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Entertainment

Dad sets daughter up with a cute guy at the pub

Single woman, 30, was set up with a ‘hot stranger’ at a pub by her DAD in a saga followed by millions on TikTok – and you won’t believe what happened next

  • An Australian publicist has shared the incredible way she met her now-boyfriend
  • Alice James, from Melbourne, said her dad asked for a cute man’s number for her
  • The 30-year-old and her father were enjoying beers at the pub
  • Her dad amused her attention to the ‘total hottie’ at the bar before talking to him
  • Since then the two went on a number of ‘amazing dates’ before making it official
  • Alice says her dad is her ‘ultimate wingman’ and owes it all to him

A ‘very single’ Australian publicist has shared the moment her ‘ultimate wingman’ dad asked for a cute guy’s number on her behalf at a pub, which led to becoming her now-boyfriend – and thousands are eager to know who he is.

Alice James, from Melbourne, was enjoying her father’s company while sipping on a pint of ale after the opening night of Six The Musical.

The 30-year-old told FEMAIL the two were ‘talking garbage’ before her dad James diverted her attention to the ‘total hottie’ sitting at the bar.

‘I had obviously noticed this stunning gentleman with his mate at the bar as soon as we walked in. Dad said “leave it with me” then jumped off his seat and proceeded to talk to these two guys,’ she recalled.

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Single television publicist Alice James, from Melbourne, (pictured) was enjoying beers at the pub with her dad James when he diverted her attention to the 'total hottie' sitting at the bar

Single television publicist Alice James, from Melbourne, (pictured) was enjoying beers at the pub with her dad James when he diverted her attention to the ‘total hottie’ sitting at the bar

'I had obviously noticed this stunning gentleman with his mate at the bar as soon as we walked in.  dad said "leave it with me" then jumped off his seat and proceeded to talk to these two guys,' Alice told FEMAIL (pictured: Alice and her dad James)

‘I had obviously noticed this stunning gentleman with his mate at the bar as soon as we walked in. Dad said ‘leave it with me’ then jumped off his seat and proceeded to talk to these two guys,’ Alice told FEMAIL (pictured: Alice and her dad James)

James struck up a conversation with the young men asking if they ‘go for Collingwood’, then turned to the eligible bachelor asking how old he was and if he was single.

‘Dad then pointed to me saying “well this is my daughter and she is very single”. As the night went on we all kept chatting until the two boys at the bar got up to leave and dad stopped them saying: “Wait! You can’t leave! You haven’t exchanged numbers!”,’ Alice recalled.

In a rush James ran to the bar, grabbed the order pad and made the two write down each other’s digits.

‘The boy was so nervous that he actually handed his number to my dad instead of me – hilarious!’ Alice said.

The following morning Alice sent the man a text saying ‘Sorry about my dad’ with a laughing emoji.

‘I wasn’t sure if he was interested or dad had just forced him to talk to me. But he replied and said it was a treat to meet us both and invited me out to dinner a few nights later,’ she said.

‘After our first date we both just had such a good time, there were a lot of laughs and chemistry and it just felt refreshingly right.’

Since then the two have continued to go on ‘amazing’ dates and both are ‘just so happy’.

A few weeks prior to the pub night Alice had also stopped using dating apps and wanted to take a break because she ‘wasn’t having fun anymore’.

But to her surprise she was able to meet someone in public thanks to her dad.

‘We had both been single for a while with some pretty grim dating history so we feel very lucky to have this connection that we do,’ she said.

Dad James struck up a conversation with the single man and pointed out how Alice is also single.  When the man and his friend of him got up to leave James said: 'Wait!  You can't leave!  You haven't exchanged numbers!'

Dad James struck up a conversation with the single man and pointed out how Alice is also single. When the man and his friend of him got up to leave James said: ‘Wait! You can’t leave! You haven’t exchanged numbers!’

And now after getting to know each other, the guy from the pub asked Alice to be his girlfriend – and she said yes.

‘I definitely owe it all to dad, the ultimate Wingman and the Maverick to my Goose because there is no way either of us would have made the first move at the pub and how sad that this relationship may never have happened,’ she said.

‘It also made the first meeting of the parents very stress free, because I think he was pretty confident that he already had dad’s tick of approval!’

