Joel Herat, one of the hostages trapped inside the Lindt cafe during the Sydney siege, has told his family the harrowing details of what really happened in the early hours of Tuesday morning.
The gunman, Man Haron Monis, was not dozing off, as previously thought.
The 21-year-old said the gunman was agitated and very awake at 2:00am. Mr Herat told his family he didn’t think they would survive until morning if they stayed inside the cafe.
Mr Herat’s father, Lawyer Bruce Herat, spoke to Fairfax Media about the details.
Joel Herat. Image via Facebook.
“From what Joel told me initially, towards 2am Monis started to bring groups of people together in close proximity from where they had been dispersed throughout [the cafe]”, he said.
“And at that point in time, Joel and five others came to the conclusion that they were not going to survive until the morning if they did not do something. So I think him and Jarrod [19-year-old Jarrod Hoffman] basically came to the conclusion that they would bust down the door. And I know that Joel made sure that Harriette [Denny] … got behind him and he said, ‘You’re coming with me’, and basically made sure that all that group were ready to go when Joel and Jarrod broke down the door, it was a group of six in total, I’m not sure who the others were.
“I haven’t ventured to go [deeply] into the detail of it simply because I just don’t want to visit that with Joel too early.
“I don’t know how they did it but they did kick down the [internal] door, which leads to the barristers’ chambers, and then the moment they busted that door down, Joel heard shots in his proximity. And he made sure that Harriette got out and Jarrod got out .. there were shots as they were fleeing.”
Top Comments
Hang on - they handpicked a "group" to escape, and deliberately left the others behind to meet their fate?
From what I understand, the hostages where seperated into small groups. I highly doubt they chose to leave people behind just because they didn't like them, and I'm sure they chose who went with them based on proximity alone.
WTF do you want them to do? Holler out across the cafe "Hey, guy with gun, can you cover your ears for a sec? Thanks man. Hey guys, we're gonna make a run for it, do you wanna come?"
You would alert the people near you that you could - if even that was possible. I really find your comment appalling. You have no way of knowing what the situation was, other than that it was life threatening - you cannot judge their actions.
Man that would take some balls to make a run for it. What if the door didn't open? Im not sure I would have the guts to do it.
I'm impressed by the elderly man who got out during the day. 83 years old - and he made a run for it!
I know right? And he was going to play tennis after he stopped for a coffee!
It would surely be obvious even to someone under stress that if you made an escape, the gunman would be likely to take it out on the remaining hostages. Understandable action - but FAR from heroic.