Categories
Australia

WA biosecurity threats put Ord Valley agricultural region on edge

The recent spread of foot-and-mouth disease to Indonesia is not the only biosecurity battle for which farmers in WA’s easternmost agricultural region are bracing.

As the only growing region in WA that sits on an interstate border, the Ord Valley’s irrigated horticulture, broadacre cropping and sandalwood industries are on high alert as several dangerous pests and plant diseases creep further west.

Located just 40 kilometers from WA’s border with the Northern Territory on the outskirts of Kununurra, it is no stranger to biosecurity incursions.

It’s where the cane toad first crossed into the state more than a decade ago, and where the damaging fall armyworm affected the first WA broadacre crops in 2020.

It’s also close to where myrtle rust was found for the first time two months ago.

It’s feared mango shoot looper and banana freckle disease could be next after they were each detected in the Northern Territory this year.

Promising new project on hold

A man wearing fluoro yellow shirt holding log of wood in a shed
David Brocklehurst says the detection of myrtle rust has put a new project on hold.(ABC Kimberley: Courtney Fowler)

Sandalwood producer Santanol is among the hardest hit by the detection of myrtle rust on an East Kimberley pastoral station in June.

Myrtle rust is a fungal disease that can infect and kill plants in the myrtaceae family, such as eucalypts, bottlebrushes, paperbarks and peppermint trees.

While the disease poses no threat to Santanol’s primary sandalwood operation near Kununurra, a new pilot project targeting the cut flower and aromatic oil markets has been put on hold as a result of its spread to WA.

For commercial reasons, Santanol is remaining tight-lipped on the plant species being used in the pilot, but has confirmed it is part of the myrtaceae family.

Managing director David Brocklehurst said plans to expand the crop into broadacre trials this dry season were now too risky.

“We are very concerned that if the rust gets here and we’ve just planted 100,000 plants, then we would actually end up having nothing,” Mr Brocklehurst said.

“We’re keeping the plants well-quarantined and we’ll just see how this unfolds.”

The Department of Primary Industries said there had been no further detections of myrtle rust since its initial detection in June.

Horticulture sector on alert

Man in blue shirt inspecting green leaves and yellow flowers of mango trees.
Steve Angel is concerned about the detection of mango shoot looper in the Northern Territory.(ABC Kimberley: Stephanie Sinclair)

Meanwhile, the recent spread of mango shoot looper to the Northern Territory and detections of varroa mite in New South Wales has put Ord Valley mango growers on edge.

Mango shoot looper is an invasive pest that attacks mango and lychee plants while the varroa mite targets bees, which play a key role in the pollination of a variety of horticultural crops.

Swag Rural manager Steve Angel, who looks after WA’s biggest mango orchard on the outskirts of Kununurra, said he had limited vehicle movements across the property.

Mr Angel said he was also conducting regular checks of the orchard to ensure there was no sign of the pests.

He said the spread of either disease into WA would be devastating.

“If we didn’t control them and have preventive measures, there would be no sense being here,” Mr Angel said.

“People have got to be on the front foot and be aware, not on the back foot waiting for something, making contingency plans.

“We want to keep it out.”

Quarantined volumes soar

The back of a woman in yellow hi-vis watching a man open an esky in the back of a camper van.
A quarantine inspector checks a vehicle near Kununurra.(ABC Kimberley: Stephanie Sinclair)

Officers at the Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development’s quarantine checkpoint near Kununurra are the last line of defense in protecting the region from threats looming across the border.

According to new figures for the 2021-22 financial year, more than 14,000 kilograms of quarantine risk material was detected at the checkpoint, up more than 50 per cent from the previous year.

Supervising inspector Kenneth Bin Jacob said while the lifting of WA’s COVID-19 border restrictions largely contributed to the jump, the long-term trend showed more risk material was collected each year.

“We do see an increase each year — a slight increase,” he said.

“It never really goes backwards.”

