Perth – Page 2 – Michmutters
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Australia

Meth user who fell asleep at the wheel killing pregnant partner in Coolup crash jailed in Perth

A driver whose pregnant partner was killed when he fell asleep at the wheel, a year before he caused another crash in Darwin that seriously injured his new partner, has been jailed in Western Australia.

Michael Dixon, 37, pleaded guilty to dangerous driving causing the death of 31-year-old Mel Duffey in Coolup, about 100 kilometers south of Perth, on December 13, 2019.

The District Court was told Dixon had not slept for more than 72 hours.

Traces of methamphetamine were also found in his blood and he admitted injecting the drug two days before the crash.

Ms Duffey, who had wanted to return home from their camping trip because she was worried about her three children, was thrown from the vehicle and died at the scene.

She was six months pregnant.

A close up of a woman wearing glasses with a nose piercing and two lip piercings
Mel Duffey was killed when his partner Michael Dixon fell asleep at the wheel while driving.(Facebook: Mel Duffey)

After the crash, Dixon moved to Darwin, where a year later, in December 2020, he crashed an all terrain vehicle into a street sign, seriously injuring his new partner, former police officer Kristi Wenck.

Dixon had been drinking with friends at a party beforehand and he pleaded guilty in the Northern Territory to driving under the influence as well as dangerous driving causing harm.

Emergency vehicles are by the edge of the road where an ATV is on its side.
The aftermath of the crash in Darwin, in which Michael Dixon’s new partner received serious injuries. (ABC News: Dane Hirst)

He was given a suspended jail term, but he was later extradited to Perth to face the charge over the crash that claimed the life of Ms Duffey.

‘disastrous decision’

Judge Mara Barone accepted Dixon had made the decision to drive because Ms Duffey was concerned and anxious about her children and not because of a selfish desire to return home.

“You drove because you believed it was the right thing … it proved to be a disastrous decision,” Judge Barone told a tearful Dixon.

A dark photo of a badly damaged vehicle on a tow truck ramp.
The wreckage after Michael Dixon fell asleep at the wheel while driving in Coolup in December 2019, killing his partner Mel Duffey.(ABCNews)

She said Dixon must have been aware of the extent of his fatigue and of the risk he would fall asleep.

Judge Barone highlighted Dixon’s subsequent offenses in the Northern Territory and told him he needed to understand that he could not drive in a manner that put the safety and lives of others in danger.

She sentenced him to three years’ jail — he will have to serve 18 months before he can be released on parole.

Dixon was also disqualified from driving for five years.

Three people in face masks walk along a city street.
Mel Duffey’s mother Cindy Rogers (right), pictured with her family outside court, criticized the sentence. (ABC News: Greg Pollock)

Outside the court Ms Duffey’s mother, Cindy Rogers, fought back tears as she described the sentence as “wrong”.

“I’ve still got her children, they’re with me and they want their mum and I can’t give them their mum and it’s his fault,” she said.

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Categories
Sports

AFL: ‘Reaching my prime’: Star GWS Giants forward Jesse Hogan excited for future

Reborn spearhead Jesse Hogan’s emergence from a difficult few seasons is complete, with a new two-year deal the reward for his best campaign since 2018.

The star Giants forward booted a season-high four goals last week in a best-on-ground performance as they put a disastrous derby defeat to the Swans behind them to take down Essendon in Sydney.

Hogan is up to 30 goals from 16 games this season, and 50 from 25 overall since crossing to Greater Western Sydney on a one-year deal after a somewhat tumultuous end at Fremantle.

Another one-season, prove-it-to-us pact followed his first year with the Giants but now the ex-Demons prodigy has security again amid what he describes as the “most consistent” football of his life.

As pleasing for the 27-year-old as his goal tally is how many matches he has played this season, after managing no more than 12 in any of the past three years, when foot and soft-tissue setbacks besieged him.

Former coach Leon Cameron and the Giants’ high performance team hatched a pre-season plan for Hogan to rest twice this year either side of the mid-season bye, which has worked wonders for him.

“Last year wasn’t ideal with being injured and having a few calf injuries to deal with, and not really having too much confidence in my body,” Hogan told News Corp.

