The actor Ezra Miller has been charged with a felony burglary in Stamford, Vermont, the latest in a string of alleged incidents involving the embattled star of The Flash.
In a police report published on Monday, Vermont state police said they had responded to a burglary complaint in Stamford on May 1 and alleged several bottles of alcohol were taken from a residence while the homeowners were not present. After police consulted surveillance footage and interviewed witnesses, Miller was located and charged shortly before midnight on Sunday.
The police report said Miller was issued a citation to appear for arraignment in Vermont superior court on 26 September.
The felony charge adds to Miller’s mounting legal woes and reports of erratic behaviour. The 29-year-old actor was arrested twice earlier this year in Hawaii, first for disorderly conduct and harassment at a karaoke bar in March, then second-degree assault less than a month later.
The parents of 18-year-old Tokata Iron Eyes, a Native American activist, also earlier this year filed a protection order against Miller, accusing the actor in court of holding sway over their child through “violence, intimidation, threat of violence, fear , paranoia, delusions and drugs”. Tokata Iron Eyes recently told Insider that those allegations were false.
Attorneys for Miller didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment on the Vermont felony charge or the protection order related to Tokata Iron Eyes.
In July, two women who had separately accused Miller of threatening behavior spoke to Variety. One woman, who accused Miller of putting her in a chokehold and throwing her to the ground outside a bar in Iceland in 2020, said: “I think, ‘It’s just fun and games’ – but then it wasn’t. All of a sudden, [they’re] on top of me, choking me, still screaming in my face if I want to fight.” The woman blamed Miller’s friends rather than the actor personally for escalating the altercation.
The other woman accused the actor of harassing her and “seemingly” attempting to break down her apartment door in Berlin in early 2022, according to the report. Miller has declined to comment on the allegations published in Variety.
After appearing in several films for Warner Bros and DC Films as the Flash, Miller is set to star in the upcoming standalone film The Flash, due out in June 2023.
Warner Bros has been criticized for remaining committed to the film after reports of Miller’s alleged behavior emerged. Public criticism intensified last week when the studio announced it was axing the nearly completed Batgirl film, but not The Flash.
David Zaslav, the chief executive of Warner Bros Discovery, referenced The Flash in an earnings report last week.
“We have seen The Flash, Black Adam and Shazam 2. We are very excited about them,” Zaslav said. “We think they are terrific, and we think we can make them even better.”
Representatives for Warner Bros did not respond to requests for comment on Monday.
Coleman Medalist Harry McKay believes Carlton’s 2022 has been a successful campaign – even if it ultimately misses finals after being in the top eight since Round 1.
The Blues have been one of the stories of the AFL season, placing inside the top eight at the end of every round so far. After eight consecutive bottom-eight finishes, Michael Voss’ team now needs one more win to cement a finals berth for the first time since 2013.
But the Blues are now clinging to seventh spot on the ladder after a 33-point loss to Brisbane on Sunday – their fourth loss from their past six games.
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With two tough games against top-four sides Melbourne and Collingwood to finish their home and away season, the Blues are now in danger of missing finals, with St Kilda and, particularly, Richmond and the Western Bulldogs well placed to squeeze into the top eight .
The last team to be in finals places every round except the last was Carlton in 1977.
Asked on Fox Footy’s On The Couch if the Blues would still consider the 2022 season a success, even if they missed finals, McKay said: “Short answer yes.
“I think I judge success in terms of our environment that we’ve created. The last couple of years we’ve probably struggled in that space in terms of culture, environment, building a really solid gameplan.
“Whatever happens for the rest of the year, I guess that’s outcome-based. But for me as a player that’s been there seven or eight years, this 12 months have been a success. Whether that comes with finals or whatever it is, I think we’ve taken a really big step in the right direction.
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“’Vossy’ talked about the other day ‘hopefully it’s a long book and this is just Chapter 1’. We want to finish off the chapter really well, but it’s definitely still a success I reckon.”