The two singles started texting and went on a number of 'amazing dates' before he eventually asked Alice to be his girlfriend - and she said yes

The two singles started texting and went on a number of ‘amazing dates’ before he eventually asked Alice to be his girlfriend – and she said yes

From the beginning Alice has shared the interactions in a series of now-viral TikTok videos that have captured the attention of thousands.

Many praised James for his action and being the ‘best wingman ever’.

‘Ummm any chance I can like, borrow your dad?!’ one person wrote in the comments, another added: ‘My dad needs to step up.’

A third added: ‘This is LEGIT the best.. go Daz!’

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Sports

Nick Kyrgios eases past Alex de Minaur in another showstopper in Montreal | Nick Kyrgios

Nick Kyrgios delivered another tennis masterclass to put Alex de Minaur to the sword and scorch into the quarter-finals of the Montreal Masters 1000. De Minaur entered the first-time showdown with his Davis Cup teammate as Australian No 1, but was handed a reality check in a 6-2, 6-3 mauling at the hands of the hottest player on tour.

Kyrgios needed barely an hour to wrap up a 15th win from his past 16 matches and guarantee himself another important rankings boost ahead of the US Open starting on 29 August.

At times it looked like Kyrgios was toying with de Minaur, who barely won a point in the opening four games. He finally got on the board but Kyrgios, mixing stylish serve-volley plays with ferocious power from the back, effortlessly took the opening set in 23 minutes before immediately grabbing an early break in the second.

He briefly lost composure after failing to serve out the match at 5-2 but regained his cool to clinch victory with a ruthless fourth break of de Minaur’s serve.

“I did what had to be done. He’s a hell of a player if you play to his strengths from him, he’s one of the best players from the back in the game, he’s just so fast, ”Kyrgios said of de Minaur after the match.

Kyrgios had a day earlier produced a serve-and-volley masterclass to stun world No 1 Daniil Medvedev 6-7(2), 6-4, 6-2. He said the effort had certainly taken a toll.

“Incredibly tough, after yesterday’s big high playing Daniil. The crowd was amazing, it’s a day I’ll probably never ever forget,” he said. “Today it was really hard for me mentally to play Alex, we’re such good friends and he’s been having such a good career so far carrying the Australian flag. It’s just tough mentally, it’s never easy to play a friend like that, especially if they’re an Australian.”

The red-hot Wimbledon runner-up is projected to rise from 37th to No 27 in the standings and could crack the world’s top 15 if he backs up last week’s success in Washington with an eighth career title on Sunday.

That would secure Kyrgios a crucial top-16 seeding in New York, ensuring the 27-year-old would not play a higher-ranked rival until at least the second week at the season’s final grand slam.

Kyrgios’s more immediate focus is Hubert Hurkacz for a place in the semi-finals for a sixth tournament running outside of an injury-enforced withdrawal in Mallorca the week before Wimbledon.

Hurkacz beat Kyrgios two months ago on the Halle grass courts and advanced to the last eight on Thursday with a fighting 6-7 (6-8) 6-2 7-6 (7-3) third-round win over Albert Ramos-Vinolas .

Earlier, fourth seed Casper Ruud advanced to the quarters with a 6-7 (7-4) 7-6 (7-4) 6-4 win over Roberto Bautista Agut.

Ruud is the highest seed left in the singles draw following the demise of the top three seeds – Medvedev, Carlos Alcaraz and Stefanos Tsitsipas – on Wednesday.

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Australia

From 300,000 rabbits to none: a Southern Ocean island is reborn | Environment

On a world map, Macquarie Island is a speck in the Southern Ocean, but for ecologists it is a beacon, illuminating a future for large-scale environmental recovery projects.

Melissa Houghton first set foot on the 34km-long green streak as a dog handler in late 2011. Rabbits, cats, rats and mice had been introduced by sealers in the 1800s and were wreaking havoc on the world heritage site. At their peak, there were approximately 300,000 European rabbits and an unknown number of black rats and house mice.

During their trip, Houghton and a labrador named Wags found what would prove to be the last vertebrate pests left on the island: an adult rabbit and her young. In 2014, Macquarie was declared pest free, the largest island to successfully eliminate rabbits to date.

Ten years after Wags sniffed out the last rabbit, the island has sprung back to life, and Houghton has stuck around to witness the change. She gave up dog handling, became a scientist and completed her PhD as part of the research team monitoring the island’s resurgence.