“Then this year, being able to link together 14, 15, 16 games and play some more consistent footy has been massive for me mentally, just to have faith in my body again and a decent season overall.”

Hogan’s agent, Matt Bain, of TLA Australia, is thrilled to see him playing well again and optimistic about greater things ahead.

“It’s a great result for Jesse. He’s happy there and deserves the two years,” Bain said.

“He’s put in a lot of work and it’s showing in his footy. I’m very proud of him.”

No key forward in the competition is averaging more than Hogan’s seven marks per match this season, with that part of his game always serving as a barometer for his performance.

“It’s not that I’m chasing marks or chasing kicks but that’s something that’s always kept me in the game – my ability to find a pocket of space,” he said.

“I’m not the most athletic, I’m not the quickest and I’m not the fittest but I think I’ve got a pretty high IQ when it comes to forward craft.”

The next step for Hogan is playing a full year, which he thinks is within his grasp if he can enjoy a big summer and enter the 2023 season injury free.

Part of that goal is also to ramp up his training between games, too, after largely staying off his legs until Wednesday or Thursday after a match and completing just one main session weekly this year.

“I’d get everything I needed to out of that session to feel sharp, then not much after that,” he said.

“But with the confidence I have in my body going into next season; I feel like I can get more training done, keep working on my craft during the week and be more confident going into games.”

Hogan, who has moved out of Shane Mumford’s Maroubra granny flat into a Balmain home, was among the eight players spared interim coach Mark McVeigh’s wrath after the disappointing display against the Swans.

The Giants’ underwhelming season has frustrated Hogan at times and he has spoken strongly recently about the players needing to be better defensively, but he has come a long way personally.

Hogan conceded several times since his Dockers exit that he made mistakes but also that escaping the constant houndings in Perth for somewhat of an anonymous existence in Sydney was badly needed.

“Hindsight is a wonderful thing. It’s kind of hard to reflect on – I have a lot of regrets and you can’t change the past, so I’ve just done the best I can to move on,” he said.

“It’s a bit of a littered few years, unfortunately, and that’s something I’m just going to have to live with, but this year and last year, I’ve taken steps forward.

“Hopefully, I’m just reaching the prime of my career and I can finish off my year really well and play some good seasons and have some deep finals runs.”

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Categories
Australia

More than two dozen WA residents own more than 100 firearms each — all approved by police

More than two dozen people in WA own more than 100 licensed firearms, each of which would have been individually approved by police, figures tabled in state parliament have revealed.

The numbers, which provide an insight into gun ownership in WA, were disclosed on Wednesday in response to questions from the Shadow Minister for Police, Peter Collier.

The figures show there are 178 people in WA with more than 25 firearms, including 34 people who have more than 50 of them, and 26 who have more than 100.

“I was, I’ve got to say, a little confronted by the figures,” Mr Collier told ABC Radio Perth host Nadia Mitsopoulos on Friday.

“But having said that, we need to have perspective on this issue.

“And that is that almost all of these multiple gun owners, I would assume, would be collectors or gun enthusiasts, or there’d be a valid reason.”

Shooting club president says numbers lack context

The numbers do not specify the classifications of the firearms, meaning they could include rifles, shotguns, handguns or paintball guns.

The numbers also do not include gun dealers.

Man in a suit in tie looks very serious while speaking to a group of people.
Shadow Police Minister Peter Collier requested the data from the state government.(ABC News: Cason Ho)

Paul Fitzgerald, WA president of the Sporting Shooters’ Association of Australia, said the numbers were high but lacking in context.

“We can talk about an individual that may run a paintball business, for example, in Western Australia,” he said.

“And there’s a number of those, and they may well have 300 or 200 paintball markers on their individual license in order to run that business.”

He said people that shoot competitively may also have 10 or 20 different firearms to compete in different divisions.

Firearms need individual approval

Under WA law, each of the 178 people in WA who have more than 25 firearms would need to obtain a license from police for each weapon.

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Categories
Australia

WA charity shops run low on stock as local governments and others remove donation bins

If you’ve been driving around with bags of clothes in your boot ready to off-load at the nearest charity bin but can’t find one, you’re not alone.

For years now, local governments, private landowners — and sometimes charity shops themselves — have been removing the bins which are all too often left in an unsightly state due to illegal dumping and vandalism.