While many Blues fans would struggle to comprehend missing the finals after so many victories in 2022, triple premiership Bomber Tim Watson said Carlton’s “trajectory is going in the right direction”.
‘What is that?’ Sloppy Blues torched | 01:52
“Success can be measured in a whole different lot of ways, but they are still improving and their graph is going in the right direction,” Watson told SEN Breakfast after hearing McKay’s comments.
“They built up a level of expectation, based on their performances earlier in the season, and I remember seeing them and thinking ‘yeah, they’re capable of actually winning the flag’.
“They’ve got some problems at the moment though – and partly to do with injury.”
McKay claimed last year’s Coleman Medal with a haul of 58 goals, but said he’d enjoyed this year more considering the team’s success to date.
“This year has been very enjoyable and a different place,” he said.
Carlton needs one more win to qualify for finals. Picture: Russell FreemanSource: Getty Images
“Although we did a lot right over the last couple of years, this year it’s just started to click. Some key changes to some key personnel have been really refreshing and really nice.
“The last few weeks have been challenging after a pretty solid first 16 to 18 rounds. It’s been a little bit disappointing we haven’t been able to play our best football, but we’re still in a really good and exciting position. Two big games at the MCG to finish the year and a chance to do something we haven’t been able to do in 10 or so years.
“Even post-game (Sunday afternoon), there was initial disappointment and frustration and we touched on a few things that didn’t go right. But before we walked out the door it was ‘what an amazing opportunity we’ve got’.
McKay said the Blues needed to improve their contested ball work, which had been “a little bit off” in the past fortnight, while they wanted to move the footy with more “dare”.
Screams of frustration are heard along the streets of Brockman in Carnarvon, as residents return home to discover they’ve been broken into yet again.
Key points:
Carnarvon Shire Council president Eddie Smith says parts of the town look like a “war zone”
Locals say they are living in fear of the increasing number of children breaking in to and damaging homes and properties
He has asked the state government to address the worsening crime problems
Twenty-two-year-old mother-of-one Teresa Peck said the front gate of the house has been sitting in tatters for three months after a stolen car crashed through it.
“This isn’t safe. This isn’t safe for anybody,” Ms Peck said.
“Especially for us mob. Basically people are just walking over us.”
Next door are two state government owned houses that were set to become homes after being renovated.
Ms Peck said they had been vandalized four times in the past week and were now uninhabitable.
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Carnarvon crime wave.(Kate Ferguson)
Next-door neighbor Doneka Oxenham said it was the same kids causing the same issues and they have had enough.
“I get on the phone to the police; [I] ring them up and they don’t come until the next day. What if they burnt themselves in that house? Even though it’s empty there’s still live wires in there,” she said.
Carnarvon Shire Council president Eddie Smith is pleading for more government support to manage escalating anti-social behavior that he said has left residents “absolutely broken” and rendered parts of the town a “war zone”.
Doneka Oxenham says she would like the Premier to visit the suburb of Brockman to see the damage first-hand.(ABC News: Kate Ferguson)
In a letter addressed to West Australian Premier Mark McGowan and several cabinet ministers, Mr Smith said change was needed in how the government approached problems in the town.
“What has been done in the past is not working and what is being done now has not changed,” Mr Smith said.
“What is changing is the increase in community members that are absolutely broken from the ongoing impact of the actions of those in our community that are not being held accountable for their actions, and then coming to me and begging for something to be done.”
Carnarvon Shire president Eddie Smith has described the vandalism as appalling.(ABC News: Kate Ferguson)
Mr Smith said some parts of town looked “like a war zone and at times [were] exactly that”, with ongoing domestic violence, child abuse, alcohol and drug abuse, and property damage.
“Businesses have been broken into multiple times — in fact, I don’t know anyone in our town who has not been impacted in some way, be it abuse, theft or damage to personal property,” he said.
Community leaders say too many state government services, like counseling for at risk children, are being managed from Geraldton which is about 500 kilometers away.
