Categories
US

Girl, 15, fatally shot in the head in West Baltimore; police ID 9-year-old as shooter – Baltimore Sun

A 15-year-old girl was playing on her front porch Saturday night in West Baltimore’s Edmondson Village when she was shot in the head, Baltimore Police said. She was pronounced dead at a local hospital.

Police on Sunday identified the suspected shooter as a 9-year-old boy who accidentally shot her while playing with a loaded gun. The boy dropped the gun and fled the scene after the shooting. The gun is registered to a woman who is a relative of the boy and works as an armed security guard, police said.

The boy will not be criminally charged because of his age, police said.

Neighbors who live in the 600 block of Linnard Street described hearing familiar sounds of children playing around 8 pm when a single, sharp pop rang out. Friendly chatter turned into horrified screams. A man waited, “They shot my daughter,” a neighbor said Sunday morning.

Officers arrived shortly after and found the girl unresponsive. On Sunday, her mother identified her as 15-year-old Nykayla Strawder. Police had previously said the girl was 14.

Nykerah Strawder said her daughter was special and that she fought to stay alive. The teenager loved to dance and make videos on TikTok. She loved her siblings of her. She was shot on the front porch of her family’s home.

Strawder pleaded for young people to stop using firearms.

“I want children to be safer. To put the guns away, get rid of these guns,” Strawder said between tears. “I lost my daughter; I’ll never be the same.”

The shooting drew a large police presence and attracted a crowd Saturday night. By Sunday morning, crickets and gospel music drifting from the nearby Manifest Wonders Christian Church were the only sounds that filled Linnard Street. A basketball rested on the front porch. There was no sign there was a fatal shooting hours before.

Neighbors and friends stopped by the house where Nykayla Strawder lived to offer support to her family. A man who stood in the doorway closed his eyes, raised his head toward the sky and cried.

The single shot and the screams that followed could be heard up the block, several neighbors said. Avis Welborn saw multiple children playing on the porch before the shooting and recognized that the group had hung out together before.

“They seemed to be friends,” Welborn said.

Theresa Hargrave, who lives nearby, described the area as quiet. Hargrave bemoaned how easy it is for children and teenagers to get their hands on guns and she blamed careless adults for not locking up their firearms.

“An adult brought that in the house; an adult needs to be responsible for not keeping the gun secure,” Hargrave said. “This is not the first time an adult is responsible for a child’s death. There is no excuse for this.”

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A child was criminally charged Friday in the Wednesday shooting death of an 8-year-old girl in Idlewylde, south of Towson. Baltimore County Police have provided few details about the shooting, the juvenile whom they arrested or the third grade student who died.

A few weeks ago, Hargrave ran into Nykayla after the teen had tried to dye her hair red. Nykayla had forgotten to wear gloves, so the dye turned her forehead and hands a shade of red.

“It was so cute,” Hargrave said with a laugh.

Hargrave was driving home from the market Saturday afternoon when she spotted Nykayla a few hours before she died. She was wearing a lime green shirt and running around the yard, Hargrave said.

“The last time I saw her, she was smiling.”

Anyone with information is urged to contact detectives at 410-396-2100 or Metro Crime Stoppers at 1-866-7Lockup.

Baltimore Sun reporter Jacques Kelly contributed to this article.

Categories
Business

Roger Montgomery reshuffles large caps post poor returns, Sydney boutique Australian Eagle Asset Management brought in

Montgomery said he would remain the executive chair of the business, as well as the chief investment officer of the private fund.

Australian Eagle would keep its North Sydney offices for now, but would go into Montgomery’s Castlereagh Street offices on non-work-from-home-days.

Both funds were put on watch by rating houses Zenith Investment Partners and Lonsec, as they prepped for out-of-cycle reviews to weigh the manager changes.

Poor returns, high fees

The 10-year-old Montgomery Fund has posted 7.32 per cent annualized over the nine years to July 31 after fees, which was 0.67 percentage points a year lower than S&P/ASX 300 Accumulation Index over the period.

It’s ahead of the benchmark on a since-inception basis at 143.69 per cent cumulative return, versus 140 per cent from the index.

The private fund, which was and will be co-managed by Montgomery, fared worse. It has posted 133.29 per cent since it launched in December 2012, which was 13.4 per cent lower than the ASX 200 Industrials Accumulation Index.

