Categories
Australia

Police hunt for five more teens after boys charged over Sydney stabbing brawl

Five more teenagers are wanted by police over a brawl that ended in a stabbing at a south-west sydney school which police allege started with a disagreement over a girl.

Five teenagers, aged between 15 and 16, have already been charged over the altercation.

A 15-year-old boy was found with lacerations on his back when emergency services were called to Bankstown’s La Salle Catholic College on Wednesday afternoon.

Five teens have been arrested after a 15-year-old boy was stabbed in Bankstown. (9News)

He was treated at the scene and taken to hospital in a stable condition.

A second 15-year-old boy was treated for a laceration to the thigh, while a third 15-year-old boy was treated for swelling and bruising to the face.

Superintendent Adam Johnson said five more teens of the same age are being sought.

Several had already been identified, while video footage on witness’ phones were being used to identify others.

They have been urged to hand themselves in at Bankstown Police Station.

Five teens have been arrested after a 15-year-old boy was stabbed in Bankstown. (9News)

Johnson said the fight started after two boys had a disagreement over a girl. “It’s an isolated incident,” he said.

“Some bad decision-making has ended in dire consequences.”

Parents of children at the school have been left in disbelief over the incident.

“It’s really got to stop, they’re our children, they’re our future,” one parent told 9News.

“You used to put a bottle of milk out and collect your milk outside, screen doors unlocked.

“You can’t live like that anymore, it’s really upsetting.”

“These youths don’t need this.

“They need to wake up,” another parent said.

All five teenage boys were refused bail and will appear in court later today.

Inquiries are continuing.

Categories
US

Alex Jones’s attorney ‘messed up’ and sent two years of texts to Sandy Hook parents’ lawyers

The legal team for far-right conspiracy theorist Alex Jones accidentally sent two years of his phone records to the attorneys for parents of a Sandy Hook school shooting victim, cross-examination revealed Wednesday during his defamation trial.

“Your attorneys messed up and sent me an entire digital copy of your entire cellphone with every text message you’ve sent for the past two years,” attorney Mark Bankston Told Jones during a hearing to decide damages in the civil case.

“And that is how I know you lied to me when you said you didn’t have to text messages about Sandy Hook,” he added.

Jones has long touted a theory that the 2012 shooting that killed 20 children and six teachers at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., was a hoax.

He was found guilty by default in four defamation cases last year after failing to comply with court orders.

Bankston argued Wednesday that Jones lied under oath about having searched his own phone for the texts and withheld the evidence in lawsuits brought by Sandy Hook families.

Jones replied that he’d given his phone over to his team.

“This is your Perry Mason moment,” he told Bankston, making reference to the fictional TV lawyer who often presented dramatic evidence at trial that changed the proceedings.

Bankston is part of the legal team representing Neil Heslin and Scarlett Lewis, parents of 6-year-old Sandy Hook shooting victim Jesse Lewis.

The Washington Post reported that Bankston caught Jones in a similar contradiction about related emails, showing the court copies of emails sent by Jones despite his insistence that he does not use email.

Bankston also revealed evidence indicating that Jones had not been truthful about his financial situation, perhaps in an effort to skirt the $150 million in defamation damages that the Sandy Hook parents are seeking, The New York Times reported.

Jones’s company, Free Speech Systems, filed for bankruptcy at the start of the trial — and his far-right website Infowars did the same back in April.

Jones testified Wednesday that he now acknowledges that the Sandy Hook massacre was real.

He said that meeting the victims’ parents, whom he previously called “crisis actors,” changed his mind. “It’s 100 percent real,” Jones said, according to The Associated Press.

Despite this concession, Jones continues to defend his actions and argues that the trial violates his free speech rights.

He arrived at the courthouse last week with “Save the 1st” written on a strip of duct tape over his mouth.

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Categories
Sports

North Melbourne all bid for Alastair Clarkson, meeting, Eddie McGuire report, future, GWS Giants, coaching great, latest

North Melbourne has gone “all in” on trying to sign Alastair Clarkson as their next senior coach, according to former Collingwood president Eddie McGuire.

Clarkson is currently being courted by both North and Greater Western Sydney, but McGuire believes the Kangaroos are “a real chance” of landing the four-time premiership coach.

North parted ways with former coach David Noble a month ago after just 38 games in charge and Leigh Adams has been caretaker in Noble’s stead.

