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Stolen car slams into taxi during chase

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 04 Mei 2013 | 21.51

A taxi and a stolen car collided in Victoria Park. Picture: Bohdan Warchomij Source: PerthNow

A STOLEN car slammed into a taxi during a police pursuit in Burswood early Saturday morning.

The crash happened just after 2am when police tried to stop the stolen orange Holden Commodore on Burswood Road.

After a brief pursuit, the driver crashed into a taxi at the intersection of Teddington Rd and Shepperton Rd, before smashing through a fence and knocking down a floodlight at a nearby caryard.

Emergency services were called to the scene, where debris from the two vehicles was strewn across the intersection.

The driver of the car was charged with failing to stop, no authority to drive and stealing a motor vehicle.

His female passenger was released without charge.

Anyone who saw the vehicles prior to the crash is asked to call Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

 

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Sheen supports sons' removal from ex

Brooke Mueller (left) and Charlie Sheen's twin boys are apparently being looked after by his ex Denise Richards after an LA court deemed Mueller wasn't fit to look after them. Source: Getty Images

CHARLIE Sheen's spokesman says the actor supports a decision to remove his twin sons from the care of his ex-wife and have them live temporarily with another ex-wife, actress Denise Richards.

Larry Solters says in a statement that Sheen will participate in court proceedings related to ex-wife Brooke Mueller's custody of their four-year-old sons.

Solters says Sheen knows that Richards will provide his sons ''a safe and in a stable, loving environment.''

Celebrity website RadarOnline.com reported on Friday that the twins were removed from Mueller's custody by the Department of Children and Family Services.

Los Angeles authorities deemed the boys were not safe with Mueller because of her alleged drug use.

"Brooke was given many opportunities by social workers to clean up her act. Social workers felt that Bob and Max weren't safe in Brooke's care. The decision was made late on Thursday afternoon, and the boys are no longer in Brooke's care. It's expected at some point the boys will be taken care of by Charlie Sheen's ex-wife, Denise Richards, who has cared for them in the past when Brooke went to rehab," a source close to the situation told RadarOnline.com.

Richards, who also has two children with Sheen, stepped in to look after the boys when Mueller went to rehab last year

"They're our family and they're Sam and Lola's brothers, and I can't imagine growing up without my sister, so anytime she needs help, I'm there for the boys," Richards told Access Hollywood last year. "[Sam and Lola] are the best big sisters to [the boys] and they love them."

"I know it doesn't seem normal, but it is our normal. They're little kids and I love children, and like I said, it's our daughter's brothers, so I can't say no," Richards said.

The agency's investigations are confidential, and Mueller and Richards' representatives have declined comment.

Sheen and Richards have two daughters from their marriage, which ended in 2006.

Mueller and Sheen were married in 2008 and divorced in 2011.

 Mueller's rep refused to comment on the story.


 


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Darwin's ruthless sex trade

Picture: Daniel Hartley-allen Source: news.com.au

THE Aboriginal woman, aged about 40, attractive with an easy smile, explains how it was for her when she lived on the streets of Darwin for six years, until she entered public housing last year: she traded sex with white men.

"It was every day," she says. She and other women would hang out by the beach, waiting for men to drive by.

"The man comes up and points out what woman he wants," she says. "I've done it plenty times, to get alcohol, food and everything, and the drugs as well. I was hooked on it. I needed it. I was getting food and I felt good. Now I've stopped."

The woman says she considered herself a prostitute. The woman's sister, aged 45, did too.

"I used to go looking for men, for grog and smokes," she says. "For a box of moselle. It was every morning, every day. White men, Greek men – all for a box of moselle."

It has been part of life in the north since frontier times: Aboriginal women used as sexual commodities. That is the reason the Stolen Generations exist - comfort women for white pastoralists, builders and miners, passing through the lands.

Now men cruise Darwin's streets and parks targeting homeless Aboriginal women, known locally as long-grassers, whose lives are mired in poverty, social exclusion, stigma, hunger, trauma, violence, deteriorating health and addiction.

Picture: Daniel Hartley-allen Source: news.com.au

Men still pay the equivalent of handfuls of sugar, tea and flour.

Until now, no researchers have ventured into the long grass and asked Aboriginal women to tell their stories of this common but unspoken sex trade.

What has emerged from the work of Dr Catherine Holmes and Dr Eva McRae-Williams, working through the Batchelor Institute, is a visceral insight into the dangers and desperation of the lives of long-grass women.

The women appoint "Captains" among their groups to take turns having sex with cruising white men.

"All kinds of cars pick up the girls, V8s, hiluxes, flash ones," one woman told the researchers.

The women felt excluded from society and saw trading sex as an opportunity to earn cash, grog, cigarettes and ganja for their groups, and also looked forward to travelling in nice cars or, on rare occasions, being taken to private homes, with stocked fridges and showers.

It was a temporary escape, and a better deal, than the routine rape they suffered at the hands of their own men.

One woman said: "The blackfellas sneak up on you when you are passed out, alone, and do their thing and leave. Then another one comes and climbs on. And another."

The researchers interviewed 89 women. They carried knives to protect themselves when sleeping in long grass groups at night.

Some women regarded what the researchers label "transactional sex" (TS) -- or as the women call it, "selly--welly" - as a positive opportunity, because they got something in return.

The report, "Captains" and 'Selly-welly': Indigenous Women and the Role of Transactional Sex in Homelessness", was commissioned by Families and Housing, Community Development and Indigenous Affairs as part of national research on homelessness.

"Study participants confirmed that women, usually under 40, would be sold by choice or coercion, although not a lot of pressure was necessary," says the report.

"They say, 'Your turn to be Captain', or 'I was Captain last time', or 'OK, I will be Captain again'."

Picture: Daniel Hartley-allen Source: news.com.au

The report said some women coveted the role of Captain, because it gave them a sense of power and control when they returned to the group, distributing the grog, ganja or cigarettes.

"The flip side of this, however," says the report, "is that a Captain who does not come back and share with the group will be stripped of their leadership rights and ultimately punished through violence or exclusion."

Some women we spoke to disagreed with the researchers – they said the captain was the man, not the woman. "He's the person who gives you what you want," said one.

Some felt "shame" going with white men, but this was quickly "neutralized when they returned to the group and enjoyed some authority and the resources; usually $20 to $40 in combination with wine and cigarettes, but maybe up to $100."

The report states: "When asked whether women did anything to prepare for TS, one mother explained about her daughter: "She good looking as she is. She has shower every day. She OK. Men like her".

Respondents told the researchers TS was occurring "'all the time, everywhere'. One young woman explained that 'all people in the long grass do it! Everybody does it ... I do it sometimes, too.'"

The women the researchers spoke to did not see themselves as sex workers. Rather, it was viewed "in the context of gathering resources".

The researchers state: "The fact that sex was being exchanged appeared to be unimportant."

Picture: Daniel Hartley-allen Source: news.com.au

NT Attorney—General John Elferink said while the activities of the women might meet the technical definition of sex work, prostitution was not illegal in the Territory and nothing would be gained by criminalizing the behaviour.

Mr Elferink said he found the report disturbing and agreed the women were vulnerable both in Darwin and their communities. But he claimed their lifestyle was a choice.

"Transactional sex is the thrust of this report," he said, "but I can tell about the violence, the homicide the sexual crimes, and a large slice of it is a direct product of people sitting around doing nothing."

Dr Holmes says the women suffer a high prevalence of post—traumatic stress syndrome, which she defines by exposure to threats or violence or death, or being witness to it. Most of the exposure came from their own men.

She says it made sense they carried knives: "They need to be hyper-vigilant to survive and they have very clear evidence that the long grass is a dangerous place."

The report does not pass judgment on the activity but Dr Holmes says: "It's disturbing that people's lives in their communities can be so bad that they see spending time in the long grass as a better option."

One woman related a typical exchange this way: "The car comes up and we [the group] go up to it and he picks which one he wants. Or we say, 'Which one do you want?', and he points... If the girl doesn't want to go, she will say, 'I already got a boyfriend' and will walk away."

Men often targeted younger women, offering not just money, tobacco, ganja, but phone cards or bus fares.

"Private cars and a non-indigenous male companion also gave women temporary access to a mainstream world that their group did not generally inhabit," says the report.

