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Australia

Tobias Moran’s in-laws frantically rushed to free alleged killer

Just as alleged murderer Tobias Moran was set to be denied bail on Thursday, interstate saviours came to his rescue.

Mr Moran was extradited to Sydney from his home in Western Australia last week after being charged with killing his German backpacker girlfriend Simone Strobel in Lismore in 2005.

With all signs pointing to the alleged killer remaining behind bars on Thursday, it seemed Mr Moran would not be returned to his pregnant wife and two children in Perth.

But as the decision was to be passed down, the surfer’s father-in-law, John Moran, who is a well-known dentist in WA, reportedly went to great lengths to ensure his son-in-law’s release.

Mr Moran and his family are understood to have coughed up hundreds of thousands for their in-law, according to the Daily Mail.

Mr Moran’s brother in law, Michael Moran, has also entered into the bail agreement and will be required to pay $50,000 if the alleged killer refuses to allow police to inspect his phone on request.

Other bail conditions include the requirement for Mr Moran to surrender his passport, to report to Wembley Police Station three days a week and to remain off encrypted communication tools such as WhatsApp.

He must not go within 500 meters of any international point of departure, unless to travel to and from NSW for the purpose of attending court and must live at an address in City Beach in WA.

Prior to his release from custody on Friday, Mr Moran was held at Lismore Police Station.

Before being extradited to Sydney on murder charges, Moran was understood to be living a life of luxury by the beach in Perth with his wife Samantha and their two children.

Formerly known as Tobias Suckfuel, alleged the murderer took the name of his wealthy wife when the pair were married in 2012.

Ms Moran, a lawyer, yoga instructor, children’s book author and former ski instructor, is now preparing to give birth to their third child.

The alleged killer was released from prison in Sydney on Thursday after prosecutors decided not to appeal against his bail being granted.

Toby Moran (above) now lives in a Perth beachside suburb and surfs at exotic beachside locations.
Camera IconToby Moran (above) now lives in a Perth beachside suburb and surfs at exotic beachside locations. Credit: News Regional Media

The Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions released a brief statement on Thursday night.

“The ODPP has considered the matter and determined not to make a detention application in relation to Mr Moran,” they said.

The matter is next listed before the Lismore Local Court on September 28.

Mr Moran will not be required to appear.

Mr Moran is alleged of suffocating Ms Strobel inside a camper van before dumping her body under some foliage nearby.

The 42-year-old was freed by a Sydney magistrate after it was determined that there was not sufficient evidence to link him with the 2005 murder.

He can now return to his home in Western Australia where he was extradited from last week.

Magistrate Margaret Quinn in the Downing Center Local Court on Thursday accepted submissions from Moran’s barrister which claimed there was no new evidence connecting him to the murder.

Police allege Mr Moran killed his girlfriend while they were staying at the Lismore Tourist Caravan Park on February 11, 2005.

Six days after Ms Strobel disappeared, the body of the 25-year-old schoolteacher was found hidden under palm fronds just 100m from the caravan park.

Police claim Mr Moran stayed at the caravan park and misled investigators as they tried to determine the cause of Ms Strobel’s death.

According to police, Mr Moran lied during the initial investigation into Ms Strobel’s death about the nature of their relationship, their consumption of alcohol, and what she was wearing when she disappeared.

More than 17 years later, he had been extradited from his home in Western Australia and charged with murder as well as acting to pervert the course of justice.

On Thursday, Mr Moran appeared via video link in Sydney Downing Center Local Court to learn whether he would be granted conditional freedom after a lengthy bail review on Wednesday.

Simone Strobel was staying at the Lismore Tourist Caravan Park in 2005 when she died.
Camera IconSimone Strobel was staying at the Lismore Tourist Caravan Park in 2005 when she died. Credit: News Regional Media

During the bail review, his lawyer Tim Game SC told the court the case against Mr Moran was “non-existent”.

He argued the police allegations against his client, including the claim Ms Strobel died of suffocation, were not supported by evidence.

The crown prosecutor disagreed and categorized the circumstantial evidence as strong.

He noted there were a number of statements from new witnesses, which the court heard would bring the total number of witness statements to a staggering 300.