“There is no accountability. There is no oversight role. The management of most of these organizations is not in Carnarvon. It’s in Geraldton or in Perth,” Mr Smith said.
Knocked-over walls and damaged fences are common along this street according to its residents.(ABC News: Kate Ferguson)
‘The money has been allocated
Alannah MacTiernan, whose portfolios include regional development and food and agriculture, was one of the ministers who received Mr Smith’s letter.
Ms MacTiernan said funding for social initiatives in Carnarvon and the Gascoyne had been allocated, and she was confident programs being rolled out would address Mr Smith’s concerns.
“In the last budget [we made] an announcement that we were setting up a Target 120 project right here in Carnarvon so we’ll be putting together a program here which will focus on those most-at-risk families and working very intensively with them,” she said.
“The fact that Carnarvon has been included in that $11 million bucket of funding is very much testament to the work that the shire and Eddie have been doing, because they have highlighted the problems that are here in Carnarvon and across the north.”
Ms MacTiernan believed programs such as the Target 120 project were already a success in other regions and would make a difference to the town when implemented.
State housing is now uninhabitable following the most recent spate of vandalism.(ABC NewsKate Ferguson )
Mr Smith said the local council initiated programs that were making a small change but without the state government’s support, it would not achieve what was required.
“I implore you and the ministers to visit Carnarvon to witness first-hand what is happening and hopefully gain an insight into how, with collaboration, we may make the changes our community desperately needs,” he said.
The Chinese military also launched roughly a dozen missiles near Taiwan, including at least one that appeared to fly directly over the island.
Kahl’s comments that the Pentagon does not think that China will imminently invade Taiwan reflect attempts by the Biden administration to downplay the drills, with officials saying they are more bluster than an indication of military activity.
But Kahl condemned China’s attempt to “slice salami their way into a new status quo” by repeatedly overflying the median line.
“Really, it’s the activities in the strait itself, the sheer number of maritime and air assets that are crossing over this kind of de facto centerline, creeping closer to Taiwan’s shores,” that officials are noticing, Kahl said.
“It’s clear that Beijing is trying to create a kind of new normal with the goal of trying to coerce Taiwan but also frankly to coerce the international community given the importance of the Taiwan Strait to the global economy,” he added.
Kahl said China’s reaction to Pelosi’s visit was a “manufactured” crisis, noting that US representatives regularly travel to Taiwan.
The United States continues to support a One China policy and does not recognize Taiwan as a separate nation, but Washington supports Taipei with arms sales for self-defense.
“Our policy has not changed, it is support for the status quo,” Kahl said. “China’s policy is what’s changed.”
Real estate experts say Australia is experiencing a rental crisis that’s set to worsen without government intervention, and so-called “zombie” homes are fueling the problem.
A zombie home is a property that is occupied only part of the time – such as a holiday house listed on Airbnb – that is not available to rent on a short or long term lease but can generate large profits for the owner.
For example, a good property in a regional town, near the beach or one in inner Sydney could fetch $1000 for a weekend but just $800 on a weekly basis under a leasing arrangement, First National Real Estate CEO Ray Ellis said.
“It’s a lot easier to take your investment property out of the full-time rental mix and put it into the short-term rental mix which is basically AirBnB or weekend accommodation,” Mr Ellis told news.com.au.
“If you could get $800 a week by having someone there full-time but you can get $1000 for a Saturday and Sunday, and don’t have to go through all the extra legislation requirements, you’ll do it, because you’re making the same return,” he said.
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Throughout any city there’s “hundreds if not thousands” of zombie homes, especially in coastal areas, that are occupied one or two days a week, Mr Ellis said.
“There’s now too many occurring in most cities in Australia.”
The benefit for owners – apart from the financial element – was not having the long-term commitment of dealing with renters, he added.
Zombie homes are widespread, with last year’s census revealing that during lockdown and while Australia’s borders were closed, there were more than 1 million unoccupied properties.