“Seeing it rebound, knowing it’s got a long way to go, and that we don’t know what else is going to happen, it’s so exciting,” Houghton says.

An all-you-can-eat buffet

Houghton remembers being “blown away” by her first views of Macquarie Island after a three-day voyage south from Tasmania in 2011. Its beaches were crowded with hulking elephant seals and raucous colonies of endemic royal penguins. But Keith Springer, who was leading the Macquarie Island Pest Eradication Project, warned her that beyond the beaches the once biodiverse and unique island was so damaged that it was “nothing but a pretty paddock”.

Melissa Houghton and her Labrador Wags among the island's penguins.
Melissa Houghton and her Labrador Wags among the island’s penguins. Photographer: Melissa Houghton

Attempts to rid the island of pests had already been under way for some years. The last feral cat was shot in 2000, poison drops were used in 2010 to kill the rats and mice, with rabbits also being targeted. But after the accidental poisoning of native birds, calicivirus (a rabbit haemorrhagic disease) was released in February 2011 to further reduce rabbit numbers.

Houghton and Wags were one of several teams sent to scour the island for surviving pests. “There are massive steep coast cliffs all the way round the island. There might be a few hundred rabbits, but it just seemed impossible [to find them],” she says.

Trudging through the landscape, Houghton saw the damage the pests had wreaked. Before the sealers, the largest creatures eating the island’s vegetation were insects. So for rabbits it was an all-you-can-eat buffet.

Melissa and Wags with the last adult rabbit on Macquarie Island in November 2011.
Melissa and Wags with the last adult rabbit on Macquarie Island in November 2011. Photograph: Courtesy of Melissa Houghton

The island had been dominated by giant tussock grass and swaying forests of megaherbs, such as Macquarie Island cabbage, which can grow taller than a human. This, says Houghton, is “like celery, very delicious, so the rabbits just absolutely loved it and smashed it”, stripping the landscape and destabilizing slopes where grey-headed albatross nested. “You’d have slime and lichen and landslips where albatrosses were trying to raise chicks and survive.”

Houghton was only able to see some plants in small fenced-off areas. These included two endemic orchids and a tiny herb called australian huperzia. “I couldn’t even envision what the island was meant to look like,” she says.

Birds such as blue and gray petrels, which had been hunted off the island by cats, were returning by 2011, says Dr Justine Shaw of the Queensland University of Technology and Houghton’s PHD supervisor. Shaw recently coordinated a 10-year project to assess the island’s response to pest eradication.

But life was still dangerous for the returning petrels. They nest in burrows, and rabbits had eaten the vegetation that hid and protected them, making the birds vulnerable to attack from skuas, a native predatory bird.

‘The tussock is over your head’

Gradually, life for the island’s birds is improving. Antarctic prions and white-headed petrels, which also nest in burrows, had managed to cling on in some sites while pests were on the island. Their numbers are now increasing. “It’s fantastic and so exciting,” Shaw says.

As birds return to breed, they also poo. This adds nutrients to the soil, which in turn helps the plants to grow back stronger. Tall plants then help burrowing birds hide from predatory skuas. “It’s this wonderful feedback loop,” Shaw says.

Today, the “pretty paddock” that Houghton first experienced has been transformed. “The tussock is over your head, and you’re dodging all these penguin tunnels,” she says. The orchids and tiny herb that had been protected by fencing have started turning up all over the place.

Houghton’s PhD research has also tracked the response of invertebrates such as spiders, flightless flies and springtails. “It’s amazing that somewhere so isolated can have so much diversity of insects – there’s a lot of endemic species,” she says. Removing mice, rats and rabbits might not seem like a way to improve life for invertebrates, but many of them rely on the plants the rabbits were gobbling up. Also, “when mice are on an island they target juicy larvae, caterpillars, moths and spiders and beetles,” says Houghton. The change is palpable. “You go into a hut now and there’s cobwebs everywhere.”

Skua at Cape Star, Macquarie Island
One of Macquarie Island’s native predatory birds, a skua, at Cape Star. Photographer: Melissa Houghton

Typically after an eradication scientists tend to assess how one charismatic species has responded to the pests’ removal. But Shaw is interested in how the island is responding as a whole ecosystem. “It’s not like someone turns the lights on and it’s back to normal. It’s actually quite a staggered response,” she says.