Agriculture Minister Alannah MacTiernan said the state government had increased its biosecurity efforts in response to the outbreaks of plant diseases and pests in the Northern Territory.

“We are very aware of the risks of banana freckle and mango shoot looper and we’re working with the growers to up both our surveillance and our movement control,” she said.

“We’re also developing a broader biosecurity awareness program that we’ll be aiming at the punters, making sure that people understand that they’ve got a role to play.”

The heightened plant biosecurity concerns come at a time when Kimberley pastoralists are on alert for animal infections that have spread to Indonesia, including foot and mouth disease and lumpy skin disease.

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Categories
US

SUV in New Mexico drives through parade, injuries seven

Multiple people were injured after a vehicle drove through a ceremonial parade in Gallup, New Mexico on Thursday, according to state police.

social media footage captured a brown SUV weaving through the annual Inter-Tribal Indian Ceremonial Parade, one of New Mexico’s longest-running events.

Two Gallup Police Department officers were among the injured and were treated for their injuries.

According to KOAT7, the driver traveled down the parade route in the wrong direction. The outlet reports two other individuals were inside the SUV.

The driver of the SUV has been taken into custody. Officers detained the two passengers while parade attendees shouted angrily and confronted the trio.

The names of the suspects have not yet been released.

The Gallup Intertribal Ceremonial is a 10-day celebration consisting of in-person and virtual events. The city celebrated its 100th anniversary of the annual event this year while the parade culminated in the first night’s festivities.

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Categories
Business

The Espy sells, Cherry Tree up for grabs as Melbourne pubs bounce back from pandemic slump

Chief executive of Australian Venue Co Paul Waterson, who this week cemented a deal to buy eight well-known leasehold venues from Sand Hill Road group, said like-for-like sales across its 180-strong portfolio were up 12 per cent on pre- pandemic levels.

Brunswick Street's Labor in Vain hotel.

Brunswick Street’s Labor in Vain hotel.Credit:

“Since December last year it’s very much caught up,” Waterson said.

City hotels are trading at similar levels to suburban venues despite the slow return of workers to office towers.

Strong evening trade, particularly a lift on Thursdays, and weekend customers are boosting CBD hotels, he said.

“Venues are not limited by demand, but by the capacity of staff,” he said.

Australian Venue Co, backed by private equity giant KKR, reignited a $100 million deal – put on hold at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic – to buy a bag of leaseholds from Sand Hill Road.

They include the Espy in St Kilda, Garden State on Flinders Lane, Prahran Hotel, the Terminus Hotel in Abbotsford, Richmond Club Hotel, The Posty, Bridge Hotel and Holliava.

Waterson said the pandemic’s latest Omicron wave hasn’t affected pub-goers. “Each time a wave comes through, we’re seeing a lot more resilience.”

“For the first time in three years we are seeing large corporate Christmas functions. We’re seeing strong bookings and quite extravagant parties planned for December,” he said.

Fronted by brothers Andy and Matt Mullins, Sand Hill Road has collected, renovated, bought, sold and built a number of well-known Melbourne watering holes.

Andy Mullins said the group still owned and had big plans for the Waterside Hotel in Flinders Street, which was not part of the deal with Australian Venue Co.

“We’re committed to a big future in hospitality in Melbourne,” Mullins said.

Back in Cremorne, former Great Britain Hotel operators, Chris and Penny Hodges have run the Cherry Tree since 2014 and their lease has a few years to run.

Allen wasn’t the only lowlife associated with the pub built during the Goldrush in the 1850-1860s on a corner facing the Cremorne Pleasure Gardens. Career criminal Squizzy Taylor also apparently jumped the bar and stole 10 shillings out of the till in 1908.

Categories
Sports

Medal tally, schedule, day eight, Australia gold medals, times, Michelle Jenneke, athletics, Australians in action

LIVE — Australians will compete for gold medals in at least seven events on day eight of the Commonwealth Games as the nation aims to hold off hosts England in Birmingham.

