Categories
Australia

The Somerton Man has been named. What do we know about Carl ‘Charles’ Webb?

A breakthrough in one of Australia’s most enduring mysteries — the case of the Somerton Man — last week saw the previously unidentified man named as Melbourne electrical engineer Carl “Charles” Webb.

The case had baffled detectives and amateur sleuths since the 43-year-old’s body was found slumped on Adelaide’s Somerton Beach in 1948.

University of Adelaide professor Derek Abbott made the breakthrough while working in conjunction with US investigator Colleen Fitzpatrick, after decades of independently researching the case.

This week is your chance to ask the experts how they cracked the Somerton Man case — and why it has attracted so much attention. Join our live Q&A blog from 12pm AEST on Thursday.

What do we know about Carl “Charles” Webb so far?

November 1905

Carl Webb is born on November 16, 1905, in Footscray to Richard August Webb (1866-1939) and Eliza Amelia Morris Grace (1871-1946).

Documents show his father was born in Hamburg, Germany, to Johannes Fredk Webb and Eliz Buck and his profession was a baker.

According to his birth certificate, his mother was born in Percydale, Victoria, and Carl was the couple’s sixth child.

His siblings are listed as Russell, 12, Freda, nine, Gladys, eight, Doris, four, and Roy, one.

October 1941

Carl Webb marries Dorothy Jean Robertson on October 4, 1941, at St Matthews church in Prahran, Victoria.

Their marriage certificate lists Carl Webb as a 35-year-old instrument maker and Dorothy Robertson as a 21-year-old foot specialist.

The couple live on Domain Road in South Yarra.

luggage tag
A suitcase with this luggage tag was left at Adelaide Station in 1948 and was connected to the Somerton Man mystery.(Supplied: Caroline Billsborrow)

November 1948

On November 30, 1948 — the day before his body was found — the Somerton Man bought a bus ticket and caught a bus from the railway station to Somerton Beach.

According to the coronial inquiry, a number of people saw him on the beach that day.

December 1948

On December 1, 1948, a man’s body is found slumped against a wall under the esplanade at Somerton Beach.

He was wearing a brown suit, had a clean-shaven face and appeared to be about 40 years old.

He had a half-smoked cigarette on his lapel and, according to a newspaper report, his legs were crossed.

He is found with a few personal items including two combs, a box of matches, a used bus ticket to the area, an unused second-class train ticket, a packet of chewing gum and cigarettes.

A post-mortem finds the man had a “stinkingly” enlarged spleen and internal bleeding in the stomach and liver.

The coroner concludes the death resulted from poison.

Somerton Man
The personal items found inside a suitcase believed to belong to the mysterious Somerton Man. (Supplied)

January 1949

A suitcase believed to belong to the mystery man is found at Adelaide Railway Station.

It contains an assortment of his belongings including a shaving brush, a knife in a sheath and boot polish.

Some of his clothes have the tags removed and others, including his tie, had T Keane printed on them.

The scrap of paper found in the Somerton Man's fob pocket.
The scrap of paper found in the Somerton Man’s fob pocket with the Persian words “Tamam Shud”.(Supplied: Professor Derek Abbott)

May 1949

A tiny rolled-up piece of paper inscribed with the words “Tamam Shud” is found hidden deep in the fob pocket of the man’s trousers.

The torn paper is later traced back to a book of ancient Persian poetry, the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, which had been left in the back seat of a car near where the body was found.

The words roughly translate to “the end” or “the finish”, and the poems touch on themes including the need to live life to the fullest and having no regrets when it ends.

June 1949

Coroner Thomas Erskine Cleland begins the inquest into the Somerton Man’s death on June 17, 1949.

The inquest is added four days later with no answers to who the mystery man is or what caused his death.

A black and white photo of a book with a section torn out.
The torn final page of a copy of Rubaiyat by Omar Khayyám, a 12th-century poet. (Supplied: Carolyn Billsborrow )

July 1949

A copy of The Rubaiyat with the page containing “Tamam Shud” torn out is handed in to the police on July 22, 1949, by a man who says he found it in the back of his car in November 1948.