When Shaw talks about the legacy of the eradication she looks to the future. Understanding the intricacies of how Macquarie Island is recovering has reported island pest eradications on New Zealand’s sub-Antarctic Antipodes Islands, South Georgia and more. In July 2022 a project was announced to eradicate predators including possums, rats, feral cats and hedgehogs from New Zealand’s Rakiura/Stewart Island, an inhabited island.

Island eradication is not cheap – the Macquarie project cost Aus$24.5m (£14m) and would have been more if not for in-kind support from research facilities already on the island. But isolated islands are hubs for biodiversity, with each one often having its own unique array of flora and fauna.

“This one management action, the eradication, has saved entire communities and species, many of which are found nowhere else in the world,” Shaw says.

Houghton is grateful to have witnessed the island’s resurgence. “It’s one of the few instances where humans can permanently reverse some damage we’ve caused,” she says.

Find more age of extinction coverage here, and follow biodiversity reporters Phoebe Weston and Patrick Greenfield on Twitter for all the latest news and features

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US

Man who tried to breach FBI office killed after standoff

WILMINGTON, Ohio (AP) — An armed man clad in body armor who tried to breach the FBI’s Cincinnati office on Thursday was shot and killed by police after he fled the scene and engaged in an hourslong standoff in a rural part of the state, the Ohio State Highway Patrol said.

The confrontation came as officials warned of an increase in threats against federal agents in the days following a search of former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida.

The man is believed to have been in Washington on the days leading up to the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection and may have been present at the Capitol on the day of the attack, according to a law enforcement official briefed on the matter. The official could not discuss details of the investigation publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

The suspect was identified as Ricky Shiffer, 42, according to the law enforcement official. He was not charged with any crimes in connection with the Jan. 6 attack, the official said. Federal investigators are examining whether Shiffer may have had ties to far-right extremist groups, including the Proud Boys, the official said.

Shiffer “attempted to breach” the visitor screening area at the FBI office at around 9:15 am, and fled when agents confronted him, according to federal authorities’ account of the incident. After fleeing onto Interstate 71, he was spotted by a trooper and fired shots as the trooper pursued him, said Lt. Nathan Dennis, an Ohio State Highway Patrol spokesperson, at a press conference.

Shiffer left the interstate north of Cincinnati and abandoned his car on rural roads, where he exchanged gunfire with police and sustained injuries, although no one else was hurt, Dennis said.

Shiffer was shot after he raised a gun toward police at around 3 pm Thursday, Dennis said. The fatal encounter with police happened after negotiations failed and police tried unsuccessfully to use “less lethal tactics,” Dennis said, without providing details.

State highway workers blocked off roads leading to the scene as a helicopter flew over the area. Officials locked down a mile radius near the interstate and urged residents and business owners to lock doors and stay inside. The interstate has been reopened.

There have been growing threats in recent days against FBI agents and offices across the country since federal agents executed a search warrant at Mar-a-Lago. On Gab, a popular social media site with white supremacists and antisemites, users have warned they are preparing for an armed revolution.

Federal officials have also been tracking an array of other concerning chatter on Gab and other platforms threatening violence against federal agents. FBI Director Christopher Wray denounced the threats as he visited another FBI office in Nebraska on Wednesday.

“Violence against law enforcement is not the answer, no matter who you’re upset with,” Wray said Wednesday in Omaha.

The FBI on Wednesday also warned its agents to avoid protesters and ensure their security key cards are “not visible outside FBI space,” citing an increase in social media threats to bureau personnel and facilities. It also warned agents to be aware of their surroundings and potential protesters.

The warning did not specifically mention this week’s search for Mar-a-Lago but attributed the online threats to “recent media reporting on FBI investigative activity.”

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Welsh-Huggins reported from Columbus, Ohio. Associated Press writer Michael Balsamo in Washington contributed to this report.

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Business

Australian Aldi customer slammed for cashier rant

A shopper who went on an angry rant after claiming she was short-changed at Aldi has been slammed online.

The customer took to Facebook to vent her frustrations at a checkout worker who claims short-changed her by 50c.

The shopper shared a picture of a packet of smoked salmon that had a red ‘reduced’ sticker on the front, with a price of $7.19.

Next to it was an Aldi receipt that showed the salmon being charged at the full price of $13.99.