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“Alastair Clarkson has met with Sonja Hood, the president of the North Melbourne Football Club,” McGuire told Channel 9.

Clarkson’s manager James Henderson told McGuire that the meeting went “very well” and that it was “a worthwhile experience”.

The former Hawthorn coach plans to meet with the Kangaroos again, as well as the Giants, in the coming fortnight.

“North Melbourne have gone all in on Alastair Clarkson, there is no Plan B at the moment,” McGuire said.

“If he doesn’t go (to North) they’ll come up with a Plan B, but they’ve shown that they want him.”

McGuire believes that Clarkson is now seriously contemplating coaching again next year, rather than waiting until 2024 to re-enter the fray.

The Roos are going hard at Clarkson (Photo by Michael Willson/AFL Photos via Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

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“His management have said, ‘You know you don’t have to coach next year?’ And I think he’s thought, ‘You know what? I’m a coach, so I’m going to coach’, and North are now a real chance I reckon to maybe land this bloke,” McGuire said.

“But he wants to bring his own team, and I think he’s put his team together and part of his thinking might well be do they all want to live in GWS? Or can we do this at North Melbourne?

“There’s a bit going on in this story but there’s no doubt the list at GWS attracts Alastair Clarkson, but the romance and maybe the practicalities mean that he could well be the coach of North Melbourne.”

North have not interviewed anyone else for their vacant coaching job, according to McGuire.

“Until he says, ‘No,’ Clarkson’s the man,” McGuire said.

Former St Kilda and Fremantle coach Ross Lyon liked the Kangaroos’ “singular focus” in their approach.

“They really need to go all in, it’s a really good sign,” Lyon said.

“If he can bring his key people… those real pillars of success around him, he knows what needs to be done, he knows who to bring.

“It’s a super plan and I think he gets time there. No one expected them to make the eight, they’ve got green shoots, they’ve got a young midfield.

“He’ll build a great environment.”

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Categories
Australia

NCA bomber Domenic Perre loses appeal against conviction for spitting on police officer

Domenic Perre — the man found guilty over a deadly parcel bomb attack on the National Crime Authority in Adelaide nearly three decades ago — has lost a bid to overturn a guilty verdict for spitting at a police officer in prison.

In March, a magistrate found Perre, 65, guilty of aggravated assault for spitting at Detective Brevet Sergeant Simon Cassell when he came to interview him at the Adelaide Remand Center in 2018.

Brevet Sergeant Cassell and his colleague, Detective Sergeant Andrew Bull, had gone to the remand center to investigate an alleged assault on Perre by another prisoner.

The detectives had been told Perre did not want to speak to the police, but went to his cell to ask him about the assault.

After Brevet Sergeant Cassell identified himself as a police officer, Perre turned his head and spat towards him, with the spit landing on his jacket lapel.

Perre was convicted, but received no extra jail time.

He lodged an appeal against the guilty verdict, which Chief Justice Chris Kourakis dismissed this morning.

The NCA headquarters in Adelaide following the blast.
The aftermath of the bombing of the NCA building in Adelaide in 1994.(Courts Administration Authority)

Perre watched the hearing through a video link from custody.

After the brief hearing was adjourned his lawyer explained what happened.

“His Honor has dismissed the appeal,” the lawyer said.

“Of course, yeah,” Perre replied.

“The system’s a total a***hole,” Perre said moments before his video link was disconnected.

Perre is also seeking permission to appeal against his murder and attempted murder convictions.

He was found guilty in June over the bombing that killed Detective Sergeant Geoffrey Bowen and seriously injured lawyer Peter Wallis in 1994.

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Categories
US

Biden signs executive order aimed at helping women travel for abortion

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden signed an executive order Wednesday aimed at helping women cross state borders to obtain abortions, his second order since the Supreme Court overturned the constitutional right to the procedure.

The order directs the Department of Health and Human Services to “consider” allowing Medicaid funds to be used to assist people traveling between states to obtain abortions. The order also directs HHS to ensure that health care providers comply with federal anti-discrimination laws so women receive “medically necessary care without delay.”

Image: Joe Biden
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, left, and Attorney General Merrick Garland listen as President Joe Biden speaks virtually during the first meeting Wednesday of the Interagency Task Force on Reproductive Healthcare Access at the White House.Susan Walsh/AP

Biden, who spoke virtually to his newly formed task force on reproductive health care access as he continues his Covid isolation, called the state of abortion access a “health care crisis” and warned that Republicans want to ban the procedure nationwide.