Australia heads into Friday’s competition sitting on top of the medal tally with 51 golds — nine more than England — as well as 42 silver and 39 bronze.

And it could be plenty more by the close of the day with at least three medals on offer in athletics, two in diving, and one each in lawn bowls and artistic gymnastics.

Follow all the action in Birmingham in our live blog below!

FULL MEDAL TALLY LIVE >

DAY 7 WRAP: Gold medal Aussie’s all-time interview gatecrashed; star ‘gutted’ after costly error

Australians are also in the hunt for wrestling medals in the women’s 57kg (Irene Symeonidis), men’s 65kg (Mustafa Rezaeifar), and men’s 86kg (Jayden Lawrence), starting with the quarterfinals stages from 7.30pm.

Meanwhile, Australia’s Cedric Dubler headed into the final day of the decathlon sitting in second.

Dubler then won the first decathlon event for the night, the 110m hurdles, with a time of 14.20 — good enough for another 949 points. That has moved him one point into the lead over Lindon Victor.

Also in athletics, Jess Hull will compete in the 1500m heats, while Brooke Buschkuehl will be in action in qualifying for long jump.

Celeste Mucci ran a strong 100m hurdles heat, matching her personal best time of 12.96, which saw her finish third.

Comeback star Michelle Jenneke was up next and comfortably finished second with a time of 12.63 to go through to the end on Sunday night. The time is the fastest she’s ever run the event, although it does not count as an official PB due to big tailwinds.

In the 1500m women’s heats, Abbey Caldwell and Linden Hall have progressed to the final after finishing inside the top four of their race with times of 4:13.59 and 4:14.08 respectively.

Away from the track, Australia’s Hockeyroos will have the chance to win a guaranteed medal when they take on India in the semi-final.

Dennis SCORCHES field to take TT gold | 00:28

You can track the live medal tally for every country here, with key Aussie wins and updates as they happen.

AUSSIES GOING FOR MEDALS ON DAY 8 (all times AEST)

Lawn Bowls

9pm — For mixed pairs B2/B3 finals

diving

8.18pm — men’s synchronized 3m springboard final

3.05am — women’s 1m springboard final (qualifying at 7.05pm)

4.23am — men’s synchronized 10m platform final

Gymnastics – rhythmic

10.30pm — Individual all-around final

Athletics

4.55am — men’s T53/54 1500m final

6.42am—women’s 3000m steeplechase final

7.15pm – 6.27am — men’s decathlon

Hockey

5am ​​— women’s semi-final vs. India

OTHER KEY EVENTS (times AEST)

Athletics

Women’s long jump qualifying — Brooke Buschkuel — 8.40pm

Men’s decathlon — Cedric Dubler, Daniel Golubovic, Alex Diamond — 7.15pm

Women’s 1500m — Jessica Hull, Linden Hall, Abbey Caldwell — 8.15pm

beach volleyball

Men’s quarterfinals — Australia vs. Sri Lanka — 9pm

Women’s quarterfinals — Australia v Scotland — 11.30pm

lawn bowls

Women’s pairs quarterfinals — Australia vs. Norfolk Island — 5.30pm

Men’s Singles — Aaron Wilson vs. Jamie Walker — 5.30pm

Mixed pairs bronze medal match — Australia vs England — 9pm

DeRozario takes out 1500, makes history | 00:26

LIVE BLOG

Click here if you cannot see the blog below

FULL LIST OF AUSSIES IN ACTION ON DAY 8 (as per AAPNews)

ATHLETICS (from 7pm AEST)