Despite the mess often scattered around them, the bins generate much-needed funding for not-for-profit organizations and provide equal opportunity employment to West Australians.

Good Sammy employs 300 people in WA with disabilities.

CEO Kane Blackman said the organization had gone from having 500 charity bins in the WA community, to just 200.

A smiling man talks to some women at a clothing collection centre.
Good Sammy CEO Kane Blackman wants to see more accessible community collection points. (ABC News: Ashleigh Davis)

“We have 40 per cent of our workforce with a disability, and we need donations through these charity collection points so people can have a job and sell to our customers,” he said.

“Each community collection point collects about 10,000 kilograms of textiles each year, so having [charity bins] is critical for Good Sammy’s supply of recycled goods to sell in stores.

“[About] 30,000 West Australians enter one of our 27 shops every week and our core mission is disability employment.”

Drop-in donations

Mr Blackman said the quantity of donations had been significantly affected by some local governments banning charity bins.

And while people could still drop off donations in store, this option was not as popular, leaving charities with a big shortfall.

“We certainly notice in tougher times that there are a lot of people that do come into our stores because of the low price point,” Mr Blackman said.

A woman wearing a gray jumper sorts through clothes at a second-hand shop.
Monica sorts through recent donations at a Sammy’s shop.(ABC News: Ashleigh Davis)

“And we like to be able to keep servicing them as best we can.”

Mr Blackman said dropping off pre-loved items was one of the most effective ways to reduce waste and contribute to the circular economy.

“The best way to do that is to promote recycling, to work with charities, and to have accessible community collection points,” he said.

Australians are some of the biggest consumers of textiles in the world — buying an average of 14.8kg or 48 new items of clothing every year.

A woman dressed in black organizations donated clothes.
Jo working at a Good Sammy’s store. (ABC News: Ashleigh Davis)

The Australian Fashion Council estimates charities sort through 720 million items of clothing per year, some 190,000 tonnes of pre-loved fashion.

The shortfall felt at Good Sammy has also been noticed at Alinea, formerly known as the Spine and Limb Foundation, which has lost around 100 charity bins over the past nine years.

Joseph Tuscon, the manager of Alinea’s commercial services ParaQuad Industries, said it was disappointing some local governments banned the bins regardless of where they were placed or how well they were kept.

“I think they take the easy way out sometimes,” he said.

“I’d like local governments and the community in general to just see the vendors for what they are — a convenient means for people to redistribute and help society by donating used and unwanted goods.”

Alinea and Good Sammy have implemented measures to reduce dumping, including putting up CCTV cameras, placing the bins in well-lit, well-trafficked areas, and having people regularly tend to the bins and remove donations and rubbish.

Councils seek alternatives to bins

In 2015, the City of Joondalup became the first local government in WA to ban the bins on council-owned land.

They now hold days where residents can drop off goods to the council, which then works with charities to distribute the donations.

But due to the pandemic, the last clothing donation day was held in January 2021.

City of Joondalup Deputy Mayor Christine Hamilton-Prime called the last donation day an overwhelming success.

“Many people were using charity bins as convenient places to dump unwanted goods and bulk rubbish, which is a littering offence,” she said.

“The ban only applied to city-owned land and not privately-owned land, such as shopping centres, where charity bins were still permitted.”

Three clothing donation bins.
Charity clothing bins like these have been disappearing off Perth streets over the past few years. (ABC News: Ashleigh Davis)

Mr Tuscon said when it came to local governments, it was a mixed bag.

“The Town of Cambridge and City of Subiaco are just as severe as the City of Joondalup who have blanket banned charity bins on any city land,” he said.

“City of Melville, City of Stirling are good and they support us. The City of Canning aren’t too bad, but a lot of the others just won’t have bins at all.”

St Vincent de Paul manager of social enterprise Carl Prowse said with the rising cost of living, more people than ever were accessing the charity’s crisis services.

A man wearing a high-vis vest stands in front of a pile of donated clothing.
Carl Prowse says about five to 10 per cent of donated items end up in landfill. (ABC News: Ashleigh Davis)

“From mental health to homeless and youth services, a lot more people are requesting support from us in what is a true sad state of affairs,” he said.