Voters in Kansas on Tuesday overwhelmingly rejected a ballot measure that would have removed language in the state’s constitution protecting abortion rights.

“This fight is not over, and we saw that last night in Kansas,” Biden said. “The court practically dared women in this country to go to the ballot box and restore the right to choose.”

Kansas, which borders states that have severely restricted abortion access following the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, including Oklahoma and Missouri, has already become a destination for out-of-state women seeking access to abortion care.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said that it would be up to HHS to ensure that the implementation of the order does not violate the Hyde Amendment, which bans using federal funds for abortions except in cases of rape, incest or danger to the life of the woman. It is unclear how HHS will go about doing that, and the order is likely to face legal challenges from conservatives.

“This is in consultation with legal experts when we make these announcements and the president has been very clear he is going to continue to do whatever he can to make sure that a woman’s right to choose continues to be protected the best way that he can from the federal government,” she said.

Jean-Pierre said also said HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra will “figure out the details and the timeline.”

Biden signed an executive order last month to safeguard access to reproductive health care services, including abortion and contraception.

Still, the actions fall short of what some Democrats and advocates have called for, such as declaring a public health emergency over abortion.

Biden has maintained that the best way to safeguard access to abortion is for Congress to pass a law legalizing abortion access nationwide, a move that Democrats do not have enough votes for.

“We’re doing everything in our power to safeguard access to health care,” Biden said. “If Congress fails to act, the people in this country need to elect senators and representatives who will restore Roe and protect the right to privacy, freedom and equality.”

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Sports

Holloway to debut, Porecki OUT, No.15 and scrum half calls made, as Rennie faces injury crisis

Waratah Jed Holloway will make his debut at No.6 ahead of Rob Leota when the Wallabies play Their Rugby Championship opener against Argentina, while coach Dave Rennie has suffered another injury set back to his starting team.

Channel Nine rugby reporter Michael Atkinson wrote Holloway was certain to be named at blindside flanker.

The 29-year-old was expected to win his first gold jumper against England in July, but he missed all three games with a calf injury.

Fox Sports suggested meanwhile that Tom Wright was locked in to play at fullback with Jordie Petaia returning on a wing and Jake Gordon and Reece Hodge the two backs to be named in a 6-2 bench split.

Hooker Dave Porecki suffered a concussion in training and will have to undergo a 12-day stand down. Brumbies hooker Billy Pollard has been called up as an emergency replacement and is heading to Mendoza for Sunday’s match, although Folau Fainga’a will star with Lachie Lonergan on the bench and the timing of Porecki’s head knock means he should be available for the second Test on Sunday week.

‘devastated for him’

Wallabies coach Dave Rennie said Samu Kerevi remains in World Cup calculations despite the season-ending ACL injury suffered at the Commonwealth Games.

Wallabies fans have been questioning how Kerevi was allowed to pursue a sevens medal as the Rugby Championship was about to get underway, but the destructive center was honoring a commitment made after the Tokyo Olympics.

Rennie said Kerevi would not have been picked for this year’s Spring Tour due to Japanese club commitments, meaning he misses six Tests, with the Wallabies due to play 11 more in total.

“We are devastated for him. The point of him going to sevens was we thought he could make a genuine difference for them in winning a medal,” Rennie told the Sydney Morning Herald.

“We will miss him big time, and not just as a player but his experience and the influence he has on others. And it’s disappointing for him, obviously, it cut short his Commonwealth Games and the international window, and it is a reasonably long recovery. So yeah, it’s a bugger.”

Rennie said he expected Kerevi could get back up to speed ahead of the World Cup next year.

“He is smart and he has a good understanding of what we’re trying to do,” Rennie said. “As you saw last year, he might have only played five Tests but he got nominated as one of the players of the year. That says a bit. We know he will come out of the Japanese program in good condition and we will get our hands on him reasonably early.

“We are confident he will be in a good place. We will try and strengthen our relationships with the Japanese clubs, just to ensure he is getting everything he needs.”

Kerevi suffered his injury in a pool match against Kenya, and Australia ended up out of the medals as he was unable to play in the final rounds.

His Wallabies teammate Len Ikitau said he had spoken to Kerevi since the incident.

“Obviously disappointed for Samu, I just chatted with him before,” said Ikitau. “I guess for him it’s getting his body right, getting surgery and then getting into rehab. So very disappointing but the type of person he is I know he’s going to bounce back and be right for next year.

