Categories
Australia

Coober Pedy council to remain in administration pending government decisions for town’s future

Coober Pedy is gearing up for council elections that in all likelihood will not be held.

Tim Jackson was appointed to administer the council in January 2019 after its elected members were suspended, a decision taken by the former state government in response to soaring debts and maladministration.

“A council is required to prepare a supplementary role of voters,” Mr Jackson said.

“We have done that and this is due to the fact that legislation to delay elections in Coober Pedy has not been introduced into the parliament yet but the local government minister has indicated that it is his intention to do so.”

Mr Jackson has proposed four models for a return to democratic governance, with his preferred option being a $12 million purchase of the town’s electricity and water utilities by the state government.

“This would enable the council to clear its debt obligations of approximately $10 million,” he said.

Coober Pedy’s local MP Eddie Hughes said the town needed government assistance to regain equality for its residents.

Two men in front of a ute in Coober Pedy.
Eddie Hughes recently visited Coober Pedy to meet with locals including opal shop owner Bill Korbetis.(Supplied: Eddie Hughes)

“We don’t expect any council in the state to exclusively manage water supply or provide retail electricity and distribution, yet we’ve placed this burden on one of our more remote communities,” Mr Hughes said.

“We need to shrink the council down to basic municipal services and that means addressing the issue of what to do with the supply of water and also the distribution of electricity.”

desperate for investment

Local business owner Melissa Georgianoudis has lived in Coober Pedy for more than 30 years and said that residents are desperate for a change.

“The town is tired and people notice it when they come through,” Ms Georgianoudis said.

“The potholes that never get fixed, the rubbish that doesn’t get picked up: It’s hard not to feel like nobody is listening.”

A sign saying Coober Pedy similar to the Hollywood sign.
The town’s “Hollywood” sign recently had its lighting restored.(ABC News: Patrick Martin)

Coober Pedy’s council owned water network is in urgent need of repair.

“There are fountains everywhere from leaks in the water system, I have no water pressure in my house,” Ms Georgianoudis said.

“Prices for everything are going up but there’s no money going back into the town and it’s driving people away.”

Shrinking oasis worth saving

More than 200 residents have left the opal city over the last five years according to national census data, however the town remains a multicultural mecca in the desert.

Sri Lankan migrant and eight-year resident Dilusha Fernando said Coober Pedy’s services made it an ideal place to raise a family.

“I feel really happy, especially with the child care,” Mr Fernando said.

“I would definitely say it really is a good environment to raise a child here because I can see that for my child, she’s 18 months now.”

Family portrait of mother, father and young girl.
Dilusha says Coober Pedy is a great place to raise his daughter Ayana.(Supplied: Dilusha Fernando)

The town has a reputation in Australia’s migrant community for its welcoming and friendly attitude.

“It’s like a big family up here I reckon, I’ve met so many people and they’re all very nice,” Mr Fernando said.

“Whoever left Coober Pedy never said a word about any bad stuff here, everyone’s like, yeah it’s a good place to start a life.”

.

Categories
US

Trump faces uphill fight on executive privilege in DOJ probe

Short, Jacob and Cipollone testified to the Jan. 6 select committee but negotiated strict terms to avoid discussing their direct interactions with Trump — a nod to the disputed possibility that such communications could be protected by executive privilege. But it’s unlikely that such claims would pass muster in a criminal probe.

“There is no way that any court would say they didn’t have to testify to conversations with President Trump in a grand jury investigation — a criminal investigation arising out of that conduct,” said Neil Eggleston, who served as White House counsel to President Barack Obama and represented President Bill Clinton in several executive privilege fights. “There’s no doubt if this got to a court, it would hold that the department is entitled to the information. … I think it’s a no-brainer.”

CNN reported last week that Short and Jacob declined to answer some questions before the grand jury on executive privilege grounds, as they had done during depositions conducted by the House Jan. 6 Select Committee. The panel has argued that executive privilege does not apply to nearly any conversation Trump had related to efforts to overturn the election, but the committee has opted against litigating those thorny and time-consuming issues, instead permitting cooperating witnesses — including Short, Jacob, Cipollone and others — to answer questions without revealing specific details of conversations with Trump that could even arguably be privileged. But Trump’s suit against the panel and the National Archives was an exception to the panel’s general approach of seeking to avoid or delay litigation on such issues.