While it’s a win-win for landlords, renters are suffering with rents souring and long queues of desperate prospective tenants lining up to inspect properties. This has forced some to live in their cars, a motel or caravan – even couch surfing – to keep a roof over their heads.
“Investors are putting their properties out for Airbnb, but it’s taking rental properties away from renters and that lack of … properties available to rent is driving demand and prices up,” Finder money expert Rebecca Pike told 7NEWS.com.au.
PropTrack’s latest rental report for the June quarter found the number of renters per property listed on realestate.com.au had risen 28 per cent year-on-year across capital cities, with Sydney and Melbourne experiencing the greatest increase.
The number of rental listings in Sydney fell 21 per cent in the last year. The largest declines in listings were recorded in Melbourne (-25.7 per cent) and Brisbane (-24 per cent).
Overall, the number of new listings coming on to the market was 13.8 per cent lower than the decade average in June.
The strong demand for rentals and limited supply was leading to significant increases in advertised rent prices, the report found.
Rental prices in Sydney have grown by 6 per cent over the past year, after having fallen throughout the early part of the pandemic.
The median rental price for a house in Sydney is currently $620 a week and $500 for a unit.
Nationally, the median weekly rent for a house is $490 and $440 for units.
With higher land tax charges for investors and larger interest rates, many of these costs are being passed on to renters causing rents to rise even further, the report added.
Ms Pike told 7NEWS.com.au the rental crisis needed urgent action and would get worse over the coming months.
“We’re definitely seeing that demand for rental housing going up because we have so many more people coming into the country, whereas during Covid we really saw that drop,” she said. “There is definitely more demand at the moment, but there’s also less supply.
“Also with the RBA cash rate, if investors are paying more for their loans, they’re potentially passing that on to renters.”
The first photo Richard Crawley ever took was a family portrait, when he was only a boy: a blurry black-and-white picture of his parents and siblings, frozen in time. It’s the kind of forgettable photo others might throw out, but for Crawley, now 71, it was the beginning of the rest of his life.
Over the following decades, he has captured about 400 hours of footage of everything that made up his life in Victoria, Australia – house moves, holidays, school pickups, pets, renovations. His main subjects were his wife Carol (who “tolerated” the filming) and his son James. Sometimes his inspirations from him were odd. “There’s the cutlery!” he proclaims, yanking open the drawer, in a moment of surviving footage. Or: “I’m just going to video these tomatoes,” he says seriously, zooming in on a very ordinary basket of tomatoes. He captured baby James eating an orange for a whole hour. Whatever his reason for it, he never did anything with the film.
But James, now 34, did: premiering at Melbourne film festival this month, his documentary Volcano Man was a way to better understand Richard who,in a time of great tragedy, the father was not needed.
Richard’s impulse to film things, James observes in the documentary, is “less for his family and more for him – its the same reason someone writes their name on a bathroom wall: I’m here, I exist, I did this.” Richard, on the other hand, views his habit of him as a “celebration of this extraordinary thing we call life.” When the three of us meet, he gives us both various explanations involving photography and Diane Arbus and cinéma vérité.
“And that’s why I filmed you eating an orange for an hour,” he finishes, addressing James. “It went on for an hour, so I filmed for an hour!”
“I still don’t get it,” James says.
Richard Crawley in the 1990s, in a still from Volcano Man. Photographer: Richard Crawley
In Volcano Man, father and son step uneasily around each other in their new roles as subject and director. “The first 30 seconds are critical – but then again, I’m not the director, am I?” Richard says during his introduction to him, a little prickly. He is the dream subject: a kind-hearted, gregarious, frustrating, often arrogant man; a former photographer who loves taekwondo, rock music and his red Ferrari from him. He possesses an unrivaled optimism – his much-repeated mantra of him is “onwards and upwards” – and an unwavering self-belief that amazes and sometimes irritates his son, who sees behind the embellishments and bravado.