After returning to complain, the customer said the cashier tried to rectify the issue and showed the follow-up receipt with the correct price and the woman’s owed change of $6.80.

However, the customer claims that the cashier mistakenly only gave her $6.30 in change – meaning she was still owed 50c.

“Today as usual I did my weekly shop at my local Aldi in Broadmeadows,” she began the post.

“It didn’t turn out to be pleasant. The checkout staff charged me full price for a product that was on special.

“I approached her and told her she gave me the wrong change, but insisted that is what it says on the till.

“My math is not great but if I was charged $13.99 for something that is $7.19, I should be refunded the difference right?

“She only gave me $6.30 instead of $6.80.

“The worst part was she said if it’s not correct then she’d give me the difference. She made me feel like I was in the wrong.

“So I waited a few minutes to explain to her that she indeed gave me the wrong change but the line was just too long.

“I know it’s only 50c but money is money plus her attitude was despicable. End of rant.”

Although a few people were sympathetic to the shopper’s situation, many slammed her post and urged her to “be kind”.

“It’s easy to get flustered in situations like this, try not to be too hard on them,” commented one.

“It’s 50 cents, you need to chill,” said another.

“Go easy on customer service staff please. It’s been a really crappy few years for us,” one group member commented.

“You can’t possibly imagine the abuse and negativity we have received. Be kind.”

“Maybe she just got flustered and made a mistake considering you ‘confronted her’. Cashiers at Aldi can serve over 200 people in a shift so mistakes will happen,” said another.

“They have a lot going on, with speed, lines, working out money and more. Maybe next time show a bit more understanding for the cashier just trying to do her best de ella. ”

News.com.au understands that if any customers have concerns about a store experience they can visit the Aldi help center for more information.

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Technology

Xiaomi unveils humanoid robot CyberOne as robot market booms

A screenshot of Xiaomi founder and CEO Lei Jun introducing humanoid robot CyberOne at the press conference, August 11, 2022. /Xiaomi

A screenshot of Xiaomi founder and CEO Lei Jun introducing humanoid robot CyberOne at the press conference, August 11, 2022. /Xiaomi

Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi introduced a human-sized robot called CyberOne at its product launch event, along with a slew of products such as new foldable phone and budget phone models on Thursday in Beijing.

The 177cm tall and 52 kilogram weighing CyberOne is Xiaomi’s new member in its cyber family following the CyberDog released last year – an experimental product for limited sale.

Xiaomi said the human-size robot has high emotional intelligence and can perceive human emotions. The robot is visually sensitive and able to perform three-dimensional virtual reconstruction of the real world. It also can perform different motions on two feet.

A human-sized robot with two feet is more complex than robots with four legs. The former requires more powerful motors, and more complicated algorithms and degrees of movement.

The new technologies developed for the robot could also be used in an array of other projects such as smart cars.

Robots are becoming increasingly popular with their fast-growing intelligence thanks to the technology advances. More companies are joining in the arena for the emerging market such as SenseTime’s Chinese chess robot and Tencent’s second generation four-legged robot dog.

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Entertainment

Married mums have IVF ‘twins’ born four days apart

A couple who announced both partners were expecting babies through IVF have given a glimpse into their family life just weeks after their children were born four days apart.

Aussie couple Laura and Suzie Francis-Mathers both gave birth in July, with Mackenzie Rose and Marlow Lachlan born on July 22 and 26 respectively.

The pair had previously announced they were expecting the children a month apart when taking to Instagram to share their news.

But baby Marlow decided to make his entrance into the world early as he “didn’t want to miss out on the fun”.

Now, as they settle into looking after the two new additions, the pair have taken the time on Laura’s birthday to thank everyone for the support through their journey.

“It’s Laura’s birthday today, which has been really lovely. We’ve had a family day celebrating with our two babies and Laura’s parents and brother, which has been really nice,” Suzie said.

Laura joked she had received a card and presents from their children and she didn’t want to brag but the duo were “pretty advanced”.

“It’s so nice writing Laura a card and not saying, ‘I hope this time next year we have bubbas,’ or, ‘This is our year,’ you know?” Suzie said.

“We’ve actually managed to make it, which feels very lovely.

“Happy birthday Mummy.”

It was the first major update since the announcement of the children’s arrival.

“We’re alive,” the pair joked at the start of the video.

Laura then thanked everyone for their kind messages following the announcement of the children’s births.

