfamiliar with court proceedings, the coronor emphasised the jarring contrast between the horror of the events of that day and the formal nature of proceedings. He noted that if ‘we appear dispassionate’ that doesn’t mean that he and others working on the inquiry were unmoved by the personal trauma and tragedy of what had happened to the hostages and their families. ‘If we are focused on matters forensic, do not fear we have forgotten your grief.’ he said.