“It was awesome to play with Samu. The kind of player he is, he’s direct. And then for me, it’s more just playing off that kind of ball that someone produces which is go forward and just reacting and playing on top there, so that’s something that I took out from playing with Samu.”

Kerevi’s absence is expected to see Hunter Paisami step in alongside Ikitau at 12 when Rennie names his 23 on Friday morning AEST for the first Test in Argentina on Sunday.

“He’s a different player to Samu,” said Marika Koroibete about Paisami. “He’s got his own game from him. He’s an extra playmaker for us as well, different energy. I reckon if Hunter is picked this week he’s going to do a good job.”

Ikitau said the Wallabies were expecting to see a different style from Argentina than they encountered in last year’s two victories over the South Americans.

“We’ve watched some footage of them the way they counter,” Ikitau said. “They don’t really kick as much as recent years but we know that they’re going to be dangerous from all over the park. So I guess for us it’s fronting up in defense and just staying switched on.

“Two games against Argentina are going to be very tough two games and then against the world champs of South Africa in Australia. We need to play the footy we know we can play and keep building on it every week.

“It was disappointing we didn’t get the series win over England. We did a lot of video footage to see what we needed to work on. But for us as a team, being in Argentina, it’s a new competition and now, this trophy is up for grabs.”

Boks legend calls out Cane

South African World Cup winner Joel Stransky says All Blacks captain Sam Cane is “battling” and needs to put his hand up if the team is to avoid double defeat against the Boks.

“If the captain is battling a little bit as a player, the other players can’t help but look around and think we could be better if someone else was there,” Kransky told NZ radio.

“He is coming back from a bad injury and trying to find that form again – but that’s where he finds himself. If you are playing against South Africa you want the best 15 on the field, and I’m not sure he’s quite there at the moment.

“Ardie Savea was sensational in that (Irish) series but Ian Foster is under pressure because he’s got the talent and not made the best use of it. There’s not a great attacking structure.”

Foster has survived for now, but Stransky believes he is walking a tight rope.

“He has got two weeks left to try and right the ship and that’s not exactly a show of confidence – it’s a stay of execution,” he said of NZR’s qualified support of the coach.

Stransky is expecting an uplift from the Kiwis after their sovereign defeat against Ireland.

“I do think they will raise their game and come back from the defeat against Ireland,” he said. “But that is so hard to do against a Springbok side that dominates up front.

“If the All Blacks are weak anywhere at the moment, it’s the ability to handle the confrontation. And we just deliver pain and suffering in the confrontational areas.

“That’s our game – mauling you out of the game, scrumming you into the penalty situation.

Sam Cane of New Zealand looks on during the International Test match between the New Zealand All Blacks and Ireland at Forsyth Barr Stadium on July 09, 2022 in Dunedin, New Zealand.  (Photo by Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images)

Sam Cane of New Zealand looks on during the International Test match between the New Zealand All Blacks and Ireland at Forsyth Barr Stadium on July 09, 2022 in Dunedin, New Zealand. (Photo by Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images)

“It’s not particularly pretty, it’s not exactly positive, but it is effective and we are really, really good at it. We force the penalties and we force the points.

“I think the All Blacks need to play fast and expansively. The Welsh – who are not the best attacking team in the world – found ways through our defense and the All Blacks need to learn from that.

“They need to catch South Africa off guard when our defense is not organized and structured, avoid the big confrontational areas.

“They need to find space in the midfield and out wide… around the fringes and forwards they won’t find anything.
“But it’s easier said than done because you need a good solid foundation to do that, and we stop the opposition from getting that foundation.”

Cane, meanwhile, has reflected on the difficult days that followed the Ireland defeat.

“Whenever you don’t get a result you’re looking for, the first thing you do is look in the mirror and look at your own performance,” he told reporters in South Africa.

“When you get to this level, players are always going to look at themselves and what they could have done better, rather than look outside.

“There have been a few tweaks within the coaching staff which should hopefully help, but without doubt a few of us need to be stepping up on the field.”

He knows what to expect on Sunday.

“That’s a confrontational, physical battle. You just have to look at the footage – big men coming round the corner, running hard, cleaning hard, and some of the skill and speed in midfield and the outside backs is right up there with the best in the world. They’re the full package,” Cane said.

On a personal level, Cane said it had been tough for the players’ families.

