Hannah Thomas
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A former Greens candidate who opposed the prime minister is set to contest charges related to an allegedly unauthorized protest where she incurred a severe eye injury during her arrest.

Hannah Thomas, aged 35, faces charges of hindering or resisting police in addition to two counts of not complying with a move-on directive at a demonstration at SEC Plating in south-west Sydney on June 27.

Her lawyer, Stewart O’Connell, entered pleas of not guilty to the charges during a brief hearing at Bankstown Local Court today.

Hannah Thomas
Hannah Thomas was among five people arrested during the protest. (Sue Higginson)

Thomas did not appear in court.

The NSW Director of Public Prosecutions had taken over Thomas’ matter from police, DPP solicitor Chris Allison confirmed during the hearing.

Thomas, an activist and lawyer, was among five people arrested during the protest.

The protest was held outside an Australian company purportedly associated with producing parts for US fighter jets utilized by the Israeli Defence Forces.

The arrests are subject to an internal NSW Police review, with external oversight by the police watchdog, after Thomas suffered an eye injury requiring surgery.

The other four protesters – Zachary Schofield, 26, Shane Reside, 41, Brandon Eid, 24, and Holly Zhang, 29 – all pleaded not guilty today to various charges relating to the protest and their arrests.

Former Greens candidate Hannah Thomas to fight NSW Police in court over events at pro-Palestine protest
Hannah Thomas suffered a serious eye injury while being arrested. (Instagram)

Zhang and Schofield have both been accused of refusing or failing to comply with a police direction, while Schofield faces a further charge of hindering or resisting police.

Eid has been charged with larceny and goods in custody suspected to be stolen, while Reside was hit with a single count of using offensive language in a public place.

Police prosecutors will run all of the matters, however, the DPP can elect to take over Eid’s case, which contains a more serious allegation of larceny.

Another of Thomas’ lawyers, Peter O’Brien, said yesterday she might permanently lose vision in her injured eye.

He has reviewed footage of the arrest and alleged a male officer “punched” Thomas in the face.

“The charge of resisting police could never be sustained as the police officers were plainly acting outside of the execution of their duties … with brutal and life-changing consequences,” O’Brien said in a statement.

Police had misunderstood the law and unlawfully applied move-on directions, he claimed.

NSW Police Assistant Commissioner Brett McFadden. (9News)

O’Brien has also flagged a civil suit on Thomas’ behalf against the state over a number of allegations, including assault and battery, false imprisonment, malicious prosecution, misfeasance in public office, and collateral abuse of process.

NSW Police Assistant Commissioner Brett McFadden has previously said he did not observe any misconduct in the body-worn camera footage of the incident. 

The officers involved remain on duty.

Protesters returned to SEC Plating on Friday evening for another rally, where a statement from Thomas was read out.

“We owe it to Palestinians to escalate, to keep targeting companies like SEC Plating, which play a role in the F-35 global supply chain and enable genocide against the Palestinian people,” she said.

Thomas ran second to Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in the inner-west Sydney seat of Grayndler at the May federal election.

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