Sourcing alcohol rules long-grass existence, and the study found if a group had grog and food, they were less likely to engage in sex transactions until the supplies ran dry.

Picture: Daniel Hartley-allen Source: news.com.au

The women expressed low concern for their safety in sex encounters with white men. One woman said: "They know not to hit a woman, not like black men who will give you the biggest hiding for nothing. They [women] will jump in any car. It's not a problem".

Rates of certain sexual infection are reported as higher in the NT than anywhere else in Australia, and especially among indigenous people.

"Sometimes use them [condoms]," a woman told the researchers, "but not all the time. The girl might be shame to push it on. They not worry about that. They get smokes, grog and sometimes ganja or maybe money. Not care.

"They just get in the car. Go with anyone. Aboriginal or Balanda (whites). It doesn't matter... The man drives up and says, 'you want to come for a drink?' and the Captain gets in."

The rate of homelessness in Darwin is higher than anywhere else in Australia. The researchers cite figures of 234 homeless per 10,000 people, compared 41 per 10,000 in Melbourne, and 47 per 10,000 in Adelaide.

Long grassers are seen by some in Darwin as a public eyesore, as human rubbish. Dr Holmes acknowledged many long-grass had anti-social behaviours which reasonable people shouldn't have to tolerate, but said people should try to see it another way.

"I'd like (Darwin people) to look at it and understand what they're seeing is a symptom of a deeper socio-economic issue affecting people in the Northern Territory," she says.

"It's not OK that these people are vulnerable. Regardless what you think about drunks, itinerants and sex, having women vulnerable to rape is unacceptable and there should be more shelter available to protect women while they sleep.

"Clearly the existing services are at capacity and the hospital and police watch house are not the most suitable options."

John Elferink said the idea they could not help themselves was wrong. "The assumption is that these people are too useless and the state's got to step in and help," he said.

"I don't subscribe to that at all. There is nothing that decays self--worth as some of the lifestyle choices these people make, backed up by a welfare system that does nothing to offset the negative and decaying effects on their spirits and well--being.

"If anyone in these circumstances wants to lift themselves out of these circumstances, the best form of welfare is a job."

Mr Elferink said "rescuing" people with welfare-based models would only create more vulnerability among the women.

"The transactional sex component and exposure to rape component is a direct result of policies which do not place any expectation upon the person who is engaging in self-destructive conduct," he says.

Yet if communities are viewed as places of violence and sexual abuse, is there is an argument that the Aboriginal women, at least, are entitled to some form of asylum?

"When we look at meeting the needs of this group of people we, as a society, fall short," says Dr Holmes. "There are opportunities to make their life better, and therefore the whole of our society will become healthier."

paul.toohey@news.com.au


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Toddler drowns in bath tub

A THREE year old girl has drowned in a bath tub in Mandurah this afternoon.

Ambulance officers attempted to revive the toddler at the scene and rushed her to Peel Health Health Campus.

Police said the incident happened at the a home in Chepstow Drive at about 2pm.

It's believed that both parents were home at the time of the incident.

An investigation is underway however it appears the drowing was an accident..

 
 


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Dying well in WA: 10 on board Nitschke's nitrogen

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 03 Mei 2013 | 21.51

Euthanasia campaigner Dr Philip Nitschke will be speaking in Perth tomorrow. Source: The Australian

THE man dubbed Australia's 'Dr Death' will show people at a Perth workshop how to use a new euthanasia product that claims to be quick, legal and totally undetectable.

And Exit International founder Dr Philip Nitschke says around 10 people from WA have already pre-ordered the nitrogen-based product - and he expects more to follow suit.

Nitrogen, he said, would not show up in an autopsy and the system used to administer it meant an individual would not need help. However the equipment used would need to be removed afterwards.

Despite this, Dr Nitschke said it was still one of the better legal options available.

In WA, the maximum penalty for assisted suicide is life imprisonment - the toughest penalty in the country.

"You don't need any help and that is why this is legal. Your partner may wish to be with you but they don't have to do anything," he said.


"You can do it all yourself. Suicide itself is not a crime.

"But of course assisting is. And in WA it's a crime that can attract life imprisonment."

Dr Nitschke said he knew of five people in Australia who had used the nitrogen-based product, which starves the brain of oxygen. It has been available in Australia for the past six months.

He explained the nitrogen was "brewed" in a certain way to ensure a peaceful death.

And because the product can be used for other means, he claimed it was legal.

"We set up a brewing company to do this," Dr Nitschke said.

"There are legal questions around helping people die. Because this can be used in several ways it can't solely be argued that this just a system to help people die. It can be used for several reasons.

"It can provide people quite a quick, peaceful, totally legal and totally undetectable death. In that sense I will be explaining to that people tomorrow.

"This is the only option for un-detectability. If you die and someone takes away the equipment, no one will know you have died. Nitrogen is unique in that way. "

Anti-euthanasia groups say the product could be used with malicious intent and did require the involvement of a second party, which was illegal.

Around 60 people have pre-booked for Saturday's Dying Well in the West event at the Wembley Community Centre.

For those seeking support or for anyone feeling distressed, call Lifeline 131 114, Mensline 1300 789 978 or Kids Helpline 1800 551 800.


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Why you can't get that concert ticket

Want to go to the Pink concert? These tickets are harder to come by than you think, says the author of a new book. Picture: Supplied Source: news.com.au

  • Tell us about your experiences buying tickets in the comments below

WE'VE all been there. It's 9am, you've logged onto Ticketmaster with all the hope in the world. Your dreams are pinned on getting those A-reserve seats for that concert, game, once-in-a-lifetime gig. You've got your credit card at the ready.

But by 9.02am your dreams are over - you can't even score a spot up in the nose-bleed section. The concert is SOLD OUT.

Wait, how did that happen? How did tens of thousands of tickets come and go within the blink of an eye? How did you end up empty handed when you've been staring at the screen for an hour?

It's an all too familiar scenario for Aussie music, sports and concert lovers. Just this week promoters announced that tickets to the sought-after Splendour in the Grass festival sold out in under an hour. Similarly all tickets to the up-coming British Lions rugby tour sold out in less than 15 minutes.

The fact is we're all getting scammed and it's out of hand, says Dean Budnick, co-author of Ticket Masters: The Rise of the Concert Industry and How the Public Got Scalped.

Budnick became so despondent with the sky-high prices of impossible-to-purchase tickets that he decided to investigate the inner workings of the ticketing industry, along with his Relix magazine colleague, Josh Baron.

Here, in a news.com.au exclusive, Budnick, who interviewed more than 100 people in the industry for the book, explains what's gone wrong and why it's almost impossible to get a ticket to anything anymore.

This man is ecstatic. Because it's extraordinarily hard to get your hands on a ticket these days. Picture: Jeff Herbert Source: news.com.au

How does an arena that seats 80,000 sell out in two minutes?

A very small percentage of seats are available to purchase during the initial general sale.

"Before that time a lot of artists have committed their ticket inventory to credit card companies they have alliances with, to their fan clubs for pre-sale, to the promoter who has a variety of opportunities, to sponsors and to the venue," explains Budnick. "Plus they also keep some inventory for themselves and the secondary market (more on this to come)."

At Justin Bieber's Nashville show in February, only seven per cent of tickets to the show were available to purchase at the general sale, meaning 93 per cent of tickets had already been set aside for other partners.

At Taylor Swift's US concerts, just 15 per cent of tickets were available at the advertised on-sale date. For Miley Cyrus' Hannah Montana tour, the numbers were similar, about 15 to 20 per cent.

The moral of the story? "If you don't have a ticket before the general on-sale, you're going to find it extraordinarily challenging," says Budnick.

But Matthew Lazarus-Hall, CEO of Chugg Entertainment, disagrees and told news.com.au that this concept was a "very American thing".

"I wouldn't say it's prevalent in Australia at all," he said. "I can't speak for everyone else, but I would say for Chugg Entertainment, it's always greater than 55-60 per cent in all price categories."

Just seven per cent of Justin Bieber's concert tickets went on sale to the public during the general sale. Picture: AP Source: news.com.au


What is a "secondary market"?

The "secondary market" is a term given to the online re-sale platforms such as eBay, Gumtree and StubHub in the US which allow people (or scalpers) to re-sell tickets they have already purchased.