The book contains a sequence of letters and a couple of telephone numbers.

Jessie 'Jo' Thomson is a key player in the Somerton Man mystery.
Jessie ‘Jo’ Thomson was interviewed by police in July 1949.(Supplied: Professor Derek Abbott)

One of the telephone numbers belongs to a nurse called Jessie Thomson, who lives just hundreds of meters from where the body was found.

In July 1949, police interview Jessie Thomson but she denies knowing the Somerton Man.

October 1951

On October 5, 1951, Dorothy Webb puts a public notice in The Age newspaper in Melbourne, publicizing that she had started divorce proceedings against her husband on the ground of “desertion”.

“Unless you enter an appearance in the Prothonotary’s Office of the Supreme Court of Melbourne on or before the 29th day of October, 1951 the case may proceed in your absence and you may be ordered to pay costs,” the ad states.

Typed writing in a column on a newspaper page
The public notice published in The Age newspaper on October 5, 1951.(Source: Trove)

During this time, Dorothy Webb relocated to Bute on South Australia’s Yorke Peninsula.

It is not clear what led her to the country town or how long she lived there.

Descendants of her sister have told Professor Abbott she remarried and died in the late 1990s in New South Wales.

November 2013

Jessie Thomson’s daughter, Kate Thomson, reveals her mother told her she knew the identity of the Somerton Man.

“She said to me she knew who he was, but she wasn’t going to let that out of the bag,” Kate Thomson tells current affairs program 60 Minutes.

Stone slab on a grave with flowers around it
The Somerton Man was buried in Adelaide’s West Terrace cemetery. (Australian Story: Ben Cheshire)

November 2020

An artist’s impression of what the Somerton Man would have looked like is released by Canadian cinematographer Daniel Voshart.

The only images previously available were unflattering black-and-white post-mortem photographs and a death mask of his face and upper torso.

The virtual-reality specialist worked with researcher Derek Abbott and genealogist Colleen Fitzpatrick to create the impression.

Somerton Man image
Canadian special effects artist Daniel Voshart recreates the Somerton Man’s face. (Image: Daniel Voshart)

May 2021

South Australian police exhume the Somerton Man’s remains from Adelaide’s West Terrace Cemetery in the hope that DNA samples will solve the case.

Previous police investigations and a coronial inquest left the matter unresolved, with hundreds of candidates being identified and then ruled out over the years.

May 2022

University of Adelaide researcher Derek Abbott and American genealogist Colleen Fitzpatrick announce that they believe the Somerton Man’s name is Carl “Charles” Webb.

They arrived at the result by comparing DNA from hair stuck in a plaster bust of the man’s head with samples uploaded by millions of people around the world in online databases used to create family trees.

The match is yet to be formally confirmed by South Australia’s coroner, but Professor Abbott says he is 99.9 per cent confident they have correctly identified the Somerton Man.

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Categories
US

Joshua Brandon Crane’s body was found along the American River after he attempted to rescue two rafters in distress.


The American River just outside of Sacramento, Calif.

The American River just outside of Sacramento, Calif.

David Rout/Getty Images

A Sacramento man who attempted to save two rafters was found dead along the American River, the Sacramento Bee reported.

The outlet says that 30-year-old Joshua Brandon Crane went missing Friday, July 26 after jumping into the American River to save two struggling rafters. Though the two of them eventually made it to safety, it wasn’t until Saturday that Crane’s body was recovered downstream from the San Juan rapids – a popular recreational area in Fair Oaks, California. The Bee says that Crane wasn’t wearing a life jacket at the time of the incident.

It’s unknown whether the two rafters were wearing a life jacket. Crane’s official cause of death is still being determined.


Sacramento County’s Regional Parks website says that even strong, skilled swimmers should put on life jackets while visiting local rivers, lakes and waterways. People are advised to wear them while boating, swimming, or even just wading. If someone is in distress, they’re advised to yell for help while another person reaches toward them with a tree branch, boat paddle or pole. Bystanders can also toss a life jacket or ice chest to the distressed person to help keep them afloat while help arrives. Currently, there are eight life vest stations along the American River Parkway that loan vests to both children and adults.