The prosecutor noted an inquest found Ms Strobel did not die from natural causes, but instead the actions of a person or people.

Magistrate Margaret Quinn noted neither an Australian inquest in 2007 nor a German inquest had definitively identified the cause of death.

The court heard the couple had been drinking, doing drugs and fighting before Ms Strobel disappeared.

Witnesses heard screaming in the area of ​​the caravan park in the hours before the young teacher disappeared.

Magistrate Quinn noted the “matters are very old” and would be difficult to prove.

Mr Moran was extradited from WA last week to face charges before the NSW court.
Camera IconMr Moran was extradited from WA last week to face charges before the NSW court. Credit: News Corp Australia
Key locations in the Simone Strobel case.
Camera IconKey locations in the Simone Strobel case. Credit: News Regional Media

She said the prosecution case was purely circumstantial.

“There doesn’t appear to be at its highest any direct evidence connecting him to the offence,” she said.

“It’s not the strongest circumstantial case I’ve seen.”

The magistrate noted Mr Moran has a clean record and his associates combined to offer $450,000 in assurances he would not flee.

Mr Moran, who was known as Tobias Suckfuell before he legally changed his name, was granted strict conditional bail after a robust discussion of how WA authorities would enforce potential bail breaches.

Magistrate Quinn determined the 42-year-old could be released if he reported to police, surrendered his phone information, surrendered his family’s passports and resided only at his City Beach home in WA.

Police claim Tobias Moran continuously lied to them after Ms Strobel went missing.
Camera IconPolice claim Tobias Moran continuously lied to them after Ms Strobel went missing. Credit: News Regional Media

However, crown prosecutor Scott Jaeger immediately moved to delay Mr Moran’s release by indicating he would submit a detention application to the Supreme Court.

Hours later, that decision was reversed.

The court heard the trial will likely be held in 2024 due to delays in the court system.

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US

Sen. Kyrsten Sinema announces deal on Inflation Reduction Act

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Business

3 ASX 200 shares to buy for a post-COVID resurgence: experts

Although it doesn’t make the front page of newspapers any more, the COVID-19 pandemic unfortunately refuses to go away.

In fact, hospitalizations and deaths were disturbingly up the past few weeks as Australians battled through winter.

So despite more than two years having passed since the S&P/ASX 200 Index (ASX: XJO) hit its coronavirus panic through, many post-COVID recovery stocks have yet to reach their full potential.

This is great news for investors, as it’s not too late to buy into some of these ASX shares.

In fact, some of them have discounted nicely in 2022 as the general market malaise dragged them down.

Here are three to buy, as nominated by Wilson Asset Management analysts:

Travel’s back. And busier than before the pandemic

The sector most obviously hit by the pandemic has been the travel industry.

While online travel agent WebJet Limited (ASX: WEB) has seen its share price double since the dark days of 2020, senior analyst Shaun Weick feels like there’s plenty more upside.

“Webjet’s a buy for us,” he said in a Wilson video.

“If you look at consensus analyst estimates on this name, you’re essentially implying a recovery to pre-COVID in the second half of 2023. We think that’s too conservative.”

Webjet has its financial year end each March, so had already reported on its results back in May, when it revealed it had returned to profitability.

“We think the market’s underappreciating the technology investments that they’ve made and the upside that provides.”

3 reasons why CSL will go gangbusters

While CSL Limited (ASX: CSL) had made a lot of money for investors for decades, the pandemic period has been lean.

Its blood plasma collection business in North America took a massive hit due to lockdowns and people generally wary of physically visiting donor centers.

Its share price, therefore, has still yet to approach its pre-COVID high.

But Wilson analyst Anna Milne reckons that’s all about to turn around.

“Firstly, there’s the Behring business, which is plasma-derived products — that’s been under-earning for a number of years now, and we think it’s really just starting to hit its straps,” she said.

“Sequiris is the vaccine business… it’s been a pretty horrendous flu season Down Under and we think that’ll probably translate to the same in the northern hemisphere.”

Then there’s the new $16.4 billion Vifor Pharma business, which CSL put in a takeover offer for late last year.