"Because of these secondary markets there are so many people who are aggressively competing online for tickets," says Budnick. "Some are professional ticket brokers and scalpers who know how much tickets to the really hot shows are worth. Others are mums, dads or uni students trying to make a bit of extra money."

Budnick says artists are now even scalping their own tickets by keeping a number and re-selling them to these online platforms for inflated prices.

Artists now realise the profit that can be made on places like eBay and so as a result, they demand a certain allotment of tickets in their riders which they are then able to directly on-sell on the secondary market.

"Katy Perry is known to do this," says Budnick. "Let's say her tickets go on sale for $100 and then two hours later they sell for $200 - that gets pretty frustrating for the artists' manager and to the artist, so they want a taste, too.

"The way one of the managers described it to me was 'look, somebody is sitting in front of this computer, smoking a cigar who is not involved at all in this show, he's just sitting there making all this money off us, we deserve a little bit of that money."

It's a full house at the A League Grand Final - but how many people managed to buy their tickets during the general on-sale? Picture: Taylor Adam Source: news.com.au


How do scalpers get so many tickets?

Aside from everyday people buying and re-selling tickets there are professional ticket brokers and scalpers making a really good living out of writing computer programs which utilise "bots".

"I know one individual and his team who got 700,000 tickets in 2007 through mechanisation and computer programs," says Budnick. "There are these computer programs that are working simultaneously to try to get in and get tickets.

"They flood the website with hundreds of thousands of attempts so that even if their program fails to interpret the security captcha code, it's all the more challenging for other people to get in and get tickets. It's a real problem."

AFL and NRL Grandfinal tickets go on sale, Ticketek is down. Again. Picture: Supplied Source: news.com.au


Why are tickets so expensive in the first place?

Forking out $150 for a One Direction concert ticket is a big ask for a 14-year old, and Budnick says most of the blame lies with the artist.

"The price is controlled by an artist who asks for a guaranteed percentage of the ticket price, this can be as high as 100 per cent," says Budnick.

This is why many venues add their own additional charges onto tickets and charge a fortune for parking, alcohol and food.

"A lot of people assume it's the cost of delivering the ticket, but service fees are a profit centre for the promoter and the venues and quite frankly they're also an additional profit centre for the artists who will not only take the money that they're getting from the ticket, but they'll also take a little bit of the money from that service fee as well," says Budnick.

In October last year, Choice magazine named Ticketmaster and Ticketek in its annual "Shonky" awards for shoddy services. They cited a November Elton John concert sold by Ticketmaster and held at the Sydney Entertainment Centre. The ticket price was $119.90, but after adding the credit card surcharge of $2.64 and a handling fee of $9.50, consumers were up for $132.04.

In response, Ticketek Australia managing director Cameron Hoy said consumers often did not understand the real costs that underpinned the company's charges, adding "our fees include labour, dispatch, handling and the cost of technology that supports the scanning of these tickets".

Some fans have become so frustrated trying to buy tickets online, they now camp overnight in the hope of buying a ticket from an outlet. Picture: Mark Evans Source: news.com.au


So, how can you increase your chances of getting a ticket at face value price?
  • Establish a relationship and a loyalty with the promoter, so you can sign up early to pre-sales and fan clubs
  • See if your credit card company, such as Visa, has pre-sale tickets available
  • If you're buying online on the day of general sale, log on early and be in the system before 9am
  • Follow the promoters, the venue, the fan clubs and the artists on social media to pick up on special offers
  • If you are looking for a ticket in the "secondary market" – wait. As it gets closer to the show, some get nervous and drop the price. "I have a friend who went to 18 concerts in a row and he actually paid less than the ticket price because he waited and scalped the scalpers," Budnick says.
  • Consider buying on your mobile rather than your desktop, says Lazarus-Hall, as the "bots" can't work on mobiles.
  • Read the frequently asked questions on the promoter or ticket-sellers website before you buy so you understand how the sale process works

Dean Budnick and Josh Baron's book, Ticket Masters: The Rise of the Concert Industry and How the Public Got Scalped is available through Penguin Books.


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Hung jury in ex-cop pepper spray case

Former police officer Laurie Jim Bruni is accused of assaulting a man in 2010 by pepper spraying him in the face for no reason. Picture: Bohdan Warchomij Source: PerthNow

FOR the second time, a District Court jury has failed to reach a verdict in the case of a former police officer facing assault and corruption charges.

Laurie Jim Bruni, 56, was on trial this week over allegations he assaulted Robert O'Neill in 2010 by pepper spraying him in the face and pouring beer over him when he was found drunk and asleep in a car in Redcliffe.

Mr Bruni was also charged with corruptly making a false entry on the WA Police internal computer system to cover up the assault.

A trial over the same matter last year also resulted in a hung jury.

On October 23, 2010, Mr O'Neill, then aged 20, had been at a Curtin University party with friends.

Later that night he ended up alone in a car on Dunreath Drive near the Perth Airport's domestic terminal.

He said he got out of the car to urinate, and while doing so, he fell into a drain system near the road, covering himself in dirty water and mud.

Mr O'Neill then went back to the car and fell asleep.

The same night, officers from the Belmont police station were called to Dunreath Drive over reports of a dark-coloured utility driving recklessly.

Mr Bruni and his then-colleague Constable Kristy Stephen responded but did not see any vehicles as they drove the stretch of road.

They turned around and drove another length of Dunreath Drive, finding Mr O'Neill asleep in a car parked on the nature strip.

Const Stephen and Mr O'Neill alleged that while the officers dealt with him Mr Bruni pepper sprayed Mr O'Neill in the face and eyes for no reason.

When Mr O'Neill's mother came from Stoneville to pick him up, the young man complained of sore eyes, which he said were still sore and puffy the next day.

Const Stephen said she did not report the incident at first because she was intimidated by Mr Bruni's seniority and he told her to pretend it never happened.

However, Mr Bruni maintained that he never sprayed Mr O'Neill.

He says the young man complained to police of painful eyes which the then-officer told him was because Mr O'Neill was rubbing them with his hands that were covered in dirt from the fall in the drain.

Mr Bruni said he tried washing the 20-year-old's face with a bottle of water and a bottle of beer because they were the only fluids nearby.

He said he never used his pepper spray on Mr O'Neill, but at one stage he did reach for it because Mr O'Neill began behaving erratically and he accidentally discharged the spray while it was still in its holster on to his shirt and utility belt.

He said after the incident was over, he and Const Stephen went back to the station.

There he updated her entries about the incident on the internal computer system because he thought they did not have enough detail.

He said he did not include a mention about the pepper spray because he never intentionally fired it at Mr O'Neill so he did not have to file it.

During the course of the trial, the jury was told Mr Bruni's pepper spray can weighed 46.12g after the October 23 incident.

A full can weigh anywhere from 66g to 75g and an empty can weighs 32g.

The jury was also told WA Police have had to send pepper spray cans to the ChemCentre for testing after they discovered in November 2012 that 14 cans that had never been used were found to vary in weight from 60g to 75g, potentially leaving some officers short of pepper spray fluid if they needed to use it.

It is also protocol for officers to hand in their spray cans after any use to ensure they always have full cans on them.

Today, the jury deliberated for more than six hours before it was discharged.

Mr Bruni will next face a trial listing hearing on June 28. His bail was renewed.


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Tour Australia's most expensive home

Australia's most expensive home: 43 Saunders Street, Mosman Park WA $57.5m. Picture: Google Maps Source: Supplied

HITHERTO hidden behind high gates and security walls, the most expensive homes in Australia are now viewable via Google Maps and Street View for all to see.

Almost everyone enjoys secretly checking out that house down the street when it goes on the market: ultimately we're all nosy parkers.

But until recently, the lifestyles of the richest Australians stayed behind closed doors. Now, thanks to the web, anyone selling their multimillion dollar mansion is inviting 23m Australians in for a viewing, even though only the top one per cent can afford to buy.

Australia's most expensive home is a sprawling $57.5m Mosman Park property beside the Swan River in Perth. Bought by mining magnate Chris Ellison from heiress Angela Bennett in 2009, the home sold well below its original asking price of $70m.

Made up of three self-contained buildings, the vast 7567 square metre riverside mansion has its own private jetty, boathouse, tennis court, outdoor and indoor swimming pools, gym and cinema.

Australia's most expensive homes: 43 Saunders Street, Mosman Park WA $57.5m. Picture: Google Maps

Huge floor to ceiling windows offer spectacular views from the luxurious oak panelled rooms.