The Sacramento Police Department did not respond to SFGATE’s request for comment at the time this article was written.

Categories
Technology

Riot’s League of Legends Fighting Game Will Be Free-to-Play

Riot Games has confirmed today that its upcoming 2D fighting game, currently codenamed Project L, will be free to play.

This announcement was made in a video by executive producer Tom Cannon in a video posted to Twitter, where he also promised that whatever monetization the team ultimately implemented would be “respectful of both your time and your wallet.”

In the same video, Cannon confirmed that the team is currently finishing work on the game’s core mechanics, and much of the team has already moved onto features like competitive play and social systems, or designing champions.

One such champion was shown off briefly during the video, as well as in more detail in a subsequent blog post from associate game director Shaun Rivera. We got a closer look at concept art for Illaoi – a prophet of the Great Kraken – in Project L.

Illaoi was released in League of Legends nearly seven years ago, where she uses an artifact called the Eye of God to tear souls from the bodies of her opponents and judge their worthiness. Illaoi in Project L is a “powerful and charimatic spiritual leader” with a dominating physical presence that gives her a large hitbox, big and powerful attacks, and slower movement. She fights with her giant totem, but also is assisted by her tentacled god, Nagakabouros. There are lots of detailed tidbits about her design and gameplay from her in the blog.

Project L – Illaoi Champion Concept Art

Project L is an upcoming 2D assist-based fighter where each team has two champions. It was first announced back in 2019, and has reemerged more frequently in the last year with gameplay updates, including one more update promised later this year by Cannon.

Project L isn’t expected to release this year, but perhaps we’ll see it in 2023.

Rebekah Valentine is a news reporter for IGN. You can find her de ella on Twitter @duckvalentine.

Categories
Entertainment

Snezana Wood shares rarely seen photos of newborn daughter

Snezana Wood shares rarely seen photos of newborn daughter Harper during home photoshoot

Snezana Wood has shared adorable photos of her youngest daughter, Harper.

The former Bachelor winner, 41, shared a two photos of the adorable baby in a rocker as the pair bonded at their Melbourne home on Sunday.

Two-month-old Harper looked adorable in her white jumpsuit as she lay with mother Snezana keeping a watchful eye over her.

Snezana Wood (pictured) shared rarely seen photos of newborn daughter Harper during a home photoshoot on Sunday

Snezana Wood (pictured) shared rarely seen photos of newborn daughter Harper during a home photoshoot on Sunday

Snezana kept it glamorous in a partially unbuttoned white shirt and black pants with her raven tresses in a high ponytail.

‘Poor Harper just wants to chill, relax in her rocker, just look around AND then there’s my big Wog head getting in her face!’ Snezana wrote, playfully.

‘[Second] pic Harper’s face: someone make her give me some space!!’

The adorable photoshoot is a welcome change of pace for Snezana and husband Sam Wood, who welcomed Harper back in May.

Harper looked adorable in her jumpsuit as she lay with mother Snezana keeping a watchful eye over her.  She made fun of herself invading the infant's personal space

Harper looked adorable in her jumpsuit as she lay with mother Snezana keeping a watchful eye over her. She made fun of herself invading the infant’s personal space

Little Harper has been in and out of hospital since birth.

The Woods faced heartbreak when their newborn was taken to the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) and Snezana was also hospitalized with sepsis shortly after the delivery.

‘Of course in true Snez fashion her only thoughts were for her little baby and it was breaking her heart that she couldn’t hold her,’ Sam said on Instagram last month.

'Of course in true Snez fashion her only thoughts were for her little baby and it was breaking her heart that she couldn't hold her,' Sam said on Instagram last month

‘Of course in true Snez fashion her only thoughts were for her little baby and it was breaking her heart that she couldn’t hold her,’ Sam said on Instagram last month

‘Snezana Wood, you really are the strongest and most beautiful person I know and like you, thank god the force is strong in little Harper.’

