A police probe is underway into whether a woman was chasing two teenagers who were riding an allegedly stolen motorcycle through Perth’s north before a fiery crash that left three people in hospital.
Key points:
The fiery crash occurred in the early hours of Monday morning
Three people were hospitalized after the incident, one in critical condition
Police are investigating whether a woman involved was chasing two teenagers
The WA Police Commissioner today confirmed it formed part of the investigation into the crash, which happened at the intersection of Hepburn Avenue and Amalfi Drive on the border of Hillarys and Sorrento in the early morning hours of Monday.
A car and two off-road motorcycles were stolen in the early hours of Monday morning, according to police.
Shortly after, authorities were called to a major crash between a car and one of the motorbikes and an 18-year-old man riding the bike was rushed to hospital in a critical condition. A 17-year-old boy, who was also on the bike, was taken to hospital in a serious condition.
A 49-year-old woman driving a Toyota Kluger also suffered serious injuries in the crash, after her car rolled and caught fire.
Police commissioner Col Blanch said the focus of the investigation was specifically on finding out whether the woman was chasing the two teenagers.
He also confirmed the two bikes were from the same home the woman resided in.
“[The focus will be] how those motorcycles were stolen, who else was in company of the two males who are now in hospital and how the Toyota Kluger came to be there and the manner in which it was driven prior to the crash,” he said.
“I would give a strong message to the community that nothing is worth dying over when it comes to property,” he said.
“Often you’ll find the people who’ll put their lives at risk can result in tragedy for other members of the community, they themselves who are taking chase, and I’m not talking about this matter, I’m saying in general , members of the public that chase offenders in circumstances, we have seen it many times … these can end in tragedy for everyone involved, and my view as police is that it’s not worth it.
“Call the police.”
Mr Blanch said any further charges would be laid once evidence is found.
“We have strong oversight from the CCC [Corruption and Crime Commission] in all our investigations and when we have the evidence, we’ll make the appropriate decisions at that time,” he said.
The 17-year-old boy has been charged with three offenses including aggravated home burglary and stealing.
He appeared in court via a bedside hearing in hospital on Tuesday.
The iconic Spare Parts Puppet Theater in the heart of Fremantle has been “condemned” to close, after a decision by the WA government which theater staff claim came suddenly and without warning.
Concerns had been raised about the aging heritage-listed building in Pioneer Park for several years, with the theater company even having to relocate the launch of its Shaun TanRules of Summer show in 2017 while work was carried out to make the theater safe.
Despite this, Artistic Director Philip Mitchell said the state’s decision to close the theater came unexpected.
“There was no warning of the closure of the theater [but] we were aware there were problems with the building,” he said.
“While the heritage building is actually quite sound, the exoskeleton that holds up the theater walls, we understand has come to the end of its life.
“We certainly don’t want to be putting our audience in danger. So the state government has condemned the theatre.”
Mr Mitchell said steps had already been taken to try and save the state-owned building, including presenting plans for a new building in 2015.
“The government has been very aware of the problems with the building and we have been banging on their door for a number of years to do something about it.”
The upcoming The Secret Garden show and the remaining 2022 season at the theater have been cancelled.
Mr Mitchell said given shows were planned four years in advance, future performances were up in the air.
“We have got a whole theater load of shows ready to go with totally uncertainty about how we’re going to proceed with those new works.”
He called on WA Arts Minister David Templeman to act.
“Right now, we need just a rebuild of the theatre,” he said.
“I’m sure David [Templeman] will come to the party and be the knight in shining armor that we need him to be.”
Quest for new home for puppets
Erin Gauntlett, the acting director general at the Department of Local Government, Sport and Cultural Industries, said closing part of the building was an “incredibly unfortunate” but necessary decision.
“When we get structural engineers saying that it’s a risk to public safety and it’s a risk to performers, the staff and the general public – we were in the very unfortunate position of having to make that difficult decision but a very necessary decision to close that building.”
She said the department had been planning remediation works, but was told last week the repairs wouldn’t be possible.
“When it comes to the time that you’re told that it’s a risk to the safety of the public…we had no choice.”
Ms Gauntlett said the department was committed to working with the company on short- and long-term solutions and all options were on the table.
“We’ll support them through this and that will include financial assistance as well as finding alternative venues for the short term.
“No decisions have been made yet about longer-term decisions.”
WA Arts Minister David Templeman has been contacted for comment.
After a six-week winter recess, West Australian politicians will return to parliament today to start the last half of the sitting year.
Key points:
The priorities include reforms in the wake of Annaliesse Ugle’s death
Improving operations at Perth’s casino will also be high on the agenda
The opposition is keeping the spotlight on recent controversies
Plenty has happened since they last agreed, including another COVID-19 wave and controversies involving the Agriculture Minister and Attorney-General.
Even still, the government insists a cabinet reshuffle is not on the cards, with its focus instead on five priorities for the 33 sitting days ahead.
At the top of their list for reforms are long-awaited changes to WA’s Bail Act, largely in response to the death of Annaliesse Ugle in 2020.
The 11-year-old took her own life after the man accused of sexual assaulting her was released on bail.
The reforms are currently sitting in the lower house and will change the act in a variety of ways, including when a person is charged with child sex offences.