With a booming market swollen by mining wealth, it's no surprise that the priciest property in Australia is found in Western Australia.

Australia's most expensive homes: Altona, 54-56 Wunulla Road, Point Piper, NSW $54.5m. Picture: Google Maps

Historically, the most expensive homes in the nation have been found in the Sydney harbourside eastern suburbs of Vaucluse and Point Piper.

As Sydney starts to move after several years of flatness, industry insiders believe NSW may reclaim the top spot from WA.

Australia's most expensive homes: Coolong, 23-25 Coolong Road, Vaucluse, NSW $47m. Picture: Google Maps

This week, after years on the market, one of Sydney's most prestigious waterfront mansions, Altona in Point Piper, finally sold for $53m.

The Sydney record deal secured the property for a little-known Melbourne-based, Chinese-born businessman.

Australia's most expensive homes: Villa Veneto, 98 Wolseley Road, Point Piper, NSW $44m. Picture: Google Maps

With iconic Harbour Bridge views, Altona boats a glorious private pool deck built over the water, and a pool cabana bigger than many homes.

Expertly designed by Dods & Zuccon Architects, the eight-bedroom ivy covered Italianate residence over multiple levels boats a luxurious home theatre and rooftop entertaining deck with jacuzzi.

Australia's most expensive homes: 90 Wolseley Crescent, Point Piper, NSW $33m. Picture: Google Maps

Altona pips Coolong ($47m) in Vaucluse and Villa Veneto ($44m) and Craig-y-mor ($32.4m) in Point Piper for the top spot in Sydney.

The latter two properties are on Wolseley Road, at an average $20,500 a square metre the nation's priciest address.

Australia's most expensive homes: 19-20 Shakespeare Grove, Hawthorn, VIC, $25m. Picture: Google Maps

Wolseley Road is the ninth most expensive street on the planet according to the Wall Street Journal, some way behind Severn Road in Hong Kong, the Billionaire's Row with the world's most expensive real estate at $80,000 a square metre.

Melbourne's most pricey home is a $25m mansion on Shakespeare Grove in Hawthorn that boasts two swimming pools, basement parking for 10 cars, a massive gym and seven kitchens. How many ways are there to boil an egg?

Australia's most expensive homes: 213 Hedges Avenue, Gold Coast, QLD $11.5m. Picture: Google Maps

Queensland's most expensive home is an ocean-front $11.3m property on the Gold Coast's Hedges Avenue, which just pips the majestic $11.2m Farsley mansion in Hamilton Hill, Brisbane.

Perhaps surprisingly, an $8.5m home in Sandy Bay, Hobart sold to Tasmanian-born former Macquarie banker Greg Woolley is more pricey than the most expensive homes in the ACT (Mugga Way, Red Hill, $7.3m) South Australia (South Esplanade, Glenelg, $7m) and the resource-rich NT (Fannie Bay, Darwin $4.7m).

Australia's most expensive homes
$57.5m 43 Saunders Street, Mosman Park WA
$54.5 Altona, 54-56 Wunulla Road, Point Piper, NSW
$47m Coolong, 23-25 Coolong Road, Vaucluse, NSW
$44m Villa Veneto, 98 Wolseley Road, Point Piper, NSW
$33m 90 Wolseley Crescent, Point Piper, NSW
$32.4m Craig-y-mor, 73 Wolseley Road, Point Piper, NSW
$25m 19-20 Shakespeare Grove, Hawthorn, VIC
$11.5m 213 Hedges Avenue, Gold Coast, QLD
$11.2m 39 Eldernell Terrace, Brisbane, QLD
$8.5m 44 Waimea Avenue, Sandy Bay, TAS
$7.3m 27 Mugga Way, Red Hill, ACT
$7m 14 South Esplanade, Glenelg, SA
$4.7m 94 East Point Road, Fannie Bay, NT

Simon Crerar is News Limited's Visual Story Editor. Follow him at twitter.com/simoncrerar

Australia's most expensive homes: 39 Eldernell Terrace, Brisbane, QLD $11.2m. Picture: Google Maps

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Australia's most expensive homes: 27 Mugga Way, Red Hill, ACT $7.3m. Picture: Google Maps

Australia's most expensive homes: 14 South Esplanade, Glenelg, SA, $7m. Picture: Google Maps

Australia's most expensive homes: 94 East Point Road, Fannie Bay, NT $4.7m. Picture: Google Maps


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Mother claims son tortured in Saudi

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 02 Mei 2013 | 21.51

Greens Senator Scott Ludlam says Australia must do all it can to help two WA brothers in Saudi Arabia.

The mother of Shayden Thorne, who is in a Saudi Arabian jail, with a picture of Shayden. Picture: Colin Murty Source: PerthNow

Foreign Minister Bob Carr says his department is working to secure the release of WA man Shayden Thorne, who is held in  a Saudi jail. Source: The Australian

Former Perth man Shayden Jamil Thorne, who is being held in custody awaiting trial in Saudi Arabia on suspected terrorism offences. Source: PerthNow

THE mother of a Perth man imprisoned in Saudi Arabia accused of terrorism-related activities says her son is being tortured as badly as a Guantanamo Bay inmate.

The woman said she only learnt overnight that Shayden Thorne, 25, was being tortured in the prison where he has been held for 18 months.

"According to the documents that I've received from the lawyer, I now know that he has been physically tortured,'' she told reporters in Perth today.

"He's been tied, hands and wrists behind his back, he's been punched in his genitals and he's passed out from that.

"His tying up has been for two weeks straight, as well as the sleep deprivation, bright lights and everything.

'It's like Guantanamo.''

The woman doubted Foreign Minister Bob Carr's claim the federal government had made 50 representations to Saudi Arabian authorities on Shayden's behalf and sent consular officials to visit him six times over the past 18 months.

"That's a stretch - not possible,'' she said.

"More like 15, not 50.''

She said Saudi authorities had linked her son to funding terrorism activities.

But not only did she not believe he was capable of supporting terrorists, he and his brother Junaid, 23, were both always short of money, like normal men of that age.

Junaid is now in hiding in Saudi Arabia after being arrested and detained for two months for protesting about his brother's imprisonment.

The men's mother said while it had been alleged Shayden had terrorist material on a laptop, the computer had been borrowed from a mosque or a friend to watch movies, and it had not been produced in the three court hearings that had been held so far.

A final hearing is expected late next month or early in June, when Shayden will learn his fate.

Responding to suggestions that Shayden could face the death penalty, she said, ``I haven't thought about that yet.''

"I guess he's going to be in prison for a long time.''

She feared the boys were "disadvantaged'' for being Aboriginal and Muslim - ironically in a Muslim country.

"Shame on them,'' she said of the Saudi government, ``that they're treating Muslims like that''.

The boys' aunt, Stephanie Riley, said the family was worried the Saudi secret service would make them "disappear''.

"We don't know what can happen,'' Ms Riley said.

Foreign Minister Bob Carr later disputed the claims of torture.

He said there had been more than 50 representations and six visits by embassy officials over 18 months to Mr Thorne, but his mother's claims were the first embassy staff had heard of torture complaints.

"On the contrary, I'm advised by our embassy that Mr Thorne has not informed them of any torture in prison - he's complained about a lack of sunlight, exercise and variations in food,'' he told Sky News.

"So, that's advice from my embassy. I have to rely on that ... that he has not made complaints to them in the contact they've had with him about torture.''

Senator Carr said he understood Mr Thorne's mother's distress.

"I just point out to her very politely, very respectfully, I do not have the capacity to bring them home,'' he said.

Carr defends department

Foreign Minister Bob Carr says the government is doing all it can to help the young West Australian.

Senator Carr has defended his department against claims it's done nothing to help Thorne, pointing to more than 50 representations and six visits by embassy officials over 18 months.

``We do our best for Australians who are in trouble overseas,'' he told reporters in Sydney.

``But if you're in trouble overseas, you're in trouble in a different jurisdiction, and Australian law does not apply.

``Shayden Thorne has chosen to live in Saudi Arabia. He's lived there for 12 years and the laws of Saudi Arabia apply to him.''

Thorne has been in custody since November 2011. His younger brother Junaid is in hiding in the country, apparently wanted by authorities for questioning after having previously been detained for two months.