“The Vifor transaction, which has been delayed, but management is still very confident that it’s going to close and we’re really excited about the pipeline of drugs there,” said Milne.

“So CSL’s a buy.”

CSL will reveal its preliminary results on 17 August.

Strong assets and a lucrative market reopening?

Winemakers are not obvious COVID victims, but Treasury Wine Estates Ltd (ASX: TWE) would argue very much that it was.

Back in 2020, the Australian government demanded an international inquiry into the origins of COVID-19. Beijing took exception to this and placed punitive tariffs on certain Australian imports.

And China was one of the largest markets for Treasury Wine at the time.

The stock price plunged, and the company attempted to diversify its markets to restore its revenues.

Milne feels like the company can put its woes behind it now.

“Firstly, it’s got a really strong asset backing. It’s got the wine itself, then it’s got the vineyards — so that provides a bit of a backstop to the share price in these kinds of volatile environments,” she said.

“Additionally, I don’t want to speak too soon, but with a new Australian government, it does like China-Australia relations might be having a bit of a cautious reset.”

Treasury Wine will report its annual results on 18 August.

Categories
Entertainment

Victoria Beckham ‘can’t stand’ Brooklyn’s wife Nicola Peltz

There’s a full-on cold war between Victoria Beckham and her new daughter-in-law, Nicola Peltz, Page Six has learned.

Peltz, 27, just married Brooklyn Beckham, 23 – Victoria’s oldest son with soccer superstar David Beckham – back in April. But we hear trouble was brewing even before the nuptials.

“They can’t stand each other and don’t talk,” a source close to the family told us. “The build-up to the wedding was horrendous.”

The source says that Peltz – who is the actress daughter of New York billionaire Nelson Peltz – didn’t want her soon-to-be-mother-in-law “to be any part of the planning, and she wouldn’t clue Victoria in on anything. Communication was minimal.”

Apparently, the cold shoulder didn’t help Posh Spice, 48 – who was struggling to warm up to the new member of the family as it was – see Peltz’s good side.

They added that it’s become “non-stop petty drama,” and it’s coming between the Beckhams, who now live in Miami, and their model son.

“They haven’t spoken to him much in the last few months,” said a source, who told us that it even went over badly at Chez Becks when Brooklyn posted a cover of British magazine Tatler that called Peltz “The New Mrs Beckham” .

The sources suspect that Peltz may be suffering from a little jealousy about her man’s globally renowned mum, and isn’t thrilled with the attention she gets, especially around her wedding day.

Peltz and Victoria Beckham were contacted for comment.

This story was originally published by Page Six and has been reproduced with permission

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Categories
US

Analyzing how 3 US presidents announced the deaths of terrorist leaders : NPR

President Barack Obama delivers a televised statement that Osama bin Laden was killed in 2011. President Donald Trump makes a statement announcing the death of ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in 2019. President Biden announces on Monday that a US drone strike in Afghanistan killed al -Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri.

Brendan Smialowski/Pool; Alex Wong; Jim Watson/Pool/Getty Images


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Brendan Smialowski/Pool; Alex Wong; Jim Watson/Pool/Getty Images


President Barack Obama delivers a televised statement that Osama bin Laden was killed in 2011. President Donald Trump makes a statement announcing the death of ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in 2019. President Biden announces on Monday that a US drone strike in Afghanistan killed al -Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri.

Brendan Smialowski/Pool; Alex Wong; Jim Watson/Pool/Getty Images

The sight of a US president announcing the death of a terrorist leader has been a fixture in American politics over the past 11 years.

The words each president uttered and their mannerisms at the podium reveal a lot about the type of leaders former Presidents Barack Obama and Donald Trump attempted to be and in the case of President Joe Biden, attempt to be.

This week, Biden announced that the US had killed al-Qaida leader Ayman al-Zawahiri in Kabul over the weekend.

In 2019, Trump revealed that the US killed ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. And in 2011, Obama shared with the American people that Osama bin Laden, the architect of the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the US, was killed.

In the days following Biden’s announcement, edited videos have popped up online comparing the speeches by Biden, Obama and Trump. Though some of the videos are created to put certain leaders in a bad light, analyzing these three speeches is worthwhile, according to historians and rhetoric experts who spoke to NPR.