“I’ve been doing all right,” said Cane. “The key is not to engage or read any articles or stuff online, and focus on your close group of friends and team-mates. As long as they have your back and believe in you, and you believe in yourself, then you’re in a pretty good spot.

“It’s probably harder sometimes on loved ones. But I’ve been all good. When we come in and get into our work, it’s almost like we’re in our own little bubble, just focusing on getting things right.”

South Africa reveal team

South Africa recalled hooker Malcolm Marx and scrumhalf Faf de Klerk to the starting line-up for their Rugby Championship opener.

In a third change from the side that beat Wales 30-14 in Cape Town last month, rookie wing Kurt-Lee Arendse replaced injured Cheslin Kolbe, who is nursing a broken jaw.

Marx will earn his 50th cap, matching the feat of the man he replaces in the starting side, Bongi Mbonambi, who reached that mark last time out against the Welsh.

“He (Marx) is a true warrior and epitomizes what we stand for as the Springboks,” coach Jacques Nienaber said in a statement.

“We are preparing for a challenging Test which will be vital in setting the tone for our Rugby Championship campaign this year and that is our focus.

“The All Blacks are strong all around and they will come to Nelspruit desperate to avenge their (2-1 home) series defeat
against Ireland and to prove that they remain one of the powerhouses in world rugby, so we believe experience and
physicality will be vital in this Test.”

Marx will have props Trevor Nyakane and Frans Malherbe either side of him, while there is an experienced lock pairing
of Eben Etzebeth and Lood de Jager. Captain Siya Kolisi, Pieter-Steph du Toit and No.8 Jasper Wiese make up the back row.

De Klerk will be alongside flyhalf Handre Pollard, with Damian de Allende and Lukhanyo Am the centres, and a back three of Arendse, Makazole Mapimpi and fullback Damian Willemse.

Categories
Australia

NSW Police hope recreation of unknown man’s face can solve 35-year mystery

NSW Police hope facial reconstruction technology will help identify an unknown man found dead in Sydney’s south-west 35 years ago.

The digitally-constructed image of the unknown man has been released as part of Missing Persons Week 2022.

Detective Chief Inspector Glen Browne manages the state’s Missing Persons Register and said it was the first time the unit has used forensic facial reconstruction tools to try and identify a deceased person.

“These types of images are produced only when all other means of identification have failed,” he said.

“Yet it’s margin of error for much of the face is relatively small and the end result is quite lifelike.”

The man’s body was found on the railway line at Guildford on March 31, 1987, about 200 meters south of the Hawkesbury Street overpass.

Investigations at the time determined the man’s death was not suspicious but he has never been identified.

Detective Chief Inspector Browne said he hoped the reconstructed image would generate new leads in the case.

“Unfortunately, the man sustained serious facial injuries when he died,” he said.

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Categories
US

Fire Sparked by Electric Scooter Battery Kills Woman and Child in Harlem

A fire in a Harlem apartment early Wednesday sparked by the lithium-ion battery on an electric scooter killed a 5-year-old girl and a 36-year-old woman, and left the child’s father in critical condition, the police and fire officials said.

Firefighters responded just after 2:30 am to a blaze that broke out in a sixth-floor apartment in the Jackie Robinson Houses, owned and managed by the New York City Housing Authority. The scooter was inside the front door of the apartment, blocking the exit, according to the Fire Department. The fire was contained to one apartment and brought under control about an hour later. A firefighter and at least one other person sustained minor injuries.

Outside the multistory NYCHA building on Wednesday, a charred scooter sat unattended. Former co-workers and neighbors of the father, whom they identified as Erick Williams, 46, said it belonged to him. They described him as fun-loving and said he had previously worked for the Parks Department. His name of him, and that of his daughter of him and the woman, who neighbors said was his girlfriend of him, were not immediately released by the police.

Electronic bikes and scooters have been implicated in numerous fires in recent months, leading the housing authority to propose banning them from its buildings entirely. Experts say the problems are often linked to aging, damaged or malfunctioning batteries and charging devices. The Fire Department has repeatedly warned of the dangers of lithium-ion batteries.

Another fire on Monday on Townsend Avenue in the Bronx was also sparked by lithium-ion batteries from electronic bikes or scooters, fire marshals said. Wednesday’s fire brought the number of fatalities linked to lithium-ion batteries this year to five, according to Fire Department statistics.

