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Eagles legend palms off Clive

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 22 Juni 2013 | 21.51

Clive Palmer tried to recruit Glen Jakovich. Picture: Ben Robinson Source: PerthNow

WEST Coast Eagles champion Glen Jakovich has turned down an offer to join Clive Palmer's new political party, even after the billionaire flew him to Brisbane to be wined and dined at an exclusive club.

The two-time premiership defender told The Sunday Times he had a "lengthy meeting" with Mr Palmer a few weeks ago. He liked his ideas, but he didn't have the time to enter federal politics.

Mr Palmer has already recruited several big-name sporting identities to the Palmer United Party. Among them are former rugby league champion Glen Lazarus and former AFL star Doug Hawkins.

Jakovich said Lazarus was also at the swanky United Service Club in Brisbane CBD when he met Palmer.

"I spoke to him. It was a lengthy meeting (and) I liked his ideas," he said. "But I decided there was too much going on in my life. I also have a young family."


In Perth this week, Mr Palmer confirmed to The Sunday Times that he had met Jakovich and tried to draft him into his team.

He also hosed down media speculation he was in financial trouble. "There is no truth in it," said the man whose wealth is estimated at between $700 million and several billion dollars.

"I can say to everyone in Australia  I have no debts personally and our companies have no debts. So we don't owe anyone any money. That's what it boils down to."

Mr Palmer said Jakovich still had two weeks to make up his mind.

He said that he would run candidates in all 15 WA federal lower house seats, as well as the Senate.

So far, the only two people who have been signed up to contest WA seats for Mr Palmer are educator Teresa van Lieshout for Fremantle and university academic Chamonix Terblanche for the Senate.

Mr Palmer said Jakovich would have been a great catch.

"Glen is a great guy. He said he had a strong commitment to WA," Mr Palmer said. "He particularly raised with me the problems in Perth. Of the different communities and ethnic groups and the problems with law and order around Perth where a lot of youths had lost their way and direction. He said something had to be done about it."

In Perth this week, Mr Palmer said he had strong links to WA.

Much of his wealth comes from the $400 million sale of magnetite iron ore mining rights at Cape Preston near Karratha in 2006.

Mr Palmer said his success in mining proved he would be no lightweight in the political world.

Mr Palmer labelled Prime Minister Julia Gillard and Opposition Leader Tony Abbott "hopeless".

He said his plan for WA was to inject $8 billion into the state's health service, with particular emphasis on palliative care.

He also believed there should be commonwealth backing for the stalled Oakajee Port project and a review of the GST carve-up for WA.


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Humble hero's brave fight-back

Charlene Hordyk has been nominated for a Pride of Australia Award.  Picture: Ross Swanborough Source: PerthNow

DOCTORS have told her she can't go into the sun for two years because her burns are so severe.

But firefighter Charlene Hordyk, left with burns to a fifth of her body after battling a blaze near Albany that killed a fellow firefighter, dreams of once again being able to play beach cricket with her little brother Liam under a golden sun.

That dream is the inspiration for her remarkable recovery - a recovery that surprised doctors and saw her return to work just months after the October 12 fire that claimed the life of mother-of-three Wendy Bearfoot.

Today Ms Hordyk, 25, speaks about the ordeal for the first time after being nominated for a Pride of Australia medal.

Ms Hordyk and Mrs Bearfoot were members of a DEC crew engulfed by flames when a freak wind-change trapped them in their fire trucks at Two Peoples Bay. Both women were flown to Royal Perth Hospital in a midnight mercy dash for emergency treatment under the care of burns specialist Fiona Wood.


Tragically, Ms Bearfoot died three weeks later. Ms Hordyk had burns to her face, neck, hands, arms and legs.

"I cannot go in the sun for two years," she said.

 "I have to have laser surgery on my hands because the scarring is not breaking down as it should. It's a setback, but I'm thankful that I have access to this kind of treatment.

"The nurses at the burns unit said to have a dream and keep thinking of that. (Mine is) that I will one day play cricket with my nephews and little brother down the beach again."

For the first six months after leaving hospital she needed three-hour scar massages every day and pressure bandages all day, every day. She still needs the bandages and occasional scar massages.

A conservation worker since 2008, she has had to swap most of her physical tasks  such as weed spraying and animal trapping  for a more computer-based role.

She said she owed her life to her DEC superior Shaun McHenry. "We were in the truck together," she said. "Without him leading me out I wouldn't be here today."

Ms Hordyk is nominated in the courage category - aimed at recognising those who have overcome personal adversity through determination and strength of character  in the Pride of Australia awards, run by The Sunday Times' publisher News Limited.

To nominate someone for Pride of Australia, go to: www.prideofaustralia.com.au


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Exposed: Shameful acts on Perth trains

Transit officers during a night shift on Perth trains. Picture: Matthew Poon Source: PerthNow

FOUL language, sexist and racist comments and rudeness from other passengers have become commonplace for commuters on Perth trains - forcing some passengers to return to choked roads instead.

The Sunday Times rode Perth's five train lines during peak hour and at night, and found commuters were forced to put up with swearing, obscene conversations, passengers who shoved in front of mothers with prams and others who refused to stand for the elderly.

It comes in the same week a video was posted online showing a young woman calling a pregnant woman a "fat f---" because the expectant mother asked her to move her belongings from a seat so she could sit down.


The footage now has more than 20,000 hits on Facebook, YouTube and PerthNow and has generated hundreds of comments, including from pregnant women who said rudeness on trains made them "ashamed of fellow humanity" and no longer use them.

"Not only would people refuse to offer me a seat but the train would be so unbelievably full that I was afraid someone would bump into me. Eventually I chose to drive instead," one Perth commuter named Stacey commented.

Last month, a woman was caught on camera racially abusing a passenger on a train in East Perth. And in May, footage of transit officers breaking up a brawl on another Perth train went viral on social media.

RAC head of member advocacy Matt Brown urged the Public Transport Authority to "adopt a zero-tolerance policy towards this behaviour by fining troublemakers up to $500 and banning repeat and serious offenders from the system".

Many journeys passed without incident, but on other train trips this week passengers were subjected to:

- A tirade of swearing as four men in their 20s loudly discussed how they were going to "f--- up" a rival and "slit his throat".

- A sexist rant between two men, one who said he hated his former girlfriends and wanted to "kill" the mother of his child because "she's a bitch".

- A commuter crush as about 20 people waiting on a platform at Perth station pushed in front of a mother with a pram.

- An elderly woman forced to stand while schoolchildren had their feet on seats.

- A loud conversation between a young man and two young women about masturbation, one simulating sex acts.

PTA spokesman David Hynes said that while more people were filming incidents on phones, "we believe the types of incidents being recorded are on the decline".

"Though you might not always like the look, smell or even language of a fellow passenger, this doesn't mean that public transport is unsafe  it simply shows that anti-social behaviour is not restricted to pubs. The media-driven, including social media, perception that public transport is dangerous is not supported by surveys of people who use our services on a regular basis."

Transit officer Geoff Rogers, 42, said every train had posters urging passengers to show respect and "the vast majority do the right thing, though the odd one needs reminding".

Percy Institute of International Protocol founder and etiquette expert Louise Percy said it was "not a youth problem or a public transport problem, but a lack of respect permeating every level of Australian society".

"We're quick to blame kids. Many lack respect but they're not born bad-mannered, they learn that," she said.

University of WA's Centre for Child and Adolescent Related Disorders director Stephen Houghton said young people acted in an anti-social or "non-conforming" way to gain status.

"Reputation is one of the most significant factors why young people behave the way they do," Prof Houghton said. "Engaging in behaviour that would shock or offend, and establishing that reputation because it has status."


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Perth supermum has 12th baby

Tracy and David Ryan with their children Willow (3), Isla (5), Piper (7), Griffyn (10), Trinity (12), Austin (16), Connor (19), Shelby (21), Mason (22) and Bryce (26) and Landon (1 month) at their home in Belmont Picture: Justin Benson-Cooper Source: PerthNow

SUPERMUM Tracy Ryan can categorically prove that children aren't cheaper by the dozen. But she also firmly believes the more you have the merrier you are.