“We’re just taking a moment while the bubbas are asleep just over there, we thought it was a good moment to say thank you and check in. It’s been an amazing time,” she said.

Suzie jumped in to reveal the last few weeks since welcoming Mackenzie and Marlow had been a “whirlwind.”

The pair said they had been asked a lot about their birth stories and revealed they would have lots to share in the coming weeks about how it all went, describing the time as “pretty mad”.

“For now, we are just getting through the day-to-day and sleeping when we can but we’re doing pretty well,” Laura said.

The pair said they were proud of what they had achieved in the first few weeks of parenthood.

Earlier this year, the couple shared a video of when they both realized they had fallen pregnant.

After two years, six [IVF] rounds, 10 transfers, two chemical pregnancies and countless injections between us, there are many videos on our camera rolls that don’t look like this,” they wrote in the caption.

“It’s been a ‘journey’ as they say, that’s turned into an adventure we are so excited to be embarking upon.”

The video showed both Laura and Suzie finding out they’re pregnant with squeals of joy, and a few tears.

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Sports

James O’Connor to replace Quade Cooper as Wallabies No.10 against Argentina, Put Fa’amausili Test debut

“’La’ (Foketi) has his best season ever from a Super point of view,” Rennie said.

“He is a good athlete, good feet and has an ability to beat people through that, or transfer and fend. He is as sharp and as quick as I have seen him, and he is committed and making good shifts.”

Dave Rennie was full of praise for Lalakai Foketi's exploits in Super Rugby.

Dave Rennie was full of praise for Lalakai Foketi’s exploits in Super Rugby.Credit:Getty

Elsewhere, Rory Arnold has overcome a niggling calf injury and will start alongside Darcy Swain in the second row. Taniela Tupou will start at tighthead prop, with Allan Ala’alatoa having flown home for personal reasons.

For the second week in a row, a Rebels prop will make his debut off the bench, with Pone Fa’amausili to play his first match for the Wallabies.

The 130kg prop, who also stands 196cm tall, has been a powerhouse for Melbourne since making his debut in 2018 but has battled a series on injuries that have restricted his game time.

The former rugby league junior made his first Wallabies squad at the end of 2020 but will finally get a taste of action.

Wallabies team to play Argentina, San Juan, Sunday 5am (AEST)

  1. James Slipper (c)
  2. Folau Fainga’a
  3. Taniela Tupo
  4. Rory Arnold
  5. darcy swine
  6. Jed Holloway
  7. Fraser McReight
  8. Rob Valetini
  9. Nick White
  10. James O’Connor
  11. Marika Koroibete
  12. Lalakai Foketi
  13. Len Ikitau
  14. Jordy Petaia
  15. Tom Wright

Reserves 16. Lachlan Lonergan, 17. Matt Gibbon, 18. Pone Fa’amausili, 19. Nick Frost, 20. Pete Samu., 21. Tate McDermott, 22. Irae Simone, 23. Reece Hodge.

Matt Philip has dropped out of the 23-man squad entirely, with Rennie preferring Nick Frost on the bench.

Going with a more traditional 5-3 bench, Rennie has also given Irae Simone a recall after last selecting the 27-year-old in 2020 for two Tests against the All Blacks.

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Simone was due to join Clermont this month but with Samu Kerevi unavailable, and Izaia Perese injured, the ex-Brumbies center was drafted in as cover for the Wallabies midfield. With Paisami the latest to fall victim to the Wallabies’ injury curse, Simone can potentially add a third cap to his name from him.

Reece Hodge maintains his place on the bench to cover multiple positions, and for the fifth time this year, Rennie has swapped the back-up halfback job again. Tate McDermott has come in for Jake Gordon in the No.21 jersey.

Watch every match of The Rugby Championship on the Home of Rugby, Stan Sport. Continue this weekend with South Africa v All Blacks (Sunday 12.30am AEST) and Argentina v Wallabies (Sunday 4.45am AEST). All matches streaming ad-free, live and on demand on Stan Sport.

Categories
Australia

Aboriginal man dies in custody at Melbourne’s Port Phillip Prison

An Aboriginal man has died in custody at a Melbourne prison.

The man, aged in his 30s, died at Port Phillip Prison on Wednesday, hours after returning to the maximum security facility from St Vincent’s Hospital, where he was treated after an incident in his cell.

