The parents of a Queensland crayfish farm worker who died from a shotgun wound have said they are thankful for the coroner referring two potential suspects to prosecutors 27 years after their son’s death.
Lawrence and Wendy Brooks also said they were “really disappointed” that the second inquest into the death of their son, Jeffrey Lawrence Brooks, did not make adverse findings today about the quality of the original police investigation.

“There needs to be an independent body set up in the Queensland Police Service as there seems to be much left to be desired in the way they conduct their investigations,” Lawrence Brooks said.

The Coroners Court of Queensland on Monday reopened an inquest into the death of Jeffrey Lawrence Brooks, who was shot through the chest in March 1996, while tending to crayfish ponds at a farm at Beenleigh on Brisbane's southern outskirts.
Jeffrey Lawrence Brooks died from a shotgun wound nearly three decades ago. (Nine)

Wendy Brooks said “it almost went over” their heads when they heard the coroner find their son may have been unlawfully killed after the couple had spent decades challenging the police’s original conclusion that his death was accidental.

“After all this time (the coroner) felt the same way we did… that part was what we were looking for,” Brooks said.

Brooks, 24, was found dead with a single shotgun wound to the upper chest at 3.30pm on March 13, 1996 near crayfish ponds on the property where he worked as an aquaculturist at Beenleigh, south of Brisbane.

Coroner Donald MacKenzie handed down his findings today that Brooks died after being shot via accidental discharge or by a person or persons unknown, and there was “reasonable suspicion” that two of his colleagues were involved.

“Having considered the vast array of material gathered over the past 26 years, there is sufficient information to found a reasonable suspicion that Johannes Wolfgang Hans Geiger and Regine Kjellerup were involved in the unlawful killing of Jeffrey Brooks,” MacKenzie said.

He said the finding was based on Brooks’ past statements that he was in fear of his life, motive, opportunity and behaviour before and after shooting potentially incriminating Geiger and Kjellerup, but he was not stating they were guilty of anything.

There were gasps from the public gallery as MacKenzie read out the finding and said he would refer the brief of evidence to the Director of Public Prosecutions.

MacKenzie did not find any suspicion of crayfish farm worker Graeme Lloyd, who discovered Brooks’ body and called police, as he was an “honest witness”.

Jeffrey's parents Wendy and Lawrie Brooks.
Wendy and Lawrence Brooks were disappointed no adverse finding was made about the police probe. (9News)

The coroner rejected much of the criticism of the original police investigation, finding it was adequate and thorough, and gave little weight to privately funded firearms experiments that claimed to have proven Brooks was shot from too far a distance to be an accident.

The 1998 inquest found that Brooks likely died from the shotgun accidentally discharging when Brooks grabbed it by the barrel, and MacKenzie said on Tuesday he could not rule this out as the cause of death.

He passed on his condolences to Lawrence and Wendy Brooks “for their loss of a fine young man taken too soon”.

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