After 24 days in the hospital, Harper was able to go home.

Sam and Snezana met on season three of The Bachelor in 2015 and got engaged later that year. They married in late 2018.

They are parents to daughters Willow, Charlie and Harper. Evie is Snezana’s daughter from her first marriage.

Sam and Snezana met on season three of The Bachelor in 2015 and got engaged later that year.  They married in late 2018. Here with Harper

Sam and Snezana met on season three of The Bachelor in 2015 and got engaged later that year. They married in late 2018. Here with Harper

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Categories
Sports

Kyle Bruce robbed, Australia news

Aussie weightlifter Kyle Bruce was in tears after he had the gold medal taken off him following a controversial review.

It appeared Bruce had set a new Commonwealth record in the 81kg category with a final lift that was given the all-clear by all three judges.

However, on slow-motion review, officials judged that Bruce’s arms did not fully extend.

The ruling saw him relegated to the silver medal.

England’s Chris Murray eventually set a new Games record after lifting a combined 325kg from his snatch and clean and jerk lifts.

Bruce looked absolutely shattered as the decision was announced and was seen being consoled by a member of the Australian team.

He was also in tears when interviewed by Channel 7 as he spoke about wanting to do his father proud.

Kyle Bruce was in tears when interviewed after the ceremony.  Photo: Channel 7.
Kyle Bruce was in tears when interviewed after the ceremony. Photo: Channel 7.Source: Supplied

Bruce wears his father’s compression top every time he competes following his dad’s death in 2015.

“It got overruled for a press out, I haven’t seen the video so I’m not sure but sometimes it’s just how the sport goes and congratulations to Chris on winning it. He was the good lifter on the day and I just got a bit unlucky there.”

He said he was “devastated”.

“My only focus and goal coming into these Games was winning that gold medal for Australia and coming away with that silver. Not going to lie, is quite disappointing. I set my standards very high but that’s just how sport goes sometimes and I’ll be ready for 2026 and I’ll come back and have some redemption I think.”

He was briefly overcome with emotion and needed several moments to compose himself when speaking of his dad.

“My dad actually passed away in 2015 and I just wear his shirt because… so he’s always there with me,” he said after a long pause.

“Just so he’s always there for me. This one’s for him.”

Silver medalist Kyle Bruce of Team Australia. Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images.Source: Getty Images

The commentators on Channel 7 were heartbroken for him.

“Oh no. He got the three green lights and now the jury has had another look at that and decided that is a no lift,” one commentator said.

“A tragedy for Kyle Bruce. He goes back to the silver medal position. The silver that he won four years ago.

“There’s tears backstage.

“What about the emotion? Then this man (Murray) has got to come out and try and steal it.”

When cutting away from the action to move to the netball, Sevens host Mel McLaughlin described the result as “heartbreaking”.

Aussie netball legend Cox summed it up perfectly: “Sport is horrible. It is also good in the same package.”

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Categories
US

Guy Refitt, Texas man who brought gun to Capitol on Jan. 6, sentenced to 87 months in prison

Washington— A federal judge on Monday sentenced Guy Reffitt, the Texas man convicted of bringing a handgun to the Capitol during the Jan. 6 attack, to 87 months in prison, the longest sentence so far related to the 2021 assault.

A member of the far-right militia group the Texas Three Percenters, Reffitt was the first defendant to stand trial on charges stemming from the attack. He was found guilty in March of five criminal counts, including obstructing Congress’ certification of President Biden’s Electoral College win.

The 7.25-year sentence was far shorter than the 15 years sought by prosecutors, who argued that the punishment should be more severe since Reffitt’s actions amounted to terrorism. At a sentencing hearing on Monday in federal court in Washington, DC, Judge Dabney Friedrich disagreed, citing another Jan. 6 cases in which prosecutors did not seek such an enhancement.