Mr Prowse said Vinnies kept its charity bins on private property like churches and school grounds, so donation numbers remained high and local governments could not have them removed.

“We have less dumping than what some of the other charities have, because we’re not in shopping center car parks and so on. We have less people rifling through the donations and breaking into the bins,” he said.

“But it’s still a regular thing. Too often, to be honest, it happens.”

“And sadly, when people start splitting bags open, if it then does rain, if everything’s wet, there’s not much we can do with it, it really has to go to the tip.”

But Vinnies has another problem.

Mr Prowse said his organization was struggling to deal with the quantity of donations, as volunteer numbers were so low they often had to intermittently refuse donations at some stores.

A warehouse full of clothes and other donations.
Vinnies’ Canning Vale center sorts through about 12 million items a year.(ABC News: Ashleigh Davis)

“We were 2,500-3,000 volunteers. We’re sitting at about half that at the moment at a time where there’s more people needing our support and stock being donated at our shops but not enough volunteers to sort through it,” he said.

Good Sammy’s Kane Blackman is calling for thoughtful, warm donations this winter, and local governments to come to the table.

“We’re calling for quality donations, around the winter period, thick winter coats. You know, in terms of thick pants in terms of beanies, we’re always after those quality donations,” he said.

“We would like to see more local governments say yes to charity collection points. We believe that’s important to help divert items from landfill and achieve the recycling and sustainability goals that are set for our state.”

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Categories
Australia

Aresh Anwar, chief executive of WA’s Child and Adolescent Health Service, resigns

The chief executive of WA’s Child and Adolescent Health Service (CAHS), which oversees Perth Children’s Hospital, has resigned from the position.

The WA Department of Health confirmed the news that Aresh Anwar had resigned from his role effective from Friday.

Health Director General David Russell-Weisz said he had accepted Dr Anwar’s resignation, 15 months after he rejected it when it was offered in the weeks following the tragic death of Aishwarya Aswath at Perth Children’s Hospital last April.

Aishwarya was seven when she died from organ failure resulting from sepsis after waiting for two hours in the hospital’s emergency department.

A report, released in November last year, revealed extensive problems with the hospital’s handling of her case.

A coronial inquest into the little girl’s death will begin on August 24.

In a media release issued on Thursday, Dr Russell-Weisz acknowledged Dr Anwar’s efforts in charge of CAHS.

New Perth Children's Hospital exterior shot
Dr Anwar initially offered to resign in the weeks after the death of Aishwarya Aswath at Perth Children’s Hospital in April 2021. (ABC News: Darren Dunstan)

“Dr Anwar brought considerable expertise, a strong work ethic, dedication and integrity, and he has also been a trusted member of the broader WA Health executive team,” Dr Russell-Weisz said.

“Among many achievements, he oversaw the foundational phase of our flagship Perth Children’s Hospital and steered CAHS through a complex and challenging period while also leading CAHS’s outstanding response to COVID-19.

“Dr Anwar played a critical role in setting up the initial roll-out of the state’s highly successful COVID-19 vaccination program and has made a considerable contribution to the WA health system, including stewardship of key recommendations within the Sustainable Health Review.”

Family worried about timing of resignation

In a statement, Aishwarya’s family said they hoped Dr Anwar was “not being made a scapegoat”.

“We are worried about the timing of the resignation, which is two weeks away from the start of the inquest,” they said.

A photo of a man and a woman holding signs that say 'fight for justice' and 'hunger strike'.
Aswath Chavittupara and Prasitha Sasidharan, are the parents of Aishwarya Aswath who died at Perth Children’s Hospital.(ABC News: West Matteussen)

“All we are looking for is a change and a better health system.”

Ms Valerie Jovanovic has been appointed as acting chief executive for four months until a full recruitment process has been carried out.

Health Minister Amber-Jade Sanderson thanked Dr Anwar for his service, in particular for his work throughout the two-and-a-half years of the COVID pandemic.

“I would like to thank Dr Aresh Anwar for his valuable contribution to our public health system as the chief executive of the Child and Adolescent Health Service,” she said.

“Dr Anwar is a hardworking and dedicated individual, his management, in particular during the COVID-19 pandemic, helped protect vulnerable children and ensure they continued to access essential treatment.