Marshals have conducted 121 battery-related investigations so far this year — already exceeding the 104 carried out last year — and have recorded 66 related injuries. For all of 2021, there were 79 injuries and four deaths related to lithium-ion batteries. (While those batteries are also found in cellphones, laptops and electric cars, there have not been widespread reports of those items catching fire.)

According to NYCHA, since 2019, there have been about 10 fires in public housing that have received an official or probable cause related to lithium-ion batteries. In a statement on Wednesday, a spokeswoman for the agency said that the public-comment period for the proposed new policy to ban e-bikes and e-bike batteries in its buildings had been extended until Sept. 6, and that the agency would issue a final policy after that date.

The Fire Department distributed pamphlets and fliers about fire safety and advice for using electronic bikes and scooters near the site of the fire on Wednesday. Among the tips: Before buying an e-bike, make sure it has the UL Mark, which means it has been tested and meets safety standards. Follow the manufacturer’s instructions for charging and storage, and only use that company’s power cords.

The popularity of e-bikes has grown dramatically in recent years, but many who use them — for both work and pleasure — may struggle with those guidelines. Doing so can be much more costly than buying off-brand or refurbished equipment. And e-bikes are often used by delivery workers who are making very low wages and who have to scrounge to afford the bikes in the first place.

E-bikes were only legalized in New York City in 2020, when many residents were relying on delivery services, though they were a common sight before then. In addition to concerns about fire safety, there has also been growing friction over traffic safety on the city’s crowded streets.

Inside the Harlem building on Wednesday, the walls in the hallway near the apartment were blackened, and the smell of smoke lingered. A woman who lives on the fifth floor said she had escaped with her children from her, including a 3-month-old.

“It’s scary,” she said. “It’s a tragedy that it happened, a little girl’s life was lost.”

Outside, a pair of former co-workers — Stephanie Cardona, 46, and Courtney Story, 52 — discussed setting up a memorial. They had worked with Mr. Williams at the Parks Department, where they said he was a crew chief. The scooter, they said, was “his transportation of him.”

Ms. Cardona recalled that Mr. Williams was always in the local park with his daughter and three Huskies, which they said also perished in the fire.

Ms. Story held back tears as she contemplated the struggle that Mr. Williams had ahead of him.

“I hope to God he pulls through,” she said. “It’s going to be a process to pull through, and then your baby is gone.”

“The world is not playing fair at all,” she added.

Alain Delaqueriere contributed research.

Categories
Sports

Classy Peter Bol defies rolled ankle to stay on track for Commonwealth gold | Commonwealth Games 2022

Resilience has been a feature throughout Peter Bol’s extraordinary life and the Australian athlete was not going to let an injured ankle derail his Commonwealth Games dreams. The 28-year-old, whose family fled Sudan’s civil war when he was four, has coped with the stress that comes with competing against the best in a grievous event for the past decade.

There have been moments of brilliance, with his fourth-placed finish in the Tokyo Olympics last year an illustration. More recently, a seventh in the world championships was deflating. On Tuesday, when he rolled an ankle ahead of his appearance in a heat of the 800m in Birmingham, Bol would have been forgiven for fearing the worst.

Instead he focused. I iced the ankle. Put your feet up. He iced the joint again. And again. It was a professional approach to a scare. I have planned to fight on, no matter the pain. But it was not until Wednesday morning that he was convinced he would produce his best from him. Walking 800m on a dodgy ankle is painful, let alone running it. But Bol pulled it off with brilliance when clocking a time of 1:47.01 to qualify the fastest for Sunday’s final at Alexander Stadium.

“I rolled my ankle yesterday and I was limping on the way back and today I’m perfectly fine, so it’s a massive thanks to the medical team at Athletics Australia,” he said. “I wasn’t playing basketball, I promise. I just rolled it on the curb at the track. That’s the first time ever. It was getting better by the night and then in the morning, I was like, ‘Bam, I’m ready to go’.”

The ease with which he claimed the heat is testament to this. Bol trailed Kenyan Cornelius Tuwai, who has a faster personal best than the Western Australian, for the first 550m before dispatching with him to cruise to the line.

“To be honest, I did feel at ease and I enjoyed that a lot,” he said. “It was awesome to come back from the world’s, because it was a disappointing end, so to come back here and be in amazing shape and just switch off like that at the end is amazing.”

Meanwhile, five-time Paralympic gold medalist Evan O’Hanlon successfully defended the T37/38 100m title he claimed four years ago on the Gold Coast with a time of 11.23 seconds in the final.