Still, the sentence is the lengthiest handed down for a Jan. 6 defendant to date. Two other defendants received sentences of 63 months earlier this year for their roles in the attack. Reffitt’s defense team had urged the judge to sentence him to no more than two years behind bars.

Reffitt will also be on probation for three years upon his release, and must pay a $2,000 fine.

Addressing the court during Monday’s hearing, Reffitt admitted he acted like a “f***ing idiot” on Jan. 6 and said he regretted his actions, apologizing to Congress and the officers he encountered that day.

pxl-20220801-201324674-2.jpg
Guy Refitt addresses a federal judge in Washington, DC, on Monday, August 1, 2022, ahead of his sentencing for his role in the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.

William J. Hennessy, Jr.


“I was a little too crazy,” he said to a skeptical Friedrich. “I was not thinking clearly.”

The judge said it was difficult not to see the apology as anything but “halfhearted,” particularly given some conspiratorial statements he has made about the events of Jan. 6 since his arrest.

“What he and others who attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6 did is the antithesis of patriotism,” the judge said before handing down the sentence.

In seeking the lengthier sentence, prosecutors said in court filings that Reffitt played a central role as part of the mob on Jan. 6, and intended “to use his gun and police-style flexicuffs to forcibly drag legislators out of the building and take over Congress.”

Assistant US Attorney Jeffrey Nestler told Friedrich that Reffitt “puffed himself up” as the leader of the mob, waving the rest of the rioters on as he confronted police on the Capitol’s west front.

“He didn’t just want President Trump to stay in power,” Nestler said. “He wanted to physically and literally remove Congress.”

The prosecutor alleged that Jan. 6 was “the beginning” for Reffitt. “He wanted the rest of his militia group to start taking over state capitols all around the country,” Nestler said.

Former US Capitol Police Officer Shauni Kerkhoff, who confronted Reffitt outside the Capitol on Jan. 6, implored the judge to sentence Reffitt to the maximum sentence possible under the law.

“His actions weren’t acts of patriotism. They were acts of domestic terrorism,” Kerkhoff said.

Prosecutors said Reffitt also threatened his children when they wanted to report him to authorities.

At his trial, Reffitt’s 19-year-old son Jackson — who turned his father in to law enforcement — told the jury that he had learned of his father’s membership in the mob when he saw his mother and sister watching news coverage of the events that day. jackson described the threat his dad had made against him and his sister, Peyton, when they tried to turn him in: “If you turn me in you’re a traitor, and traitors get shot.”

In court on Monday, prosecutors read a letter from Jackson to the judge, in which he described the “painful, slow story” of his father’s descent into conspiracy theories. He said his father needed mental health care, which Friedrich said she would require as part of the sentence.

During the trial, Reffitt’s attorney at the time called no witnesses, and Reffitt did not testify in his own defense.

F. Clinton Broden, Reffitt’s new attorney, disagreed with prosecutors’ characterization of his client. He argued in written memos and in court that Reffitt never actually entered the Capitol, never removed the handgun from his holster and “never gave any indication he would actually harm his children.”

Peyton, the defendant’s daughter, spoke emotionally in court on Monday in support of her father and explained that his mental health was a real issue.

Wiping away tears, Peyton said, “My father’s name wasn’t on the flags that were there that day, that everyone was carrying. It was another man’s name,” referring to former President Donald Trump, who addressed his throngs of supporters near the White House before they marched on the Capitol.

Friedrich, the judge, appeared most concerned with Reffitt’s mental health and prospects once he is eventually freed, at one point asking, “What is this man going to do after he is released from prison?”

“It’s really disturbing that he repeatedly persists with these views that are way outside the mainstream,” she added, “His claims [about attempts to overthrow the government] are wrong.”

Friedrich also took issue with Reffitt’s violent threats against lawmakers like Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi.

“To this day, he has not disavowed those comments,” she said.

Since Reffitt’s conviction by a 12-person jury, five more defendants have been found guilty by juries. Five others have been convicted by judges at bench trials. One defendant, matthew martinwas acquitted of multiple misdemeanor counts by a judge.