Last month, Mrs Ryan gave birth to her 12th child, Landen, with her husband David, a police forensic investigator.

Amazingly, Landen became an uncle before he was born because one of his older brothers welcomed his first child into the world on May 1.

Click here for pictures of the big Ryan family.

 Landen joined Bryce, Mason, Shelby, Connor, Austin, Trinity, Griffyn, Piper, Isla and Willow to squeeze into the Ryans' crowded but happy house. Mrs Ryan lost her 11th child Vallon in February last year when he didn't survive his premature birth at 26 weeks.

Mrs Ryan is contributing more than most women to the state's baby boom, which reached a record 33,920 last year.


 About 14,000 WA women have six or more children, but these days, few mums are putting their hands up for the 10 loads of washing a day, $500 weekly grocery bills and non-stop housework that comes with Mrs Ryan's massive brood.

The 44-year-old has spent the past quarter of a century having and raising children and said that despite the challenges, she loved her job as a mum and wouldn't have it any other way.

"I love it  I don't see it as a sacrifice," Mrs Ryan said.

 "People ask me what my job is and I say: 'This is my full-time job'. This is what I'm meant to do and why I believe I've been put here."

But Mrs Ryan said the whole operation wouldn't work if it wasn't for her husband's enthusiasm and effort.

"David loved my big family of eight kids, but he only has one sister," she said.

 "He's a fantastic father and we work well together. Importantly, we are on the same page, which is the only way we could make it work."

Yesterday, Landen's name was tattooed on his dad's arms, next to those of his brothers and sisters, who range in age from three to 25.

Eleven of the Ryan children have been born at Mount Lawley's Mercy Hospital over the past 22 years and eldest son Bryce was born in her home town of Auckland in New Zealand. "I love the staff at Mercy Hospital and can't praise them enough," Mrs Ryan said.

 "They have always looked after us, especially last year when I lost my gorgeous son Vallon at 26 weeks.

"It's been 23 years since I first went to Mercy Hospital and I've seen a lot of changes in that time, but most importantly I feel comfortable with the midwives  they are always caring, compassionate and professional."

The hard-working couple make sure they find time for themselves by scheduling date nights and have already managed to see a movie together with four-week-old Landen.

"I cope by having a roster system, and the biggest calendar I can buy so I always know what everyone is doing, whether they have school or work or activities to go to," Mrs Ryan said. The biggest challenge was keeping the family budget in the black as it was stretched to the limit with rising living costs. Her shopping advice was to buy food when on special and work the meal plan around that.

"Some people say I am absolutely crazy, but every one of my children is a blessing and they are a talented bunch  most of them do Irish dancing and three have even competed at a state and national level," she said.

One of Mrs Ryan's greatest skills is doing housework one-handed, with a baby in the other arm, but she joked that there were so many extra hands to help out that baby Landen would never get to lie down.

"We are like any other family, just a bit bigger," Mrs Ryan said.

 "The older kids help the younger ones and everyone has a job to do and pitches in to help. Even my three-year-old knows to bring her plate up to the sink when she's finished. Though our children know the value of having to wait, they don't go without either."

Mrs Ryan said the difficulties paled in comparison to the rewards.

"They're never going to be without someone who loves them," Mrs Ryan said.

 "They are always going to have someone there for them.

"The good parts are the unconditional love and there's nothing more beautiful than when Dad walks in the door and they run to him saying 'Daddy, you're home'."

Mrs Ryan expects Landen will probably be her last child, but she has no plans of slowing down. "Once the kids have all grown up, I've always wanted to start my own party-planning business," she said.

"I love organising massive themed parties for birthdays and special events."

Despite the family's hectic schedule, they still manage to occasionally go on camping holidays, but only have one vehicle  an eight-seater van, which is now one seat short for the kids who don't have their own car.
 


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The 20 best pub billboards

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 21 Juni 2013 | 21.51

MOST of us don't need any help getting ourselves into a bar for a drink.

But these pubs have made a trip to the watering hole all the more interesting with a clever pun or two to help entice drinkers in for a pint.

We've sourced some of the best - and most clever - pub billboards from around the world.

They're guaranteed to make both well-seasoned drinkers and teetotallers giggle all the same.

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Leave your comment below. Have you seen a better pub billboard?


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Teenage girl's 'hero' jailed for child stealing

JAILED: Wayne John Morley, who has been jailed on the relatively rare charge of child stealing. Source: PerthNow

CCTV: Wayne Morley, left, and a teenage girl are caught on CCTV arriving at a motel in Mundaring on one of the two occasions he ran away with the teenager. Source: PerthNow

A 44-YEAR-OLD man has been jailed for three years for the rare offence of child stealing, after admitting to twice running away with a 13-year-old girl he was romantically interested in.

Wayne John Morley was captured by WA police after hiding out at a bush camp in Chidlow, east of Perth, with the teenager daughter of his former partner.

It was the second time in two weeks the pair had disappeared, with Morley believing he was the "white knight'' who was saving the young girl from a chaotic home life.

Instead, Judge Philip McCann said Morley had put his own selfish and inappropriate feelings for the girl before any sensible judgment, embarking on two absconsions with her that were "doomed to fail''.

WA's District Court heard Morley had formed a bond with the girl during his tempestuous 15-month relationship with her mother, while the girl and his daughter had become best friends.


After authorities ordered the teenager to live with her father in Perth, Morley also moved to the state and re-established contact with the girl.

On August 10 last year, Morley, his daughter and the teenager arranged to meet in secret and set off to drive to Victoria, but were stopped at the WA/South Australian border.

Two weeks later, Morley booked plane tickets under a false name for him and the girl, and took her to a hotel in Mundaring.

After seeing media coverage about their disappearance, the pair panicked and disappeared into the bush for three days, living mainly on oranges.

He was arrested and pleaded guilty to two child stealing charges in March.

Defence lawyer Justin Geoghegan said Morley believed he was the girl's hero, but also admitted his feelings for her were inappropriate.

"The plan was based on emotion and doomed to fail from the start,'' Mr Geoghegan said.

"He wanted to be her hero, but the romantic interest tainted any good judgment he had left.''
Judge McCann accepted the girl had suffered no physical harm, but had been seriously affected nevertheless.

"He pandered to this immature girl's wrong-headed thinking. And she is still going through the throes of this whole fiasco,'' Judge McCann said.

Both the girl and her mother were in court to support Morley, despite restraining orders preventing them being in close proximity.

Morley was made eligible for parole after 18 months, and the sentence was backdated to the date of his arrest in August last year.


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Mum denies putting son in machine

Mother Kerry Murphy admits she struggled to cope with her son Sean's energy. The toddler died in a closed washing machine. Picture from Channel 9. Source: PerthNow

Perth Now Kerry Murphy (in blue top) leaves the coroners court after inquest into the death of her child. Picture: Stewart Allen Source: PerthNow

THE mother of a young boy who died from being trapped in a washing machine has told a Perth court she did not place him in there and was fast asleep when he climbed in himself.

Kerry Murphy, 27, gave her evidence on the final day of a coronial inquiry into the death of Sean Murphy, 3, who was found in the front-loader machine with his dead pet cat on September 20, 2010.

She claimed she had overslept into the early afternoon and Sean - for the first time since he had become mobile - had not jumped on her to wake her in the morning.peMs Murphy, who was diagnosed as having a borderline personality disorder when she was 18, suggested spring-time asthma and allergies had made her drowsy, and said she was a heavy sleeper.

She was woken by a phone call, she claimed, and noticed the public housing property was quiet, so began frantically searching for her son.


Ms Murphy found Sean ``in a foetal position'', pressed against the rear of the washing machine, and she had to remove the stiff body of the dead cat first before she could get to her son.

She attempted CPR and called 000.

When paramedics arrived, a hysterical Ms Murphy said: ``I've killed my baby.''

She said that because she feared he'd been injured during her resuscitation attempts and because she blamed herself for what happened, Ms Murphy told the court.

``If I'd been awake, he wouldn't have climbed in there,'' she said.

While the washing machine door had been closed after the last load, Sean could have opened it himself and climbed in, she said.

