The heartbroken families of police officers who were killed by a truck driver while in the line of duty have told how they have been ‘left with scars that will never completely heal’ one year on from their horrific deaths.
Mohinder Singh, 48, ran his truck into Leading Senior Constable Lynnette Taylor, Senior Constable Kevin King and constables Glen Humphris and Josh Prestney on Melbourne’s Eastern Freeway on April 22 last year.
Singh had spent the days leading up the crash on a bender smoking ice and cannabis and downing bottles of booze. He had only slept for five hours over three days.
The four officers had been impounding a Porsche driven by mortgage broker driver Richard Pusey when they were struck and killed by Singh’s semi-trailer.
Their deaths were the biggest loss of officer lives in a single incident in Victoria Police’s history.
Constable Josh Prestney (pictured) was one of four Victoria Police officers who were killed by truck driver Mohinder Singh on Melbourne’s Eastern Freeway on April 22 last year
In a heartbreaking statement one year on from his death, the family of Constable Prestney said: ‘Josh’s guitars have fallen silent, the music he loved is no longer pumped around the house’
The family of Constable Prestney (pictured) said their world fell apart the night he was killed while in the line of duty
Constable Prestney is pictured at left with his mother Belinda and at right with his father Andrew
Const Prestney, 28, was on his first week on the job when he was killed, having just graduated from the police academy in November, 2019.
He was only working a short stint in the field before he was to be transferred to Kew police station.
In a statement released to mark the one-year anniversary of Const Prestney’s death, his mother Belinda, father Andrew and brother Alex said they will never be able to move on from the crash.
‘The night we lost Josh our world fell apart. It has now been one year, but the memory of how that night unfolded is as clear and as painful as if it happened yesterday,’ the family’s statement said.
‘As hard it was to lose Josh, harder still has been learning to live without him. We will never get used to this, get over this or move on from this.
‘If we are lucky, time may soften the edges of our grief, but the loss of our son and brother has left scars that will never completely heal.
‘He was eager to excel in his new career with Victoria Police and we would like to acknowledge the members he trained with and worked with, who are struggling with his loss.’
Left to right: Senior Constable Kevin King, Constable Glen Humphris, Leading Senior Constable Lynette Taylor and Constable Josh Prestney
The funeral procession lines up during the funeral of Constable Josh Prestney on May 4, 2020
Floral tributes before the funeral of Leading Senior Constable Lynette Taylor at the Victoria Police Academy in Melbourne last April
A tribute to the four fallen police officers outside the Victoria Police Academy in April, 2020
Const Humphris, 32, was another new recruit to the force, having only started his police career in 2019 after graduating from the academy in March of that year.
His partner of four years, Todd Robinson, described Const Humphris’ death as ‘one of the most gut-wrenching experiences of my life’.
‘Despite the tragic circumstances, I want to use this opportunity to remember Glen as the smiling, bubbly and beautiful man that he was, and the love we shared for each other,’ Mr Robinson said.
‘He touched many people in his life, and many people cared for him. I want these stories and memories of joy and optimism to be forever remembered.’
Mr Robinson said on the day of the crash, ‘I wished Glen a great day and hugged him goodbye as I left for work, not knowing that would be the last time we would ever see each other’.
Victoria Police officers will pause on Thursday to remember and pay tribute to their four fallen colleagues.
Vigils will be held across the state with a message to be broadcast through police radios at the end of the service and at 5.36pm when the incident occurred, requesting a minute’s silence.
Flags at police stations will be flown at half-mast and landmarks across Victoria, including the police academy, will be lit blue in the evening.
‘The deaths of four of our own continues to be felt right across the police force,’ Victoria Police Chief Commissioner Shane Patton said.
‘We know that this date, and the days and weeks surrounding it, will be a particularly difficult time for many.
‘The deaths of our colleagues struck at the very core of Victoria Police and brought home the sobering reality of the inherent dangers that come with police work.’
Singh was last week sentenced to a total of 22 years by Justice Paul Coghlan: 12 years for one death and three additional years for each of the other three deaths with the terms partially concurrent.
There was an additional year on the sentence for his drug offences.
The non-parole period was 18.5 years, and taking into account the year he has already been behind bars, he could be out in late 2039.
The families of all of the four victims watched on within the Supreme Court of Victoria on April 14 as Singh’s sentence was handed down.
The court heard Singh had been told to get some rest before he got behind the wheel on the day of the crash.
For two whole seconds before he ran the police officers down, alarms in Singh’s truck warned him to stop.
At 22 seconds past 5.36pm that day, Singh’s truck swerved into the emergency lane where the vehicle’s front mounted radar sensor detected the stationary police vehicles in front of the truck.
The truck triggered a ‘Forward Collision Warning Event’, which projected a red flashing light onto the inside of the windscreen.
Mohinder Singh, pictured arriving at the Supreme Court of Victoria in Melbourne, was sentenced to a total of 22 years in jail
Mohinder Singh’s truck careered off the highway and into the car of Richard Pusey, who had been pulled over by the officers for speeding
Richard Pusey has pleaded guilty to four charges – outraging public decency, drug possession, reckless conduct endangering serious injury and speeding – after the crash. He is pictured being taken away from his Fitzroy property by police on April 23, 2020
Crash experts later found Singh never hit the brakes and the only reason the truck stopped at all was because the vehicle itself had done so.
Pusey himself pleaded guilty last month to several charges after filming the crash site and taunting a senior constable as she lay dying. He is awaiting sentence.
Pusey avoided being struck in the crash as he had been urinating off to the side of the road.
He fled the scene and was arrested a day after the crash on April 23.