Police Life AUTUMN/WINTER 2022

Page 25

Sticking through tough times When Stawell born-and-bred Sergeant Liam McMahon made the move across the state to become Officer-in-Charge at Corryong Police Station, he planned to be in the far northeastern town for three years. But when a catastrophic bushfire season in the summer of 2019/20 swept through the small town of Corryong and surrounding areas, Sgt McMahon’s devotion to the community he had come to love shone through as he stayed to help lead the difficult recovery process.

“A lot of the policing issues we were dealing with in Corryong were directly resulting from people not coping with the trauma they've been through in the fires,” Sgt McMahon said.

“People struggle at the best of times and at the worst of times,” he said.

“I could have easily gone back home after the fires, but when I saw what people in the community were going through, I wanted to stay around for them.”

Now, as he establishes himself as one of the experienced heads at Horsham Police Station, helping junior colleagues manage their mental health is a top priority for Sgt McMahon.

Sgt McMahon said the small town was deeply affected by suicides that followed the fires.

“The junior guys on the van, they’re faced with some pretty traumatic stuff,” he said.

One of the resulting funerals triggered a mental health episode in a man who aggressively confronted Sgt McMahon in the middle of the main street.

“You'll sometimes see them very quiet, usually a day or two later after something has happened.

Knowing that the man was struggling, Sgt McMahon tried to diffuse the violent situation and, with the help of an off-duty paramedic, was able to restrain the man and arrange mental health treatment. “The guy was a professional deer shooter and, because I had to take his guns after the incident, he was left without a job or livelihood,” Sgt McMahon said. After the man finished his period of treatment, Sgt McMahon went the extra step and helped organise a new job for the man, driving a water truck.

It was a significant sacrifice for Sgt McMahon to make, because his supportive partner and two teenage boys still lived in Stawell and he had already spent three years doing 13-hour round trips to visit them every fortnight.

“As a country cop, if you can try and help people so they ultimately don't need to come and interact with the police as much, you've done your job, because you've led them to what they really need, which is the actual help,” he said.

But after five years in Corryong, he is back with his family, having landed a job at the nearby Horsham Police Station.

Sgt McMahon said his own mental health troubles over the years have helped him understand what others are going through.

Sgt McMahon believes his time at Corryong, his first stint as a sergeant, made him a better police officer, especially in understanding the impact of mental illness.

He was left with post-traumatic stress disorder after seeing significant trauma in his career and sought professional help before taking up work in non-frontline roles throughout Victoria Police for a time for the sake of his recovery.

“It's all about just trying to understand what their situation is.”

“That's something that I'll pick up on straightaway and go, ‘Hey, you're not yourself today. Are you okay? “When you've been there yourself, you can remember what those days were like, hoping that someone was going to grab you and go, ‘Hey mate, you alright? What was it like? Do you want to talk about it? If not now, here's my number for later. “It’s not ticking the boxes, it's about being truly empathetic, showing that you do care.”

Images Country-forged career 01 Sgt Liam McMahon (right) with friend and Horsham police prosecutor Sgt David Cosgriff who worked as a Country Fire Authority volunteer in the 2019/20 summer bushfires in Corryong. 02 Mentoring and supporting junior colleagues is an important part of the job for Sgt Liam McMahon. 03 After working in Corryong away from his family in Stawell for five years, Sgt Liam McMahon has returned to the area at Horsham Police Station. Editorial: Jesse Wray-McCann Photography: Brendan McCarthy

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For 24/7 crisis support or suicide prevention services, please call Lifeline 13 11 14. If life is in danger, call Triple Zero (000). Current and former Victoria Police Employees and their families can also access wellbeing services via bluespacewellbeing.com.au

POLICE LIFE | AUTUMN/WINTER 2022

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No special treatment

5min
pages 18-19

Changing courts

4min
pages 16-17

Cropping out crime proceeds

3min
page 15

Listening to your voices

3min
page 24

A decade of staying on track

4min
pages 8-9

Snapped on social

1min
page 30

Cracking open crypto crime

6min
pages 20-21

Coming full circle

5min
pages 26-27

Connecting through culture

5min
pages 22-23

The Commodore's final lap

4min
pages 28-29

Sticking through tough times

4min
page 25

St Kilda's sand and street beat

6min
pages 12-13

Stopping a fire starter

8min
pages 6-7

Secret life of police

3min
page 4

A decade of holding gangs to account

4min
page 3

Dismantling a drug ring

6min
pages 10-11

Behind the badge

3min
page 5

In brief

4min
page 31

Oddspot corner

1min
page 30
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