``I could have used one finger to open that door.''

The inquest was shown a photo of the boy some six months earlier, playing ``hide and seek'' in a dryer that was missing its door.


Ms Murphy said she should have explained to her son - who climbed on anything that was ``climbable'' - that hiding there was dangerous.

The inquest heard earlier this week from a neighbour - who admitted he had a falling out with the boy's mother - that he heard yelling, stomping and muffled cries coming from the house hours before Sean died.

Coroner Alastair Hope said there were three possible scenarios that he would consider: the family dog had jumped up and closed the washing machine door shut after the boy had climbed in, Sean had trapped himself inside the machine - pushing the door from the inside so it rebounded and closed - or the mother was involved.

But he had difficulty envisioning how Sean physically could have entered the machine to have wound up in the position in which he was found, and how he could have caused the door to rebound shut given that position.

``These are the practical aspects that are troubling me the most,'' Mr Hope said.

He will hand down his findings on July 19.

Kerry Murphy leaves the Coroner's Court after giving evidence into the inquest into the death of her child. PICTURE: Stewart Allen Source: PerthNow

Earlier today - mum admits she 'struggled' with her son's energy

Kerry Murphy, 27, made the admission in the final day of a coronial inquiry into the death of Sean Murphy, who was found in the front-loader machine with his dead pet cat on September 20, 2010.

Ms Murphy claimed she overslept until the early afternoon and after being woken by a phone call, realised the public housing property was quiet, so she began a frantic search for her son.

She could not explain why she had slept so long, but suggested spring-time asthma and allergies had made her drowsy.

Ms Murphy found her son "in a fetal position'', pressed against the rear of the washing machine and had to remove the stiff body of the dead cat first before she could get to her son.

She attempted CPR and called triple-zero.

Ms Murphy said she recalled telling paramedics "I've killed him. I've killed my baby''.She explained that comment by saying she was worried she'd injured him during her resuscitation attempts and that she blamed herself for what happened.

"If I'd been awake, he wouldn't have climbed in there,'' she said.

While the washing machine door had been closed after the last load, Sean could have opened it himself and climbed in, she said.

"I could have used one finger to open that door.''

The inquest was shown a photo of the boy some six months earlier, playing "hide and seek'' in a dryer that was missing its door.

Ms Murphy said she would never have encouraged him to play a game with the machine.

"I didn't explain to him that it was dangerous. I should have done,'' she said.

Ms Murphy had earlier told the inquest that she struggled to know how to respond to his behaviour, which she described as active.

"I didn't cope very well with it, but I did the best that I could.''

The inquest was also shown a video of Ms Murphy dropping one of the family's cats in front of their dog, which then attacks it - an incident for which she was later convicted for animal cruelty.

Kerry Murphy leaves the Coroner's Court after giving evidence into the inquest into the death of her child. PICTURE: Stewart Allen Source: PerthNow


She said it was the cat that was being "vicious'' and that the dog was being "playful''.

The inquest continues.


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Sharpshooting Hawks down Eagles

Hawthorn have stretched their winning streak to 11 straight matches with a twenty point victory over West Coast.

  • Hawthorn 19.9 (123) bt West Coast 16.7 (103)

FOR the second successive Friday night, an opposition threw the kitchen sink at Hawthorn.

In Round 12, Carlton tried to dazzle Hawthorn with midfield speed and, for the most part succeeded. Statistically at least. But on the only count that mattered, the Hawks held sway on the scoreboard.

Friday night, West Coast - a vastly improved outfit on the one that hobbled past St Kilda at its most recent start - emerged as if shot from a cannon.

With big men blazing at centre clearances and up forward, the Eagles looked the real deal for one of the few times in a season that could generously be described as erratic.

SuperCoach scores and stats

The tactic was clear. Again pump the hosts in the middle and bomb it as high and as quickly as possible to stretch the shorter Hawks backline.

Statistically, again, it worked a treat. By halftime, the Eagles had 33-24 inside-50s, a 22-18 clearance edge and accordingly had the ball in their forwardline an amazing 66 per cent of the time.

Shane Savage kicks a goal against West Coast.

But there was one problem.

Hawthorn booted six goals in each quarter and led by an ultimately critical 26 points.

It's that critical time of the year when coaches are sizing up exactly how to counter the league's powerhouses.

There's talk of slingshot footy off half-back, or of stacking half-back lines to form walls with space ahead into which rebounding teams can run.

But the explanation for Hawthorn's 11-game winning streak - just one off the club record with lowly Brisbane to come next week - is actually far more simple.

The forwardline is elite, perhaps the deepest in years.

Scott Selwood of the Eagles handballs whilst being tackled by Luke Hodge of the Hawks during the round 13 AFL match between the Hawthorn Hawks and the West Coast Eagles at Etihad Stadium.

Reams of paper have been dedicated to Lance Franklin, and his partner in crime Jarryd Roughead - the matchwinner Friday night - has found career-best form.

But it's more than that.

Jack Gunston is ruthlessly efficient when the ball comes his way and Luke Breust would be in All-Australian reckoning as a mediums-sized opportunist.

Tackling terrier Paul Puopolo was a late withdrawal, while livewire Cyril Rioli is poised to return within a fortnight to add to the firepower of a unit that last night produced an extraordinary set of numbers.

Six of nine times the Hawks went inside 50 in the first quarter they kicked a goal.

By halftime that was 12 of 24 -- a staggering 50 per cent success rate.

Lance Franklin works his magic against the Eagles. Picture: Michael Klein

This from a team that already leads the league in that category with a season average of 30.7 before this game.

That it tailed off to 16 of 35 and 19 of 49 by fulltime was an invevitable "market correction".

But keep in mind that West Coast played arguably its best game of the past two months and still came up 20 points short with eight more forward 50 entries.

For other clubs, there's no solution to those numbers just yet.


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Perth Lord Mayor Lisa Scaffidi's pay doubled

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 20 Juni 2013 | 21.51

City of Perth Lord Mayor Lisa Scaffidi's pay is set to double. Picture: Alf Sorbello Alf Source: PerthNow

MAYORS and councillors across Western Australia are set for a massive pay rise, with the allowance for Perth Lord Mayor Lisa Scaffidi set to climb to about $175,000 a year.

The state's Salaries and Allowance Tribunal (SAT) has been considering the fees and allowances for local government members, which have not been increased for eight years.

The Sunday Times revealed in April that the Lord Mayor wanted her current salary tripled to match her counterparts in Melbourne and Sydney.

Despite the state government planning significant reform of WA's councils and authorities, the SAT has determined WA councillors and mayors should receive big increases in their allowances.

From July 1, councillors are set to receive up to $30,000 per year, more than four times the current maximum rate of $7,000 per year.

Mayors of WA's top 18 councils could now claim up to $130,000 in allowances and sitting fees while Perth's Lord Mayor will be given annual allowance of $130,000, plus the $45,000 maximum sitting fee for attending meetings.

Ms Scaffidi said the increases brought WA councillor's fees up to the level of the rest of the country.

"It is well overdue. You need to find appropriate people, and the (mayor's) role does carry extraordinarily long hours and lot of weekend work with it,'' Ms Scaffidi told Fairfax Radio.

"Previously (running for council) was a sport for those who could afford to run and hold office. Now the playing field is levelled.''

Troy Pickard, president of WA's Local Government Association, had argued that payment for the state's councillors lagged way behind the rest of Australia, pointing to a maximum fee of $221,280 for a NSW mayor, while in WA it was capped at $60,000 for a mayor.

"Would any employee accept that he should not have a pay adjustment for eight years because it will cost his employer?,'' Mr Pickard said.

"Also I believe it affects the attraction of potential new mayors, presidents and councillors.''

PerthNow readers were divided on the Lord Mayor's pay rise when the issue was raised by The Sunday Times in April.

The SAT revealed that in 2011/12, WA's 138 local governments cost about $4.25 billion to run.


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Jager stunt goes horribly awry

A partygoer is in a coma and eight others hospitalised after a swimming pool was filled with liquid nitrogen at Jagermeister event in Mexico. Source LiveLeak

A YOUNG man remains in a coma after organisers of a party designed to promote Jagermeister pumped liquid nitrogen into a swimming pool.