Taking a deeper look at each speech, their delivery, even down to the words each used, provides a small window into each man, those experts said.

Though starkly different characters, there are similarities worth noting, said Thomas Schwartz, a professor of history, political science, and European studies at Vanderbilt University.

The fact that Obama, Trump and Biden took center stage to announce the execution of another person is “a little bloodthirsty,” Schwartz said.

“But they do recognize that there’s a domestic political gain from taking out terrorist leaders, and they want to claim it,” he added.

Each president in their speech makes a special note to say that they directed the military and intelligence officers to act on the intel provided, that they gave the orders, Schwartz said. Each man ultimately wants to assert his leadership from him on the global stage, he said.

“Underneath it all are presidents trying to justify themselves politically and gain something politically,” Schwartz said. “So I think our comparison on that level is probably justified even if, on stylistic things, it also reminds people what they liked and didn’t like about various presidents.”

Obama’s speech on bin Laden looms large

President Barack Obama reads his statement to photographers after making a televised statement on the death of Osama bin Laden from the East Room of the White House on May 1, 2011.

Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP


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Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP


President Barack Obama reads his statement to photographers after making a televised statement on the death of Osama bin Laden from the East Room of the White House on May 1, 2011.

Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP

Each expert who spoke to NPR agreed: Obama’s speech was iconic. Though Trump and Biden took out major terrorist leaders, the gravity of killing bin Laden is unmatched. To some degree, Trump and Biden attempted to even emulate Obama’s bin Laden speech, Schwartz said.

“Bin Laden was, of course, someone who was a household name in a way that the other two men were not,” said Margaret O’Mara, a history professor at the University of Washington. “So it was sort of an extraordinary historic moment, and something that in a way looms larger than the other two, because it was bin Laden.”

O’Mara noted that Obama took time to acknowledge the emotion for victims of 9/11 nearly a decade after the attacks.

“Obama’s speaking almost within a decade of 9/11 so it’s much more raw,” she said.

Obama, in a measured and somber tone, said in his nine-minute speech: “It was nearly 10 years ago that a bright September day was darkened by the worst attack on the American people in our history.”

In this image released by the White House and digitally altered by the source to diffuse the paper in front of Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, President Barack Obama and then-Vice President Joe Biden, along with members of the national security team, receive an update on the mission against Osama bin Laden in the Situation Room of the White House on May 1, 2011.

Pete Souza/AP


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Pete Souza/AP


In this image released by the White House and digitally altered by the source to diffuse the paper in front of Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, President Barack Obama and then-Vice President Joe Biden, along with members of the national security team, receive an update on the mission against Osama bin Laden in the Situation Room of the White House on May 1, 2011.

Pete Souza/AP

He went on to say: “And yet we know that the worst images are those that were unseen to the world. The empty seat at the dinner table. Children who were forced to grow up without their mother or their father. Parents who would never know the feeling of their child’s embrace. Nearly 3,000 citizens taken from us, leaving a gaping hole in our hearts.”

Obama also carefully described how the White House came to receive intelligence on bin Laden and a short description of the steps special forces took to kill him.

“There’s no question that watching Obama, you got reminded of how deliberative and almost academic his style could be in discussing things,” Schwartz noted.

Trump rejects traditional presidential rhetoric

Former President Donald Trump speaks on Oct. 27, 2019 in the Diplomatic Room of the White House, announcing that Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the leader of the Islamic State group, is dead after being targeted by a US military raid in Syria.

Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP


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Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP


Former President Donald Trump speaks on Oct. 27, 2019 in the Diplomatic Room of the White House, announcing that Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the leader of the Islamic State group, is dead after being targeted by a US military raid in Syria.

Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP

Former President Trump took a far different approach in announcing the execution of Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in 2019.

Taking a moment to analyze Trump’s speech in comparison to Obama and Biden provides “a window into a lot of things,” O’Mara said.

“In kind of a very blunt way, it’s a window into how Trump was such a very different president — and not just different from the two men who were on either side of him, but modern presidents generally,” she said. “If you dial back and look at presidential oratory of presidents of both parties, it’s very different in terms of not only the tone, but what type of information is being relayed.”