It remains unclear whether Trump intends to formally assert executive privilege in a bid to block any testimony to the grand jury. A Trump spokesperson did not respond to requests for comments on the former president’s plans.

However, Trump is likely to be at a disadvantage in such a legal battle because of the defeats he already suffered as he tried to block the National Archives from disclosing thousands of pages of his White House records to the Jan. 6 select committee. That fight also helped the Justice Department hone arguments that may come into play in the grand jury probe encircling Trump’s allies.

The department represented the National Archives in that fight, lodging extensive briefs opposing Trump’s power to assert executive privilege as a former president over the objection of the sitting president, Joe Biden.

“The exceptional events of January 6 amply justify President Biden’s determination that assertion of the privilege is unwarranted with respect to the records at issue here,” Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar contended in a Supreme Court brief, “and [Trump] has not even attempted to offer ‘any specific countervailing need for confidentiality.’”

In short, the Justice Department’s grand jury investigation might benefit from Trump’s repeated efforts to block investigators in the past. Even before those court rulings, the department typically had the upper hand in battles over privilege. Grand jury subpoenas are more legally potent than the congressional variety, and the Justice Department will enter any fight with Trump armed with a court-approved strategy to defeat Trump’s executive privilege claims.

Judges at every level determined or acquiesced in rulings that the urgency of Congress’ need to investigate the Jan. 6 insurrection easily outweighed Trump’s desire to maintain the secrecy of potentially privileged records.

“Presidents are not kings, and Plaintiff is not President,” US District Court Judge Tanya Chutkan wrote in the first ruling against Trump last November. The DC Circuit Court of Appeals followed suit, with a 68-page opinion rejecting Trump’s effort to assert privilege on multiple bases.

“The January 6th Committee has … demonstrated a sound factual predicate for requesting these presidential documents specifically,” Judge Patricia Millett wrote for the three-member panel. “There is a direct linkage between the former President and the events of the day.”

The panel’s victory against Trump unlocked some of its most crucial evidence against the former president, including handwritten notes, call and visitor logs and speech drafts that showed the West Wing struggling to get Trump to condemn violent supporters on Jan. 6 and continue his efforts to overturn the election during and after the riot.

A separate legal fight—between Trump’s last chief of staff, Mark Meadows, and the Jan. 6 select committee—may also bear on Trump’s ability to insert executive privilege issues into the grand jury investigation. In that civil case, Meadows asserted immunity from congressional subpoenas, a power that the Justice Department has long supported for sitting presidents and their immediate advisers.

But the department had never weighed in on whether similar immunity applies to a former aide to a former president. In fact, the Justice Department’s only reference to any similar scenario was to directly cite a decision by President Harry Truman to resist a subpoena from the House UnAmerican Activities Committee after he had left office, citing separation-of-powers concerns. But Truman’s quote held no legal value, and the matter has never been litigated until now.

In a 17-page brief filed in Meadows’ case just over two weeks ago, the Justice Department for the first time said that a former aid to a former president did not have “absolute” immunity from compelled testimony, and that Biden’s decision to waive privilege should take precedence over any attempt by a former president to assert it.

“Allowing a former President to override the decisions of the incumbent would be an extraordinary intrusion into the latter’s ability to discharge his constitutional responsibilities,” the department argued.

Meadows’ lawyer George Terwilliger sharply criticized the Justice Department’s move, saying it “elected to become an advocate for the committee and urged the court to go into untested legal waters.”

Some executive privilege battles litigated in civil cases have dragged out for years. One, involving a House subpoena for Justice Department documents related to the Operation Fast and Furious gunrunning investigation, stretched for seven years, from 2012 to 2019.

However, the courts tend to fast-track grand jury subpoena battles because of the priority given to criminal investigations.

“The Department of Justice can get in front of a court really fast, unlike Congress,” said Eggleston, the former Obama White House counsel. “They can do that in a matter of days. They can work so much faster and they don’t really have to negotiate.”

Legal experts say the reported grand jury subpoenas to Cipollone and Philbin raise issues beyond the traditional executive privilege ones because they were, at times, giving Trump legal advice that would normally be protected by attorney-client privilege. However, in a 1998 dispute stemming from Independent Counsel Ken Starr’s probe of President Bill Clinton’s White House, the DC Circuit ruled that governmental attorney-client privilege had to yield to a grand jury subpoena in the context of a criminal investigation.