Nine partygoers who were in the pool at the time were taken to hospital after four buckets of liquid nitrogen were poured in. Eight of the nine have since been released.

Last Saturday's party, held in Leon, Mexico, was attended by about 200 people, mainly young adults.

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Witnesses told the Daily Mail party organisers, dressed in orange uniforms, had added the substance to the pool to create a smoke effect.

But shortly thereafter, party attendees noticed people in the pool passing out and losing consciousness.

It has been suggested that the liquid nitrogen had a chemical interaction with the chlorine in the pool which created toxic smoke.

A 21-year-old man, identified as Jose Ignacio Lopez del Toro by Univision Noticias, remains in a coma in Campestre Medical Hospital.

Mexican officials have launched an investigation.

In a statement from Jagermesiter headquarters in Germany, company officials said they were working with event organisers and authorities to determine what happened.

"We fully support responsible drinking and adhere to the guidelines within each market in which we operate," the Jagermeister officials said in their statement.


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Palmer backs stranger as candidate

Educator and author Teresa van Lieshout will contest the Labor-held seat of Fremantle. Picture: Supplied Source: PerthNow

CLIVE Palmer has endorsed a devoutly religious Western Australian candidate for his political party on the same day he met her.

The mining magnate had seen Teresa van Lieshout's many YouTube videos, covering a wide range of topics such as "Biblical Eschatology (Apocalyptic)'' and "Abolish Psychiatric Practice in WA'', but had not met her until a Palmer United Party (PUP) function in Perth today.

She will contest the Labor-held seat of Fremantle after being approached by the party.

The Australian Democrats and Katter's Australian Party asked her to run for them as well, but she says she chose Mr Palmer's organisation because he had financial resources to fight the two major parties.

"I looked at some of his policies and they seemed pretty sound to me,'' Ms van Lieshout said.

But she disagrees with Mr Palmer's stance on asylum seekers, saying she's not one to toe the party line and most voters want politicians with firm views.

While the billionaire has said asylum seekers deserve more compassion - and even airline tickets to get here - Ms van Lieshout agrees with Bob Katter, who wants the Navy to patrol Australian waters for boats.

And she believes asylum seekers should continue to be sent to Christmas and Manus islands, and Nauru, saying Australian politicians are not doing enough to help its own citizens, who are becoming homeless in droves.

In WA, she's particularly enraged that the Liberal-led government is imprisoning fine defaulters in large numbers. Australia-wide, she wants the decision-making power in schools to be taken from principals and handed to teachers.

But the topic that fires her up the most is psychiatrists after her brother was involuntarily institutionalised after being diagnosed with schizophrenia.

There, he was pumped full of drugs - a scenario that had killed some people, she claimed.

"I want psychiatry abolished,'' she said.

"They nearly killed my brother.

"It destroyed my family's life.

"It's just a killing machine and a money machine.''

Ms van Lieshout also shrugged off a matter that could pose a big problem for her down the track: possible imprisonment over non-paid court costs.

She tried to appeal a conviction for breaching planning laws after putting up political signage outside her Hilton home during the 2013 state election, but that was twice rejected in WA's Supreme Court.

After unsuccessfully arguing that there was an implied right of freedom of political communication in the constitution, she was ordered to pay thousands of dollars in costs.

But she told the judge to "f***; off'', she said.

"I wrote him a letter saying `I'm going to pay a cent'.

"They might try and jail me for political reasons.

"That would be pretty cruel and stupid.''

Ms van Lieshout, a former teacher who picked up 1.8 per cent of the votes for the seat of Willagee in the 2013 state election, provides tutoring and advice through her education consultancy.

Curtin University academic Chamonix Terblanche was the other WA candidate anointed by PUP today as part of its Senate ticket.


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Hoons share death-defying videos

A gang of hoon drivers film each other performing reckless stunts in Melbourne's northern suburbs.

VICTORIA'S worst hoons are encouraging copycats by posting videos of their dangerous stunts online in defiance of a police crackdown.

One boastful hoon dubbed the Black Bandit promotes his death-defying acts on suburban roads in Melbourne's northvia social media.

In one video, his black car - its numberplates removed - is filmed by another driver while he performs reckless stunts and burnouts in front of vehicles at an intersection in Thomastown.

Police are reviewing the footage.

The Transport Accident Commission's Janet Dore slammed the video.

``Behaviour such as this is nothing less than moronic,'' Ms Dore said.

``Innocent Victorians could have been killed or seriously injured and by behaving like this the driver of this vehicle has shown absolutely no respect for anyone else on the roads.''

Epping Highway Patrol's John Sybenga said police would try to locate the vehicles involved.

``We will be keeping an eye out for these vehicles, the driver may face a court and will be penalised to be determined by a magistrate,'' he said.

He said police were monitoring illegal street drag races and dangerous hooning throughout the state.

``Hoon behaviour is an ongoing issue in the northern suburbs and in Thomastown it is particularly bad,'' he said.

Aurora Community Association's Cara Horner said hooning behaviour is rife in the northern suburbs and making the community feel unsafe.

``We have spates of people coming and performing burnouts in residential streets, in carparks, fishtailing up roads and disturbing residents with loud tyre noise. It's frustrating for the local community who want these vehicles off the roads.'' she said.

jessica.evans@news.com.au

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What's in store for Perth's property market?

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 19 Juni 2013 | 21.51

Property experts and analysts take a look at where the Perth real estate market is head in 2014. Source: PerthNow

FORGET the property spikes of recent times, the Perth market is set to cool in the next 18 months.

In its barometer on property movement, SQM Research predicts price growth will continue - but at a slower rate for the next two years.

The independent property analyst's just-released report, Perth Housing Boom and Bust 2013/2014, says with conflicting stimuli - such as lower interest rates versus a mining downturn - the Perth housing market will "only be for the brave".

Managing director Louis Christopher said Perth had already experienced much of its predicted 5 per cent growth this year.

"We're not likely to see much more in the second half of 2013," he said. "There will be a slowdown in house price growth."


Hegney Property Group chief executive Gavin Hegney said the transitioning of WA mining projects from construction phase to operational phase would see a shift of about 15,000 workers from the mining sector to the home construction sector.

Mr Hegney said the construction of new homes would increase as a result and improve supply.

Experts agreed WA's population growth was tied to the mining sector and we were already experiencing a slowing of migration.

Momentum Wealth managing director Damian Collins said the big move from renting to buying over the past six months by first-homebuyers was likely to slow as house prices moved and rents moderated.

"Overall, that will mean a more balanced rental market and more supply of properties available for purchase, meaning a return to a balanced property market," he said.

Mr Collins said interest rates were at an all-time low and could go lower still.

"The recent fall in the Australian dollar may move the Reserve Bank to sit on their hands for a few months, but I certainly don't see rates going up in the next 12 months and potentially slightly lower," he said.

"Low rates will help keep people buying and investors looking, but won't spur on the market on its own – it's one component.''

SQM Research managing director Louis Christopher Source: PerthNow


MARKET FORECAST: SQM Research managing director Louis Christopher delivers his summary for the Perth property market into next year.

THE Perth housing market is what we describe as a relatively shallow market.

That means there will be periods where there can be very few buyers on a week by week basis during downturns; a market that suff ers from literally little to no buyers.

By the same token, it is also a market that can move quickly upwards when the economy is undergoing positive periods.

While the fortunes of the commodities cycle have a signifi cant infl uence on the Perth market, interest rate settings still can make or break it, which is evident when we consider the period 2006/07 – a phase prior to the market-fallout from the global fi nancial crisis.

Over that time, housing finance approvals fell 18.7 per cent from peak to trough.

Meanwhile, national housing finance approvals increased by 6.3 per cent.

What happened in 2006 and 2007? We had interest rate rises. Prior to 2008, the cash rate as set by the Reserve Bank rose three times in 2006 and a further two times in 2007.

Yet the rest of the national market was still recording rises. Not so for Perth. It was already falling and it was a commodities bust. The terms of trade was still rising well into 2007 and up to 2008.