Trump, known for lengthy rally speeches during his presidency, spoke for far longer than Obama or Biden in this announcement. His initial speech from him went on for over eight minutes, but he went on to take questions from reporters for another 40 minutes.

And with his usual flair, Trump spoke about the raid in dramatic detail using emotive language to describe both al-Baghdadi and the manner in which he died.

“No personnel were lost in the operation, while a large number of Baghdadi’s fighters and companions were killed with him. He died after running into a dead-end tunnel, whimpering and crying and screaming all the way,” Trump said.

He went on describing the operation, saying, “The thug who tried so hard to intimidate others spent his last moments in utter fear, in total panic and dread, terrified of the American forces bearing down on him.”

This goes back to Trump’s background not in politics, but as a businessman and reality TV star, these experts noted.

“One of the things that was very noteworthy about Trump’s presidential rhetoric was that he claimed to not want to use it, he said that he didn’t want to be presidential,” said Jennifer Mercieca, a historian of American political rhetoric and professor at Texas A&M University. “I thought that presidential [style] was boring and lame and he thought that he won the office of the presidency by being dynamic and interesting. And so that’s, I think, very clearly reflected.”

In comparison, Biden and Obama delivered very somber speeches, she said.

Biden tries to project strength

President Biden speaks from the Blue Room Balcony of the White House on Monday as he announces that a US drone strike killed al-Qaida leader Ayman al-Zawahiri in Afghanistan.

Jim Watson/AP


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Jim Watson/AP


President Biden speaks from the Blue Room Balcony of the White House on Monday as he announces that a US drone strike killed al-Qaida leader Ayman al-Zawahiri in Afghanistan.

Jim Watson/AP

Biden is known to struggle with blunders and flubs in speeches. He’s even sometimes said the opposite of what he means, as noted by a New York Times piece during the 2020 presidential campaign.

For the announcement regarding the killing of al-Zawahiri, Biden (like the two presidents before him) wanted to communicate strength and power, Schwartz said.

Both Obama and Biden showed restraint in the language and description used to explain the killing of al-Zawahiri and bin Laden, Mercieca said.

Both men used the office of the president to sound official and to talk about justice owed to victims of 9/11.

Biden said of al-Zawahiri: “He carved a trail of murder and violence against American citizens, American service members, American diplomats, and American interests. And since the United States delivered justice to bin Laden 11 years ago, Zawahiri has been a leader of al Qaeda—the leader.”

He added: “Now justice has been delivered, and this terrorist leader is no more.”

Presidents do this to “sort of elevate what could be a very crass event, which is that the United States has exacted revenge and murdered someone else,” Mercieca said.

“What Donald Trump did was the opposite. He didn’t try to elevate it,” she said. “Instead, he called the person a ‘dog,’ he very crudely described how they died, and what it meant.”

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Business

Binance funds Andrew Bragg’s trip to San Francisco

The precise days of this June trip, for “digital asset meetings”, are unknown. Bragg updated the Senate register of interests on July 13.

Last year, Britain’s Financial Conduct Authority announced that Binance is prohibited from conducting any regulated activity in Britain and warned consumers about firms advertising and selling investments in crypto-assets.

Around the same time, Japan’s Financial Services Agency warned that Binance was operating in the country illegally, Germany’s BaFin threatened to fine Binance for selling investment products without prospectuses and the Monetary Authority of Singapore banned Binance altogether and warned consumers it is not licensed.

In the United States, where it is banned, Binance is under investigation by the Department of Justice, the Internal Revenue Service, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

Last month, Reuters reported that Iranian traders continued to operate on the Binance exchange in contravention of international sanctions.

This month, the Dutch central bank DNB fined Binance for operating in the Netherlands without being registered.

Saving the best for last, Binance last year handed over confidential customer data to Russian security services so Vladimir Putin‘s agencies could trace the sources of bitcoin donations to jailed opposition leader Alexei Navalny. And then send those donors a polite warning letter?