Australian Eagle Asset Management’s Sean Sequeira. Tamara Voninsky

Its performance has worsened in the past year, with the fund returning -12.95 per cent when the benchmark did 3.48 per cent.

Montgomery pointed out the two funds’ returns were better than the benchmark on a three-year annualized basis.

“The MIM team have improved their performance over the last few years, but not many managers can match the track record of Sean and Alan and the team at Australian Eagle,” he said in response to the funds’ under-benchmark returns.

The new manager, Australian Eagle Asset Management, has been around since 2004/2005 and currently manages about $250 million. Its long-only strategy has beaten the index by 4.1 per cent since inception and by 3.82 per cent on a one-year basis, according to the firm. (It also runs a long/short strategy).

Montgomery Investment Management only works with smaller-ticket investors and has stayed away from managing money for institutional funds.

It was called out for its high fees and high cash allocation by Lonsec in 2020. Montgomery said it hadn’t changed its fees since then, and there was no immediate plan for them to change under the Australian Eagle deal.

Over the last three years, the firm has increasingly looked to external fund managers to expand its business, instead of building internal investment capabilities. It’s now in global equities (via distributing Polen Capital’s strategies down under), Australian small caps (via a joint venture with Gary Rollo and Dominic Rose) and credit (via a distribution agreement with Aura Funds Management).

“We’d be flattered to be thought of in those circles,” Montgomery said, when asked if his business had transitioned from an investment firm to a funds distribution business like Pinnacle, Fidante or GSFM.

“Difference is those operators would have multiple managers in similar strategies,” he said adding his firm was much more focused.

Categories
Technology

How you can get an iPhone for $600 – but what’s the catch?

The process of owning an iPhone these days feels like you’ll need to take out a small loan.

While its intuitive design makes it an easy choice among consumers, they’re not always the most affordable option. But one telco is turning the tables, allowing you to upgrade your device for less, while also offering a more sustainable solution for purchasing a new device.

In recent weeks Telstra MVNO Belong announced its partnership with Kingfisher Mobile Australia to bring customers to Second Life Shop, which offers both refurbished iPhones and Samsung Galaxy smartphones for a fraction of the price.

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Here’s what you can expect from your refurbished device:

  • 12-month warranty
  • A SIM card loaded with $80 of credit. This is available for use on any of Belong’s three postpaid mobile plans
  • 100 per cent functionality
  • A minimum of 80 per cent battery health

When you do the maths, you can potentially receive as many as the first three months’ worth of phone bills covered with the purchase of a given device. But it’s important to note these devices are not available on a traditional Belong repayment plan. Even if you’re not after a new phone, it’s a great bonus if you’re after a new SIM.

Sounds like a great deal? Check out the widget below for a quick round-up of Belong’s current postpaid plans:

Another perk to partnering with Belong is that it has doubled the data on these two plans:

  • $35 monthly plan with 40GB of data + 40GB bonus data for 12 months = 960GB total data per year
  • $45 monthly plan with 100GB of data + 100GB bonus data for 12 months = 2400GB total data per year

These plans offer 480GB and 1200GB bonus mobile data, respectively, when you total the monthly bonus across the year. Take advantage of double the data on their $35 and $45 monthly plans over 12 months when you stay on your chosen plan.

So which models are up for grabs? At the time of writing, Belong’s refurbished device reseller stocks the following brands and models:

  • Apple iPhone X from $399
  • Apple iPhone XR from $419
  • Apple iPhone XS from $429
  • Apple iPhone 11 from $599
  • Apple iPhone 11 Pro from $739
  • Apple iPhone 11 from $829
  • Samsung Galaxy S20 5G from $669
  • Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra 5G from $769
  • Samsung Galaxy S20+ 5G from $659
  • Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra from $949
  • Samsung Galaxy S20 FE 5G from $609

The range of devices on offer via the Belong Second Life Store is, however, more limited than what you’ll find at both carrier-agnostic retailers like Amazon and major carriers like Optus.

At the time of writing, numobile and Boost Mobile are the only other MVNOs on Telstra’s network offering refurbished devices.