Of course, the market continued to fall once the GFC set in. Indeed, housing finance approvals fell 45.9 per cent from its peak, finally bottoming out in August 2010.

House prices fell from peak to trough by 8.1 per cent in that time.

So what is our outlook? In what potentially could be a tumultuous year for the state economy, our forecast is for the market to cool, but not correct or collapse.

We are tipping that the interest rate cuts and current falls in the Australian dollar will provide a necessary buff er for Perth's housing market.

Nevertheless, there will be a slowdown in house price growth from the levels recorded in 2012.

SQM Research is also taking a rather conservative approach to house prices for Perth, going forward.

While the cuts in interest rates will entice fi rsthomebuyers into the market, we believe investor activity may soften, particularly if there is evidence of rising unemployment.

A falling Australian dollar will help stabilise a mining downturn, but it will not eliminate the downturn's negative impact for the Perth economy, which while becoming increasingly diversifi ed, is still very much tied to the fortunes of Western Australia and correspondingly, the global commodities cycle.

Vacancy rates are set to rise as job lay-off s accelerate. Indeed, we are recording some evidence of that now, with rental vacancy rates rising in nearly every month since October 2012.

So, it is quite possible Perth rents may fall in the second half of the year. Overall there will be some large economic forces at work in the city.

One, low interest rates having a stimulatory eff ect, while the other – a mining downturn – having a potentially harsh eff ect.

Thus, the Perth housing market will only be for the brave.

*Perth Housing Boom and Bust Report 2013/2014. SQM Research is an independent property advisory and forecasting research house.

Tim Lawless, Research Director RP Data. Picture: Theo Fakos Source: PerthNow

MARKET HEADING TOWARDS 'NORMAL'

LEADING data analyst Tim Lawless says WA is moving out of economic boom times into something which might be called "a bit more normal".

The RP Data director of research said that where an economy was in transition mode, further uncertainty could be involved.

"What's happening in WA is not an end to the mining boom, it's an end to the infrastructure boom,'' Mr Lawless said.

He said Perth's capital city housing market peaked last in April 2010.

"If you find some indicators are weakening, they're actually weakening from an exceptionally high level," Mr Lawless said.

In the RP Data Perth Leaders Forum powerpoint presentation, the company said while Perth's market was recovering there were some potholes to watch out for.

Lifestyle markets, particularly unit dwellings located along the coastline still needed to be treated with some caution.

"Valuations looks much more solid in regions that have had a strong run up in values, although mining regions are starting to hit the risk radar, with a significant slowdown in transactions,'' Mr Lawless said.

"Agents looking for solid growth opportunities should be examining those areas where transactions are now accelerating - plenty of opportunities around WA."

Gavin Hegney of Hegney Property Group in Subiaco. Picture: Stewart Allen Source: PerthNow

PRICES

PRICES have "done their dash" this year, experts say. Analysts predict very little upward movement between now and the end of the year.

Both Hegney Property Group CEO Gavin Hegney and Momentum Wealth managing director Damian Collins said Perth had already seen most of the 8 per cent growth in house prices that they had each predicted for this year.

Mr Collins said 2014 would see more moderate growth in the overall market ( 4-5 per cent) as builders brought on more supply and population growth slowed.

"However, as always, there will be pockets of Perth that still perform well above the average, so careful selection is required," he said.

SQM Research believes the increasing number of renters in the city is likely to prevail over the next decade.

HOT SPOTS

WARWICK, Maddington and Marangaroo were among Perth's hottest localities for potential investors, according to SQM, being postcodes with the tightest current vacancy rates.

"Very low vacancy rates tend to translate into much higher prices,'' managing director Louis Christopher said.

"We're not saying they're definite hotspots but the figures do show a trend."

LANDCORP

LandCorp chief operating officer Nicholas Wolff says the government developer's priorities over the next 18 months will be infill, activity centres, Pilbara projects and creating regional centres.

"Working closely with our partners we will deliver projects from Karratha, Geraldton, Kalgoorlie, Bunbury, Busselton and Albany," Mr Wolff said.

"In the metro area we will focus on Claremont, Carine, Alkimos, Mandurah Junction and Cockburn Central."

INCOMES

PERTH'S median income is considerably higher than the national figures - a trend expected to continue over the next decade.

SQM Research said the 2011 Census showed median family income in Perth of $1781 a week. The national median was $1481.

"By 2021 it is anticipated that the city of Perth will record a median family income of $2572 per week, compared to WA's $2481 and Australia's $2019,'' the report says.

The report also listed the 10 suburbs with the fastest income growth in Perth over the past 20 years.

"Rapid income growth is usually a main contributor to the performance of property prices," the report said.

Perth, North Fremantle, Mosman Park, North Perth, Glendalough/ Mount Hawthorn, Kings Park/ West Perth, East Fremantle, Fremantle, Maylands and Leederville/ West Leederville were listed.

Momentum Wealth managing director Damian Collins. Picture: Justin Benson-Cooper Source: PerthNow

RENTS

TENANTS will have no need to worry about out-of-control rents for the next 18 months, experts say.

SQM Research managing director Louis Christopher said the rental market was cooling as vacancy rates rose because of reduced demand.

"We're likely to see low rental growth,'' he said.

SQM Research's Perth Housing Boom and Bust report predicted asking rents would fall by up to 4 per cent in the inner-city and by up to 2 per cent in the city's southeast this year, while other areas would record incremental growth.

Momentum Wealth managing director Damian Collins agreed that the "rising rents" of the past 18 months, which culminated in a median weekly Perth rent of $470 for Perth, was at an end.

Mr Collins predicted flat rents or the rest of 2013 and only moderate growth 2014.


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How barrister David became Heather

Barrister Heather Stokes in a studio shot. Source: News Limited

LAST August, Adelaide barrister David Stokes brought his double life to an end and arrived at work as Heather. She tells the story of her transition below.

She used to run for Australia, back when she was David Stokes. In 1973, not long out of St Peter's College, she won the men's national 100m track title, and competed in the Pacific Conference Games in Canada.

"I had a fractured foot during the trials for the Christchurch Commonwealth Games and I nearly made the team which wasn't bad considering I had to take several months off for the fracture to heal," Heather Stokes says, flicking back a stray piece of fringe.

Respected criminal lawyer returns to work as a woman

It is almost a year since criminal barrister David Stokes left work on Friday and returned on Monday as Heather.

Acting Chief Judge of the District Court, Geoff Muecke, sent around a memo to judges the week before to advise them that from next week, Mr Stokes would be Ms.

"He rang me personally to say 'how do you want to be addressed?'," she says. "He said 'I think they all know but it's nice they will know it's happening as of this day'."

Have you an inspirational story? Tell us

It caused something of a sensation in legal circles - how could it not? A middle-aged barrister with steel grey hair and a receding hairline becomes a woman in tailored skirts and pantyhose, draped cardigans, high heels, dangly earrings and lipstick.

The transition, done with psychiatric and medical support, is a major step but Heather's evolution is not over. There is potential in the future for sexual reassignment surgery but that remains a long way off.

In the lead-up to becoming Heather, David took aside court staff, senior police and prosecutors, even members of the press, to let them know what was about to happen.

"I'd catch up with them over coffee, that sort of thing," Heather says. "I ran into the Chief Justice (John Doyle), he was buying coffee, and I told John that I was going to do this and that I would let his office know as a matter of professional courtesy."

She would break the ice saying, "I don't know what stories you would have heard about me but this is what I'm embarking on", and answer whatever questions they had. "I was saying this is me, and if you want to talk about it, I'm happy to talk," she says.

Most of the court staff took it in their stride although when she first went to the cells in the Samuel Way Building to see her client, convicted murderer Kelly Lee Pearman, she was challenged by one of the guards.

"She said 'Are you all right? I don't think I've seen you down here'," says Heather. "And I said 'for God's sake, it's Heather'."

She was not asking permission, nor was she seeking approval. She wanted to let colleagues know she was on a course that was not going to change.

"I didn't need approval; approval is nice if you can get it," she says. "A couple of close friends and a couple of judges said 'what you're doing is fine but we're worried about what it's going to do your practice'. It was only an expression of concern."