How does Richard feel, that his son made the film instead of him? “I love no one more than Jamie – he’s my son, but he’s also my best friend in lots of ways. And so when you’ve got that kind of relationship, there’s a lot of trust involved… I’m delighted that the film has been made, even if it’s not by me.” I have chuckles.
“I said to James, you can use anything you like, no holds barred. There’s no bullshit here.” I have paused. “I think I’ve been quite courageous, actually. So have James.”
Richard wasn’t always the dream father. When Carol died at the age of 52 from cancer, James felt his father’s relentless optimism had disguised how sick Carol had been in the lead-up, denying him more time to say goodbye. “Just like that, mum was gone. He kept saying how she wouldn’t want us to feel bad,” he says, in Volcano Man. “But all I wanted to do was feel bad, with him.”
James watching his father’s ‘grief tapes’. Photographer: Jamie Gray
Meanwhile, alone in his house in Tower Hill – built on the rim of a dormant volcano – Richard began documenting his loneliness and grief. “I’m just really lonely,” he weeps in one clip; in another, he rages at the “incoherent, indulgent bullshit” he is making. “Who is going to want to see this?” he pleads to the camera.
James knew his father had filmed his grieving process but hadn’t wanted to watch it. “I was busy enough trying to work out the grief thing myself,” he says. But in Christmas 2020, James watched the 30-hours of footage by himself, “which was pretty harrowing. It’s pretty full on, very raw.”
But both men knew there was the makings of something great in there, so James went back and watched the rest of Richard’s footage, including the exact moment James burst into the world, squalling in the doctor’s arms.
“With something so close, you can’t see the forest for the trees. I watch the film now and see my life. I’m amazed people think it’s good. It’s just stuff to me,” James says. “I was most terrified about making something that meant something to me and Dad and no one else. How do you make the specific universal?”
“It’s easy,” Richard interjects. “You make your dad seem a bit unhinged.”
“Well,” James says. “Everyone gets frustrated with their parents. And your greatest strength, Dad, is also your greatest frustration for your son, which is your attitude – which is an amazing attitude and very unique and incredibly optimistic and a wonderful way to live.”
‘An amazing attitude and very unique and incredibly optimistic and a wonderful way to live’ … Richard Crawley. Photographer: Jamie Gray
At its heart, Volcano Man is about two men grieving in identical and utterly different ways. While they don’t always understand each other, they come to a point where they can finallyhave a conversation about her death. “It took me years, and a film, to be able to talk about the things that I needed to talk about,” James says. “But I wouldn’t change any of it. It was the right thing to do at the time. Being emotionally available is very important. You’re never gonna get clarity on all of it or work it all out – but if you don’t try, then what’s the point?”
“Exactly,” says Richard. “That’s why we’re here!”
The film is dedicated to “all the mums, especially Carol”. It’s hard not to feel envious, at times, that both men have such a complete record of their loved one – perhaps incidental in Richard’s quest to make his mark on the world, as James says, but as Richard would put it, it is still a celebration of Carol.
“It is amazing to bring her back, in a way, in this film – it has been lovely for me,” says James. “And a catharsis for sure. It’s a goodbye that I didn’t get to say the way I wanted to. But now I can. And we wouldn’t have done it at all, if you hadn’t filmed everything, Dad.”
“One thing leads to another,” Richard says. “To have this out there, I’m really pleased. And the fact James has done it – great! Mission accomplished.” You did the hard work, I say, and he laughs: “James had the easy bit!”
Essendon has made preliminary inquiries around unsigned North Melbourne forward Cam Zurhaar.
Zurhaar has been sitting on a Kangaroos contract for two months and has understandably held off committing given the ongoing uncertainty around who will take over as senior coach.
While the Bombers have some interest in the 24-year-old goalkicker, there is also a belief he re-signs at Arden Street once a coach is named.
Further, Essendon have other holes they want to fill, particularly the addition of a big-bodied midfielder.