“The DC Circuit is very explicit that government attorneys do not have any greater privilege than other advisers when it comes to information they have that is relevant to a grand jury,” said Ryan Goodman, a New York University law professor and co-founder of the Just Security blog. “I think it’s highly likely that Trump will lose very quickly because … there’s case law in the DC Circuit contradicting any such claims.”

One former White House lawyer for Trump, Ty Cobb, said he thought some of the recent court rulings might have been mistaken to hold that a former president couldn’t assert executive privilege if the current one disagreed.

“I’m not sure that that is right,” said Cobb, who has publicly broken with Trump and called his actions related to Jan. 6 “disqualifying.”

However, Cobb acknowledged that either way, current law says criminal investigators can get even information protected by that privilege if they show “an urgent need” and “no other place to go” for it.

“If you tick those boxes, you can be questioned,” he said. The attorney noted, though, that some witnesses might choose to invoke their Fifth Amendment rights regardless of, or in addition to, any privilege Trump might assert, and the right against self-incrimination is largely treated as sacrosanct.

The initial stages of any executive privilege fight over grand jury testimony about Trump would go to Chief Judge Beryl Howell, an Obama appointee and former Senate Judiciary Committee counsel who has repeatedly voiced outrage about the Jan. 6 attack.

Beyond that, Trump’s lawyers can take the issue to the DC Circuit, which already snubbed him in the White House records fight, and on to the Supreme Court, which did the same.

The only outward sign of hesitation from the Justice Department on executive privilege issues is its decision last year not to bring criminal charges against Meadows and Trump’s social media guru, Dan Scavino, for defying House subpoenas based on what they said were instructions from Trump.

But the department’s recent backing for the House in Meadows’ civil suit seems to indicate that Justice Department officials are committed to their view that the stronger legal argument here is that, as a former president and because of the gravity of the Jan. 6 events, Trump cannot successfully assert the privilege to block testimony.

Indeed, some legal observers say Trump’s chances of succeeding in this sort of court battle are so remote that he might not even choose to fight it out. A privilege battle that attorney John Eastman pursued in court against a House subpoena led to a judge ruling in March that Trump likely committed a crime — obstruction of justice — by trying to interfere with the certification of electoral votes by Congress on Jan. 6, 2021 .

One potential downside for Trump if he does put up a privilege fight over the grand jury demands is a repeat of what happened in the Eastman case, with a judge or multiple judges publicly declaring that he probably broke criminal law. It would not amount to a criminal charge, but it would fuel public perceptions that Trump crossed the legal line in his activities by trying to overturn President Joe Biden’s win at the ballot box.

“There’s a potential risk for Trump that a judge holds there’s sufficient evidence of his engaging in criminal conduct,” said Goodman, the New York University law professor, a possibility that might dissuade Trump from embarking on a quixotic legal battle to shield his advisers from testifying about their conversations with him.

Categories
Australia

Rental stress hits families in Toowoomba with $15 standing between home and homelessness

Fifteen dollars might be spare change to some but, for those trying to contend with feeding a family and grappling with rising costs of living it is a rent rise few can afford.

According to a new survey from Data Finance Analytics Toowoomba, southern Queensland has one of the highest rates of mortgage and rent stress in the country.

The survey of 47,000 people across Australia found 61 per cent of renters were under rental stress, while in Toowoomba 57 per cent of the 240 respondents experienced rental stress.

Lyndal Hood is one of them. She and her husband’s rent has recently risen by $15 a week.

“Our rent went up from $230 to $245 when we got our new lease,” she said.

Ms Hood’s husband works in retail, and she worked in hospitality until forced to take a break after a heart attack late last year.

major sacrifice

Ms Hood said while it may seem like a small amount, it quickly added up.

“That extra $30 to [fortnight]that’s the price of my medications,” she said.

“That means no extra money left over, and it’s not like we’re bludgers.

“If it went up further, we’d have to leave because we can barely cope with what we’ve got.”

Welcome to Toowoomba sign surrounded by flowers
Toowoomba has been known as Australia’s Garden City since the 1940s.(ABC Southern Qld: Peter Gunders)

Ms Hood said she had no choice but to stay in her property and pay the extra amount.