David emerged as Heather in mid-August but the transition had been going on for much longer. A lifetime in fact. No one wakes up one day and decides to change their sex. But unlike some transgender people, Heather did not grow up feeling like a girl who was trapped in a boy's body. It was trickier than that, less clear-cut.

Defence lawyer Heather Stokes the Supreme Court in Adelaide.

"Way, way back from as little as I can remember I had an interest in dressing up as a girl," Heather says. "I was aware that I had this desire to dress as a woman, which would make me like any other transvestite. Sometimes, that is a cover for something deeper, and in my case it was."

David had talked to his father in the early 1970s and late 1980s about whether he would be happier living as a woman but it came to nothing and he got on with his life.

He married not once but twice and was in love with both women, at least for a time. The first marriage broke down after a decade, and David left for another woman. He later married his second wife with whom he has two adult daughters who fully support him and who he adores. The second marriage lasted for 28 years but crumbled as 'Heather' started to emerge.

David wasn't particularly effeminate and cut quite a dashing figure at the Bar where his clients included Zialloh Abrahimzadeh who stabbed his wife to death in public, the former head of the APY Lands Bernard Singer, and AFL footballer Fabian Francis. He was a heterosexual man who liked to dress as a woman, but only in private.

"I wasn't bad looking as a male and I was reasonably successful - that was one reason why I sublimated that need and that need had to be suppressed," she says.

The record shows that David Stokes would be in his mid-60s. Heather likes to think of herself as a born-again woman who is "somewhere in her fifties". Either way it is late in life to be making such a drastic change.

She reached the point last year where, for her sanity, it had to be done.

"I nearly did this the year before but I decided 'I just can't do this' and I put it on hold again," she says. "But I had got to the stage where I don't know what I would have done to myself."

Not that she would have harmed herself; she is far too sensible for that. But she could see herself becoming progressively more depressed and miserable. The thought of never becoming who she was supposed to be frightens her even now.

The legal community, perhaps because they are wiser in the ways of the world than most, has taken the change entirely in its stride and it helped that David, and Heather, are well-liked.

Judges have been unfailingly courteous - although one of them kept calling her Mr Stokes during a recent courtroom argument - and she says she has lost just two briefs out of hundreds. One judge finds it difficult but manages to nod cursorily, another looks away when they pass in the street. At the recent funeral of Paul Rofe QC, a judge walked past without recognising her but then realised and doubled back to apologise.

Heather's first public appearance was in relation to Kelly Lee Pearman who killed housewife Karen Hodgson with a sawn-off shotgun after a bungled home invasion in 2010. In her third day as Heather, Pearman was sentenced to 15 years and she was approached by journalists as she left court and asked to comment. She appeared on television that night as Heather.

"I don't have a reputation for stopping and talking unless there's a social justice issue and I just kept on walking and fielded a couple of questions," she says.

Heather says clients like Pearman were unfazed by the change. Most of them are focused on court at the expense of anything else; some said "it's 2012 so what was the problem?"; and one asked permission to come around the table and give soon-to-be-Heather a kiss on the cheek.

"Of the hundreds of matters I've been involved in since August last year, I've only lost two briefs because people were a bit unsure about how a jury might react," she says. "But I've won a lot more trials than I've lost in that time."

Heather plainly enjoys being a woman. She began hormone therapy early last year - "I'm on the Pill!" she says - and presents as a woman, not as a man in drag.

Like other transgender women, she relishes the trappings of womanhood that define her new status. She represented Pearman in a form-fitting elasticised black dress. She likes jewellery, her nails are polished and the lipstick is in place. Despite her career as a runner, she does not have the giveaway bulging calf muscles and her legs are slender and shapely.

"Genetically, I'm lucky," she says. "I don't look like a boy in drag and that's been a huge advantage."

Mostly, she believes in herself. She is lively and amusing company and has enormous confidence in herself as a woman. She is happy being Heather and wants everyone to know it.

She had been living as Heather except for work as part of her transition so by the time it happened there was no awkwardness, no having to steel herself to walk through the door of Christopher Legoe Chambers and face colleagues for the first time.

"I'd got way past the stage of being outdoors as Heather and being nervous, way past it," she says. "That was months and months and months before. I just felt really comfortable, and I was curious to know what the reactions would be."

Her only residual concern - and it's one that she worries could be exacerbated by this article - is that juries will recognise her and make judgments.

"I said to one judge last year that it still worried me a bit that some jurors will have seen publicity or figure from the voice that there is something going on," she says. "He said, 'well actually, we've just finished a trial Heather and I'm not sure that all of the jurors do pick it up."

Early this year, something very unexpected happened to Heather Stokes. She began falling in love with a colleague, lawyer and barrister Kristie Molloy.

After leaving a long marriage in 2011 and transitioning to Heather she anticipated a future of friendships, but not love. "I was quite prepared to spend the next x years going out with friends and meeting people and having a good time," she says. "I hadn't envisaged being in a couple until this happened. I am an extremely happy girl and it is as much a surprise to her as it is to me."

Kristie wasn't gay, yet she had fallen in love with a woman who used to be a man.

"I wasn't a lesbian - all my past relationships were with men but I fell in love with Heather," Kristie says.

So surprised was Heather that she sought out her psychiatrist whose assessments of her are part of the legal process for reassigning gender. She basically had to ask him what she was doing falling for a woman.

"It took him five to eight minutes to scientifically say 'd'uh'," she says. "Gender orientation is not the same thing as gender preference. So if you're born with an orientation towards women, the mere fact that you change your gender because that's the way you see yourself does not automatically mean that you will change your gender preference."

So Heather is a gay woman who never had an interest in men, and hasn't now. Kristie, who is in the same chambers, knew David vaguely but fell in love with Heather. They know they are the subject of gossip but are getting through it and Heather wants the world to know they are together.

"I am proud of the fact that she loves me, I am proud of the relationship," she says. "I want to tell everyone I'm in a relationship with someone I adore."

Heather Frances Stokes is still a work in progress. She changed her name by deed poll, has a new lawyer's practising certificate, driver's licence, health and credit cards.

She is about to apply for a new passport, which will require her amended birth certificate and a letter from her psychiatrist confirming she identifies as female.

From one week to the next, she changed to female bathrooms and only one person has ever complained. She chose the name Heather last year because it was a soft name with suitable Scottish ancestry and it was non-generational and relatively uncommon. There aren't a lot of Heathers around, she says, but there will always be Heathers.

Sexual reassignment surgery is a way off in the future. It is a long and deliberate process and she is not sure how far down that road she will go.

"It's a reality that not everyone feels the need to do so," she says. "I have made no decision about that. I probably will do, but that's a while away."

Becoming Heather has not just been about adopting the trappings of womanhood. She says there is a genuine internal transformation going on that has altered her view of things.

Her professional life and passion for social justice haven't changed but her emotional reactions have subtly shifted. She is not the same person that she was.

"It's like there's some circuitry in my head that's been lit up by the fact I'm on hormones and now living as a female - that has been quite interesting," she says.

It is hard to believe but she says that she cries more. "I do, it's not pathetic, that's the point, I've had a couple of meltdowns," she says. "I used to see a sad movie and I would have shed a tear anyway but the reaction is much stronger and much more lasting. And I've had some hormonal reactions to things which have not been much fun, they've been quite distressing."

Barrister Heather Stokes putting make up on at home.

Without wanting to overplay it, she feels more vulnerable as a woman. If there is a group of men in the street, she pays more attention to their body language and what they are doing.

"I hadn't expected that but I do feel more vulnerable," she says. "I don't want to overplay that or be silly or over-intellectualise it but I have noticed it without intending it to happen."

The decision to speak to saweekend has been motivated by the decision to become patron of the support group for women in prison, Seeds of Affinity.

Heather says she has always felt strongly about the plight of women in the prison system who suffer in general more than men. Many are mothers, and too many of them come out of prison and return to inappropriate relationships.

"Women prisoners are very underprivileged and probably one of the most downtrodden groups in the community," she says. "I appreciate there is no sympathy for criminals and some of the women have done some terrible things but mostly speaking not."