The Refurb Shop, aka Boost’s competing refurbished phone store, offers some devices at a slightly cheaper price but they only include a $30 prepaid SIM rather than $80 of credit.

Compare Boost Mobile, numobile and Belong’s mobile plans to make sure you’re getting the most bang for your buck:

This article contains affiliate links, whereby 7NEWS.com.au may earn a commission if you click on a link – at no extra cost to you.

Watch: Scientists stunned by discovery of a ‘walking shark’.

Watch: Scientists stunned by discovery of a ‘walking shark’.

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Categories
Entertainment

Netflix Talks “Sandman” Aspect Ratio Confusion




Netflix Talks Sandman Aspect Ratio Confusion
Netflix

Some tuning into Netflix’s highly-anticipated series adaptation of Neil Gaiman’s comic magnum opus “The Sandman” have reportedly been confused over some creative choices with the show’s aspect ratio.

The series delves into fantasy realms where dreams hold sway, and the makers of the series play with that by using slightly distorted cinematography at times. The result makes the cast seem to have slightly elongated faces and gives locations a surreal stretched look.

Some viewers, however, have mistaken it for a technical issue with Netflix’s stream. There’s been enough confusion that a spokesperson for Netflix has issued a statement (via Variety) having to confirm the image distortion is a deliberate creative choice: “As you’ll note many of the environments are surreal in the series, and we often say it’s quite what a dream would feel like.”

The statement comes as reviews for the series have been very good, with criticisms mostly being about the series being possibly too slavishly loyal to the comic at the cost of some not quite gelling with the material’s inherent strangeness.

“The Sandman” is currently streaming worldwide on Netflix.






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Categories
Sports

Zambian 400m sprinter Muzala Samukonga collapses, vomits, put in wheelchair after incredible finish

Just as an underdog Zambian sprinter set tongues wagging about an astonishing kick to snatch Commonwealth Games gold in the men’s 400m, attention turned to whether the teen was all right.

Muzala Samukonga had three rivals to mow down at the top of the home straight on Sunday, including two-time European champion Matthew Hudson-Smith, but produced a staggering finish to seize gold in 44.66.

He had pulled off a 1.23-second personal best to clinch the shock triumph, but he quickly descended into a frightening state.

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Samukonga collapsed as he celebrated, before getting up and continuing to celebrate but dropping to the ground again.

He vomited and was helped into a wheelchair as the Alexander Stadium crowd applauded, showing its appreciation for his Herculean effort.

“Extraordinary, bizarre, barrier-breaking last 100m,” said former British runner Tim Hutchings in commentary.

Samukonga had also punished himself in his 400m heat, knocking 0.13 of a second off his PB to win the race before racing into a world of hurt.

He collapsed, clutched at his left hamstring, punched his thigh and tried to return to his feet, only to collapse again.

He was taken from the track in a wheelchair.

Samukonga’s astounding performance in the final left silver for Hudson-Smith, who posted 44.81, and Jonathan Jones of Barbados pocketed bronze in the 44.89.

As Samukonga broke down in tears during the playing of the Zambian national anthem, Hudson-Smith put an arm around him.

Australian Steven Solomon finished seventh in 46.22.

The two-time Olympian’s fastest time of the Commonwealth Games was the 45.98 he had run in the opening round.

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Categories
US

‘Apocalyptic’ weather in Delaware sends beach umbrellas flying

Gusting winds hit coastal Delaware on Friday, with video showing dozens of beach umbrellas getting blown off the sand and swirling through the air.

Beachgoer Shane Mannix captured video at Bethany Beach as rain and winds swept the coast.

Visitors can be seen fleeing the beach as the gusting winds lift umbrellas out of the ground and into the ocean. One social media user described the scene as “downright apocalyptic-looking.”

According to witnesses, the severe weather appeared to pop up out of nowhere.

Bethany Beach is a small coastal town in Sussex County. With a population of around just over 1,000, the summer months bring in some 15,000 visitors to its shores.

The severe weather came a day after witnesses captured footage of a waterspout slamming into Smith Island off the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland.

That video, taken by Amy and Daniel Somers, shows debris flying in the air as the waterspout approached land.