“I feel like we’re just stuck,” she said.

“We look around town at what else is out there and it’s no better than this place. The house across the road is $360 a week and it’s a dive.”

Darling Downs and South West REIQ president Daniel Burrett said rent rises were generally the landlord’s reaction to increasing interest rates.

“Rents are continuing to go up,” he said.

“The average rent price in Toowoomba is in the early $400s. It used to be around the $330 to $340 mark.”

statewide surge

Statewide it is no secret that rent is also surging, particularly in high-growth areas.

According to the Everybody’s Home campaign that coincides with Homelessness Week this week, the average rent on the Gold Coast rose by over 15 per cent in the past three years.

Everybody’s Home spokesperson Kate Colvin said the data proved how many people were at risk of homelessness.

“We know that rental stress is the gateway to homelessness,” she said.

“When you combine surging rents with flat wages you put people in a financial vice and for the past three years that vice has been tightening.”

Ms Colvin said it would not just affect low to middle-income earners and was “a handbrake on the economy right through regional Australia”.

“You have situations where in tourism locations restaurants can’t open every day of the week because they can’t get the staff, or aged care services around the country where they simply can’t get the staff to operate at full capacity,” she said.

“A part of the reason for that is because people won’t move to an area to take up work if they can’t find a house or a property in the rental market.

“In terms of our economic health, particularly in regional Australia, housing is an important part of the picture.”

never been worse

Data Finance Analytics principal Martin Short said he had never seen it as bad.

“Unfortunately, both rental stress and mortgage stress seem to rise and the pressure on households is really stressful and growing,” he said.

“I’ve never seen it so high with almost half of households with a rent obligation finding it really difficult to service it.

“It’s the worst in the high-growth corridors, the areas of the country that have been on a lot of new developments.”

Lowset brick house with For Rent sign out front.
Housing advocate Everybody’s Home says surging rents with flat wages have put people in a “financial vice”.(ABC News: Lucy Robinson)

Rents rose by 12.1 per cent on the Sunshine Coast to an average of $641 per week and 9.4 per cent or $426.21 per week in Cairns.

Ms Colvin said the solution was in social housing.

“Obviously, building social housing would deliver rental properties, but rental properties that are targeted to low-income households who are the ones who are being most squeezed out of the rental market,” she said.

Ms Colvin said this would then free up rentals for people in other income brackets.

“So, it’s a really great solution that really fits the problem,” she said.

Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume.

Play Video.  Duration: 11 minutes 4 seconds

Why is everything so expensive?

.

Categories
US

80% of NYC gun suspects get released from custody following arrest: Eric Adams

More than 80% of pistol-packing perps were put back on the streets after getting busted for gun possession in New York City this year, Mayor Eric Adams said Wednesday.

“When it comes to guns, this year, 2,386 people were arrested with a gun. Of those, approximately 1,921 are out on the street,” Adams said during a news conference on bail reform and recidivism.

“Arrested with a gun, out on the street.”

Adams added: “Gun arrests in custody: 19.5%. Out of custody: over 80%.”

“How do you take a gun law seriously when the overwhelming numbers are back on the streets after carrying a gun?” I have asked.

Adams also highlighted the number of gun suspects who’ve been re-arrested — and re-released.

“This year, 165 people were arrested with a second gun charge,” he said.

“Of those, 82 — out on the street. Not one arrest but two gun arrests — back out on the street,” he smoked.

This is the highest percentage in years.
Major Eric Adams questioned how anyone could take a gun law seriously if they are released from custody so quickly.
NYC Special Narcotics Prosecutor
This is the highest percentage in years.
Around 80% of perps for gun arrests are released to the streets.
Robert Miller

Adams didn’t specify how many defendants were released without bail or how many posted bail to get sprung.

All gun-possession charges are eligible for bail under New York law, which requires judges to impose the least restrictive conditions necessary to ensure defendants return to court.

In 2019, the year before the state’s controversial bail reform law took effect, “we arrested 80 people for a gun crime who had an open gun arrest,” Adams said.

Major Eric Adams
Adams has continuously challenged state lawmakers on bail reform.
Robert Miller

In 2021, he said, “the number was 259” — more than three times as many.

