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Man charged with manslaughter of four-week-old baby brought to hospital with multiple broken bones​on May 9, 2025 at 8:42 am

Man, who police say is a family member, granted bail after being charged nearly two years since boy’s deathGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastA family member charged with manslaughter nearly two years after the “abhorrent” death of a four-week-old baby has been granted bail.Police arrested a 26-year-old man on Friday morning over the July 2023 death of the boy in Wagga Wagga.Sign up for Guardian Australia’s breaking news email Continue reading…Man, who police say is a family member, granted bail after being charged nearly two years since boy’s deathGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastA family member charged with manslaughter nearly two years after the “abhorrent” death of a four-week-old baby has been granted bail.Police arrested a 26-year-old man on Friday morning over the July 2023 death of the boy in Wagga Wagga.Sign up for Guardian Australia’s breaking news email Continue reading…   

A family member charged with manslaughter nearly two years after the “abhorrent” death of a four-week-old baby has been granted bail.

Police arrested a 26-year-old man on Friday morning over the July 2023 death of the boy in Wagga Wagga.

The man, who police said was a family member, brought the baby to Wagga Wagga Base hospital suffering a critical illness along with other injuries that were allegedly deliberately inflicted.

Those injuries included multiple broken bones, police said.

The infant died three days later at the Sydney Children’s hospital.

The man was granted bail on a $10,000 surety after facing Albury local court charged with manslaughter on Friday.

He is next due before Wagga Wagga local court in July.

Det Insp Peter Owen said the death had profoundly impacted those in the southern New South Wales community.

“All of these matters, including this, deeply impact the people who are associated, whether they be teachers, health workers, police, the extended family and community members,” he told reporters on Friday.

“The death of an infant is tragic – where there are suspected inflicted injuries, it’s another level that is abhorrent to people.”

The man was arrested in Albury on the NSW-Victorian border and charged with domestic violence-related manslaughter.

He was visiting other children when arrested, Owen said. He was not adversely known to police before the incident.

The investigation into the death involved assistance from the secretive NSW Crime Commission.

“It’s coming up to two years of consistent, dedicated work from a small team of regional detectives,” Owen said.

“The dedication and devotion to this job is an absolute credit to those detectives.”

The baby is survived by two siblings, police said.

 

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