Bethany Beach is a small coastal town in Delaware's Sussex County.
Bethany Beach is a small coastal town in Delaware’s Sussex County.
Twitter/@hbcarter

Significant damage to structures and properties has been reported on Smith Island, but there was no immediate word on any injuries to residents of the small island.

Fox News’ Andrea Vacchiano contributed to this report.

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Categories
Business

Have the tech giants finally had their bubble burst? I’d hate to speculate | John Naughton

A speculative bubble, wrote Nobel laureate Robert Shiller in irrational Exuberancehis landmark book on human foolishness, is “a situation in which news of price increases spurs investor enthusiasm, which spreads by psychological contagion from person to person, in the process amplifying stories that might justify the price increases and bringing in a larger and larger class of investors, who, despite doubts about the real value of an investment, are drawn to it partly through envy of others’ successes and partly through a gambler’s excitement”.

Observers of the tech industry are wearily familiar with this kind of irrationality. Throughout 2020 and 2021, as Covid-19 wreaked economic havoc on countries throughout the western world, the tech industry remained strangely untouched by what was happening on the ground. While the rest of us cowered in lockdown, the pandemic made tech bosses and owners insanely richer. Their companies grew faster and became even more profitable while other industries languished. Apple had so much extra cash that it spent $90bn (£74bn) – nearly the gross domestic product of Kenya – buying its own shares. Amazon laid out $50bn in 2021 on warehouses, hiring tens of thousands of employees, ordering fleets of electric vehicles and building cloud computing centers. And so on.

So while the pandemic had put many conventional companies on life support, it looked as though it had consolidated the dominance of Alphabet (neé Google), Amazon, Facebook, Microsoft and Apple, making them the new masters of our networked universe.

And then something happened. On 19 November 2021 the Nasdaq stock market index (which is heavily influenced by tech companies) stood at an all-time high of 16,057, then suddenly went into rapid decline. As I write, it stands at 12,369. And so the question became: was this just what economists euphemistically call a “market correction” or an indicator that this particular speculative bubble had really burst?

The answer, if the quarterly figures released last week by the tech giants are anything to go by, is that it looks as though the bubble has at least been punctured. The numbers, according to an analysis by Luke Gbedemah and Sebastian Hervas-Jones of Tortoise Media, suggest that a split is emerging between the companies that can “sustain an economic downturn and those that might be facing existential decline”. The figures indicate that, for the first time in the history of the industry, the combined real revenue growth rate of the companies was negative rather than positive and real revenues overall were less than the year before.

Alphabet’s revenues, for example, were up by 13% but its profits fell by 14%. Apple’s revenues increased by a whisker but profits were down by more than 10%. Amazon’s revenues were up by 7% but profits fell by a whopping 60.6%. Meta – that is, Facebook – had a terrible quarter, with revenues slightly down but profits dropping by 36%. Just about the only bright spot was Microsoft: its revenues were up by nearly a fifth, but even then profits just inched up by 2%.

In interpreting these numbers, the usual caveats apply: these are just one quarter’s results (though Meta has now had two dreadful ones); global supply chain problems and pulling out of Russia may have had a disproportionate impact on Apple; and Amazon’s results may reflect the impact of its huge investment in Rivian, the electric vehicle manufacturer, from which it has ordered 100,000 vehicles.

But overall, one has the feeling that these giant money-printing machines are moving into territory that is unfamiliar to them – territory where, instead of having endless resources for expansion and experimentation, margins will be squeezed, costs and perks cut, workers fired and efficiencies found. Suddenly, Alphabet’s chief executive is calling for staff “to be more entrepreneurial, working with greater urgency, sharper focus and more hunger than we’ve shown on sunnier days”. Similar sanctimonious exhortations are doubtless being issued by his counterparts at the other giants.

Two further thoughts stand out. The first is that the period of what one might call “tech exceptionalism” – the era when these companies and their cheerleaders were lauded for being different from normal, boring corporations – may be drawing to a close. From now on, they’re just corporations – like BT or Unilever.

The second is the extent to which we have all underestimated Microsoft simply because it fumbled the smartphone opportunity. Instead, it focused on providing the basic computational infrastructure of the organizational world. The NHS, for example, has something like 750,000 PCs, all of them running Microsoft operating systems and software. Ditto for the UK government, large corporations, university administrations and small and medium-size enterprises in the western world. And it now has a successful cloud computing business. It’s not glamorous or exciting but it’s a rock-solid, enduring business. If you bought shares in it 30 years ago, you’d have the basis for a pretty good pension now. And it’ll still be around when Facebook is just a bad memory.

