Osmington shooting


The Osmington shooting was a familicide in Osmington, a rural locality near Margaret River, Western Australia, on 11 May 2018.
Peter Miles, a retired schoolteacher, shot dead his wife, daughter, and four grandchildren, before committing suicide. It is the worst shooting incident in Australia since the Port Arthur massacre of 1996.

Background

Peter Miles was a retired schoolteacher who worked in the farm school at Margaret River Senior High School for 20 years. In 2015 he and his wife Cynda moved from the Margaret River townsite to a hobby farm in Osmington. His daughter Katrina and her four children Taye, Rylan, Arye and Kayden moved onto the property following the breakdown of her marriage, living in a renovated shed. Katrina believed the children were on the autism spectrum, and they were withdrawn from the local school in order to be home-schooled.
According to Aaron Cockman, Katrina's estranged husband, the Miles family had a history of violence, mental illness and dysfunctional relationships. Peter was "estranged from his own mother and his father had tried to kill him". His son, Katrina's brother, burned down a shed during a family dispute and later committed suicide. Katrina "once threatened to kill herself and the children by driving into a tree".
Cockman stated that Peter paid an estimated $100,000 of his daughter's legal fees relating to their separation, and that Peter and Cynda had prevented him from seeing his children for six months prior to the shootings.

Investigation

Authorities arrived at the Miles' 30-acre farm in Osmington following a call to 000 at 5:15 am. Peter Miles was found outside the property deceased in a chair on the veranda, his wife Cynda inside the main house. Their daughter, Katrina Cockman and her four children were found inside a converted shed behind the main house that served as their residence. Western Australia Police Commissioner Chris Dawson confirmed that three rifles were recovered at the property, all of which were licensed to Peter Miles, and that police did not believe that anyone outside the residence was involved.
Aaron Cockman, estranged husband of Katrina and father to their four children, held a press conference 48 hours after learning of the deaths. Cockman said that he had been told by police that Peter Miles first shot Katrina and her four children while they slept in their beds, before shooting his wife Cynda in the living room of their home. He then placed a two-minute 000 call to police alerting them to the shootings, before committing suicide.
On 17 May, Dawson confirmed that police had completed forensic work and that access to the property was returned to the family, but stated that the investigation would continue for several months. A suicide note was also confirmed to have been found.

Aftermath and criticism

Aaron Cockman, the father of the four children killed, has criticised the Office of the State Coroner for its secrecy and unwillingness to provide information to him. Ros Fogliani, the State Coroner, rejected his request for a public inquest to be held, stating that it was "not desirable" and that "all relevant lines of inquiry have been followed and that a coroner is now able to make the required findings about the deaths on the evidence that has already been obtained". Cockman subsequently wrote to state attorney-general John Quigley reiterating his request for a public inquest.
Cockman has stated his belief that the Family Court of Western Australia placed the Miles family "under intense financial and emotional pressure" prior to the killings, and supports a royal commission into Australian family law.