Yet Andrew Bragg exercised his judgment to accept Binance’s sponsorship of his international travel. His powers of judgment of him are not unlike his powers of comprehension of him: inoperative.

Standing in the Senate corridor on Wednesday, Bragg told SBS News “There’s no question there are far too many vested interests in this building and if I had it my way, I would have it locked to the lobbyists.”

Lock out the lobbyists, says the former lobbyist for bank-owned super funds. Too many vested interests, says the guy whose jolly to California was funded by the crypto industry. Turns out Bragg’s self-awareness is also on the blink.

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Entertainment

Banksy painting found in Tel Aviv, 70 kilometers from its original location in West Bank

A long-lost painting by British graffiti artist Banksy has been resurfaced in an art gallery in downtown Tel Aviv, an hour’s drive and a world away from the concrete wall in the occupied West Bank where it was initially sprayed.

The relocation of the painting, which depicts a slingshot-toting rat and was likely intended to protest Israel’s occupation of the area, raises ethical questions about the removal of artwork from occupied territory.

The painting initially appeared near Israel’s separation barrier in the occupied West Bank city of Bethlehem and was one of several works created in secret around 2007.

Banksy’s trademark absurdist and dystopian imagery was used to protest Israel’s decades-long occupation of territories the Palestinians want for a future state.

It now resides at the Urban Gallery in the heart of Tel Aviv’s financial district, surrounded by glass and steel skyscrapers.

Israeli art dealer Koby Abergel, who bought the painting, said the gallery was simply displaying the work and leaving its interpretation to others.

“We brought it to the main street of Tel Aviv to be shown to the audience and to show his messages,” he said.

Mr Abergel said the cracks and scrapes in the concrete served as “a fingerprint” that proved it was the same piece that appeared on the artist’s website.

He said he bought the concrete slab from a Palestinian associate in Bethlehem, but declined to disclose how much he paid for it.

The 70-kilometre journey it made from the West Bank to Tel Aviv is shrouded in secrecy.

The concrete slab, which weighs about 400 kilograms, would have had to pass through Israel’s serpentine barrier and at least one military checkpoint.

The graffiti artwork was spray-painted on a concrete block that was part of an abandoned Israeli army position in Bethlehem, next to a soaring concrete section of the separation barrier.

Sometime later, the painting was itself subjected to graffiti by someone who obscured the painting and scrawled “RIP Bansky Rat” on the block.

Mr Abergel said Palestinian residents cut out the painting and kept it in private residences until earlier this year.

banksy graffiti
Banksy’s work depicts a slingshot-toting rat and was likely intended to protest Israel’s occupation of the West Bank.(AP Photo: Oded Balilty)

He said relocating the work involved delicate negotiations with his Palestinian associate and careful restoration to remove the acrylic paint sprayed over Banksy’s work.

The massive block was then enclosed in a steel frame so it could be lifted onto a flatbed truck and rolled through a checkpoint, until it arrived in Tel Aviv in the middle of the night.

It was not possible to independently confirm his account of his journey.

Israel controls all access to the West Bank, and Palestinians require Israeli permits to travel in or out and to import and export goods.

Even when traveling within the West Bank, they can be stopped and searched by Israeli soldiers at any time.

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Categories
Australia

Maribyrnong City Council to remove 12 trees from Bunbury Street, angering residents

A dozen heritage-listed trees in Footscray have been marked for removal by Maribyrnong City Council (MCC) after reports they posed a risk to public safety.

Some 54 English elm and desert ash line Bunbury Street in the Melbourne suburb, with the eldest trees planted about 120 years ago.

But residents believed MCC was unnecessarily removing some trees and were only informed about the plans days before work was expected to start.

Local Footscray Ronch Willner said the move had sparked anger.

“Last week they sent notifications to a few residents about the removal works that have started today,” he said.

“Because of the poor community consultation, the community has started to read the reports and have started to [realise] … they’ve been selectively removing the trees over the years without notifying the residents.”

A street with cars parked on either side and large leafy green trees in the nature strip.
Residents say they want to see the heritage-listed trees remain.(Supplied: Martin Stockfeld)

Mr Willner said the community, which wanted its green spaces preserved, understood the safety risks the trees could pose.