Adams also said that in 2019, 20 people arrested in shootings already had pending gun-possession charges but that last year, the number spiked nearly fourfold, to 77.

Also during Wednesday’s news conference at One Police Plaza, NYPD Chief of Crime Control Strategies Michael Lipetri said, “We like to talk about credible messengers when we work with our social service providers … to deliver the message to the crew member about stop the violence. ”

But Lipetri said that “the credible messenger today in New York City is the crew member that was arrested with a gun yesterday, that’s out today, that’s telling that crew, ‘Well, look at me, I can carry a gun in New York City .’”

Lipetri said the NYPD was investigating 716 suspected of committing 30% of the roughly 2,400 shootings that have taken place since 2021.

“Of those individuals, 54% — almost 385 — today have an open felony,” he said.

.

Categories
Sports

Alligator Blood a shock scratching from Victorian spring carnival after ruling from integrity officials

EXCLUSIVE: Alligator Blood banned from Victorian spring carnival

Alligator Blood has been banned from racing in the Victorian spring carnival.  Picture: Grant Peters–Trackside Photography Alligator Blood has been banned from racing in the Victorian spring carnival. Picture: Grant Peters–Trackside Photography

Headline horse Alligator Blood has been sensationally banned from racing in the Victorian spring carnival.

In a bombshell development, News Corp can exclusively reveal the two-time Group 1 winner has been barred by Victorian integrity officials.

Victoria has followed the NSW lead in banning Alligator Blood from racing, due to owner Allan Endresz’s undischarged bankruptcy status.

“In relation to horses where you hold a majority interest: Stewards will not allow any horse in which you hold a majority share to race in Victoria until: (a) you annul your bankruptcy; and (b) resolve the ownership ascertainment issue to the Stewards’ reasonable satisfaction,” a letter from RV deputy chief steward Rob Montgomery to Endresz reads.

$4.99 SIGN UP! GET SET FOR THE SPRING CARNIVAL WITH RACENET IQ

“For the avoidance of doubt, the prohibition outlined in this section 2 includes the following horses: Alligator Blood and American Pioneer.”

Endresz said he may seek an immediate legal injunction over the matter – he will be on a hook-up with his legal team on Friday.

“We could seek an injunction or appeal the decision to try to keep Alligator Blood going,” Endresz said.

“I could also put an application in that converts 60 per cent of the ownership over to the other owners.

“But then they (integrity officials) say they might need to do due diligence on the finances of the other owners, that’s absurd.

“It’s distressing for Alligator Blood’s fans they have taken this hard-nosed approach, this was a specific rule introduced for me, there is no doubt about that.

“They (Racing Victoria) allowed Alligator Blood’s Cox Plate nomination and now they have done this today.”

Alligator Blood winning the Stradbroke Handicap. Picture: Grant Peters–Trackside Photography

In terms of banning Alligator Blood, Racing Victoria told Endresz “any future ownership application to amend your interest in the racing ownership of the named horses will be subject to stewards review and approval.”

Horses in which Endresz owns a minority interest may be allowed to race in Victoria, subject to stewards’ discretion.

Alligator Blood, trained by Gai Waterhouse and Adrian Bott, was set to be a huge Victorian spring carnival drawcard.

He secured a famous and emotional win in the Stradbroke Handicap, giving Waterhouse her first Stradbroke win and her 150th Group 1 triumph.

Endresz’s wife – terminally ill Joy – was on death’s door when Alligator Blood won the Stradbroke and she passed away the following day but not before waking up and asking if the horse had won.

Bott said he would work with Victorian authorities to try to understand the decision, but rich Hong Kong races in December loomed as one potential option.

As it stands, Alligator Blood can still race in Queensland so there is also the option of the rich Magic Millions day on the Gold Coast in January.

“Where can we race? If it is Magic Millions we will look at that, or if it is an international campaign we will look at that,” Bott said.

Earlier on Thursday, before News Corp broke news Alligator Blood had been banned from the Victorian spring, Endresz also revealed he had nominated the star horse for the Japan Cup in November.

News Corp sighted a letter from Japanese racing officials about the matter.

“We recognize that Alligator Blood is one of the great horses in Australia,” a representative from the Japan Racing Association writes to Endresz.

“The nomination for the Japan Cup will close on 4 October. The JRA Selection Committee will be held as soon as possible after closing.