“I will continue to work with the CAHS Board and the WA Health Director-General to progress important changes at CAHS for the benefit of children in our state and our hardworking healthcare workforce.”

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Categories
Australia

Perth woman Moe Moe Myint Kelly jailed over ‘ruthless’ theft of $2 million from employer

A 65-year-old Perth woman who over seven years “ruthlessly” stole $2 million from trusting family friends she worked for, has been sentenced to more than four-and-a-half years in jail.

Moe Moe Myint Kelly was employed as a bookkeeper and accountant for a Northbridge business, which operated both a pharmacy and a newsagent.

She was a family friend of the owners, and the District Court was told when the business started struggling, Kelly agreed to work for free until things improved.

However, unknown to the owners, she began funneling sums of cash from the daily takings into her own accounts.

The thieving began in 2011 and only stopped when Kelly made what was described as “a minor error” in 2018 which led to an audit that uncovered her crime.

The court heard when the owners confronted her, she claimed she had sent most of the money to charities in Burma.

State Prosecutor Justin Whalley SC said bank statements showed the sums Kelly deposited into her accounts ranged from just under $1,000 to $15,000, with most of them being around the $5,000 mark.

A woman in sunglasses, a black top and apricot pants outside a Perth courthouse.
Moe Moe Myint Kelly’s earliest possible release date is April 2025. (ABC News: Glyn Jones)

In total there were more than four hundred separate instances of stealing, with records showing that between 2011 and 2015 she lost large amounts of money at the casino.

The owners provided victim impact statements to the court which detailed the struggles they went through including working around 100 hours a week and using their savings to pay their staff.

Woman was ‘riding a gravy train’

Mr Whalley said Kelly was a trusted family friend of the owners and he described her offenses as “a massive breach of trust”.

“We say she continued to work for nothing because she was riding a gravy train, that was providing her with hundreds of thousands of dollars a year,” he said.

Kelly was initially charged with stealing $3.5 million and had been due to stand trial earlier this year.

However, after negotiations, she pleaded guilty to stealing the lesser sum of $2 million, although Mr Whalley said it was not accepted the figure was that low.

“But it was not in the public interest to litigate the difference,” he told the court.

Kelly’s lawyer said her client, who was born in Burma, had an extremely deprived childhood that effectively included being “abandoned” by her parents when she was seven.

She said Kelly was now married to a man who had been diagnosed with cancer.

Aggravated, ‘ruthless’ offending

Judge David MacLean told Kelly her crimes were aggravated because she was a trusted family friend of the business owners.

“You had a ringside seat to their suffering… you cynically abused that position of trust,” he said.

He also described her actions as “ruthless”.

“You stole directly, repeatedly without guilt, remorse or shame from someone who you appeared to consider as a family,” he said.

Judge MacLean said greed appeared to be the motivation for the offenses.

“It was undertaken by reason for a desire to either enrich yourself or to spend more time at the casino.”

He also described the sum stolen as “enormous”.

“It was an amount of money which was squandered on a parasitic enterprise, something in the order of $1.2 million at the Crown Casino,” he said.

Judge MacLean said Kelly continued to try to justify her actions by claiming she had not been properly paid, and because of that he did not accept she was entirely remorseful.

After taking into account her deprived upbringing and her pleas of guilty, Judge MacLean sentenced Kelly to four years and eight months in jail.

She will have to serve two years and eight months before she is eligible for parole — her earliest possible release date will be in April 2025.

The court heard none of the money had been paid back.

Victim says Kelly ‘cost year years of her life’

Judge MacLean did make a compensation order and the court heard any of Kelly’s assets will be forfeited.

The business owner, Diana Quan, was in court for the sentencing.

She said the jail term was not enough.

“She took 10 years of my life,” she said.

“It’s been an emotional toll. It’s brought up a lot of emotions.

“It was a hard time for us and it continues to be a hard time, we’ll never recover from this, we’re just a small family business and we work really, really hard.”

Ms Quan also said she did not believe the business would get any of the money back but she was grateful the Judge did not accept Kelly was truly remorseful.

“The picture that she presents to the world is very different from who she actually is.”

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Categories
Australia

Port Kennedy driver charged with running over a man in Warnbro incident

A Port Kennedy driver has been accused of running over a man and pinning him under his car after a brawl at a Warnbro service station.