Heather insists she isn't brave; that she has only done what she felt she needed to do. And she is proud that she did it in Adelaide, resisting the temptation to start afresh by moving interstate. Instead, she stood her ground:

"I have stayed in Adelaide, I've stayed in my own profession, and I have a fairly high profile as a criminal barrister. I'm a bit stubborn. It was the right thing to do. I've never seen myself as brave, it was a necessity."

She is also sending a message to others that they can do it, and survive. It is another reason she has agreed to speak, so transgender people who may be tempted to self-harm can see that another life is possible. Suicide rates in the transgender population are extraordinarily high; a 2011 study in the US put it at 41 per cent.

"You don't wake up one morning and think, 'screw it, I'm going to thumb my nose at the world and decide I'm going to be a transgender.' It's not something you ask to do," she says.

"You can squash it within you, you can hide it, you can avoid it, and maybe never give in to it but it's really important for people of all ages to know you don't have to do that. And it ought not to be bad."

She has never been so happy because she has never felt so "right" in herself. "You feel as though you are finally where you ought to be, in a body where the presentation feels natural," she says. "When you get there and you realise just how appropriate this is, it's an amazing feeling."

seedsofaffinity.org.au

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Online sex squad nets trainee teacher

A 21-year-old trainee teacher has been arrested for allegedly grooming a girl he thought was 12 for sex online. Source: The Sunday Mail (Qld)

A TRAINEE teacher has been arrested for allegedly grooming a girl he thought was 12 for sex online.

Western Australia's Online Child Exploitation Squad charged the 21-year old from Yanchep, north of Perth, after he was nabbed following a covert three-month operation.

Police will allege between June 12 and 17 the man used online social chat facilities to sexually engage with a police officer posing as a 12 year-old girl.

He is said to have groomed the girl by exposing her to indecent material, and eventually instructed her about sexual matters.

He was studying at TAFE to become a teacher's assistant and a few days prior to his arrest had started his practical assessment at a high school in the northern Perth suburbs.

Police are investigating if the man has been communicating or committing offences with any real children.

The man has been charged with using electronic communication with the intent to expose a child to indecent material, and one count of using electronic communication with the intent to procure a child to engage in sexual activity.

He will appear in the Joondalup Magistrates Court on July 3.


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Jill's killer 'unrepentantly evil'

Jill Meagher's husband Tom tells the ABC's 7.30 report he thinks of the sentence imposed on convicted rapist Adrian Bayley is a 'disgrace.' Courtesy: 7:30 Report, ABC

THE shattered husband of Jill Meagher has spoken out against Victoria's justice system following the sentencing of Adrian Bayley, who was on parole when he committed the murder that shocked the country.

Tom Meagher has kept a dignified silence in the months following her death, but tonight he revealed his anger after learning Bayley was released early from jail after serving time for numerous rapes.

"I felt furious. I'm still furious when I hear anyone say it, whenever I read it, my blood boils," Mr Meagher told the ABC.

"It is not fair that it is my wife, of course it's not, but it is not fair if it is anyone.

"This man is unrepentantly evil. He's been let off too many times by our justice system."

Adrian Bayley leaves the Supreme Court after being sentenced to life for the rape and murder of Jill Meagher.

Bayley was sentenced to a non-parole period of 35 years for Ms Meagher's murder and rape.

Bayley's shocking past

Memo to parole board: toss the key

Victim impact statements from the family

Jill Meagher's father, George McKeon, makes emotional statement after Adrian Bayley was sentenced to life for the murder of his daughter. Courtesy: Nine News

The punishment included 15 years for the sexual assault charge, which left Mr Meagher questioning why Bayley had not received the harshest punishment possible in Victoria.

"I certainly don't think the sentence for the rape charge was enough at all," he said.

"Given what this man has done in the past, I think that 15 years is a disgrace, considering the maximum penalty for rape is 25."

"I don't know what the maximum penalty is for, if it's not for that man? Who else could fit the bill of a maximum sentence for rape than Adrian Ernest Bayley?"

Edith McKeon and Tom Meagher after Adrian Bayley was sentenced to life.

The grieving husband called for change to the state's parole system and spoke of his own life sentence, that he will serve remembering the brutal murder of his beloved wife.

Jill's relatives tell of emotional wait

Authorities warned about Jill killer

Inside Bayley's police interview

Jill Meagher. Picture: HWT library

"My life is just completely and utterly changed in a matter of one night," Mr Meagher said.

"That's the worst thing for me because the way Jill and I lived was very free of that. We trusted people we met. That's been ruined for me. And I think that's the worst part of it. Not being able to be myself any more."

He described his wife as "incredibly witty".

"(She was) just so smart and intelligent. She brightened up any room she was in," he said.

"I think the number one priority (of the parole board) should be to protect the innocent. That's what they didn't do in this case and that's why Jill's not here."

Adrian Bayley jailed for life

Jill's life in pictures


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Soundwave promoter's twitter tirade

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 18 Juni 2013 | 21.51

AJ Maddah. Source: PerthNow

A PROMINENT music festival promoter has verbally abused a young Perth woman in a vulgar online tirade sparked by the girl's complaint her favourite band wasn't visiting the city.

Soundwave promoter AJ Maddah lashed out at Phoebe, 20, after she tweeted to him about one of her favourite bands, All Time Low, not coming to Perth.

The tweet prompted a series of vicious and vulgar replies from Maddah, who represents the band, from his Twitter account @iamnotshouting.

AJ Maddah tweets with Perth girl Phoebe. Source: PerthNow

Phoebe said she knew Maddah's reputation for being abusive on social media.

The conversation then escalated to Maddah calling Phoebe 'stupid', 'quite unattractive', made insinuating comments her parents had down syndrome and her future was full of 'sadness, lonliness and the odd mercy f***'.

The conversation between AJ Maddah and a Perth girl on Twitter. Source: PerthNow

Maddah has also previously criticised Perth on social media, saying his bands lost money when came here to play.

He has also previously engaged in social media abuse with The Voice star and Good Charlotte frontman Joel Madden and Blink 182's Travis Barker.

AJ Maddah tweets about Perth. Source: PerthNow

Phoebe said while she was not upset about the comments, she was appalled at the language used.

"I just couldn't understand how he has the audacity to say what he said on a public forum when he is respected by thousands," she said.

"My advice to others would be to try and not let it affect you I guess.

"This man, this middle aged man, head of a promotional company that brings a number of the world's most famous, rock, hardcore, and metal bands to Australia every year, spent his afternoon and night insulting a fanatical pop-punk band fan."

Soundwave have refused to comment about their promoter or the verbal tirade of abuse.

AJ Maddah. Source: PerthNow

The exchange shocked Perth Curtin University Department of Internet Studies lecturer Dr Tama Leaver, who said people felt less restrained online.

"A Twitter handle like @iamnotshouting is clearly somebody who has cast themselves as an online identity that is loud and brash," he said.

"The responses that Phoebe got in response were certainly very strong."

Dr Leaver said he hoped organisations would keep people accountable for these types of exchanges on social media.

"For somebody whose position appears to be promoting a particular type of show, it seems a very odd use to use a Twitter account essentially to have a huge go at someone for suggesting bands play in a different location," he said.

"I certainly think they should be asked why they think that was the most appropriate way to respond to someone, especially when they are effectively situated as the public voice of a particular event."

Dr Leaver advised social media users to avoid engaging in threatening comments.

"I do think as a general advice, not engaging as much as possible as somebody starts hurling abuse online unless you have a really good reason to," he said,

"The more you respond to someone, the more they're going to get fired up and continue to say things because they're getting a reaction."


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Mum of toddler was 'cruel to animals'

TRAGEDY: Mother Kerry Murphy, pictured with her son Sean who was found unconscious in a closed washing machine and later died. Picture from Channel 9.  Source: PerthNow

THE mother of a toddler found unconscious in a washing machine with his dead pet cat had a history of animal cruelty and would rip the heads off dolls as a child.

The West Australian coroner is investigating the death of three-year-old Sean Murphy, who was found in a machine on the afternoon of September 20, 2010, after his mother, Kerry, claimed she overslept.