But he said the community felt MCC was unnecessarily removing some of the trees.

Mr Willner said a juvenile tree (number 51) that was flagged in the arborist reports as “needing watering” was removed by the council without notice.

A report from the MCC flagged the decline in the trees’ health was in part due to infrastructure and management of the canopies, and stated three trees had already been removed.

Many trees, according to the report, would also need to be removed in the future as they continued to grow, with their roots possibly becoming damaged by the kerbside.

A screenshot of a report showing to photos of trees growing into the gutter of a street.
Some trees may be removed because they are growing too close to the kerb.(Supplied: Maribyrnong City Council)

Trees ‘could not be saved’

MCC chief executive officer Celia Haddock said the trees were putting the street’s residents and visitors at risk and “could not be saved.”

“Two mature elms collapsed during a severe wind event last year,” she said.

“Their failure prompted MCC to proactively assess and remove only those identified as being in poor structural condition to mitigate any future risk to the public.”

Plans to replace the trees have not been confirmed, but Ms Haddock said the council would be “working with local residents on a tree-planting renewal plan”.

Community members have since started an online petition in the hope MCC will rethink the trees’ removal.

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US

DeSantis suspends elected Democratic prosecutor who signed pledge on abortion cases

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Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) suspended the Tampa Bay area’s top state prosecutor Thursday after he vowed not to prosecute potential crimes related to abortion restrictions or gender-affirming care for minors.

Legal experts described the decision to suspend Hillsborough County State Attorney Andrew Warren (D) as alarming because it appears to be punishing an elected official exercising prosecutorial discretion on issues the governor disagrees with.

“It’s shocking and disturbing behavior,” said University of Miami law professor Tamara Lave. “[Warren is] a democratically elected official put in that office by voters. They elected him twice. If his constituents do not like what he was doing, they have the ability to vote him out of office.

Warren was first elected in 2016, and reelected in 2020. He signed a pledge in June with dozens of other prosecutors from around the country that said they would “refrain from using limited criminal legal system resources to criminalize personal medical decisions.”

Warren signed a similar pledge in 2021 that stated prosecutors would “use our discretion and not promote the criminalization of gender-affirming healthcare or transgender people.”

DeSantis signed into law this year a ban on abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy with no exceptions for rape or incest. A lawsuit claiming the ban violates the right to privacy in the Florida constitution is being heard on appeal.

While there currently is no ban in the state on gender-affirming surgery, DeSantis said Warren shouldn’t preemptively say he would not prosecute if a law is passed.

DeSantis, surrounded by law enforcement officers at a news conference at the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office in Tampa on Thursday, said Warren was trying to “nullify” state laws.

“This prosecutor, this state attorney for this judicial circuit, Andrew Warren, has put himself publicly above the law,” DeSantis said.

DeSantis said Warren had a “very, very troublesome record.”

Warren has taken other actions that DeSantis criticized, including declining to prosecute 67 protesters arrested for unlawful assembly during the demonstrations over the murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police in 2020.

Warren was also instrumental in helping formerly incarcerated people regain their voting rights after DeSantis signed into law restrictions to a voter-approved constitutional amendment allowing them to register to vote.

Warren also created a conviction review office to examine innocence claims. During a news conference that had been scheduled Thursday before DeSantis suspended him, Warren announced the success of one of those cases. After leading an investigation that in 2020 freed a man wrongly convicted of murder, Warren’s staff continued to pursue the case, and on Thursday he announced that an examination of DNA linked two other men, currently in prison, to that murder, as well as other murders in the area in 1983.

Linda Sheffield, a niece of Linda Lansen, one of the victims, appeared alongside Warren and thanked him for getting justice for her family after four decades.

“I keep saying thank you to him, and he keeps saying no. But it’s true, we need this. We need this here,” Sheffield said. “We also need it all over the state.”

Warren was asked at the news conference what he was doing when he learned that DeSantis had suspended him.

