Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
ABC News
ABC News
National

Father-of-six denied bail in Darwin after fight ends in the death of his brother in Jingili

Authorities have described the death as a "domestic violence incident". (ABC News: Dane Hirst)

A punch-up between brothers has ended in tragedy, with one dead and the other set to remain in custody for now, after being denied bail. 

Peter Kinthari, a 39-year-old father-of-six, has been charged with manslaughter after the death of his brother in the northern Darwin suburb of Jingili on Wednesday night.

Northern Territory Police have described the death as a "domestic violence incident".

During a bail application on Friday afternoon, the court heard the brothers, who hailed from the remote community of Wadeye, had "engaged in a fair fight" during a prolonged drinking session.

Lawyer John Blackley, from the North Australian Aboriginal Justice Agency, said the accused's brother and his wife had "flown in from Wadeye that day", before they met with their family members and started drinking heavily.

The two brothers began arguing, with witnesses alleging that verbal taunts soon spilled over into physical violence, with an ensuing altercation lasting at least two hours.

Mr Blackley said, at one stage, the fighting was interrupted by an "intermission" where "both the accused and the deceased were hugging each other and were in good spirits".

A witness statement alleges they saw Peter Kinthari "absolutely belt" someone else during the altercation. (ABC News: Che Chorley)

Accused could face retribution in prison, court hears

The violence then escalated once more, with the court hearing allegations read by the prosecutor from a "sober, independent" eyewitness that the accused had king hit his brother to the face.

"I saw the fatter fellow [Peter Kinthari] absolutely belt the skinnier guy, knocking him from a standing position to the ground," the witness statement read.

Crown prosecutor Marty Aust said the witness had watched the victim "completely out of it, sitting on the road by himself" when he was approached by his brother, who was yelling at him aggressively.

"I then saw the shorter, fatter bloke strike the skinnier bloke very, very hard. It was hard enough to send the skinny bloke flying backwards … it was so hard I immediately assumed he'd been kicked in the head," the eyewitness statement said.

"It was a bit hard to see, but it could've been a very hard kick or punch to the face, chest, or guts."

The court heard the 41-year-old brother, whose name is withheld for cultural reasons, is believed to have died from a ruptured pancreas, which the prosecution will allege was caused by blunt force trauma inflicted during the fight.

The defence team said questions remained over the cause of death, citing an incident where the victim fell over in the shower in the immediate wake of the punch-up.

Judge David Woodroffe described the death as a "tragic incident" but refused bail to the accused on the grounds that it was "simply too serious" to do so.

Mr Blackley, who had pushed for bail so his client could look after his children, including two infants, said there was a chance Mr Kinthari would face threats of retribution from family members while on remand.

The accused will next face court in Darwin on September 28.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.