Dianne Murphy, who adopted Kerry when she was three-years-old, told the West Australian Coroner's Court on Tuesday her daughter had been diagnosed with borderline personality order.

She said her daughter had a history of animal cruelty as a child, which a psychiatrist explained was a result of her traumatic childhood in the UK.

Ms Murphy said her daughter had killed a frog and would often rip the heads off dolls.

"She took her anger out on her toys,'' Ms Murphy said.

Constable Adam Clue testified when Sean died he overheard Ms Murphy on the phone say: "He (Sean) does this all the time. He's a little troublemaker.''

He also heard Ms Murphy say it was not her fault and she was probably asleep.

"They're treating me as a murder suspect,'' he allegedly heard Ms Murphy say.

"This day just goes from bad to worse.''

Constable Clue said Ms Murphy wanted to see her son in hospital but police said she had to wait.

Neighbour Daniel Charles Dickerson testified he heard the toddler crying and Ms Murphy telling him off in the hours before Sean was discovered in the machine.

Mr Dickerson, who admitted being a cannabis user and being upset Ms Murphy had put a restraining order on his son, said he had not told police what he heard because he did not want to ``get involved''.

But he said he had witnessed Ms Murphy being "nasty'' to her son and on one occasion, Ms Murphy called Sean a "little bastard'' when he was playing too close to a car, saying: "That car is worth more than your life.''

When Sean died, Ms Murphy told Mr Dickerson: "I didn't kill him. It was an accident.''

Mr Dickerson denied his version of events was a figment of his imagination.

He also said he was upset the Department of Child Protection (DCP) had investigated him and had not looked at Ms Murphy's behaviour, so he made a complaint over the counter a year before Sean's death.

The DCP's Emma White said there was no record of Mr Dickerson's complaint and said it was not common practice to take complaints over the counter.

But Ms White said Ms Murphy had approached the DCP about Sean's ``diabolical'' behaviour, complaining Sean was like a "hurricane leaving a mess in his wake''.

Coroner Alistair Hope is investigating how the boy could have accessed the machine and whether washing machine safety standards need improving.

The inquest continues.


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Big Read: Asher Keddie's moment

Asher Keddie Source: News Limited

Asher Keddie is madly in love and she wants the world to know it.

The Offspring star thanked new partner, Archibald Prize winning artist Vincent Fantauzzo, and his young son Luca in her Gold Logie acceptance speech in April.

Keddie also won Silver that night - as Most Popular Actress for her role as Nina Proudman in the popular Channel 10 drama.

It was a high point that came six months after it was revealed that Keddie had split from musician/actor husband Jay Bowen after five years of marriage.

"As if life couldn't get any sweeter thanks to the two guys in my life - Vincent and Luca … oh how lucky I am," Keddie said.

'I was very happy with where I was professionally and it just makes all the world of difference when you have a wonderful family around you, the people you are meant to be with."

Two months later and Keddie is still beaming. The 38-year-old has just finished filming the fourth season of Offspring and has already signed for a fifth series.

Keddie has a hit show, a shelf full of Logies, and a new partner whom she loves - what more could she want?

"You can't hide happiness," Keddie says. "I've landed in a place where I feel very relaxed and inspired in a way that I haven't felt before.

"I want to embrace and celebrate all the great things that have happened in my life over the past year.

This year's Gold Logie confirms that Keddie, and Nina, resonate with female TV viewers in a very special way.

Keddie has won acclaim for portraying Ita Buttrose in Paper Giants: The Birth of Cleo and Blanche d'Alpuget in Hawke but it is the fictional Nina that has cut the deepest.

"I think (Offspring's popularity) is probably a combination of Nina's honesty as a character and also the show's honesty.

"Viewers can be exasperated by (Offspring) and angered by it and also really happy about the honesty of the show.

"Nina is relatable because she exposes herself (emotionally) in ways that a lot of us try and cover up.

"I like people that are flawed. I'm terribly flawed. People in my life are as well. That's what makes it rich and textured and interesting."

This year Nina is pregnant to partner, anaesthetist Patrick Reid (Matthew LeNevez).

That has turned Nina into something of a control freak who is determined to order all aspects of her life before the baby arrives.

Nina and Patrick are in couple's counselling even though nothing is technically wrong with the relationship.

"It was fun - I was able to run the gamut of emotions with Nina pregnant over the eight months of (filming) the show.

"The big theme of series four is that no matter how much you try and control things - to aim for perfection and be as organised as possible - life throws you curve balls," Keddie says.

"It was really interesting playing a pregnant woman. The prosthetic belly really helped me. It was heavily weighted and moulded to my body. We had a caste made. It almost felt a part of me.

"Physically what happened was that as the belly grew I was truly wobbling. I couldn't help it. I found it difficult to breathe at times because it was pushing against my rib cage.

"Not being a mother myself and not having experienced pregnancy, I had to try and imagine what it would feel like emotionally.

"It would be very hormonal at times - swing from being very positive and in control of how things were going to pan out and what type of parent I (Nina) was going to be and then having enormous doubts about that and a lack of self-confidence."

That begs the question - has playing the pregnant Nine made Keddie think of having a child with Fantauzzo any time soon?

"It certainly didn't put me off," Keddie laughs.

"That is another interesting thing that I have been thinking about. As with everybody, my thoughts and feelings evolve over a period of time and perhaps what I felt a few years ago is different to what I feel now.

"I'm not sure what the future holds but I have always actually been open to anything. I love family and children but I also love my work.

"If I was lucky enough to have both (work and children) one day, it will be fantastic."

Like Nina, Keddie is learning to relax - to live in the moment and accept the everyday blessings that have come her way thick and fast over the past 12 months.

There is no five year plan. No 'to do' list.

"As I've grown up I've not held on as tight (tried to control destiny) as I normally would have in the past," Keddie says.

"I would hope that if I found out I was going to have a child I could continue along that path and let it (life) evolve organically.

"If the opportunity came up to work in another country, I'd be thrilled about that (too).

"I know Vincent feels the same way too. His work is international as well. That is really exciting for us - the prospect of that (working overseas).

"I'm just really enjoying being able to balance my personal and professional lives a little better than I have done (in the past)."

Offspring, Channel 10, Tuesday nights, 8.30pm

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Pregnant woman abused on Perth train

This video taken on a train from Perth to Clarkson, shows a girl who refused to move her things from the nearby seats, even when asked by a seven month pregnant woman.

Perth commuters have taken to social media to shame fellow passengers after a video was uploaded to YouTube showing a pregnant woman being abused on a train. Source: PerthNow

PERTH commuters have again taken to social media to shame fellow passengers caught behaving badly.

The latest video to gain momentum on the web was reportedly filmed on February 15 this year on the Perth to Clarkson train line.

It was posted to YouTube on June 14 and has already had more than 23,300 hits in the four days since, pushed by posts on Facebook pages Public Transport Exposed and Perth WA Memes.

What has your public transport experience been like? Let us know in the comments below.

The short video is of a woman, sitting on a crowded train, with her bags and files on a seat next to her originally refuses to move them for a woman in her 60s and a pregnant woman.

A man then asks the woman to move her things, but she refuses and other passengers start to comment on how rude she's being.


The woman then calls the pregnant woman a "fat f***" before letting the expectant mum sit.

The video comes after another one recorded this year of a racist fight in East Perth and of transit guards breaking up a fight on a train, during which one male claimed to have a gun.

A Public Transport Authority spokeswoman said Transperth staff could not be the arbiter of public morals, but passengers should behave properly.

"We do not condone the behaviour of the passenger in this video," she said.

"While she has not committed any offence, common decency dictates that seated passengers should stand for someone who needs a seat more than they do. Clearly marked signage on all our buses and trains supports this."

The spokeswoman said each year Transperth invested a lot of time and effort in programs aimed at improving passenger behaviour.

"The most recent of these is the Two Hoots campaign, which specifically reminds commuters about the importance of standing for people who need a seat more than you.

"One of the 'nursery rhymes' which make up the Two Hoots campaign specifically refers to giving up your seat for a pregnant woman."


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