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Screen grab from Channel 7 News Australia, showing homeless man Michael Rogers, also known as the Trolleyman, talking in an interview. Photo: Seven News Australia

Australia’s ‘Trolleyman’ hailed for ramming knife-wielding street attacker

  • Homeless man Michael Rogers has insisted he is not a hero after he launched a shopping trolley at the attacker during Friday afternoon’s attack
Australia

A homeless man who rammed a shopping trolley at a knife-wielding attacker who was threatening police is being hailed and rewarded for his actions, but he insists he is not a hero.

Michael Rogers emerged from a crowd of onlookers during the attack Friday afternoon in downtown Melbourne, Australia, in which one person was fatally stabbed and two others wounded.

Social media users have dubbed Rogers “Trolleyman” and an online fundraiser for him by registered charity Melbourne Homeless Collective had raised more than US$72,000 by Monday morning.

“Our hero is humble as can be and had no idea about this fundraiser,” the GoFundMe page reads. “He is amazing. “We believe his efforts deserve a reward that can really help him out.”

In interviews with Australian media, Rogers, 46, has insisted he is no hero.

“I threw the trolley straight at him, and I got him. I did not quite get him down, though. I’m no hero,” he told Channel Seven.

One person was killed and two others injured in a rush hour stabbing incident in Melbourne's bustling central business district on November 9, prompting police to shoot a knife-wielding suspect near a burning vehicle. Photo: AFP
A man runs away from a burning vehicle in downtown Melbourne after the driver stopped the and stabbed a number of people. One person was killed and two others injured in the attack. Photo: AFP

He also told Melbourne’s The Age newspaper he had been on the wrong side of the law himself. The paper reported he had been “in and out of jail” for some 20 years, including a five-year sentence for aggravated burglary, and that he’d had a long history of drug use.

“I haven’t had good experiences with police,” Rogers told the paper, adding his move to help on Friday was a “spur of the moment” decision.

Somali-born Australian Hassain Khalif Shire Ali, 30, stabbed three men on the street in Friday’s attack, killing a well-known restaurateur and wounding two other men.

Sisto Malaspina, 74, died a short distance from the popular Pellegrini’s Espresso Bar he had run for more than 40 years. The other two men are recovering in a hospital from non-life-threatening injuries.

Floral tributes can be seen outside Melbourne's Pellegrini's Cafe for Sisto Malaspina, the day after he was stabbed to death in an attack police have called an act of terrorism, in central Melbourne. Photo: Reuters

Victoria state Police Commissioner Graham Ashton said Shire Ali had also made an “unsophisticated” plan for his vehicle to explode to cause many more fatalities. He had placed several barbecue gas canisters in his car, but they failed to ignite.

Shire Ali was known to federal police and his Australian passport was cancelled in 2015 out of concern he planned to travel to Syria to fight with Islamic State.

While Rogers won praise from the community, senior Victorian police officials were divided in their reaction.

Deputy Commissioner Shane Patton said Rogers’ help was appreciated by police on the scene. “There’s no doubt he acted bravely,” he told ABC radio. “His assistance was greatly appreciated.”

But later Patton’s superior, Chief Commissioner Graham Ashton said while Rogers’ actions could have led to a tragic outcome.

“I don’t like to criticise people in that situation, he is acting instinctively about what he is looking at in front of him,” Ashton told Melbourne radio 3AW.

“But certainly if a trolley had hit a police member and knocked him over and then this offender was on top of him, it could have had a tragic consequence. Luckily in this case, it did not.”

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Homeless man hailed for ramming Melbourne attacker
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