Police allege that the incident unfolded about 8.20pm on Wednesday, when the accused went to the Caltex petrol station on Warnbro Sound Avenue to buy a couple of items.

When he returned to his Mitsubishi Lancer, a man known to him hopped into the front passenger’s seat and a fight broke out between them.

Your local paper, whenever you want it.

The 29-year-old man in the passenger’s seat got out of the car and started to walk away.

It is alleged the 33-year-old driver then sped towards him, with the Lancer jumping the kerb and ploughing into the victim, pinning him under the vehicle.

A man has been hospitalized after he was hit by a car at a service station in Warnbro.
Camera IconA man has been hospitalized after he was hit by a car at a service station in Warnbro. Credit: 7NEWS/7NEWS

Several people nearby managed to lift the car off the victim.

He was then given first aid by police officers before being taken to Royal Perth Hospital with third degree burns to his back.

The driver was arrested and charged with inflicting grievous bodily harm with intent to harm and no authority to drive.

He will appear at the Rockingham Magistrates Court on Thursday.

Photos of the aftermath showed the Mitsubishi dumped in the bushes near the service station, with the scene taped off by police.

Police have taped off the scene.
Camera IconPolice have taped off the scene. Credit: 7NEWS/7NEWS

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Categories
Australia

Medi-hotels were sold by Labor as a way to fix WA’s health system, but only one has been built

So-called medi-hotels formed a key part of Mark McGowan’s pitch to voters at the 2017 election, but five years on there is little sign of them.

Sold as a way to solve what was then labeled a “crisis” in the health system, three facilities were promised to free up hospital beds and ease strain on the system.

It was imagined they would mostly be used by regional patients who no longer needed the care of a full hospital bed but were not yet ready to go home.

Three were promised, but so far, the only one to open is a four-bed facility at Royal Perth Hospital.

Work on another, being built by a private provider in Murdoch, is under way with hopes it will be open in the next year.

Medi hotel plan
The site of the planned Murdoch medi-hotel near Fiona Stanley Hospital in 2017.(ABC News: Jacob Kagi)

But the third, promised by Joondalup, appears to be no more, with the Health Minister yesterday telling parliament for the second time that plans had changed.

“We’ve actually made a bigger investment in Joondalup Health Campus, an even bigger investment than a medi-hotel, by expanding the bed base and [adding] 102 mental health beds,” Amber-Jade Sanderson said.

“In discussion with the local community, and with the local provider, that’s what they wanted.”

Joondalup plan disintegrates

Cracks started to show when what was planned to be the first facility, near Fiona Stanley Hospital, was already a year behind schedule before the pandemic.

But plans for others remained alive, including when then-health minister Roger Cook told parliament in September 2021 that development approval had been received for a 110-bed mental health unit at Joondalup, with 90 inpatient beds also on the agenda.

Joondalup Health Campus emergency entrance with red and yellow signage.
The government says it has come up with bigger and better plans for Joondalup Health Campus.(Supplied: John Holland)

Mr Cook said while the focus was on completing the first phase of the expansion, “ambitions” remained for a medi-hotel in the future.

But just eight months later his replacement, Ms Sanderson, told budget estimates the now 102-bed mental health facility would be a “far greater contribution” than a medi-hotel – a sentiment she echoed yesterday.

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Categories
Australia

Rabia Siddique’s husband, WA doctor Anthony Jenner Bell, charged with domestic violence

A magistrate in Fremantle has lifted a suppression order, allowing the reporting of a domestic violence charge against a prominent WA doctor accused of assaulting his wife, human rights lawyer Rabia Siddique.

St John of God doctor Anthony Jenner Bell has pleaded not guilty to the aggravated assault of Ms Siddique in Mount Pleasant.

An interim suppression order was in place until this morning, when Magistrate Adam Hills-Wright lifted it.

The court heard Dr Bell had sought the suppression order to prevent his identity from being reported.

Magistrate Hills-Wright said Dr Bell had stated in an affidavit that the complaint against him was made in the context of a separation.

Dr Bell also stated that reporters had contacted St John of God asking whether his position was under question.

He said his employer was supporting him, but if the matter got into the media, it could lead to him being stood down and he may not be able to see some patients.