Josh Dunkley requested a trade to the Dons in 2020, but the Western Bulldogs held the onballer to his contract. Angus Brayshaw was an Essendon target earlier this year before signing back on at Melbourne.
The Bombers feel a bigger midfielder would complement an existing engine room which includes Zach Merrett (179cm), Darcy Parish (180cm), Dylan Shiel (182cm), Jye Caldwell (183cm) and youngster Ben Hobbs (183cm).
Dunkley’s contract expires this year and while the Dogs have presented him with a long-term offer, negotiations have progressed slowly.
The Dunkley camp hasn’t rejected the offer, but haven’t presented a counter-offer, either.
Dunkley is said to be happy and engaged at Whitten Oval, but while the Dogs expect him to stay it’s not moving quickly.
Brisbane Lord Mayor Adrian Schrinner will release further details on Tuesday but the research and proposals have already been discussed by civic cabinet and development along the corridor has been ruled out.
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The extensive documentation, including a business case, has also been provided to Infrastructure Australia and the Queensland government.
While Schrinner has yet to comment on the research, or proposals, he announced more Brisbane Metro vehicles on Monday and said: “I am now more confident than ever that we can look towards expanding the Metro network to other areas of our city.”
Former Labor state governments had planned extra bus lanes for the corridor and possible western bypass tunnels under the original Western Brisbane Transport Network strategy in 2009.
The latest research also flagged another possible tunnel south from Everton Park to Toowong, similar to one examined by a former Labor state government. It would link up with the Western Freeway and Legacy Way.
Brisbane’s CBD from the lookout on top of the Chermside Hill Reserve.Credit:Tony Moore
Brisbane City Council infrastructure committee chair Andrew Wines said escalating congestion costs and environmental issues meant there was no option but to go underground.
“This study shows the economic cost of north Brisbane’s congestion will be a staggering $1.5 million a day within a decade, which is totally unacceptable,” Wines told BrisbaneTimes.
“Brisbane is the fastest-growing capital city in the country and our northern neighbors in Moreton Bay – who are investigating options for alternatives to the Bruce Highway – are also growing quickly.
“This study must start a conversation between all levels of government – and the private sector – about options to ensure northside commuters get home sooner and safer.”
The preserved corridor between Gympie Road at Carseldine and Shand Street at Alderley was identified in the 1980s and has remained largely free of houses since then.
However, the research found many threatened and endangered species in parks along the original Trouts Road route from Stafford to Carseldine: the large Chermside Hills Reserve, the Downfall Creek Bush Reserve, Mine Hill Reserve and Sparkes Hill Reserve at Alderley.
Environmental issues identified in Chermside Hills Reserves and linked parks
Flora
Chermside Hills Reserve is considered a high-risk trigger area.
There are approximately 21 threatened plant species recorded within the vicinity of the corridor.
This includes endangered eucalypt woodland and open forest community
It is significant conservation value, only found in the Chermside Hills Reserve area. The ecosystem cannot be offset in another location.
Fauna
The identified threatened and vulnerable species are powerful owls, gray headed flying foxes and tusked frogs, in addition to sugar and squirrel gliders.
Koalas are regularly spotted in the Chermside Hills Reserve. Evidence of their presence was detected during environmental investigations undertaken as part of the development of the business case.
cultural heritage
The study found it has a “rich Aboriginal peoples’ history”.
Examples include artefact scatters, marked trees, earthen features, pathways, stone arrangements, story places and campsites.
“A future detailed business case will be important to confirm the presence of Aboriginal cultural heritage values in the study area and strategies to manage potential impacts.”
Those environmental concerns rule out the original plan – first considered in the 1960s – to transform Trouts Road into a four-lane highway between Alderley and Carseldine.
Community concern over the prospect of a highway running between bushland and housing estates, and altering local traffic flows, had seen the future of the corridor debated in recent federal, state and council election campaigns.
