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Posted: 2024-06-22 21:19:51

Fearing the worst, the soldier typed out a frantic message to her army mate.

"F**k f**k f**k please msg me when you guys have phones," she wrote.

They'd exchanged messages only hours before, while he was sitting on the tarmac in a military helicopter.

"There is a weird vibe now you've gone," he'd written earlier.

"I hope you have fun tonight," the soldier, who has been given the pseudonym D20, replied after confirming she'd left to visit home.

Little did D20 know, it would be the last time she'd speak to Captain Danniel Lyon, her friend and an army pilot in the 6th Aviation Regiment.

He and three others all perished in deep waters off the central Queensland coast when their MRH-90 Taipan helicopter ditched into the ocean.

Text message scree in front of generic army background

The final series of messages between anonymous Troop Commander, D20, and Captain Danniel Lyon.(ABC News: Lewi Hirvela)

An inquiry into the circumstances of July 2023 has this week revealed the final gut-wrenching messages between colleagues in the hours leading up to the crash.

But nearly a year on, the families and friends of the dead are no closer to understanding why Bushman 83 went down that night.

'Toxic' army culture of fatigue and burnout

The plan was meticulous.

Soldiers had descended upon Proserpine in the Whitsundays in July last year to take part in Exercise Talisman Sabre, training with American forces.

As night fell, four crews were to fly MRH-90 Taipan helicopters in formation to pick up special operations personnel from Lindeman Island.

But in the hours before the mission, D20 decided she wanted out.

"I did not sleep well because I was dwelling on how much of my life I had given to the regiment," she told the inquiry.

A composite image of four fair-skinned men, three of whom are in military uniform.

Captain Danniel Lyon, Corporal Alexander Naggs, Lieutenant Maxwell Nugent and Warrant Officer Class Two Joseph Laycock died when the chopper crashed.(Supplied: ADF)

The unit had been switching between back-to-back night and day shifts, often working 12-hour-long stints and on the weekend.

Soldiers were even offered sleeping tablets to help them get through their shifts, the inquiry heard.

The anonymous soldier was concerned the fatigue and burnout situation was becoming unsafe, so she raised her concerns.

It was ultimately futile.

"It was becoming quite toxic … it wasn't a good environment," D20 told the inquiry.

A military helicopter lands in bushland, kicking up clouds of dust.

The inquiry aims to understand the circumstances surrounding the MRH-90 Taipan and why it crashed.(Supplied: Department of Defence)

It wasn't the only thing on her mind.

As Troop Commander, D20's role was to help soldiers with administrative issues — including payroll — an increasingly frustrating task.

It was taking months, even years, before soldiers were being paid for work they had already completed.

"You couldn't pay me enough to deal with the rubbish we were dealing with," she said.

The intense workload, combined with fatigue and a "toxic" culture from army top brass was reaching boiling point.

"Headquarters were not supportive, they weren't interested in factoring in the human element," D20 told the inquiry.

By the time the exercise was underway in Proserpine, she was cracking under the pressure.

A ship pulls Taipan wreckage from the ocean, authorities are in a smaller watercraft nearby

The Taipan wreckage was pulled from waters off the Queensland coast in the days following the crash.(ABC News)

"Why am I doing this," she recalled asking herself. 

"Why am I literally burning myself into the ground for an organisation that does not care about me?

"I can't keep doing this."

In a moment of distress, she told her superior she wanted to go home. He agreed and booked her on the next flight out to Sydney.

She felt guilty about leaving her comrades behind for such an important mission, which had taken years of organisation.

"I felt like I was quitting and leaving them," she told the inquiry.

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