Outside of court on Monday, before the sentence was imposed, Reffitt’s wife Nicole told CBS News she believed prosecutors’ representation of her husband was a “misrepresentation.”

“He’s a good man,” she said.

Cristina Corujo contributed to this report.

Categories
Technology

Bioscientists use mixed-reality headset, custom software to measure vegetation in the field — ScienceDaily

Ecologists won’t always need expensive and bulky equipment to measure vegetation in the wild. Rice University scientists have discovered a modern heads-up display works pretty well.

Rice researchers set up a Microsoft HoloLens as a mixed-reality sensor to feed VegSense, their application to measure understory vegetation, plant life that grows between the forest canopy and floor.

A proof-of-concept study by graduate student Daniel Gorczynski and bioscientist Lydia Beaudrot shows VegSense could be a suitable alternative to traditional classical field measurements at a low cost.

Their study in Methods in Ecology and Evolution shows the hardware-software combination excels at quantifying relatively mature trees in the wild, which is one measure of a forest’s overall health.

Gorczynski came up with the idea to try HoloLens, commonly marketed as a productivity tool for manufacturing, health care and education. I have developed the open-source software for the device and noted that while the combination is less effective at picking up saplings and small branches, there’s ample room for improvement.

Gorczynski said he was introduced to mixed-reality sensing while an undergraduate at Vanderbilt University and recognized its potential for biological studies. “It seemed sort of like a natural fit,” he said. Gorczynski brought the idea to Beaudrot in 2019 shortly after his arrival at Rice.

The combination of stock hardware and custom software cost far less than systems based onlidar (for “light detection and ranging”) most often used in three-dimensional field studies, said Gorczynski, who developed VegSense on a platform geared more toward 3D games and interactive experiences than hard science.

Field tests at Houston’s Memorial Park showed that at least for mature trees, the smaller solution is just as good. In their case study, VegSense easily detected 48 of 50 such trees in the target area, a circle about 30 feet in diameter that Gorczynski walked, looking up, down and around to build the 3D database. (“Imagine an asterisk with a circle around it,” he said, describing the data-capture pattern.)

“For this study, we wanted to be really deliberate in trying to replicate more traditional understory vegetation structure measurements,” Gorczynski said. “We tried to get that level of detail.”

What he sees as he scans the environment is a holograph-like grid pattern that tracks the surfaces of vegetation. “What’s really cool about that is you can see what the scanner is picking up, but also the spots you missed,” Gorczynski said. “The idea is to get the mesh to cover as much of the vegetation as possible because that’s what gets you the best scan.”

“The results were so nice that Dan quickly wrote it up for publication,” Beaudrot said, noting that Gorczynski expanded his validation of the gear during a subsequent field trip to Tanzania, the focus of one of 15 tropical forests in a recent rainforest study by the Rice group.

“This device can facilitate a lot of great ecological research, particularly because it’s so cost-effective,” she said. “Collecting vegetation information on the forest floor right now is really hard to do without a lot of manual labor, or a really expensive lidar system.”

“So this is a groundbreaking, cost-effective device,” Beaudrot said. “It’s not going to give you the same resolution data that lidar will, but this is just the first application. We hope making VegSense open-source to the ecological research community will spur all the potential ways it can be developed.”

Northrop Grumman, Conservation International and Rice supported the research.

Video: https://youtu.be/dBHfxvhMChU

StorySource:

Materials provided by Rice University. Originally written by Mike Williams. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.

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Categories
Entertainment

OnlyFans job for nurse who was shocked to learn boyfriend had secret family – who she was paying for

A former nurse says she was forced to start a risky but high-paying job – after discovering her boyfriend had a secret family that she had been paying for.

Dara, 37, from Brooklyn in New York, regularly shares sexy snaps with her 271,000 followers on Instagram.

WATCH THE VIDEO ABOVE: Dara joined OnlyFans after learning boyfriend had secret family

For more Relationships related news and videos check out Relationships >>

But the pursuit morphed into her joining OnlyFans, and she now makes more than 16 times what she previously earned as a newborn intensive care unit nurse.

