![Constables Matthew Arnold and Rachel McCrow were wounded then fatally shot at close range. Pictures via QLD Police Constables Matthew Arnold and Rachel McCrow were wounded then fatally shot at close range. Pictures via QLD Police](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/194363481/cefbd792-0994-4e7c-b3b0-14cf04fc29ea.jpg/r0_3_450_257_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
At 4.36pm police radios across Queensland fell silent for a minute to remember constables Matthew Arnold and Rachel McCrow one year on from their death.
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On a fateful day on December 12 the police officers jumped a fence at a property at Wieambilla, west of Brisbane, before Nathaniel, Gareth and Stacey Train gunned them down in cold blood.
A year on from their heinous killings, emotions are still raw as the Arnold, McCrow and Dare families approach a second Christmas without their loved ones.
Constable McCrow's sister recently gave birth to a boy - a nephew she will never meet.
Constable Arnold was a triplet and his family was still grappling with his death, Queensland Police Union president Ian Leavers said on December 12.
"That gut-wrenching pain, which all of us felt on that day, will never, ever be forgotten," Mr Leavers said.
"The way that they were callously executed in cold blood has resonated with every police officer in Queensland because they know it didn't have to occur, it should never have occurred, but it could have been any one of them, just responding to a call for service."
A year on from the killings, the police union is adamant it will one day acquire the Wieambilla property so it can never again "be used for evil".
Neighbour Alan Dare was shot dead before Gareth Train and his wife Stacey and Gareth's brother Nathaniel Train were killed in a gunfight with specialist police on the night of December 12.
![Neighbour Alan Dare was farewelled after he was shot in the Wieambilla attack. Picture via AAP Neighbour Alan Dare was farewelled after he was shot in the Wieambilla attack. Picture via AAP](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/194363481/56644c56-271b-4cb5-9765-7602f208abc9.jpg/r0_19_450_338_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
The Train's children Aidan and Madelyn extended their condolences saying they "are truly sorry for the suffering our parents have caused and the impact their actions continue to have".
"All who are hurt by the loss of Rachel, Matthew and Alan have our condolences and sympathy, know that we grieve their deaths with you," a December 12 statement said.
"In the evening of that day, my sister and I lost the family that raised us.
"This was the only family we had in our childhoods, due to estrangement from our extended family.
"We are not aligned with the religiously extreme beliefs held by our parents. Similarly we do not share the same view in regards to the police," the statement said.
As well as the minute's silence, Commissioner Katarina Carroll and dignitaries will attend a wreath-laying ceremony at Brisbane's Queensland Police Service Memorial to mark the 4.36pm anniversary.
"Matthew and Rachel's family ... are in pain each and every day, and they do not want to publicly come out on the anniversary," Mr Leavers said.
"But they've asked me to convey the message - please never forget Matthew, never forget Rachel, don't forget their families, but make sure that (we do) anything that we can do (to) prevent a tragedy like this happening into the future.
"Don't let their deaths go in vain."
The Arnold family released a statement saying December 12 marked a day of "incomprehensible evil".
"We miss Matt's laugh, kindness, empathy and willingness to help," they said in a statement released by Queensland Police.
"These traits were what made him such an excellent police officer and made him love his job."
The family also paid tribute to the bravery and courage of Constable McCrow.
"We will forever stand with the McCrow family in the pain they feel with losing Rachel," they said.
"We also remember Alan Dare on this day."
Following years of concerns about gun-related crime around Australia, a meeting of federal, state and territory leaders last week agreed to establish a National Firearms Register within four years.
The agreement was reached on the day a US man was arrested by the FBI in connection with the Queensland attack.
Donald Day Jr is accused of sending "Christian end of days ideology" to the Trains in the lead-up to the killings after they connected on YouTube.
After they killed the officers and Mr Dare, the Trains filmed a YouTube video in which they told "Don" they loved him and they would "be home soon".
With Australian Associated Press