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National
Giselle Wakatama

Truck thief who 'saw yowies' jailed over 100km pursuit that ended in flames

Rodney Johnson stole a truck and crashed it into multiple cars and a building in Singleton in 2017.

A man has been sentenced to more than 12-and-a-half years' jail, six-and-a-half years' non-parole, for a fiery truck rampage in New South Wales.

Rodney Johnson, 31, was behind the wheel of the prime mover when it ploughed through buildings on October 11, 2017, in Singleton in the Hunter Valley.

During the carnage eight people were injured and multiple cars crushed.

Newcastle District Court judge Tim Gartelmann said the trail of destruction was akin to a war zone and that it was astonishing no-one was killed.

One of the charges related to using the prime mover as a weapon as Johnson led police on a 100-kilometre pursuit.

"The overall course of driving was staggeringly dangerous," the judge said.

Driver blamed psychosis

In 2018, Johnson pleaded guilty to a string of offences over the crash which left a trail of destruction in Singleton — some of which is yet to be repaired.

Johnson said he stole the truck in the town of Murrurundi as a way of getting to Sydney.

In a letter submitted to a sentencing hearing this week, Johnson said he had not slept for four days at the time of the incident and said he was psychotic.

"I saw a black panther with yellow eyes and I thought I saw three yowies — two little ones and a big one," he said in the letter.

"I thought people were trying to get me and something came over me and I got scared and I don't remember.

"I have a flash of hitting the telegraph pole and I remember one of the police officers grabbing my arm.

"I've seen it on the news what happened, and it really scared me."

Johnson pleaded guilty to 11 offences and another 10 were taken into account during sentencing.

He will be will be eligible for parole in 2024.

After the crash, a critical incident team was set up to investigate circumstances surrounding the incident including the timing of the deployment of road spikes.

The ABC has been told the investigation is ongoing.

Victims relive terror

Victims used their impact statements to describe their terror as the rig approached on that day.

"Before [the crash] I was always very confident and social and approached life with a positive attitude," Deborah Anderson said.

"That changed and I thought my life was over.

"The image of that truck with a smashed red car in front coming towards me is an image that haunts me every day."

Another victim, Kelly Tito, also said she would never be free of the memory of the day.

"It turned my life upside down," Ms Tito said.

"I haven't worked since the accident and I am in constant pain.

"I have terrible nightmares of the trucks impacts and I haven't driven since.

"I freeze when a truck comes near us and the sound of them petrifies me."

Kerry Small spent six months in hospital with a fractured skull, a punctured lung and broken legs following the accident.

"I accept my life has changed forever," Mr Small said in a statement read to the court by his daughter.

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