“We wish Alligator Blood continued success at the spring carnival.”

Allan Endresz with wife Joy, who passed away the day after Alligator Blood won the Stradbroke. Picture: Twitter/Facebook

It is a bold and unorthodox move to even consider as the Japan Cup is run over 2400m and Alligator Blood has never stretched out beyond 1600m.

“They said they were setting Better Loosen Up a task when he won the Japan Cup (in 1990) and this horse (Alligator Blood) has already proven the doubters wrong,” Endresz said.

Alligator Blood headed north from NSW to race in the Queensland winter carnival after Racing Queensland did not follow the NSW decision to ban Endresz-owned horses from racing.

With Alligator Blood banned from racing in Victoria, it has left the headline horse in no man’s land, unable to race in either of Australia’s biggest racing states.

On Thursday morning, the TAB fixed odds market had Alligator Blood as a $26 chance in the Cox Plate.

But after the news he had been banned, TAB removed Alligator Blood from all its spring carnival betting markets including the Cox Plate.

Alligator Blood had been set to have a trial at Cranbourne next Tuesday.

Categories
Australia

ADF, Border Force called in as government establishes foot-and-mouth disease task force

The Army is being called in to advise the federal government on Australia’s preparedness for a potential outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD).

Australia has been free of the disease, which affects pigs, goats, cattle and sheep, for more than a century, but an outbreak detected in Indonesia in May has authorities on high alert.

Agriculture Minister Murray Watt says the new task force will provide urgent advice over the next four weeks on Australia’s response in the event of a potential outbreak.

“The new exotic animal disease preparedness task force will include officials from a range of government departments, including the Australian Defense Force, Australian Border Force and Animal Health Australia,” Senator Watt said in Canberra.

“By bringing together the best expertise from across government, we can ensure that everyone understands their roles and responsibilities if there were to be an outbreak, and that there are no gaps in our response.”

.

Categories
US

Restructuring officer for Alex Jones’ business questioned about tens of millions withdrawn from company



CNN Business

The accountant now in charge of overseeing right-wing conspiracy theorist Alex Jones’ company Free Speech Systems through its bankruptcy was questioned Wednesday by attorneys for families of Sandy Hook shooting victims over $62 million in funds Jones has drawn from the company over the years.

Free Speech Systems, which runs Jones’ conspiratorial outlet Infowars, filed for bankruptcy protection on Friday, amid proceedings in two states to determine how much Jones owes in damages to families of Sandy Hook victims over his false claims that the shooting was a hoax and they had not actually gone through the experience of losing a child in it.

Marc Schwartz testified he signed a contract to take over as Chief Restructuring Officer for the company in June and now controls all bank accounts, payroll and hiring decisions. Schwartz testified that Jones withdrew about $62 million dollars from the company over 14 years, and testified that $30 million of those withdrawals was paid to the IRS.

Schwartz also testified during the hearing, which ran for more than six hours, that Infowars received about $9 million in cryptocurrency donations and that “they went directly to Mr. Jones.”

Schwartz said during his testimony that Free Speech Systems should be allowed to use cash it has on hand to be able to pay vendors, saying otherwise it will have to shut down.

“If we can’t pay the critical vendors then we will be shut down,” Schwartz said. “The company’s in a situation right now where there’s not a whole lot of breathing room.”

US Bankruptcy Judge Christopher Lopez said Wednesday he would not allow more withdrawals moving forward and that he found some of Schwartz’s testimony “troubling.”

Court documents filed Friday as part of Free Speech Systems’ bankruptcy showed the company has between $10 million and $50 million in estimated assets and between $50 million and $100 million in estimated liabilities. An attorney for Free Speech Systems said at the hearing Wednesday that the company has about $1.3 million cash on hand.

Schwartz stressed the importance of being able to pay vendors that allow the company to broadcast and sell products online, saying that when Jones is not on the air discussing products he sells, the company sees a 30% drop in sales.

“If we can’t broadcast, we can’t sell,” Schwartz said.

Schwartz testified the management structure of Free Speech Systems was not set up the way a successful business should be managed.

“There is Alex and then there is everybody else,” Schwartz testified.

Schwartz said accounting controls were, as far as he could tell after taking control of the company, “nonexistent,” that the people responsible for maintaining the company’s books did not have accounting degrees and that there had been no financial reports produced in at least 18 months when he took over.