Women’s Long Jump Qualifying Rounds (Brooke Buschkuehl, Samantha Dale), Men’s Decathlon 110m Hurdles (Cedric Dubler, Daniel Golubovic, Alec Diamond), Women’s 100m Hurdles Round 1 (Michelle Jenneke, Celeste Mucci), Men’s Decathlon Discus Throw (Cedric Dubler, Daniel Golubovic, Alec Diamond), Women’s 1500m Round 1 (Abbey Caldwell, Linden Hall, Jessica Hull), Women’s 4 x 400m Relay Round 1, Men’s 4 x 400m Relay Round 1, Men’s Javelin Throw Qualifying Round, Men’s Decathlon Pole Vault (Cedric Dubler , Daniel Golubovic, Alec Diamond), Men’s Javelin Throw Qualifying Round (Cameron McEntyre), Men’s Shot Put Final, Men’s Triple Jump Qualifying Rounds (Julian Konle), Men’s 200m Semi-finals, Women’s 400m Semi-finals, Men’s Decathlon Javelin Throw ( Cedric Dubler, Daniel Golubovic, Alec Diamond), Men’s 1500m T53 / T54 Final, Women’s 200m Semi-finals, Women’s Triple Jump Final, Men’s 800m Semi-finals, Men’s 400m Semi-finals, Men’s Decathlon 1500m (Cedric Dubler. Daniel Golubovic, Alec Diamond), Wom in’s 3000m Steeplechase Final (Amy Cashin, Brielle Erbacher)

BEACH VOLLEYBALL (from 8pm)

Quarterfinals – Men’s – Australia v TBA (1100 BST 2000 AEST)

SQUASH (from 9pm)

Mixed Doubles Round of 16, Plate Classification, Quarter Finals; Men’s Doubles Round of 16 – Cameron Pilley/Rhys Dowling (AUS) v TBA, Plate Classification; Women’s Doubles Quarter Finals

DIVING (from 7pm, and 3am)

Women’s 1m Springboard Preliminary (Brittany O’Brien, Esther Qin, Georgia Sheehan), Men’s Synchronized 3m Springboard Final (Sam Fricker, Shixin Li), Women’s 1m Springboard Final, Men’s Synchronized 10m Platform Final (Domonic Bedggod, Cassiel Rousseau)

WRESTLING FREESTYLE (from 7.30pm)

Women’s 57kg (Irene Symeonidis), Women’s 62kg, Women’s 68kg, Men’s 65kg (Mustafa Rezaeifar), Men’s 86kg (Jayden Lawrence), Men’s 125kg

BADMINTON (from 8pm)

Round of 16 – Men’s Singles, Women’s Singles, Men’s Doubles, Women’s Doubles – Kaitlyn Ea/Angela Yu (AUS) v Yujia Jin/Jia Ying Crystal Wong (SGP), Hsuan-Yu Wendy Chen/Gronya Somerville (AUS) v Elena Johnson /Chloe Le Tissier (GGY)

TABLE TENNIS (from 6.30pm)

Mixed Doubles Round 3 and Quarterfinals; Men’s Class Semi Finals; Women’s Class Semi Finals; Women’s Singles Round 2; Men’s Doubles Round 3 and Quarterfinals; Women’s Doubles Round 2 – Chunyi Feng/ Yangzi Liu (AUS) v Shanecia Delpesche/Jessica MC Carter (SVG), Minhyung Jee/Jian Fang Lay (AUS) v TBA; Men’s Singles – Dillon Chambers (AUS) v Zhe Yu Clarence Chew (SGP), Finn Luu (AUS) v Sharath Kamal Achanta (IND), Nicholas Lum (AUS) v Javen Choong (MAS)

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Categories
Australia

Victim’s advocate slams lawyer’s ‘kangaroo court’ media attack in Neil Duncan paedophile case

A paedophile convicted of sexually abusing three girls has had his sentencing delayed so he can undergo surgery for prostate cancer and tests for possible bowel cancer, a court has heard.

It comes as a victim’s advocate slammed a barrister for Neil Duncan calling media coverage of the case a “kangaroo court”.

On June 2 Duncan, 67, was convicted in the Queanbeyan District Court on eight counts of sexually touching three girls under the age of 16 in Bega Valley and Kosciuszko National Park in 2019.