Victoria's Port Phillip Prison

Victoria’s Port Phillip PrisonCredit:Craig Abraham

Concerns have since been raised about possible delays in reaching the man to provide medical assistance before he died at the prison at Truganina.

Those with knowledge of death said the man was due to be released from custody in coming weeks.

A spokesperson from the Department of Justice and Community Safety confirmed the inmate’s death.

“It is with great sorrow that Corrections Victoria acknowledges the passing of a prisoner at Port Phillip Prison. As with all deaths in custody, the matter has been referred to the coroner, who will formally determine the cause of death,” the spokesperson said.

News of the man’s death comes less than three months after an inquest was held into the death of Aboriginal woman Veronica Nelson at the women’s prison in nearby Ravenhall.

During the inquest, the coroner was told more than 500 First Nations people had died in custody since the findings from the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody were handed down in 1991.

A friend of the dead man described him as a strong warrior. “We will catch up in the dreamtime brother,” he wrote.

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US

Ex-Police Officer Gets 7 Years in Prison for Role in Jan. 6 Attack

A federal judge sentenced a former police officer on Thursday to more than seven years in prison for his role in the Jan. 6 attack, equaling the longest punishment handed down so far in the Justice Department’s sprawling investigation into the Capitol riot.

The man, Thomas Robertson of Ferrum, Va., was sentenced to seven years and three months in prison, followed by three years of supervised release, by Judge Christopher Cooper of US District Court in Washington.

A federal jury found Mr. Robertson, 49, guilty in April of five felonies, including obstruction of an official proceeding, civil disorder, and carrying a weapon in a restricted building, according to the US Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia. Prosecutors said the Army veteran, who had wielded a large stick and donned a gas mask during the riot, had confronted police officers who were trying to stop the increasingly violent crowd.

“Thomas Robertson, despite swearing an oath of office when he became a police officer, joined the violent mob at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, and did so while armed,” Matthew M. Graves, the US attorney, said in a statement.

The punishment came 10 days after another federal judge sentenced Guy Wesley Reffitt, the first defendant to go on trial in the attack on the Capitol, to seven years and three months in prison. That judge, Dabney L. Friedrich, said the sentence was significantly longer than any handed down so far to the more than 800 people arrested in connection with the riot.

Mark Rollins, a lawyer for Mr. Robertson, said on Thursday that he planned to appeal his client’s conviction.

In a handwritten letter to Judge Cooper filed on July 28, Mr. Robertson, a former member of the Rocky Mount Police Department in Virginia, said that he had been “exposed to lots of pro Trump and anti Biden media” shortly before the riot because he had been taking care of an ill friend who was an enthusiastic supporter of the former president.

“I’ve never been a huge Trump supporter, and in fact totally agreed with VP Pence that he had no Constitutional authority to delay the vote tally,” Mr. Robertson wrote. “My arrival at the Capitol after the rally was as much a function of crowd following as anything, and nobody was more surprised than me that I was able to walk unimpeded directly to the Capitol.”

Prosecutors, however, painted a different picture. In court documents, they said that Mr. Robertson believed the presidential election had been fraudulent and became determined to overturn the results. On Jan. 6, they said, Mr. Robertson and another police officer drove to Washington, attended the “Stop the Steal” rally on the National Mall and then donned gas masks at the Capitol.

Mr. Robertson, who was trained in using a police baton, brandished a large wooden stick in a tactical position and blocked the path of officers who tried to stop the violent advance. Mr. Robertson met up with the other officer, Jacob Fracker, 30, inside the Capitol, and they took a selfie of themselves making an obscene gesture, prosecutors said.

Mr. Fracker, who was also a member of the Rocky Mount Police Department, pleaded guilty in March 2021 to a federal conspiracy charge, prosecutors said, and was a witness for the prosecution at Mr. Robertson’s trial. Mr. Fracker’s sentencing is scheduled for Tuesday.

In the days after the attack, Mr. Robertson bragged on social media about his actions, prosecutors said. He said he was proud of a picture he had snapped of himself at the Capitol.

“It shows 2 men willing to actually put skin in the game and stand up for their rights,” Mr. Robertson wrote on Facebook, according to prosecutors. “If you are too much of a coward to risk arrest, being fired, and actual gunfire to secure your rights, you have no words to speak I value.”