Dara needed the money after finding out her partner had another, secret girlfriend – who was eight months pregnant.

Even more shockingly, she claims her ex had been using her money to cover his budding family’s expenses.

Dara, who learned her boyfriend had a secret family – and she was paying their bills. Credit: Jam Press/@moneybirdette

In June 2019, Dara was working as a NICU nurse.

Although living pay to pay, she was also supporting her boyfriend – even agreeing to move across the US to live with him.

A month after moving to the Big Apple, Dara uncovered the truth about her boyfriend.

Not only did he have a heavily pregnant girlfriend, but Dara was financing them both.

“I found out through Facebook,” she told JamPrime.com.

“We were about to go and meet his mum, who lives abroad, and I went to follow her and noticed she was ‘friends’ with a profile of his that I didn’t know about.

The former nurse joined OnlyFans. Credit: Jam Press/@moneybirdette

“When I clicked on this alternative profile, I saw photos from a baby shower for his other girlfriend.

“I was so shocked, hurt and angry.”

Stuck in a lease in a swanky New York flat, Dara ditched her boyfriend.

But she soon found herself struggling to pay her bills.

Dara’s now glamorous life has been hard-earned. Credit: Jam Press/@moneybirdette

Looking for new ways to make ends meet – and wanting to show her ex what he was missing – she decided to try OnlyFans, launching her account in 2018.

Within her first month, she made $US30,000 ($A43,100) – the equivalent of her yearly nursing salary.

Now, she makes more than $A722,500 per year – and it’s all thanks to her cheating ex.

“I have a lot of pride and decided to just figure my financial situation out, rather than let a man take advantage of me,” Dara said.

“When I fell into debt, I ditched him, then got rid of my car, which was a money guzzler, and started an OnlyFans.

“The rest is history.”

In the beginning, she mostly posted behind-the-scenes images from photo shoots, but she couldn’t believe how much money was coming in.

“I remember thinking ‘I’m going to post whatever makes me as much money as possible’ and now I’m debt-free,” she said.

Dara had been living pay to pay while supporting her boyfriend. Credit: Jam Press/@moneybirdette

“For the first time, I can actually save money.”

Dara’s new job means she has turned her back on 13 years in health care but she has not looked back.

“I don’t plan to return to nursing as long as I keep making good money,” she said.

“I loved watching my patients grow and go home.

“But the job started to take a toll on my mental health.

“Being a nurse is emotionally taxing when you work in the intensive care unit, and I wasn’t making enough to make ends meet.

“I don’t regret my decision.”

As for her former partner, Dara reveals he still tries to contact her and he knows about her OnlyFans career.

She said: “He still contacts me to this day but I’ve blocked him.

“I want nothing to do with him.”

For more engaging lifestyle content, visit 7Life on Facebook.

Comedian spots bizarre Bunnings apron detail.

Comedian spots bizarre Bunnings apron detail.

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Categories
Sports

Australian weightlifter Kyle Bruce believes he was robbed of gold medal

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“It’s good to review things but I also feel like it brings up a bit too much technicality in the sport and it deters people wanting to do the sport.

“I just want to be respectful but deep down I’m extremely disappointed. I wanted to win that gold.

“To have it and then 30 seconds to a minute later not, it’s absolutely gut-wrenching. I’ll probably turn my phone off for a few hours and just bring some humbleness back. I’m pretty gutted.”

Asked whether the crowd may have influenced the judges’ decision, Bruce bit his tongue but cheekily suggested he was looking forward to a home Commonwealth Games in Australia in four years’ time.

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“If it was a home crowd, maybe [I would have won], maybe not. I hate going into the whole politics of it,” Bruce said. “The decision was the decision. I did the best I could for myself and Australian weightlifting.

In a separate interview with a group of reporters, Bruce was blunt. “My next big goal is the 2026 Commonwealth Games in Bendigo which is home soil,” he said. “Maybe I will have the advantage there.”