The decision by Queanbeyan District Court Judge Robyn Tupman to grant Duncan bail ahead of his planned sentencing today caught the attention of NSW Attorney-General Mark Speakman who requested the Director of Public Prosecutions review the bail decision.

Duncan was arrested at a Narrabri Pony Club event a week after his conviction but was re-released after an allegation he breached his bail conditions could not be proven.

After work by victims’ advocates and media coverage of the case, changes came into effect on June 27 requiring a judge to refuse bail following conviction and before sentencing for an offense likely to carry full-time imprisonment, unless special or exceptional circumstances could be provided .

A man in a cloth mask walking down the street.
Neil Duncan leaves the NSW Supreme Court while on bail in July.(ABC South East NSW: Adriane Reardon)

Then in July the NSW Supreme Court rejected a detention application by Crown prosecutors, when Duncan’s lawyers revealed he had recently been diagnosed with prostate cancer and would require surgery in September, thereby falling under the definition of “special or exceptional circumstances”.

Today, Judge Tupman accepted an adjournment application by his defense team which will allow Duncan to undergo surgery at Macquarie University Hospital on September 20 for prostate cancer and undergo further tests for possible bowel cancer.

Judge Tupman adjourned sentencing to allow Duncan five weeks to recover from the surgery.

neil duncan court pic
The NSW Supreme Court dismissed the Crown’s detention application in July. (ABC South East NSW: Adriane Reardon)

“Prostate cancer is not a condition where it is beneficial to delay treatment,” Judge Tupman told the court.

Crown prosecutors objected to the application, telling the court the medical procedures could be taken care of while Duncan was being held in custody.

“People wait a considerable amount of time [in prison] for outside intervention,” Judge Tupman told the court.

Media coverage criticized

The judge said media coverage of the case was “unfortunate”, and given the public attention it had received she could be facing “judicial death” if she did not take the time necessary to read all the submitted documents while considering Duncan’s sentence.

“I’ve been in court almost every day since the jury came out in Queanbeyan,” she told the court.

Crown prosecutors told the court continued delays in proceedings would create “anxiety” for Duncan’s victims.

“The victims are keen to have these proceedings finalized so they can move on,” they told the court.

neil duncan downing
Neil Duncan will be sentenced in Sydney’s Downing Center District court in October.(Facebook: Downing Center)

Duncan’s barrister Richard Pontello SC told the court his client would not answer to media coverage of the case, which he labeled a “kangaroo court”.

Victims’ advocate Ken Steele called Mr Pontello’s use of the term “offensive.”

“Someone like Neil Duncan should be reported on,” he said.

“The suggestion he’s in any way given hard treatment due to media coverage is that it’s the right of the public to keep track of these cases and it’s the media’s job to report on it.”

Duncan’s bail was continued and he will be sentenced on October 24.

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Categories
US

SUV in New Mexico drives through parade, injuries seven

Multiple people were injured after a vehicle drove through a ceremonial parade in Gallup, New Mexico on Thursday, according to state police.

social media footage captured a brown SUV weaving through the annual Inter-Tribal Indian Ceremonial Parade, one of New Mexico’s longest-running events.

Two Gallup Police Department officers were among the injured and were treated for their injuries.

According to KOAT7, the driver traveled down the parade route in the wrong direction. The outlet reports two other individuals were inside the SUV.

The driver of the SUV has been taken into custody. Officers detained the two passengers while parade attendees shouted angrily and confronted the trio.

The names of the suspects have not yet been released.

The Gallup Intertribal Ceremonial is a 10-day celebration consisting of in-person and virtual events. The city celebrated its 100th anniversary of the annual event this year while the parade culminated in the first night’s festivities.

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Categories
Business

BITRE data reveals WA’s Broome Airport has worst flight delays in Australia

A popular tourist town in WA’s far north has been outed as having the worst airport delays in Australia, according to new data.