Looking towards Brisbane CBD down Old Northern Road from Everton Hills.Credit:Tony Moore
The research shows the proposed underground motorway would reduce traffic on Transurban’s existing Airport Link and Legacy Way toll tunnels by between 11 and 31 per cent by 2041.
However, it reduces traffic on major northside arterial roads; including Gympie Road (35 per cent less traffic by 2041) and Wardell Street (down 23 per cent by 2041).
The long-term plan is to increase bus lanes on those arterial roads.
The RACQ’s 2021 congestion report released in February 2022 shows Stafford, Old Northern, South Pine, Rode and Hamilton roads slowing to mid 30km/h during peak periods, adding minutes to trips.
SCRANTON, Pa. — A defense attorney targeted vulnerable clients and pressured them into having sex in exchange for legal work, the Pennsylvania attorney general’s office said Monday.
Corey J. Kolcharno is charged with four counts of promoting prostitution after an investigation found he sexually exploited clients, tethering “his performance as their counsel to a demand for sexual services from them or in exchange for payment,” police wrote in an affidavit.
Kolcharno — a former Lackawanna County prosecutor — was arraigned Monday and released on a $20,000 unsecured bail. A statement issued by his attorney from him said Kolcharno “has made a conscious decision to accept responsibility.” Kolcharno told reporters he intended to give up his law license.
According to state police, Kolcharno targeted women who struggled with addiction, had been sexually abused or had financial problems. At first he requested nude photos or worn underwear, then escalated his predatory behavior into a demand for sex in exchange for legal services, authorities said. I have paid his clients as much as $500, police said.
Victims said they were ashamed but felt they had no choice but to give in, authorities said.
Kolcharno “picked these victims because they had limited choices, because he thought they would be easy to silence, and less likely to be believed if they ever came forward,” Attorney General Josh Shapiro said in a written statement.
Investigators said they found hundreds of sexually explicit images of Kolcharno’s clients on his cellphone.
Police said the crimes took place between 2018 and 2022, when Kolcharno was a partner in the Fanucci & Kolcharno law firm outside Scranton.
Before reentering private practice, Kolcharno was an assistant district attorney in Lackawanna County from 2005-2011.
Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation has almost doubled its profits in 2021/22 to a record $US760m ($A1.1bn).
The US-listed company owns News Corp Australia, as well as numerous mastheads in the US and UK, alongside book publisher HarperCollins and a majority stake in real estate advertising company REA Group.
Net income increased 95% on the previous year, while revenue for the year ended June 2022 reached another record at $US10.4bn ($A14.9bn), an increase of 11%.
The unprecedented result was driven by the company’s news media division, which saw $US217m ($A311m) profit growth through digital advertising revenue expansion and record digital subscriber numbers.
In an ebullient presentation to investors, the company said it had seen seven years of uninterrupted double-digit growth, which has resulted from acquisitions and digital transformation.
“The business has been fundamentally transformed, we are vastly more profitable and have created a potent platform for even greater growth, to the benefit of all our investors and other stakeholders,” the chief executive, Robert Thomson, said in the results release.
In the most recent quarter, overall revenues were up 7% to $US2.67bn ($A3.83bn), while net income was back in the black at $US127m ($A182m), compared with a net loss in the fourth quarter of the previous year.
Dow Jones, publisher of the Wall Street Journal, achieved the highest revenue since its acquisition, driven by record advertising, and growing digital-only subscriptions.
Fourth-quarter profitability at Dow Jones soared 54% to $US106m ($A152m), leading to a 30% increase for the year to $US433m ($A620m).
Declines in broadcast viewing at Foxtel were offset by streaming revenues from Kayo and Binge, with more than 2.8m streaming subscribers in total.
Digital real estate division revenues, including results for REA Group and Move, grew by a quarter.
The acquisition of HMH books and media saw revenues climb 10% in News Corp’s book publishing division, with consumer spending above pre-pandemic levels.