“I was doing the work that I was elected to do as a state attorney,” Warren said. “I was focused on delivering justice to Linda and her family de ella that they’ve been waiting 39 years to get… and I was overseeing the office of 300 people that keeps 1.5 million people safe in Hillsborough County. So the governor wants to do his side show with his cronies of him, I’m the one who’s upholding the law and keeping the community safe. ”

In his order suspending Warren, DeSantis said the prosecutor “demonstrated his incompetence and willful defiance of his duties” when he signed the pledge to “use our discretion and not promote the criminalization of gender-affirming healthcare or transgender people.”

DeSantis supporters in the GOP-led Florida legislature applauded the governor’s move. Incoming state House speaker Paul Renner tweeted that state attorneys “don’t get to choose which laws you uphold … that’s the California way.”

Rep. Fentrice Driskell, leader of the Florida House Democrats, called the suspension “a mean-spirited political stunt.” Driskell, who is from Tampa, said Warren has done a good job as a state attorney.

“Andrew Warren’s statements are well within his prosecutorial discretion,” Driskell said. “I don’t believe the governor has authority to remove him just because of decisions he doesn’t agree with. Voters put Andrew Warren in office. We have a governor who doesn’t respect representative democracy.”

Warren said at the Thursday afternoon news conference that he still considered himself to be the state attorney for the 13th Judicial Circuit, and that he hadn’t read DeSantis’s order suspending him.

“And just based on the governor’s track record with unconstitutional orders, I have a feeling that this is going to be just as unconstitutional as the 15-week ban on abortion, the anti-protest law and [a] dozen other things,” Warren said. “The governor is trying to overthrow the results of a fair and free election. … This is the governor trying to overthrow democracy here in Hillsborough County.”

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2023 Nissan Z arrives in Australia

The first Nissan ‘Zed’ car in more than a decade has arrived in Australia, ahead of the start of customer deliveries in the coming weeks.


The new 2023 Nissan Z has arrived in Australia ahead of the first customer deliveries in the coming weeks.

Revealed 12 months ago, the simply-named ‘Z’ is the first new Nissan ‘Zed’ car since the 370Z went on sale in 2008, offering a refreshed retro-styled look, standard twin-turbo V6, and a modern twin-screen inside.

Priced from $73,300 plus on-road costs, it’s also about $20,000 more expensive than the car it replaces – with a limited-edition Proto Spec pushing the price to $80,700 plus on-road costs.



While customer deliveries are yet to begin, Nissan Australia is celebrating the arrival of its first new Zs with a step back through the ‘Z car’ lineage, which celebrated its 50th birthday in 2019.

A gallery of images published by Nissan Australia today shows six of the seven Z-car generations built since 1969:



  • Two examples of the original ‘S30’ generation: an original 1969 Datsun 240Z, and a 1974 Datsun 260Z
  • 1978 Nissan 280ZX, designated S130
  • 1989 Nissan 300ZX (the second-generation 300ZX, badged Z32)
  • 2002 Nissan 350Z (Z33)
  • 2008 Nissan 370Z (Z34)
  • 2023 Nissan Z

Missing from the set is the first-generation 300ZX (the Z31), sold in the mid 1980s.

While not publicized at launch, in a fun fact for Nissan Z fans: official Japanese data lists the new Z as wearing the RZ34 designation, rather than the long-rumoured Z35 codename, as it’s not an all-new car – but rather a reskin of the old 370Z, with a similar floorpan and identical wheelbase.

For a deep dive into all past Nissan Z-car generations, click here to read Drive’s history feature, published in late 2020.



“This is a proud moment. Few models can claim the performance lineage of the Z, and to be able to celebrate it right here in Australia, on the eve of a new dawn of performance for the brand, is special,” Nissan Australia Managing Director, Adam Paterson, said in in the middle statement.

“This might be the first example of the all-new Z we see on local roads, but we’ll soon be seeing many more, with a new era of Z about to begin.”

the 2023 Nissan Z is due in Australian showrooms in the coming weeks.



alex misoyannis

Alex Misoyannis has been writing about cars since 2017, when he started his own website, Redline. He contributed for Drive in 2018, before joining CarAdvice in 2019, becoming a regular contributing journalist within the news team in 2020. Cars have played a central role throughout Alex’s life, from flicking through car magazines as a young age, to growing up around performance vehicles in a car-loving family.

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