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A man has been charged with four counts of manslaughter and has been released on bail for a twist of the fate of the Melbourne Highway that killed four Victorian policemen.
Frankston, 49, arrested Saturday morning in Lyndhurst, southeast Melbourne, and charged, Victoria police said.
The guy gave the impression at an out-of-session hearing at melbourne Magistrates’ Court on Saturday night and granted bail to return to court on October 26.
The type is believed to be an executive of the trucking company, who has been sanctioned for protection violations, adding truck defects and the use of tired drivers, whose vehicle was affected by the tragedy.
The four officials, Lynette Taylor, Kevin King, Glen Humphris and Joshua Prestney, were killed when a Porsche seized the East Road at Kew on April 22.
Police allege Porsche’s motive forced 41-year-old Richard Pusey, timed at 149 km/h under the influence of methamphetamine and cannabis, leading police to try to capture his car.
Officers were beaten through a semi-trailer while dealing with Pusey, who allegedly filmed the turn of fate siege and verbally assaulted police officer Taylor, who died, before fleeing.
Pusey, of Fitzroy, charged with nine offences, adding driving at a damaging speed, driving recklessly endangering life, without lending a hand and possessing drugs.
Earlier this year, 47-year-old truck driver Mohinder Singh, accused of driving with guilt, killed all four police officers and was arrested to return to court in October.