A monthly report by the Bureau of Infrastructure and Transport Research Economics has revealed that Broome experienced the lowest percentage of on-time arrivals and departures this June, with little over 30 per cent of flights to Perth leaving within 15 minutes of their scheduled departure.

Flights arriving in Broome provided only marginally better, with 37 per cent landing on time.

In Broome, Virgin Australia delivered the brunt of these delays with none of the 14 scheduled flights from Broome to Perth departing on time.

Virgin Australia Regional Airlines also suffered delays, only 38 per cent of flights to Perth managing to leave at the scheduled time.

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Categories
Australia

Family of Canberra woman Bronte Haskins called on ACT coroner to find several people failed her in the lead up to her suicide

The family of Canberra woman Brontë Haskins has asked the ACT coroner to make adverse findings about several people involved in her case before and after her suicide in 2020.

Ms Haskins, 23, died in hospital after several days on life support.

Her death came while she was on bail after a stint in jail for drug driving.

Ms Haskins had suffered both substance abuse and mental illness, something her mother said was not taken seriously enough by authorities.

In the lead-up to her death she had been staying at her mother’s home, while she was on bail.

A coronial inquest into Ms Haskins’s suicide heard her mother called police and mental health services when she became delusional, believing the unit where she was staying was a gas chamber.

Several issues have been raised in the case before the ACT Coroner’s Court, including the family’s claim that a mental-health nurse failed to give the case the priority it required and failed to follow up a call from Ms Haskins’s mother, Janine.

Lawyer Sam Tierney who represented Ms Haskins’s family referred to the staged triage system — where category A is the most serious, and category G requires more information — when criticizing the way the case was handled by mental-health nurse Karina Boyd.

A young woman relaxes in a hammock as she cuddles a large smiling dog.
The inquest heard Brontë Haskins’s case was not triaged correctly.(Supplied)

“Had Ms Boyd not incorrectly triaged Brontë as category G, Brontë would have more likely than not been assessed face to face by a trained mental-health clinician within 72 hours and certainly prior to her death,” Mr Tierney said.

Counsel assisting the coroner Andrew Muller also took aim at the way the case was triaged.

“Brontë should have been assessed as a category C or D, resulting in some urgent follow-up,” Mr Muller said.

“What is material is that, on any view of the available information, Brontë was incorrectly assessed for triage purposes.”

Mr Muller has recommended an overhaul of the triage system.

But in its submissions, the ACT defended Ms Boyd’s decision, saying she had not been able to speak to Ms Haskins and her only contact was with her mother.

“She had been told that the AFP had been called and she assumed that the police would contact her if they thought Brontë needed a risk assessment or mental-health service,” the territory submissions said.

Court hears CCTV footage of minutes before attempt to take life missing

A young woman smiles at the camera while cuddling a big black dog.
Ms Haskins’s family have called for greater transparency in passing on confidential details after the death of a mental health service user to the Coroner’s Court.(Supplied)

Another key issue was the fact police returned a CCTV recorder to Brett French, an associate of Ms Haskins, at whose home she had tried to take her life.

The court heard about 45 minutes of footage which may have shed light on the events leading up to her death was deleted

Court documents showed Mr French had admitted showing some of the CCTV to another man.

Mr Tierney told the court the family wanted an adverse finding against Mr French for his “callous” treatment of Ms Haskins on the day of her death.

Mr Tierney also identified the behavior of police investigating the death as an issue.

“A proper investigation and analysis of the CCTV recorder may have disclosed further and important information to the coroner to assist in the process of considering Brontë’s death,” he said.

He has called for a recommendation that will send a message to the AFP about the handling of coronial exhibits.

The inquiry has also looked into the management of Ms Haskins’s case and whether further detention could have prevented her death.

Mr Muller said there was evidence of better communications about her could have helped.

“Had Brontë been stopped the outcome may, of course, have been different,” Mr Muller said.

“But there was no proper reason she could be stopped.”