O’Hanlon, who has twice retired from the track during his lengthy and decorated career but returned to win bronze at the Tokyo Paralympics, said he hoped could further add to his medal collection at the Games in 2024. “I would like to keep running . I know if I was training at the same level, I was before London and Rio that I feel like I could win gold again in Paris,” he said.

Rohan Browning was left disappointed after finishing sixth in the men’s 100m final with a time of 10.20 – 0.10s slower than the time he laid down in the heats, which would have been enough for him to take silver in the final. Akani Simbine won silver in 10.13 behind winner Ferdinand Omanyala.

“I’m not happy with it,” Browning said. “It was just an ugly, painful kind of race and it’s one of those tough nights. A month ago there’s no way I saw myself in this ending. I try to take each win and race in my stride but once you’re here you just want to be on that podium. That’s what it’s all about.

“I thought about packing it in after worlds and just getting back home and into some training for next year and I am glad I decided to persist. I think one of the lessons I have learned is persistence is so much more important than patience. You have just got to keep trying things and keep at it.

“Today there were a few things I could have done to be up there but I think I was bested today. I need more training in my legs and I need a big winter off-season.”

Brandon Starc takes a moment with his baby after winning high jump silver.
Brandon Starc takes a moment with his baby after winning high jump silver. Photograph: Michael Steele/Getty Images

And in the high jump, Brandon Starc battled through the pain barrier and narrowly failed to defend his Commonwealth crown, but still claimed silver behind New Zealand’s Hamish Kerr after both men cleared 2.25m.

“That was tough. That was probably the toughest comp I’ve ever had,” Starc said. “I had to withdraw from world champs because of the bruised heel and throughout that comp, besides maybe the first jump, I was feeling every bit of that bruised heel.

“I was taking my shoe off, trying to get some sort of relief, tapping it here and there but really I just had to grit my teeth and jump through it. I don’t know what it was, I don’t know if it was family or if I just wanted something really bad and I kind of just jumped through it and somehow I got a medal.”

Categories
Australia

NSW Police seek to rebuild relationship with Moree’s Aboriginal community after Gordon Copeland’s death

Over two weeks in a country New South Wales courtroom, police officers were moved to tears, made apologies, and admitted that their best had not been enough as they tried to explain how a 22-year-old man died while fleeing from them.

Images have been used with the permission of the family.

Family members watching the inquest into his death at times cried, shook their heads, and left the gallery when the evidence became too painful.

Gomeroi man Gordon Copeland drowned in the flood-swollen Gwydir River in Moree last July when he ran from police who had been following him and his two friends in a car.

Man wearing a gray jumper and black cap, holding a young smiling child on his shoulders
Gordon Copeland with his son Gordon Junior.(Supplied: Aboriginal Legal Service)

The events of that day, and the evidence heard at the inquest, now have the police wondering how they will move forward with the local community.

“I don’t know how we mend our relationship,” the region’s police commander, Superintendent Steve Laksa, told the coroner.

“The tragedy of Gordon Copeland and the potential failures there by the police are tragic, but I don’t know what we do in terms of moving forward from here.”

Man in formal navy police suit and cap, looks away from the camera as he walks towards it
Steve Laksa told the inquest he is not sure how to mend the relationship with the community.(ABC New England North West: Kathleen Ferguson)

‘Inhuman’ body cam evidence

Constable Nick Murray was on the scene early that July morning when he saw someone of “Aboriginal appearance” go down an “8-metre cliff” into the Gwydir River.

He had switched on his body cam, and the video from that night was played to the inquest.

While shining his torch through high grass, he can be heard saying, “F*** me they’re young aye, with clothes on too, I’m surprised he hasn’t f****** drowned.”

Mr Copeland had fallen into the river minutes earlier.

A river and land.
Gordon Copeland was last seen disappearing down a bend in the Gwydir River.(ABC New England North West: Kathleen Ferguson)

Constable Murray can be heard laughing, and said, “F*** this little c***.”

About nine minutes after Mr Copeland had entered the river, Constable Murray said, “I don’t know what do you wanna do, keep looking? F*** me.”

At the inquest, he was questioned about his level of concern.

“I was very concerned … we’re there trying my hardest to find the person, and I was very thoughtful in trying to make sure he’s fine,” Constable Murray said.

“What have you learned from this?” asked counsel assisting the coroner Peggy Dwyer.