Not in interests of justice: magistrate

Magistrate Hills-Wright said Dr Bell was presumed to be innocent.

He said publicity increased the community’s understanding of how the justice system worked, and for a suppression order to be made, the court had to be satisfied there were exceptional circumstances.

While widespread publicity could cause “significant embarrassment”, the court process applied “equally for all”, he said.

Magistrate Hills-Wright said the court was being asked to weigh the potential wider ramifications for patients and institutions.

He told the court suppression was not in the interests of justice.

Dr Bell is scheduled to appear in Perth Magistrates Court next month for a trial allocation date.

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Categories
Business

Suburbs struggling the most amid RBA’s interest rate hikes revealed

An estimated one in five mortgage holders – or 551,000 Australians – will struggle to pay back their mortgage if interest rates continue to rise as expected.

Comparison site Finder found a whopping 20 per cent of mortgage holders will be in serious mortgage distress if their home loan interest payments increase by three per cent. Home loans have already increased by 1.75 per cent since May.

It comes as separate data from S&P Global revealed which suburbs in Australia are most at risk of defaulting on their home loans.

The Northern Territory came out as the worst state, with the highest percentage of mortgage holders more than 30 days behind on payments.

A fringe suburb in Perth topped the list in terms of debt overdue to the bank, while Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide as well as some regional areas also received a poor rating.

Of even more concern was that the research was conducted before the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) starting increasing the cash rate, meaning these areas will be even more at risk of defaulting on their loans now.

For four consecutive months the RBA has hiked interest rates. Last week, after its August meeting, the central bank brought up the cash rate to 1.85 per cent.

The cash rate has already risen by 1.75 percentage points since May, following two years of interest rates sitting at a record low of 0.1 per cent.

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According to S&P Global, rising mortgage repayments have hit suburbs on the fringes of big cities the hardest.

Their research measured the weighted average of arrears more than 30 days past due on residential mortgage loans in publicly and privately rated Australian transactions.

The Perth suburb of Maddington, 20km from the city centre, topped the list of “Worst performing postcodes” in the report.

As of early April, 4.67 per cent of homeowners in Maddington are in arrears.

That was closely followed by Dolls Point, located in southern Sydney.

Of the mortgaged houses in that NSW suburb, 4.33 per cent are behind on payments.

In third place was another WA postcode, Byford, in Perth’s southeastern edge, with an arrears percentage of 4.16 per cent.

Western Australia had one more suburb on the list – Ballidu in the Central Midlands – while NSW had a total of four.

Bankstown and Castlereagh, from Sydney’s west and southwest, were also experiencing substantial pressure. Katoomba from the Blue Mountains, south of Sydney, also earned a spot in the report.

Victoria, Queensland and South Australia each had one suburb on the list – Broadmeadows in Melbourne’s north, Barkly in Queensland’s Mout Isa region and Hackham, an outer suburb of Adelaide.

A breakdown of each state showed that the Northern Territory was the most behind in its mortgage repayments, at a rate of 1.75 per cent.

Western Australia came in at 1.40 per cent, as of April this year, before interest rates started to be hiked.

Victoria received a score of 0.87 per cent while 0.85 per cent of NSW mortgage holders were also in mortgage arrears.

The ACT fared the best, with an arrears rate of only 0.33 per cent.

Overall, the national average was 0.71 per cent for Australia’s arrears rate, as of April.

“The swift pace of interest rate rises will create debt-serviceability pressures for households with less liquidity buffers and higher leverage,” the report noted, forecasting that sometime in the third quarter of this year a higher arrears rate would show up in new monthly date .

Finder also released a damning statistic about the state of Australia’s home loan debt.

A recent survey conducted last month concluded that more than half a million homeowners would be “on the brink” if interest rates rose by three per cent.

Of those, 145,000 Australis said they would consider selling their home if rates jumped because they would “struggle a lot” to repay them. That represents about five per cent of Australia’s mortgage holders.

The survey also found that 14 per cent of admitted respondents they might fall behind on their repayments or other bills.

Nearly half (48 per cent) would be able to manage, but would have to cut down on their spending, according to Finder.

Only a quarter of participants said a rate rise would not change their lifestyle or spending habits at all.

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