Other recommendations being sought by Ms Haskins’s family include greater transparency in passing on to the Coroner’s Court confidential details after the death of a mental health service user, recording of calls to the mental health line, audits of the triage system, and better information to be passed to AFP officers called to incidents.

Coroner James Stewart said he would take some time to hand down his findings.

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Categories
US

Wray: Allegations ‘troubling’ about FBI agent covering up Hunter Biden information

Kennedy grilled Wray on Thibault’s alleged partisan actions on social media over the past few years, such as “liking” a Washington Post article titled “William Barr has gone rogue” and tweeting to Rep. liz cheney (R-Wyo.) that her father — former Vice President Dick Cheney — was a “disgrace.” Kennedy also mentioned Thibault’s retweet of a Lincoln Project post saying that “Donald Trump is a psychologically broken, embittered, and deeply unhappy man.”

Kennedy then pressed Wray on allegations that Thibault — who Kennedy said worked on both the investigation of links between Trump and Russia and the ongoing Hunter Biden probe — had “covered up derogatory info about Mr. Biden while working at the FBI.”

Wray gave similar answers to Kennedy’s questioning on both the social media posts and covering up of information, saying that he’d seen “descriptions to that effect” but wanted to be “careful” of not interfering with any ongoing personnel matters. But he did concede to finding the allegations about the social media posts “troubling.”

“I should say that when I read the letter that describes the kinds of things that you’re talking about, I found it deeply troubling,” Kennedy told.

Senate Judiciary Chair Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) first raised alarms about Thibault’s alleged partisan actions in May, demanding that the Justice Department and the FBI investigate whether the agent violated department guidelines with his social media posts. Grassley sent a second letter to the Justice Department and the FBI in late July saying that he had received “highly credible” whistleblower accounts alleging that Thibault had downplayed or discredited negative information obtained about Joe Biden’s son during the 2020 election.

Wray on Thursday didn’t definitively confirm or deny the allegations against Thibault and seemed to be trying to preserve his ability to act as an impartial decision-maker on potential discipline against the agent. However, the FBI director stressed that the actions Kennedy was describing were “not representative of the FBI.”

“I feel very strongly, and I have communicated consistently since I started as director, that our folks need to make sure that they’re not just doing the right thing, that they’re doing it in the right way and that they avoid even the appearance of bias or lack of objectivity,” Wray said.

Kennedy said he agreed with Wray’s statement that the majority of FBI employees have “tremendous integrity and objectivity,” but stressed that the situation with Thibault is only hurting the FBI’s image and needs to be addressed with the public.

“You’re killing yourselves with this stuff,” Kennedy said. “And this investigation needs to be completed on this gentleman and the results need to be reported to the American people.”

Wray seemed to raise doubts that Thibault was working at any recent time on issues related to Hunter Biden. The FBI chief said that investigation, reportedly focused on tax issues and potential foreign influence related to Hunter Biden’s business ties, is being run by the Bureau’s Baltimore Field Office, which handles matters related to Delaware.

The Biden administration has permitted Trump’s appointee as US attorney for Delaware, David Weiss, to stay on to complete the probe of the president’s son.

Hunter Biden in a December 2020 statement denied any wrongdoing in his tax affairs. Biden’s lawyer did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the allegations.

“I take this matter very seriously but I am confident that a professional and objective review of these matters will demonstrate that I handled my affairs legally and appropriately, including with the benefit of professional tax advisors,” he said.

Earlier in the hearing, Wray seemed to indirectly address the claims that during the 2020 election season the FBI helped downplay or suppress information about Hunter Biden’s business ties by categorizing that as Russian disinformation.

The FBI director suggested it wasn’t his agency’s job in such situations to try to validate or verify the claims, only to alert US officials, businesses or individuals that foreign powers are trying to exploit the situation.

“Sometimes this gets lost in a lot of public commentary. We are not investigating whether or not information we see is true or false,” Wray said. “Our focus on the malign foreign influence space is whether or not there is a foreign adversary pushing the information.”

