Because Kovco's battalion was based at
Holsworthy, New South Wales, his widow asked that his body be returned to Australia from Kuwait via
Sydney Airport, where it arrived around 7a.m. on 29 April 2006. The coffin was met by Kovco's widow, Shelley, his children, parents Judy and Martin, other family members, and an honour guard of 300 3rd Battalion personnel wearing black armbands and dress uniform. Chief of the Defence Force Air Chief Marshal
Angus Houston, Chief of Army Lieutenant-General
Peter Leahy, Defence Minister Brendan Nelson and Australian Attorney-General
Philip Ruddock. Kovco's family later formally identified his body at the mortuary in
Glebe.
New South Wales coroner John Abernethy, assumed "jurisdiction in relation to any inquiry into his identity, the date and place of his death and the manner and cause of his death", and organised for homicide investigators at the State Crime Command to coordinate the investigation with the army's special investigations branch. An autopsy conducted on 1 May 2006 determined the cause of death to have been a single bullet wound to the head. The shot left no powder burn, and passed straight through the soldier's body, close to his temple. The bullet itself was not passed to the coroner, and is apparently missing. A military board of inquiry, headed by former NSW coroner,
Group Captain Warren Cook, and including former
Queensland police commissioner Jim O'Sullivan and Colonel Michael Charles, was established to be conducted out of Sydney's
Victoria Barracks, and Brigadier
Elizabeth Cosson was appointed to investigate the repatriation. Cosson's team travelled to Kuwait on 30 April to investigate the circumstances which led to the "casket bungle". Coroner Abernethy was reported to have questioned Defence Minister Nelson on his three conflicting public statements about Kovco's death. :"I dreamt I was sitting in our room (here) by myself and for some unknown reason I pulled out my 9 mm pistol and shot myself in the head!? I have no idea why but it seemed I wanted to see what it felt like." Kovco described hearing "the click of the hammer" as he shot himself, but he wrote, instead of a loud crack, "the sound went dull as the bullet entered my skull. It was like I could feel the bullet inside…a few seconds later I went limp and started gushing blood from the wounds, nose, ears and mouth. I then seemed to die and woke up and said, fuck, that hurts." Kovco went on to write that night that he was not suicidal, but believed the dream was a premonition. "I have no intention of shooting myself," he wrote. "I know it wasn't about killing myself so I'm a bit worried that it might be a premonition about a bullet hitting me in the head but not killing me." According to Private Ray Johnson, one of the two soldiers with Kovco at the time of the shooting, "
Dreams" by
The Cranberries was playing on an
mp3 player and Kovco stood at his bunk bed typing on his
laptop while the men laughed and mimicked the lead singer
Dolores O'Riordan. But the 23-year-old private did not see Kovco place his gun, which had been hanging holstered from the bed, to his head. In a written statement, Johnson said: On 1 December 2006, Defence Chief Angus Houston announced that the board of inquiry had determined that Kovco died as a result of the inappropriate handling of his personal weapon while engaging in skylarking behaviour. Kovco's mother, Judy, was dissatisfied with the findings and sought an independent coronial inquiry.
Funeral A funeral service was held on 2 May 2006 in the town hall of his home town of Briagolong. It was attended by several hundred mourners including the Prime Minister and Defence Minister, a large 3rd Battalion presence led by its commanding officer, Lieutenant Colonel
Mick Mumford, and a significant media contingent. Australian soldiers in Baghdad held a pre-dawn ceremony, led by Brigadier
Paul Symon, to coincide with the funeral. Kovco was buried with full military honours, including a three-volley
gun salute and
flypast, at the cemetery at nearby
Sale later that day. There was some criticism of the addition of Kovco's name to the Roll of Honour at the
Australian War Memorial in Canberra on 11 November 2006. The former president of the New South Wales Vietnam Veterans Association, Barry Billing, criticised the inclusion on the grounds that Kovco did not die as a result of hostile action. The inclusion was consistent with standard practice, however, as the names of all members of the Australian military who have died as the result of service in a war zone are included on the Roll of Honor without regard to their cause of death.
Draft report misplaced On 15 May 2006, a
CD-ROM containing a confidential draft copy of the Defence Department's report detailing the body repatriation "bungle" was accidentally left in the drive of an airline lounge computer at
Melbourne Airport by the investigating officer, Brigadier
Elizabeth Cosson. Subsequently, Melbourne radio journalist
Derryn Hinch, who claims to have received the CD from the person who found it, broadcast some of the details of the report: "I'm deeply embarrassed about it and I deeply regret the circumstances," Air Chief Marshal Houston told a conference on 17 May, and appealed to the media to treat the material sensitively. The draft report appears to stop short of finding anyone at fault for the problems with Kovco's repatriation. ==Coronial inquiry==