The boys are Aboriginal and are Australian citizens but moved to Saudi Arabia with their father.

Thorne's mother,  from the south-eastern Perth suburb of Thornlie, who has asked not to be named, says her boys are innocent.

She says authorities found terrorist material on a laptop Shayden borrowed from a mosque but he knew nothing about it.

She raised his case in the media after becoming frustrated with the lack of progress on Shayden's case.

She claims Shayden has been tortured by Saudi authorities in the prison outside the capital Riyadh. She says both her boys want to come back to Perth.

The Thornlie woman described her 23 and 25 year-old sons as normal young boys.

"Carefree and easy going. I know they don't drink, they don't smoke or anything like that and they are into fitness and hanging out with their friends - that kind of stuff," she told Sky News in Perth.
 
"I couldn't travel over to Saudi Arabia even if I wanted to because I don't have the funds to do that."

"The day before yesterday Junaid contacted me and voiced his concerns about what was going to happen when they caught him."

She said Junaid was more confident now that they have gone to the media and he hopes something can now be done to help them.

She also questioned the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade's handling of the case.

``I just think that they're not doing as much as what they should be doing to get my boys home.''

Senator Carr said he sympathised with the family but said the government was limited in what it could do.``We can't run a trial, we can't mount their defence for them,'' he said, adding he was concerned about the torture allegations.

Senator Carr again rejected calls for a new levy to help fund DFAT's consular activities.

Should know fate by June

The man's mother said Shayden should learn his fate by June.
 

She spoke with Shayden's lawyer on Wednesday night and was advised he should learn his fate in coming weeks.

``He told me that he's just spoken to the judge and the judge is going to convene the last hearing some time in May or June,'' she told 6PR's Fairfax radio today.

``And he did tell me that even after this hearing, if he is found innocent, that they are still going to keep him in prison for a month or two afterwards because that's just how slow the government are over there with the paperwork and everything.''

She said the lawyer advised her to ``put pressure on the government ... because he can come home sooner than that''.

Her other son Junaid is in hiding in Saudi Arabia because of fears he too will be arrested.

While Shayden came to the attention of authorities in late 2011, Junaid kept that information from his mother for some time, worried about the shock it would cause her.

She said she decided to inform the media on Wednesday as that was the best way to apply pressure in Saudi Arabia.

``Saudi authorities don't work well under pressure and as long we keep applying the pressure, he (the lawyer) said the boys will come home soon because there is no case.''

Junaid, 23, was previously detained for two months after taking part in a protest demanding Shayden's release.

Authorities have taken his passport and told him they want to speak with him again, but haven't said why.

``He's just afraid that they're going to arrest him again,'' his mother said.

``He doesn't want to go back to that prison.''

She insisted both sons were innocent and said there was "no evidence'' to back up the charges Shayden faced.

They moved to Saudi Arabia 18 years ago when their Muslim father, who is now divorced from their mother, was offered a job there.

Both sons studied finance at university, but Shayden had quit in the third year and started working, while Junaid had his name struck off the graduation list and now can't study.

They are Aboriginal, Australian citizens and had western tastes, but firstly identified as Muslims, she said.

They want to come back to Perth, where their mother returned after living in Saudi Arabia for about a year.


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Lotto frenzy for $60m jackpot prize

LOTTO FRENZY: WA players are queueing for tickets for tonight's $60 million jackpot draw. Source: Supplied

WA Lotto players have gone into a buying frenzy to get a ticket in tonight's $60 million jackpot draw.

Retailers are reporting long queues around WA as punters dare to dream about winning one of the biggest jackpots in WA Lotto history.

For only the second time in Powerball's history, the draw has jackpotted to $60 million.

The jackpot has grown because no winner has taken out Powerball's Division 1 prize for the past seven weeks.

WA has been no stranger to Powerball luck this year. Two months ago a Noranda family picked up Powerball's entire $20 million Division 1 prize pool after purchasing their ticket from The Lucky Charm in Noranda.

Lotterywest spokesperson Jodi Eastman said if tonight's Division 1 prize of $60 million is won by a Western Australian player, it would make local history as the largest Lotto prize ever won in our State.


"The largest prize ever won by a Western Australian Lotto player is $30 million but that could all change in an instant if one lucky local lines up their numbers tonight," she said.

The record $30 million Lotto prize has been won twice in Western Australia - in 2001 by a Perth southern suburbs couple and again in 2007 by a university student in his 20s.

Lotterywest also broke records last year after delivering a record $258 million to the Western Australian community in 2011/12.

Tickets for Powerball's $60 million jackpot are available until 6pm tonight from Lotterywest retailers across WA or from Play Online at www.lotterywest.wa.gov.au.


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Shower death boys' mum 'depressed'

An inquest is being held at the Perth Coroners Court in relation to the deaths of Miranda Hebble's two sons, who died after she put them in the shower and fell asleep at her Ellenbrook home in 2008. Picture: Richard Polden Source: PerthNow

CARDBOARD was found inside a shower drain where two young boys died when they were left alone for 10 hours, an inquest in Perth has heard.

The West Australian coroner is examining the deaths of Lochlan James Stevens, aged two, and Malachi Isaac Stevens, 10 months.

They died in November 2008 after their mother, Miranda Hebble, left them in the shower and fell asleep or passed out for 10 hours.

A police video was shown in court today, revealing a hair dryer plugged in and numerous items in the shower, including cardboard in the drain.

There were also clothes and towels blocking the door, and magazines and nappies scattered.

Another video showed police re-enacting the flooding and measuring the depth of the water in which the boys would have been sitting.

Psychiatrist Felice Watt testified that although she could not diagnose Ms Hebble because she was not her patient, she displayed symptoms of post-natal depression.

Referring to notes made during a stint at Graylands Hospital after the deaths, Dr Watt said Ms Hebble exhibited symptoms including sleeplessness, anxiety, appetite loss, isolation, weight loss and a lack of energy.

Dr Watt said each factor alone could not determine a diagnosis, but together provided a "snapshot'' into Ms Hebble's state.

However, she added she did not have the "whole picture'' about what Ms Hebble was thinking or feeling at the time.

Despite having no history of depression, Ms Hebble could have experienced mental illness, due to the "psychiatric pressures'' of raising two children, that went untreated.

Ms Hebble's history indicated she suffered from migraines and iron deficiency, Dr Watt said.

She also told medical staff she had a ``weak body'', became tired easily and often wanted to be alone so she would push people away.

Dr Watt said mothers often felt shame about admitting they were struggling to cope, which was why child health nurses were important, but Ms Hebble was not seeing her nurse regularly.

Coroner Alistair Hope commented that Dr Watt's evidence highlighted the danger that existed for some women who were alone, isolated and not in much contact with the outside world when they were "stuck'' at home raising children.

Dr Watt said those mothers were most at risk of post-natal depression.

Ms Hebble will testify next week.


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RSPCA investigates horse shooting

The RSPCA is investigating the shooting of a horse in Anketell. Picture: Supplied. Source: PerthNow

THE RSPCA is seeking witnesses after a horse was repeatedly shot in Anketell last week.

Veterinary surgeons removed 23 pellets from the horse's head and torso after it was rushed to Baldivis Veterinary Hospital for emergency treatment.

It is believed the shooting occurred on Wednesday 24th of April near Treeby Road.

A group of horses escaped from their owner's property after 9.30am that morning and were found at about 1pm.

The horse's owner contacted the RSPCA Cruelty hotline on ANZAC Day.

He said the horse was bleeding with what appeared to be wounds inflicted from a shotgun.

The horse is still being treated for severe injuries and may lose its right eye.

RSPCA chief inspector Simon Eager said shooting a tame horse was "an appalling act of cruelty."

"The public are reminded that such acts of animal cruelty can attract up to a $50,000 fine and five years imprisonment," Mr Eager said.

If anyone has any information about the incident they are urged to call the RSPCA Cruelty hotline on 1300 CRUELTY (1300 278 3589).


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Mum may have fallen asleep: inquest

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 01 Mei 2013 | 21.51

Miranda Hebble outside the Perth Coroners Court this week. Picture: Richard Polden Source: PerthNow

THE mother of two young boys who died when she left them in the shower for 10 hours could have been so exhausted she fell asleep, a neurologist has told an inquest.

The West Australian coroner is examining the deaths of Lochlan James Stevens, aged two, and Malachi Isaac Stevens, 10 months, who died in November 2008.