Categories
Australia

Bogie shooting: Tragic new details emerge of mass shooting in Queensland property

A 59-year-old man has been charged with three counts of murder relating to the mass shooting on a rural property near the central Queensland town of Bogie on Thursday.

Police will allege that around 9am, they received a report three people had been fatally shot at a property on Shannonvale Road and another man had suffered a gunshot wound to the abdomen.

Watch more on this story in the video above

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A 35-year-old Bogie man, Graham Tighe, his mother Maree Schwarz, 59, and her husband Merv, 71, all died at the scene.

Graham’s brother, Ross Tighe, survived and was able to flee into remote bushland with a gunshot wound to his stomach before raising the alarm.

7NEWS understands police will alleged that the gunman invited them to meet up at his property amid a dispute over a boundary line.

The 59-year-old man – who was also charged with one count of attempted murder – will appear in Proserpine Magistrates Court on Monday.

The charges come as new tragic details emerge that Graham’s partner Lucy had only recently given birth.

Graham’s uncle, Greg Austen, told 7NEWS the father had only spent a few days with the newborn before the baby was taken to Brisbane to visit Lucy’s mother.

“It’s just devastating shock that things can happen so quickly in the blink of an eye and ruin so many lives so quickly,” he said.

Maree and Mervyn Schwarz. Credit: Supplied

7NEWS understands police will allege the farming family was invited to meet with their neighbor at the edge of his Bogie property, 45 minutes away.

Shortly after, Merv, Maree, Ross and Graham were dead.

Acting Superintendent Tom Armitt said the property where the shooting allegedly took place was “tens of thousands of acres”.

“It’s actually a 45-minute drive between the neighbours,” he said.

“At the crime scene, which is at the front gate of one of the premises, it is a 3km drive between the gate and the house at that location.”

Armitt said because Ross had been so far from the crime scene, and it was unclear whether the alleged gunman was still at large, police were cautious in their approach to the property.

“At that time, not knowing whether the armed offender was present or not, putting their lives in grave danger, especially when the report was that the people had been shot with a rifle,” Armitt said.

“So that was slow and meticulous work and extremely brave of the officers who were involved at that time.”

The surviving man was airlifted to Mackay Base Hospital where he remains in a serious but stable condition. Credit: 7NEWS
Graham’s brother Ross survived and was able to flee into remote bushland with a gunshot wound to his stomach. Credit: 7NEWS

Ross was initially in a critical condition but since undergoing multiple emergency surgeries is now reported as serious but stable.

“He was able to speak to us overnight and provide us details of what occurred at the incident yesterday morning,” Armitt said.

“And detectives will be speaking to him again this morning.”

Community in shock

Merv and Maree are being remembered as a “lovely, hardworking” family as loved ones try to make sense of the tragedy.

“We’re lucky we still have Ross with us,” Austen told 7NEWS.

“To see the trauma that would have unfolded in front of him and then be able to go that far to raise the alarm, it’s a mighty effort.”

Graham leaves behind two young children, with partner Lucy stuck in Brisbane, unable to fly on commercial airlines as she gave birth a few weeks ago.

7NEWS understands after desperate efforts from family and friends, a charity will put Lucy and her children on a charter flight home.

Graham’s partner Lucy had given birth to their second child just weeks before. Credit: 7NEWS

Whitsunday Regional councilor Jan Clifford said the tight-knit community would be devastated.

“To my knowledge, nothing like this has ever happened in the Whitsunday region before,” Clifford said.

“We are all deeply saddened by the tragedy.”

Clifford said the incident was bound to have a big effect on the tiny community of Bogie, which has a population of 207 according to the latest census data.

“It’s a little village. Everyone will know everyone… It’s just awful.”

One woman working in nearby Collinsville said the entire community was in shock.

“The whole town is a bit rattled that something like that could happen here,” she told AAP.

“It’s a small town, everyone knows everyone.”

– with APA

Horrific moment child falls out of car window.

Horrific moment child falls out of car window.

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