“Act in a more professional way on body-worn video, I guess. What I said was a coping mechanism, I can’t control that it just blurts out,” Constable Murray said.

“My reactions and what I said was wrong, knowing what happened,” he said.

Mr Copeland’s cousin Lesley Fernando told the court this evidence was “utterly disgusting”.

“It’s inhuman, the actions on that video, that we will now live with forever,” she said.

“We will never unsee that or unhear it.”

Family member of Gordon Copeland upset at search site.
Lesley Fernando says police gave her a post-it note with information to continue the search for her cousin.(ABC New England North West: Kemii Maguire)

That was not the last time police were at the river while Mr Copeland was still alive.

Those same officers were sent back to collect evidence an hour later, and what they found was a person in pain and struggling to stay afloat in floodwater.

Officers told the inquest they pleaded with the person to swim towards them.

He tried to swim to them, but the current was too strong, and they watched him drift off around the bend.

It was later agreed that person was Gordon Copeland. It was the last time he was seen alive.

A search kicked off shortly afterwards and lasted about eight hours, after information from detectives led to its termination.

Local police told the family two people were in the car on July 10, and they had been accounted for.

Detective Brad Beddoes got this information from the car’s owner, who was not there that night.

But a third person was in the car, and that person was Gordon Copeland.

Man with young family.
Gordon Copeland died before his second son was born.(Supplied: Aboriginal Legal Service)

Detective Beddoes told the inquest he hadn’t spoken to officers on the ground that July morning, hadn’t watched their body-cam videos, and hadn’t spoken to the two other people in the car.

He said he “probably” drew that conclusion too early after being questioned about why he did not properly check his information.

“Clearly now it wasn’t good enough, but I’d done my best. I’m sorry for your loss,” he said while crying in the witness box.

Lesley Fernando told the court she pleaded with officers for any information to allow the family to keep looking after police called off a search for someone missing in the river — and said she was given a post-it note with directions to where the man was last seen.

“This was the resource they gave to look for our loved one,” she said.

Seven people stand in front of a black metal bar fence with brick pillars
Mr Copeland’s cousin Lesley Fernando (third from left) was supported by family when she gave evidence.(ABC New England North West: Kathleen Ferguson)

The family spent thousands of donated dollars on wetsuits, kayaks and go-pros, food and fuel for their own search, which did not end until Mr Copeland was found by police months later.

Josephine Brown, Ms Copeland’s partner, was heavily pregnant at the time of his disappearance, and was trudging up and down the river searching for the father of her sons.

Woman stands with toddler and young boy, wearing a black jumper featuring a photo of herself and and a man in a heart shape.
Gordon Copeland’s partner Josephine Brown and their two sons attend the coronial inquest.(ABC New England North West: Lani Oataway)

Police maintain they never stopped looking.

It was not until NSW Coroner Teresa O’Sullivan wrote to them months later, encouraging another wide-scale search, that they would find Mr Copeland.

SES pointing at map
Mounted police, SES, divers, and helicopter and boat crews were brought in for the final search.(ABC New England North West: Lani Oataway)

He was discovered by police divers, less than 500 meters from where he was seen entering the river.

Superintendent Steve Laksa told the inquest this case had set back efforts to build relations between police and the local Aboriginal community.

Before Gordon Copeland disappeared, he said the district had run an operation which prevented a “significant” number of young Aboriginal people from going to jail. What that operation involved was not clear.

“We are not going to build that trust while ever we continue to put handcuffs on kids and lock them up,” he told the inquest.

Man in police uniform speaks to microphones in front of police station.
Superintendent Laksa addressing the media when police widened the search for Mr Copeland in October 2021.(ABC New England: Kemii Maguire)

Superintendent Laksa also told the coroner most of the officers in Moree were straight from the Police Academy, with little experience.

He said he understood the importance of recognizing the region’s violent past, including massacres and Stolen Generation, and its lasting effects.

“I want to be able to walk down the street and be in Moree, I want my police to be able to be in the street and be in Moree, and I want us to have a positive relationship,” he said.

A woman looks down at a white t-shirt she is holding over her torso
Gordon Copeland’s mother Narelle Copeland was supported by family on the last day of the inquest.(ABC New England North West: Kathleen Ferguson)

But even he was unsure how to begin that process.

“If there is any chance that we can connect with the family even if that is sitting down and listening to the stuff we don’t want to hear, I would take that opportunity straight away,” he said.

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