Lawyers homed in on Jones’ salary under the bankruptcy plan, saying documents showed Jones’ salary before the bankruptcy was $625,000 a year, and under a restructuring plan, it would amount to about $1.3 million. Schwartz said Jones’ salary could be considered reasonable because of his value to the company.

“Who is more valuable? Nobody,” Schwartz said. Lopez authorized a lower salary for Jones to be paid, of about $20,000 every other week.

When asked how much the company had spent on legal expenses related to the Sandy Hook lawsuits, Schwartz said company records show at least $4.5 million have been spent between 2018 and 2021, but that he does not believe that number is accurate.

Schwartz also testified that Jones used a company-associated American Express card to pay for personal expenses, including housekeeping charges, regularly in the past 18 months. The card had $300,000 a month in charges, but Schwartz said accounting staff did not label what the charges were for.

“We can’t tell you whether it’s for electricity, entertainment or electronic supplies for the production studio,” Schwartz said.

Lopez said he would not authorize the current American Express bill of about $172,000 to be paid.

Schwartz said he didn’t know who Jones was before being hired, and that he doesn’t agree with many of Jones’ views but occasionally consults with him on matters involving the business.

Three smaller companies tied to Jones declared bankruptcy earlier this year, briefly pausing the suits against Jones. But the families suing him dropped those companies from their lawsuits so that the cases could move forward against only Jones and Free Speech Systems. Shortly after, the companies exited bankruptcy protection.

.

Categories
Sports

Potential No.1 pick nominees for father-son selection

Will Ashcroft has officially nominated to join Brisbane as a father-son selection in the 2022 National Draft.

Ashcroft, the potential No.1 pick in this year’s draft, is the son of 318-game triple-premiership Lions champion Marcus Ashcroft.

The teenager has starred for Sandringham Dragons in the NAB League and for Vic Metro in the Under 18 National Championships.

Ashcroft put his name up in lights after racking up 51 disposals for the Dragons in a NAB League match in June.

Subscribe to the SEN YouTube channel for the latest videos!

“I can’t wait to join the Club and start earning the respect of all the players and coaching staff,” the young midfielder told Brisbane’s website.

“I was lucky enough to do some work with the midfielders last pre-season and I am really looking forward to learning from them and hopefully breaking into that group and seeing what we can become.

“To be following after dad is a privilege and if I can achieve half of what he did then I would be happy. I am also looking forward to forging my own name.

“I’d like to say a big thanks to Leon Harris (Lions recruiter) he has done heaps of work over the years to support me. And also a huge thanks to my parents and brother and sister for all they have done.”

Ashcroft is averaging 35 disposals in the NAB League and 33 touches across three games for Vic Metro.

His younger brother Levi is eligible for the 2024 National Draft.





.

Categories
Australia

Father who killed toddler are doing donuts on quad bike likely to avoid jail, court hears

A Victorian father who killed his two-year-old son in a quad bike crash because he was doing donuts with the toddler on his lap has wept after learning that he is likely to avoid jail.

WARNING: This story contains details that may distress some readers.

Christopher Browne was behind the wheel when he lost control of the buggy during the dangerous manoeuvre and it overturned, flinging his son Lincoln from the vehicle at their home in Barnawartha North, near the New South Wales border, on Christmas Day in 2020.

Lincoln was sitting on his father’s knee and was only being held in place. No one was wearing a helmet.

Browne escaped the crash with minor injuries, as did his sister, who was in the passenger seat.

He today appeared in the County Court of Victoria and pleaded guilty to dangerous driving causing death and conduct endangering persons.

Judge Michael Cahill said he accepted that Browne was “profoundly remorseful.”

“I have formed the view in all the circumstances in this case that a community correction order is the appropriate sentence for Mr Browne,” the judge said.

“Living with the loss of his child is punishment more than any court could impose.”

Browne, who appeared by videolink from Wodonga, wiped away tears as the judge spoke.

Father was trying to ‘scare’ sister in lead-up to crash, court hears

On December 25, 2020, Browne opened presents and ate brunch with family members at his home in Barnawartha North.

Just before lunchtime, Browne took his Polaris buggy out to give his guests rides.

He got into the driver’s seat and sat on top of the seatbelt, which was already clipped in, while his sister got into the passenger side and put on her restraints.