Their mother Miranda Hebble, then aged 22, put them in the shower after Lochlan smeared faeces from his nappy on floors and walls, and closed the bathroom door.

She fell asleep or passed out and woke up about 10 hours later to find the shower flooded and both boys dead.

Neurologist Graeme Hankey told the inquest on Wednesday that based on medical reports, there was no definitive conclusion about how or why Ms Hebble might have passed out or fallen asleep for so long.

Dr Hankey said a CAT scan did not suggest Ms Hebble had lost consciousness or suffered a seizure.

He said further tests, such as an MRI, could have been done but he did not expect they would have produced results that would help draw a conclusion.

Dr Hankey said there were no indications that Ms Hebble suffered from epilepsy or a structural abnormality in her brain like a tumour.

If she had had a seizure in 2008, she would still be prone to similar episodes now, he said.

Although a toxicology report showed no sign of drugs, Dr Hankey said it was possible she had taken something that had left her system by the time the test was done 24 hours later.

He said he struggled to find anything neurological in Ms Hebble to explain the "10-hour gap'', but believed it was plausible she fell asleep.

"I think if you're that tired, you can sleep for 10 hours,'' he said.

Ms Hebble, who is anaemic, is yet to testify, but the inquest has heard she saw white speckles before passing out.

The inquest continues.


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Squalor among WA's 'dirtiest secrets'

Minutes from the mining boom: South Hedland, WA's indigenous community still waiitng for housing Source: The Australian

A 20-MINUTE drive from where real estate agents are touting a "new breed of luxury modernist apartments" to cashed-up employees of Port Hedland's mining boom, members of Joanne Polly's indigenous community sleep in the fields.

In South Hedland, as the Sunday Times recently discovered on a tour of the region, residents are dying of kidney and liver failure, and their children are inhaling petrol and aerosols.

While boomtown Port Hedland boasts $1 million bungalows and apartment blocks with "green credentials" and "specially designed to best capture solar access", communities like South Hedland have all the solar access they want.

They have been waiting for up to a decade for public housing.

Living in squalor on the doorstep of Western Australia's multi-billion-dollar resources rush where "fly-in fly-out" workers earn six-figure salaries is nothing new for these fringe dwellers.

What's new is their lives are under the spotlight in a film, Utopia, due for international release by controversial expatriate Australian John Pilger.

Pilger, an award-winning television journalist who has lived in Britain since 1962, is a long time critic of Australia's "racist" treatment of the Aboriginal population.

In this latest film Pilger says that "more than any other colonial society, Australia consigns its dirtiest secrets, past and present, to willful ignorance or indifference".

While acknowledging that Australia "has changed" since he left the country, 73-year-old Pilger quotes from a history text he studied at school which described Aborigines as  "completely amoral" and which said "we are civilised  and they are not".

To film Utopia he flew to Western Australia to compare the living conditions of Aboriginal communities with the riches of the mining boom, commenting that "barely a fraction of mining, oil and gas revenue has benefited Aboriginal communities, whose poverty is an enduring shock".

Pilger says mining companies waged a propaganda campaign in cahoots with media "mates" to defeat former prime minister Kevin Rudd's mining tax, and he ridicules claims that the boom has benefited black Australians.

Accompanied by elders of Perth's Nyoongar community, he travelled to Rottnest Island, WA's "premier tourist destination" where the "first Australians" endured "starving, torture, humiliation and murder".

Rottnest was an Aboriginal prison between 1838 and 1931, but Pilger insists "Rotto is not the past" and quotes recent incarceration rates of indigenous children in WA.

Pilger's spotlight on our international "shame" over Aboriginal welfare coincides with controversy in Western Australia over indigenous incarceration.

Last week, WA's corrective services commissioner, Ian Johnson, resigned in the wake of a decision to place 140 children in an adult prison, following a riot in the young inmates' juvenile detention centre in January.

On Friday, the Perth Supreme Court will hand down a decision over a legal challenge to the children's transfer to the Hakea facility, made by Sydney human rights lawyer, George Newhouse.

In a piece written for The Guardian Pilger quotes a former prisons official's claim that Australia is "racking and stacking" black Australians, whose incarceration rate is "five times that of black people in apartheid South Africa".

According to the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW), "indigenous young people aged 10-17 years old  were 31 times more likely than non-Indigenous young people to be in detention, up from 27 times since June 2008".

AIHW Child Welfare and Prisoner Health Unit executive, Tim Beard, said that while the rate was stable, it "is extremely high and the message is that the over-representation of indigenous incarceration is consistent across every state and territory in Australia".

Statistically in WA, one in every 14 indigenous men will spend tonight in police or prison custody.

In NSW, according to Attorney General, Greg Smith, indigenous male offenders currently account for 23 per cent of male inmates, while Aboriginal women make up 29 per cent of the female population in custody.

In juvenile detention, 48 per cent of young people in detention in NSW are of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander background.

Aboriginal and Torres Strait islander people comprise around 2.2 per cent of the total NSW population.

Pilger also claims poor indigenous health care is turning children blind and deaf.

Australia is also the only remaining first world country where the eye disease trachoma - easily preventable with access to clean running water - still exists. It does so in remote Aboriginal communities.

The ear disease otitis media is also a risk factor in indigenous communities, particularly in Western Australia.

In the Pilbara community, local Smith Family counsellor, Nia Hadenfeldt, who sleeps in her office because rents are too high, said she wanted a youth curfew because alcohol, drugs and aerosol sniffing were "destroying" Hedland's youth, according to the article in the Sunday Times.

Western Pilbara Mobile Children's Services supervisor, Sharon Thompson, also told the Sunday Times that scabies, school sores and gum disease were rife among Aboriginal children.

Bob Neville, chairman of the Pilbara Association of Non-Government Organisations, said in the article WA was "in the middle of the biggest resources boom we've ever seen, and locals have nothing to show for it".

He called for an inquiry, saying, "every night they're sleeping in the dirt on Gina Rinehart's doorstep. They're dying from alcohol, drugs, poor nutrition and suicide".


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Charges over police station fire attack

The remains of a burning package found outside a Wanneroo police station. Picture: Nine News Source: PerthNow

A WOMAN has been charged over an alleged arson attack at a police station in Wanneroo this morning.

Police allege a burning parcel was left on the doorstep of the Wanneroo Police Station on Friars Drive about 7.30 this morning.

It started a small fire but "minimal damage" to the building and there were no injuries.

Police have examined the fire remains for evidence and believe the parcel contained a mixture of sticks, paper and food.

Initial reports suggested that a Molotov cocktail had been thrown at the building but police have now ruled that out.

This afternoon, a 32-year-old Wanneroo woman was charged with criminal damage by fire. She is due to appear in the Joondalup Magistrates Court tomorrow.


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Perth man on terror trial in Saudi Arabia

An Australian man faces terror charges in Saudi Arabia. Picture: Thinkstock

AUSTRALIA must do all it can to help two West Australian brothers in Saudi Arabia, one behind bars and the other in hiding and facing arrest, Greens Senator Scott Ludlam says.

Senator Ludlam says he understands Shayden Thorne, 25, is in custody facing allegations of terrorism.

His brother Junaid, 23, is wanted by authorities after having previously been detained for taking part in a protest against the Saudi government's treatment of political prisoners.

"Saudi Arabia is not renowned for due process, rule of law or fair treatment of suspects. It is essential that the federal government makes the maximum effort to protect the human rights of Junaid and Shayden Thorne," Senator Ludlum said in a statement on Wednesday night.

He said Shayden Thorne had allegedly been tortured.

"The Australian government must investigate these claims as vigorously as possible. It is essential that Foreign Minister (Bob) Carr does all he can to ensure the fair treatment of these two Australians."

A Department of Foreign Affairs spokesman confirmed a 25-year-old West Australian man was on trial for alleged terrorism-related offences and was being detained in a prison outside the Saudi capital, Riyadh.

"Consular officials from the Australian Embassy in Riyadh have been providing consular assistance to the man since his arrest in November 2011. Consular staff in Canberra are in regular contact with the man's family in Australia," he said.

The spokesman said the embassy was also assisting a 23-year-old WA man whose Australian passport was currently held by Saudi authorities.

"The man is not detained. Efforts are under way to clarify his legal situation," he said.

