A man who is reportedly pursued six police officers by a street in the suburbs of a metal pole before he was shot is an immigration -prisoner on several counts of bail.
The police were called to a house in Doveton in Doveton on Saturday morning in southeastern Melbourne after reports of a malfunction.
A man was spoken and arrested in the front garden before he reportedly took an 182 long A-Frame metal pole and released himself from the police.
Masi Ayiik, 33, is said to have chased them on the street and sued them to officers who deployed OC spray before a shot was fired by the police.
He suffered a single shot at his upper body and was taken to the hospital under the police.
Ayiik was later released and accused of four counts of resisting police -members and one counts each of the abuse of the police, common law attack and reckless behavior serious injury.
He appeared on Sunday evening in Melbourne Magistrates Court.
It is understood that Ayiik was one of the hundreds of immigration -prisoners who had been released in the community last year after a controversial statement by the Supreme Court who found indefinite detention illegal, even if it was previously convicted of criminal.

The police were forced to shoot Masi Ayiik (Photo -Center) after he reportedly sued them, waving a metal pole

Questions in the shooting in a street in the suburbs in southeastern Melbourne continue
Ayiik had at least five counts of Burast and tried to request a bail again on Sunday, Nine News reported.
The police also claim that he was already desired on earlier excellent attacks.
The court heard that Ayiik posed a potential danger to the public, could hinder the course of justice or could not appear at the court on Monday if he received a bail, the Herald Sun. reported.
Ayiik had confronted with deportation due to alleged serious violations before he received a visa for which he had to wear a single bracelet.
The court also heard that he reportedly violated his visa conditions in December and again in January.
Bail was refused and Ayiik will appear again in court on Monday.
Almost 300 immigration prisoners have released since the Supreme Court's ruling in November 2023.
At the end of last year, the ruling led the ruling to impose electronic monitoring and evening clocks on dangerous non-citizens who were released from detention after a wave of alleged crimes involved in liberated prisoners.

Masi Ayiik (center) is an immigration prisoner who had at least five counts of bail. He was refused bail to return to court on Monday
Shadow Home Affairs Minister Senator James Patterson has dismissed Prime Minister Anthony Albanian and his reign from the last incident in the aftermath.
“A dangerous criminal released by Labor of Immigration Detion Now on five counts of Burgrations is precisely the type of person that the Albanian government should have kept off the street using the preventive detention powers that were adopted by parliament 16 months ago,” Senator Pattery Mail Australia said on Sunday evening on Sunday evening.
'Instead, this government has been on its own and spent $ 22 million in tax money without submitting a single application to exclude the dangerous criminals who really do harm in our communities on the Labor watch.
“The Minister of the Interior must immediately use these powers to prevent a repeat of this tragic situation – or worse.”

Liberal Senator James Patterson (photo) says that the immigration -prisoner of the Albanian government should have been held off the street
An investigation into the incident by supervising the Professional Standards command continues.
Victoria Police Acting Commander Southern Metropolitan Region Wayne Viney has defended the decision of officers to shoot the man.
“While he was arrested, he (reportedly) broke free from police members, chased police members in the street with this large metal pole,” he said.
“One of the members, out of fear of the life and security of the other police members … that man was shot.
“To go to the utmost from photographing someone, yes, they would have feared their own safety.”