What I’ve been reading

on sail
The Maintenance Race on the Works in Progress website is a riveting account by Stewart Brand of the first round-the-world solo yacht race.

Algorithm and blues
Kyle Chayka’s interesting new yorker essay The Age of Algorithmic Anxiety explores the subtle pressures of surveillance capitalism.

photo finish
Instagram Is Dead is an angry blogpost by talented photographer Om Malik about how Meta has destroyed a platform he valued.

Categories
Entertainment

Response Issued To Franco-Castro Casting




Response Issued To Franco Castro Casting
HBO

The recent news of the hiring of James Franco to play the late Cuban leader Fidel Castro in the upcoming feature “Alina of Cuba” has generated some backlash.

Now Alina Fernandez, the daughter of Castro and the subject of the film, has discussed the casting and seems to have no issue with Franco in the role.

She explains to Deadline that: “James Franco has an obvious physical resemblance with Fidel Castro, besides his skills and charisma”. She also says: “the project is almost entirely Latino, both in front and behind the camera” with Franco being an obvious exception.

The film also stars Ana Villafane as Alina and Mia Maestro as her mother, but the Franco casting is what’s being talked about. Actor John Leguizamo criticized the casting recently, saying on Instagram: “How is this still going on?… I don’t got a [problem] with Franco but he ain’t Latino!”

Added to that are the complications surrounding allegations against Franco, and the casting news overshadowing the film as Castro is not the focal point.

Miguel Bardem helms the movie about the Cuban exile-turned-social advocate Fernandez.






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Categories
Sports

Marianne Vos disqualified for ‘puppy paws’ after Vårgårda victory

Marianne Vos was celebrating victory at the Postnord Vårgårda WestSweden road race when commissaires made a very late decision to disqualify the Jumbo-Visma rider for breaking the so-called ‘puppy paws’ rule about 13 kilometers from the finish. With Vos relegated, Trek-Segafredo’s Audrey Cordon-Ragot inherited the victory.

“When I was in that ‘puppy paw position’, I quickly realized it was not allowed. I immediately switched to the correct position,” Vos said a while after the news broke. “Apparently, it was enough for the UCI to disqualify me.

“We’ll have to accept their decision. It is a pity, but it is a rule, and it is strictly enforced. You usually don’t ride in that position. I feel bad about it because I did not benefit from it, but rules are rules.”

The infraction came shortly after the decisive move broke clear from the speeding platoon. With the currently unbeatable Lorena Wiebes in the pack, attacks had been relentless in the late laps of the Swedish one-day race, and Vos was one of those determined to make something stick. She, Pfeiffer Georgi (DSM), Valerie Demey (Liv Racing Xstra) and Audrey Cordon-Ragot (Trek-Segafredo) eventually formed the winning move, and it was Vos who ultimately raised her arms in victory in Vårgårda.

Audrey Cordon-Ragot (Trek-Segafredo) wins Postnord Vårgårda WestSweden road race after disqualification of Marianne Vos (Jumbo-Visma).

However, there were rumblings among the most watchful eyes who had spotted Vos’s momentary lapse in judgment as decades of racing instinct brought her forearms down to her bars, fingertips dangling over the front wheel: ‘puppy paws’, ie a position that was banned by the UCI last season.

You had been celebrating a fourth victory at the race (she won in 2009, 2013 and 2018) with her teammates and giving post-race interviews, but all the while, the race jury was in discussion.

French national champion Cordon-Ragot was the fortunate beneficiary of Vos’s DSQ, but the upgrade from second place behind “the strongest rider in the peloton” to a 19th pro victory, her first at WorldTour level, registered as slightly hollow for the Trek-Segafredo rider.

“To be honest, I have a mixed feeling,” Cordon-Ragot said after learning she’d been crowned victor. “I’m super happy for the race I did, super proud of the performance of my teammates. We showed our strength with an amazing teamwork and my role was to finalize the huge work they did. That, for me, was the most important thing happened today and what I’ll retain from the race.”