Junaid Thorne said his brother, Shayden, had not told him whether authorities had beaten him.

"I have seen a few bruises on his body, but he never wanted to tell me that he was being tortured," Junaid told ABC Television on Wednesday.

"When he managed to see his lawyer he told him he had been beaten very bad, lashed with cables."

Junaid said he had been in hiding for two months.

"So I have been unable to visit or speak to him," he said.

He said the terrorism charges against his brother had no basis.

"My lawyer has attended two of his trials in Riyadh and they have not provided any proof whatsoever," Junaid said.

The 23-year-old said he would leave Saudi Arabia "tomorrow" if he had the opportunity.

The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade says the 25-year-old man from Perth was arrested in November 2011.

A spokesman said he was on trial for alleged terrorism-related offences and was detained in a prison outside the Saudi capital Riyadh.

''Consular officials from the Australian Embassy in Riyadh have been providing consular assistance to the man since his arrest in November 2011,'' he said.

''Consular staff in Canberra are in regular contact with the man's family in Australia.''

The spokesman said the Australian embassy in Riyadh was also assisting a 23-year-old man from Western Australia whose Australian passport was being held by Saudi authorities. He said this man was not being detained and efforts were under way to clarify his legal situation.

Consular staff in Canberra are in regular contact with the man's family in Australia.


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Fugitive mum 'delighted' to return to Norway

Written By Unknown on Senin, 29 April 2013 | 21.51

Brozzi Lunetta, his daughter Reya and ex-wife Camilla Ellefsen Lunetta reunited in Sydney on April 26, 2013. Photo: James Ricketson. Source: Supplied

Camilla Ellefsen Lunetta in 2002. Photo: Supplied. Source: Supplied

Reya age-progressed to 10. She was allegedly abducted by her mother, Camilla Lunetta. Picture: National Center for Missing and Exploited Children Source: Supplied

  • Fugitive mum and abducted daughter found
  • Father reunited with 11-year-old Reya
  • Mother and child free to leave the country

A WOMAN who spent a decade on the run in Australia after abducting her daughter is now free to leave the country and plans to return to Norway.

Camilla Ellefsen Lunetta had been hiding Down Under since abducting her daughter Reya from the United States in 2002 amid a bitter custody dispute.

Reya's father Brozzi Lunetta returned to Australia this month after news.com.au revealed that his ex-wife and daughter were living in Sydney's eastern suburbs.

The fugitive mum's run then came to an end last week when the American father found the pair being sheltered at a home in Palm Beach, north of Sydney.

Ms Ellefsen Lunetta appeared in the Family Court this morning and is now free to leave Australia.

The proceedings in The Hague Convention matter were finalised after Mr Lunetta agreed to discharge the return order for his daughter.

News.com.au understands Reya and her mother have now been removed from the Airport Watch List and plan to return to Norway tomorrow using emergency passports which were issued to them on Friday.

This comes after Mr Lunetta, who returned to Norway at the weekend, helped his ex-wife and daughter evade authorities last week while they worked out how best to proceed.

Meanwhile, details of Ms Ellefsen Lunetta's life on the run are emerging.

Two weeks ago documentary filmmaker James Ricketson had offered Ms Ellefsen Lunetta and Reya - now known as Zia and Layla - a place to stay as a favour to a friend who said the pair was "in a crisis".

"I didn't know what their names were or anything about the drama they were involved in," he said.

"The following day I met the mother and child and ... was told enough of the story to be able to say 'come and stay at my house for a few days while we work out what needs to happen next'.

"In the meantime I got on the internet and found out a whole lot of stuff that I didn't know before about Brozzi's side of the story."

Brozzi Lunetta with daughter Reya before she was abducted. Picture: supplied. Source: Supplied

Ricketson then hatched a plan to bring about a resolution.

"It became apparent very early on that Zia was spending a lot of time on the telephone to Norway talking to lawyers, the Attorney-General's department and all sorts of people with a view to going back to Norway to try to sort out the problems that she had created as a result of her abduction of Layla," he said.

"Then through a fake email address I made contact with Brozzi because I was hoping - as I knew that he wanted them to go back to Norway and I knew that she wanted to go back to Norway - that maybe there was some possibility I could act as a sort of broker.

"Next thing I know there's a TV crew at the front door so then the whole plan was cemented."

Camilla Ellefsen Lunetta and Reya on April 24, 2013. Picture: Today Tonight. Source: Supplied

Ricketson said Ms Ellefsen Lunetta would have "loved this drama to have been over much earlier than it was".

"What happened was, regardless of who was right and who was wrong a decade ago, unfortunately once Zia made the decision to take off with Reya there was no way back," he said.

"She became a gypsy on the run. The battle-lines were drawn and she couldn't afford to go back because she had all of these charges hanging over her.

"If at some point eight years ago, once she realised she'd made a mistake, it had been possible for her to get on the telephone and say 'look, I've made a mistake can we please sort this out?' she would have. The only option she had was to remain on the run.

"I think she's absolutely delighted, in a way, that all this has happened and that now she can go back to Norway and pursue her musical career because she's a very talented musician."

Camilla Ellefsen Lunetta in 2002. Photo: Supplied Source: Supplied

Both Ms Ellefsen Lunetta and Mr Lunetta allegedly opened up to Ricketson.

"I've heard both sides of the story. Camilla said that Brozzi was never violent or abusive towards her ever. Brozzi is very open about this and says that 10 years ago he had a problem with alcohol and that he has a problem with his temper. Camilla also has a very short fuse," he said.

"Brozzi said that Camilla was suffering from postpartum depression at the time that all of his happened; she insists that she wasn't and I don't pretend to know the truth. Whatever led her to make the decision, once she made the decision there was no going back on it and she's been trapped."

Ricketson said Ms Ellefsen Lunetta was a "terrific" mother to Layla, who had no idea they had been on the run from authorities for most of her life.

"On the night that all of this happened I had them in my car for two hours and Zia was explaining to Layla why this was all happening, why there was a film crew there and who this person (Brozzi) was," he said.

"She had managed to maintain this illusory world to Layla for all of this time.

"Layla had no idea that she was on the run and anything other than an ordinary girl who had to be home schooled."

Brozzi's search for his daughter Reya brought him to the Sunshine Coast in 2010. Picture: Megan Slade Source: The Courier-Mail

Despite this, Layla quickly adjusted to her changed situation.

"(Thursday night) Layla said 'this has got to be the weirdest day of my whole life'," he said.

"It certainly freaked her out but by the next day she had adjusted to the new state of affairs and new reality.

"She's a girl who is very interested in establishing a relationship with her biological father. She's also delighted at the idea that she's got a younger brother now (Mr Lunetta has a 10-week-old child with his new wife).

"She's one of the best adjusted 11-year-old girls I've ever met."

Mr Lunetta said his ex-wife had told his daughter about him.

"When we were in the car driving from the house (at Palm Beach) into Sydney, Camilla tapped me on the shoulder and said 'I just want you to know that she knows about you'," he said.

"She said 'it's not true (that I told her you died in a car crash). That's just one of those lies that got out there and I couldn't contact you to correct that lie'."

Camilla Ellefsen Lunetta and Reya in 2002. Photo: Supplied Source: Supplied

The 40-year-old said his daughter had asked to now be known as Hira Lunetta. Hira, which means diamond in Hindi, was one of the alias names her mother gave her while they were on the run.

"My daughter is truly a special human being and Camilla deserves a lot of credit for doing such a great job of raising her under such difficult circumstances," he said.

"Any anger or resentment I might have towards Camilla serves no purpose. It's always been about our daughter and more love.

"This is truly all going to work out."

Ricketson said it was an "extraordinary" story.

"Who would have thought (last week) that this story could have had a happy ending? It's a story almost designed to have blood in the streets, blood in the gutters, AFP, FBI, Interpol, court cases, angst and so on," he said.

"That Brozzi, after his 10-year search, has given up all of his rights as a father makes him, in my mind, a hero. And he's a lovely man. I think that Camilla in her own way too is a lovely person who made a bad decision and she's had to live with the consequences of that ever since and now she wants to get back to living a normal life.

"It's a miracle that circumstances have played out the way they have and that it's possible for all three of them to get back to normal. It's almost a fairy-tale ending."

News.com.au understands Ms Ellefsen Lunetta is in talks with a television network which is attempting to secure exclusive access to her story.

