Fri, 12 Jun 2026
Headlines:
Australian police say deadly 2022 siege in Queensland was Christian ‘terrorist attack’
Published on: Thursday, February 16, 2023
Published on: Thu, Feb 16, 2023
By: AFP
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Australian police say deadly 2022 siege in Queensland was Christian ‘terrorist attack’
The family opened fire when four police officers arrived on December 12 for a routine missing persons investigation at their home in the small town of Wieambilla in Queensland. (AFP file pic)
SYDNEY: Australian police today blamed a family’s Christian fundamentalist beliefs for a “terrorist attack” that killed three people at a remote property in December.

The family opened fire when four police officers arrived on December 12 for a routine missing persons investigation at their home in the small town of Wieambilla in Queensland.

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Three family members – Gareth Train, his wife Stacey Train, and his brother Nathaniel Train – killed two officers and one neighbour, before dying in a shootout with police.

Counter-terrorism and intelligence police have since searched for a motive for the bloody event, trawling through diaries, books, phone messages, emails, witness statements and body-worn camera footage, police said.

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The investigation found that the three family members “acted as an autonomous cell and executed a religiously motivated terrorist attack”, said Queensland’s deputy police commissioner, Tracy Linford.

The family subscribed to a fundamentalist belief known as “premillennialism”, which predicted Christ would return to Earth after a period of tribulation, widespread destruction and suffering, she told reporters.

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An examination of Stacey Train’s diary in particular indicated that a range of things perpetuated their belief, such as Covid-19, climate change and global conflicts, Linford said.

Police were still conducting a “major investigation” for the coroner, she said, adding that there was no evidence anyone else was involved in the incident.

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The deceased police officers were identified at the time as 26-year-old Rachel McCrow and 29-year-old Matthew Arnold. Both were constables, just starting their police careers. 
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