Cordon-Ragot sees her victory in Sweden as just reward for herself and her team, which brought one of the strongest rosters to the Swedish one-day race, but concedes that, “On the other side, it’s a strange situation.

“After the finish line I was happy for my second place, and I am still proud of it,” Cordon-Ragot continued. “I had no regrets because I was beat by the strongest rider in the peloton at the moment. I was definitely not embarrassed to be second. But then I was told I was the winner and my name will be on the palmarès. Chapeau to Marianne, because she was the first who recognized that a rule is rule and accepted the sanction.”

Audrey Cordon-Ragot on the podium of the Vårgårda WestSweden road race.

That the final decision came more than 30 minutes after Vos had crossed the finish line makes the pill all the more bitter, echoing the devastatingly late disqualification suffered by Nils Eekhoff at the U23 road world champs in Harrogate in 2019.

It once again begs the question: surely an in-race infraction can and should be dealt with before the culprit has a chance of winning? Or having any more impact on the race?

As it is, with Vos being in that group, and one of the others being a teammate of Wiebes, it’s pretty likely that a DSQ on entry to the last lap, for instance, would have changed the outcome dramatically and Wiebes would be celebrating an umpteenth 2022 victory.

That said, the window was already pretty small, the incident coming so close to the end of the race, so it would have required very quick and decisive action from the race jury.

There is no perfect outcome, but what we’ve got is a race dominated tactically by Jumbo-Visma and Marianne Vos, whose signature is all over the last lap or so, but whose name does not appear at the top of the results sheet.

Postnord Vårgårda WestSweden RR (1.WWT)
Vargarda → Vargarda

CORDON-RAGOT Audrey
Categories
Australia

NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet says allegations he promised London role to David Elliott ‘offensive’

NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet has commented on allegations he spoke about creating a highly paid public service role based in the UK for a minister.

Labor has sought to extend an inquiry into how former NSW deputy premier John Barilaro was appointed to a top US trade job, amid reports by Nine newspapers that the NSW Premier offered to create a new parliamentary trade role for Transport Minister David Elliott in London.

The report says the Premier spoke to Mr Elliott about the agent-general position in London as compensation following manoeuvres that could have seen him removed from cabinet.

Mr Perrottet told Nine radio this morning he discussed “a number of roles” with Mr Elliott, including the agent-general role in London, but the Premier stopped short of clarifying whether he spoke about creating a public service role for him.

“David Elliott was never promised a job outside of politics,” Mr Perrottet said.

“That is deeply offensive and wrong.”

“But people always say from time to time discussions will be had in relation to when someone withdraws what they would like to do. That is normal.

“What I don’t do as Premier is to say that I will ever make those appointments or offer anyone a job.”

Mr Perrottet said the conversations he had with ministers were private.

“I am not going to go into details in relation to parliamentary secretary roles or a role in the ministry,” he said.

Mr Barilaro is expected to face some serious questioning this morning when he appears for the first time before the inquiry.

a man looking and smiling
David Elliott avoided answering whether he discussed the role with Mr Perrottet. (AAP: Dan Himbrechts)

The inquiry last week heard from senior NSW bureaucrat Kathrina Lo, who said she would never have signed off on her appointment as New York trade commissioner had she known of the level of ministerial involvement.

Trade minister and Member for Penrith Stuart Ayres resigned from his portfolios and leadership position in the party over concerns about his role in the selection process.

Mr Elliott did not directly respond to questions about the conversation with the Premier.

“I’m committed to delivering the NSW government’s infrastructure pipeline, which is helping transform our state, and ensuring our public transport delivers first-class services for the people of NSW,” he said in a statement.

“I have no interest in working overseas again.”

John Barilaro awarded $715,000 in defamation damages over YouTube videos
John Barilaro resigned from the New York role shortly after accepting it. (News Video)

NSW Shadow Treasurer Daniel Mookhey said Mr Perrottet had many questions to answer.

“The allegations about the Premier allegedly offering David Elliott an appointment to the agent-general position in London are deeply serious,” Mr Mookhey said.

“Labor as a result will seek to expand the inquiry’s term of reference so we can examine the agent-general’s position as well as other roles across the world.”

The Premier’s office has been contacted for comment.

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