Email kristin.shorten@news.com.au or follow @itsKShort on Twitter


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Gai v Singo: WTF is going on?

We'll assume he wasn't blowing up about her fashion sense Source: The Daily Telegraph

Businessman John Singleton has sacked trainer Gai Waterhouse following a clash on live television.

ON THE surface, the John Singleton/Gai Waterhouse bust-up is a story about racing. But it's actually about much more than that.

It is about friendship, family, integrity, trust and the fundamental problems with having an upstart 32-year-old bookmaker in every Australian lounge room.

If you've missed the finer points, here's a super quick five point summary, followed by five early lessons from this still unfolding yarn:

1. THE BLOW-UP
Colourful businessman and horse owner John Singleton splits acrimoniously on live television with his long-term trainer Gai Waterhouse. Gai is the mum of Tom Waterhouse, whose relentless self-promotion has made him one of Australia's most disliked public figures.

2. THE FAILURE
The split occurs because Singleton has a mare called More Joyous engaged in a big race called the All aged Stakes at Randwick. More Joyous is no Black Caviar, but it once won eight races in a row. On Saturday it runs second last.


3. THE ALLEGATIONS
Singo blows up after the race, not because his horse has lost, but because he says a friend heard from Tom Waterhouse that the horse had health issues and was "no chance" of winning. The inference is that Tom must have got that info from Gai. Tom Waterhouse denies the allegations and is considering legal action.

4. THE FOOTY STAR TIE-IN
It then emerges that Waterhouse tipped Channel Nine commentator Andrew Johns a different horse to More Joyous in a casual interaction during Friday Night Footy. On The Sunday Footy Show, Johns says Waterhouse said nothing negative about the horse's health. He also reveals that he himself backed More Joyous. Meanwhile, Waterhouse says he lost $300K on the race, thereby inferring that he wanted More Joyous to win, and believed it could win.

5. THE TENSE PHONE CALL
There is also reportedly a phone call between mother and son where Gai asks Tom if he has told anyone More Joyous was not well enough to win. Tom says 'no, Mum'. A more thorough inquest will take place next Monday, headed by NSW chief steward Ray Murrihy.

SO THERE'S YOUR SUMMARY. NOW HERE ARE FIVE THINGS WE'VE LEARNED SO FAR...

1. THE FAMILY DEFENCE DOESN'T CUT IT
The Waterhouses really have to stop defending each other in public. Three weeks ago, Gai Waterhouse said everyone should lay off her son because he was such a productive young Australian. Today Tom Waterhouse has defended his Mum saying "if anyone does not think Mum is out there trying to win every time, they don't know her". Gee, that settles it, then.

2. PEOPLE NOW LIKE TOM EVEN LESS
Tom Waterhouse is everywhere, bombarding people of all ages with his gambling information. The guy has a weird role on Nine's Friday Night Footy which is passed off as editorial content when  really he's just spruiking gambling odds. People don't like him for that. Now that he's embroiled in all this, they like him even less.

3. SOMETHING LIKE THIS WAS ALWAYS GOING TO HAPPEN
When you're hanging out with that many sports stars who enjoy a bet, and when you're a bookie whose Mum is a top horse trainer, there will always be people like John Singleton who question the information chain. The words "conflict of interest" come very strongly to mind.

4. THE WATERHOUSE NAME TAKES ANOTHER BATTERING
Tom's father Robbie and grandfather Bill were warned off Australian racecourses for being implicated in the Fine Cotton horse substitution scandal in the 1980s. Tom plays on his family's gambling knowledge in his ads, as though it's something people should respect. In truth, many people still haven't got over Fine Cotton.

5. RACING IS BACK TO NORMAL AFTER BLACK CAVIAR
Two weeks ago, racing was in the headlines for a fast horse which always tried its hardest and won every race it contested. Children loved the horse, and racing momentarily seemed like a happy, open, family kind of sport. How very quaint that suddenly seems.


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Australian tourist raped in Bali

An Australian woman has been raped while a knife was held to her throat during a violent robbery in Bali.

A PERTH woman has been raped while a knife was held to her throat during a violent robbery at the villa she was staying at with family in Bali.

The 28-year-old was attacked in the early hours of Saturday morning after being woken by an intruder who had entered her room at Villa Damais in Kerobokan.

Details of the horrific assault emerged today, with the woman telling police she was first forced to open a safe in her room, before being raped while a knife was held to her throat.

The attack occurred as seven other members of her family, including children, slept in adjacent rooms.

All have since returned to Perth.

"The victim was then threatened with a knife by the perpetrator,'' local police chief Reinhard Habonaran Nainggolan said.

"His right hand held the knife while his left hand held a flashlight.

"She was under threat of knife that she could not make a sound.''

The police chief said the woman was treated at a local hospital after the attack but had since been discharged and returned to Perth with her family yesterday.

He said she had given a description of the alleged attacker, who police suspect of carrying out previous rapes, with the hunt for the suspect ongoing.

The villa was usually watched by one security guard, but he had left his post that night.

"They entered the villa by jumping on to the wall,'' Mr Reinhard said.

Three iPads, two mobile phones and 1.5 million rupiah ($A150) were stolen.

The attack is the latest in a spate of incidents in the popular holiday destination.

In March, Mercedes Corby was bashed by a gang in Kuta as she returned home from a party.

The older sister of convicted drug smuggler Schapelle Corby needed minor surgery after suffering a broken nose and bleeding to the cornea during the assault.
 


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Mum 'passed out' as sons died in shower

An inquest has heard two little boys died in a bathroom while their exhausted mother was unconcious or asleep for 10 hours.

INQUEST: Miranda Hebble, whose two sons drowned in a shower at her Ellenbrook home in 2008, outside Perth Coroner's Court today. Picture: Richard Polden Source: PerthNow

INQUEST: Miranda Hebble, whose two sons drowned in a shower at her Ellenbrook home in 2008, outside Perth Coroner's Court today. Picture: Richard Polden Source: PerthNow

AN exhausted Miranda Hebble put her two young sons in the shower and closed the bathroom door.

She fell asleep and woke up about 10 hours later to find water overflowing from the shower - and both boys dead.

The WA coroner is examining the deaths of Lochlan James Stevens, aged two, and Malachi Isaac Stevens, 10 months, who died in November 2008.

Ms Hebble, then aged 22, was caring for her sons alone in Perth while the boys' father, Christopher Stevens, then aged 23, was working on a fly-in fly-out basis.

The couple have since separated.

Counsel assisting the inquest, Kate Ellson, said Ms Hebble had no history of mental illness or drug and alcohol abuse.

She was a quiet person and had been struggling with sleep because of Malachi's restlessness.

Constable Daniel William Herbert O'Rourke testified that in February 2008 he was called to an incident in which Malachi had been left in a car while Ms Hebble returned a DVD to a store.

The baby, then five weeks old, was hot, crying, sweaty and red in the face when he was pulled from the car, he said.

Ms Ellson said in her opening address that on November 7, Lochlan had smeared faeces from his nappy on floors, walls and Malachi's cot, so their mother took the boys into the shower.

She left to fetch something but passed out or fell asleep, the court heard.

When she woke up 10 hours later, she found Malachi floating in the shower on his side, with bruises on his cheek.

Lochlan was lying on the bathroom floor with blood coming from his mouth and had a scratch on his forehead and a mark on his stomach, Ms Ellson said.

In a call to emergency services, Ms Hebble said: "I passed out and the plug in the shower got plugged up ... and the shower filled up ... and they're not breathing. They're dead.''

The boys were pronounced dead at 2am the following morning.

A post mortem examination could not reach a definitive conclusion, but indicated drowning may have caused Malachi's death, while Lochlan may have suffered exhaustion, hunger and possibly hypothermia, Ms Ellson said.

Drowning might also have contributed to his death, the court heard.

Ms Hebble was comforted by family members as she sat quietly in court for some of the proceedings.

Outside court, Mr Stevens told reporters he was hoping to get an "end to the story'' to help everyone move on.

Mr Stevens said he now had a wife and daughter but still missed his boys.

He described Lochlan as a "terror'', causing "chaos'' like many children his age and said Malachi had "iron lungs that could scream the house down''.

Mr Stevens said he wanted to know how and why they died.

"Give me an answer that I can actually use,'' he said.

The inquest continues.


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