Murray was asked whether he felt he deserved the gold medal, considering Bruce was adamant he had made the superior lift. After a short pause, he said weightlifting needed to look at how it reviewed lifts.

“I haven’t seen it. I feel for him,” Murray said. “Do we need referees and courts? It’s something that a lot of the weightlifting community have been arguing about for a while. It’s great they’ve got video review.

“I feel for him because he’s a strong guy. He put the weight on the bar and he got it overhead. It’s a shame the referee has called it. He did phenomenally well.”

Bruce owns a gym in Parramatta and got into weightlifting to get stronger as a rugby back-rower. His father of him passed away from cancer a few years ago, which inspired him to take up weightlifting full-time.

“There will be some redemption,” Bruce said. “There is a good incentive and motivation to really train hard and come back and get that gold. I had that gold. It got taken away. That’s pretty hard to handle. I’m a strong and motivated person. I’ll bounce back from this and I’ll get there.”

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Categories
US

Guy Refitt: Jan 6. rioter who carried gun to US Capitol and threatened Nancy Pelosi gets more than 7 years in prison

Reffitt, a recruiter for a right-wing militia known as the Three Percenters, was the first Capitol rioter to go to trial rather than take a plea agreement.

“Mr. Reffitt’s reluctance to admit early that his behavior is illegal is concerning,” District Judge Dabney Friedrich said before handing down the 87-month sentence. “And I want to be very clear… under no legitimate definition of the term ‘patriot’ (does) Mr. Reffitt’s behavior on and around January 6 fit the term. It is the antithesis of the word.”

Friedrich added: “The officers at the Capitol are the patriots, as well as those who fought and even died to protect our democracy, our rule of law… those in the mob are not. Not only are they not patriots, they’ re a direct threat to our democracy and will be punished as such.”

Reffitt was convicted by a DC jury in March and convicted earlier this year of five felonies, including transporting and carrying a firearm on Capitol grounds, interfering with Capitol Police and obstructing an official proceeding. He had driven to DC with several firearms, one of which he carried with him on the steps of the Capitol during the early hours of the riot.

“I just want to see Pelosi’s head hit every f**king stair on the way out. … And (Republican leader) Mitch McConnell too,” Reffitt said, according to a video recording he made of himself on January 6.

The hefty sentence, paired with the fact that every January 6 defendant to face a jury has been convicted, could determine some of the hundreds of January 6 defendants awaiting trial to instead take plea deals offered by the Justice Department.

The 87-month sentence is two years longer than any other Capitol riot prison term handed down so far.

Reffitt’s wife and two daughters were in the courtroom when the sentence was handed down. Reffitt’s younger daughter, Peyton, told the judge that her father was “not a threat to my family,” and that her family “turned a blind eye” to his mental health issues.

“My father’s name wasn’t on all the flags that were there that day, that everyone was carrying that day. He is not the leader,” Peyton said through tears, at times pausing with her hand on her heart.

The mother of Ashli ​​Babbitt, the pro-Trump rioter who was shot and killed by police on January 6, was also in the courtroom at times on Monday.

Reffitt’s son Jackson, who testified against his father during the trial, was not in the courtroom. In a statement read aloud by prosecutors, Jackson said that his father “slowly lost himself over the last five years,” but that “whether you view him as a father, a family member or friend, using these labels to justify anything he has done is completely wrong.”

Courtroom sketch during the verdict in the Guy Reffitt Jan 6 trial on March 8, 2022.

Prosecutors had sought a sentence of almost a decade longer than the most severe sentence to date by adding enhanced penalties to his sentence for terrorism. Prosecutor Jeffrey Nestler told the judge that Reffott “wanted to physically and literally remove members of Congress from power” and that the government believes “what he was doing that day was terrorism.”

“We do believe he is a domestic terrorist,” Nestler said Monday.

Friedrich did not add additional penalties for terrorism, however, saying that it would create an “unwarranted disparity” between Reffitt’s sentence and that of other rioters convicted of bringing weapons or threatening lawmakers.

This story is breaking and will be updated.

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