Court documents reveal that Browne placed Lincoln, who wanted to go for a ride, on his left knee and held him in place.

He then drove out into a paddock and performed several donuts before driving back up the driveway, where he reached speeds of up to 70 kilometers per hour.

He turned the buggy around and drove back into the paddock to perform another donut when he lost control of the vehicle and it flipped, flinging the toddler.

The court heard the buggy was estimated to be traveling at 45kph at the time.

The event was witnessed by Michael Hart, the partner of Browne’s sister.

“Lincoln fell out … and went straight under. The buggy landed straight on top of him,” he later told investigators.

The two-year-old died at the scene.

Lincoln smiles as he is held by his father in a family photo outdoors.
The court heard Browne has been overwhelmed by post-traumatic stress in the aftermath of his son’s death.(Facebook)

Browne later told investigators that he was trying to “scare” his sister.

“I tried to show my sister my new car … My brother-in-law, her partner, said not to go too hard to scare her ’cause he wanted to get one, which her being my sister made me feel like I wanted to ,” he said.

He told police that he had one mid-strength beer during lunch and a pre-mixed drink before and during brunch, but tests revealed he had no alcohol in his system after the crash.

“Mr Brown has been overwhelmed by his post-traumatic stress,” Judge Cahill said.

“At times, the only thing that keeps him going is his sense of responsibility to look after his wife and the younger child.”

None of Browne’s family members made victim impact statements to the court and he was supported by his wife during the hearing.

Prosecutor Erin Ramsay initially pushed for jail time but ultimately accepted that a community-based order was an appropriate sentence.

“There should be a very significant amount of unpaid community work attached to such an order given that the order’s really being made in lieu of what would otherwise be imprisonment,” she said.

Browne’s bail was extended ahead of his sentence next week.

He will be assessed for a community-based order.

.

Categories
Sports

Scotland’s Eilish McColgan upsets Kenya’s Irine Cheptai in the Commonwealth Games 10,000m, matching her mother Liz Nuttall

The women’s 10,000m race in Birmingham has produced one of the iconic moments of the Commonwealth Games, with Scotland’s Eilish McColgan upsetting the odds to emulate her mother Liz Nuttall by taking gold in the event.

The pair had an emotional embrace in the stands after the race, which saw McColgan break the Commonwealth Games record.

Nuttall (formerly Liz McColgan), won the women’s 10,000m world title and the 10,000m crown at the Commonwealth Games in Edinburgh in 1986.

She went on to successfully defend her title in Auckland four years later. In the process she set a Commonwealth Games record for the event of 31 minutes 41.42 seconds.

A Scottish athlete runs to the shoulder of a Kenyan rival on the final corner of a 10,000m final, as both runners grimace.
Eilish McColgan and Irine Cheptai gave it everything in a thrilling final lap of the women’s 10,000m final, before McColgan came away to win.(Getty Images: Al Bello)

Thirty two years on, her daughter came into the 10,000m facing the task of beating favorite Irine Cheptai of Kenya.

loading

The 25-lap race was a tactical battle, with McColgan lifting the slow early pace before it evolved into an elite group of six, that then became a group of three with Cheptai and compatriot Sheila Chepkirui Kiprotich.

Kiprotich then dropped back with a suspected leg problem, leaving McColgan and Cheptai alone.

The crowd in the Alexander Stadium roared her on, McColgan gritted her teeth and hung in on the final lap as she refused to be broken by the Kenyan runner.

The pair ran down the back straight with Cheptai leading by a meter or so, but McColgan was still there and kept responding to every move.

As they ran towards the final turn, McColgan was on her shoulder and the crowd noise grew again.

The Scottish runner seemed to lose balance slightly but regathered herself for one last push entering the straight. She finally drew level and then moved in front.

Both women were on the limit, but McColgan had enough in reserve to draw ahead in the final stages and sprint clear for gold.

Team Scotland's Eilish McColgan celebrates her gold medal in the women's 10,000m
The emotions were high for Eilish McColgan as the Scottish runner brought the house down with a stirring win in the 10,000m, like her mother had 32 and 36 years previously.(Getty Images: David Ramos)

She raised her arms in triumph as she crossed the line, then the tears flowed for McColgan as she tried to process the fact she had won.

.