Once the new legislation is passed, anyone deciding bail in that situation will have to specifically consider a number of factors, including the “physical and emotional wellbeing” of the child victim.
Another provision will mean that where a child victim raises concerns about their safety and welfare if the accused is not kept in custody, the person deciding bail must be presented with that information by the prosecutor and take it into consideration.
When he introduced the bill into parliament, Attorney-General John Quigley said it struck the right balance “between elevating the voices and concerns of child victims of sexual abuse and maintaining the precepts of our justice system”.
Crown Perth reforms also high priority
It has been around five months since the WA government was handed the Crown Casino Royal Commission’s final report, containing 59 recommendations on how to clean up money laundering, criminal infiltration and problem gambling.
The first swathe of laws designed to start chipping away at those recommendations are yet to pass parliament but are on the priority list.
The bill is also still in the lower house, having been introduced just before parliament broke for the winter break.
Once passed, it will establish an independent monitor who will oversee the casino for a two-year remediation period, as recommended in the report.
Questions have been raised about the utility of that monitor though, with one gambling researcher raising concerns the casino would return to “business as usual” at the end of that two-year period.
The bill will also increase maximum penalties under the Casino Control Act from $100,000 to $100 million, and allow the minister to appoint an independent chair of the Gaming and Wagering Commission.
While there are more than a dozen other bills currently on the books for MPs to consider, the government is particularly keen to see three of them pass soon.
One will implement recommendations from the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse by requiring about 4,000 organizations to report allegations or convictions of child abuse.
That is on the list to be debated in the upper house this fortnight, and once passed will also give the state’s ombudsman oversight of how those organizations handle child abuse complaints and allow for independent investigations.
Another bill will provide greater protection for owner-drivers and other small businesses in the road freight sector, including minimum periods for contract termination.
Finally, there’s a bill to allow for the construction of a number of Metronet projects along the Armadale Line, including removing level crossings and raising tracks, and extending the line to Byford.
Opposition piles pressure on ministers
While that is what the government wants to focus on, the state opposition is keen to keep the pressure on a number of ministers who have been in the headlines for the wrong reasons over the winter break.
Among them is Alannah MacTiernan, who apologized after what she described as “clumsy” comments about foot and mouth disease, including that if it landed in WA it could make domestic milk and meat cheaper.
Then there is Mr Quigley, who had to correct evidence he gave in the defamation case between Mr McGowan and Queensland mining magnate Clive Palmer earlier this year.
It led to Justice Michael Lee describing Mr Quigley’s evidence as “all over the shop”, although he did make the point that “being a confused witness is a quite different thing from being a dishonest one”.
Even still, it prompted Deputy Liberal Leader Libby Mettam to yesterday label Mr Quigley a “lame duck.”
“But fair questions could be asked of other members and ministers in the McGowan government cabinet,” she said.
Opposition Leader Mia Davies also piled on the pressure.
“The Premier has an Attorney-General that is confused and confusing, an Agriculture Minister who has lost the confidence of the industry, a Health Minister that has overseen the highest ever ambulance ramping in the state, and a Housing Minister with no housing,” she said.
“It just doesn’t add up when you consider the strength of numbers Labor have in the parliament and the wealth the Premier has at his fingertips as Treasurer.”
Metronet ‘behind schedule and over budget’
Ms Davies said the opposition would also “maintain its focus on a Labor Government that is failing to deliver on promises made to the people of Western Australia”.
“Their major project, Metronet, is behind schedule and over budget, and the cracks are starting to emerge in cabinet as the emergency of COVID diminishes and the spin and rhetoric from the government starts to wear thin with the public,” she said.
But the opposition will also have to contend with its resources being pulled in multiple directions, as the North West Central by-election to replace former Nationals MP Vince Catania approaches.
Now that he has officially handed in his resignation, a date for the poll will be set — expected to be sometime in mid-September.
It creates a tricky situation, with both opposition parties competing for the same votes.
Long-serving Nationals MP Vince Catania has handed his resignation to the speaker of Western Australia’s Legislative Assembly, officially triggering the process of holding a by-election.
Key points:
Vince Catania announced his retirement two months ago
But the by-election process couldn’t start until he handed in his resignation
It creates an awkward situation for the Liberal-National alliance
It is expected the poll to replace him in the seat of North West Central will be held around the middle of next month, possibly on September 17.
A date will be formally decided when the WA parliament sits on Tuesday for the first time after its winter recess.
Both the Liberal and National parties have announced their candidates, but it is unclear whether Labor will contest the seat.
The long-serving Nationals MP announced his retirement nearly two months ago, saying he did not “have anything left in the tank.”
However, he did not officially resign at the time, as most politicians do, in a move described as “most unusual” by political commentator Peter Kennedy.
When asked about the delay, a spokesperson for the WA Nationals said it had always been Mr Catania’s plan to retire in early August.
“[He] continues to be committed to his role as the member for North West Central until this time,” the spokesperson said.
North West Central is WA’s geographically largest electorate, taking in towns such as Carnarvon, Coral Bay and Exmouth.
Mr Catania has held the seat since 2008, after initially being elected to the upper house in 2005.
The Nationals were the first to announce their candidate for the by-election, selecting local publican Merome Beard.
A post on Ms Beard’s Facebook page shows she will officially launch her campaign on Friday, in an event that will also be used to farewell Mr Catania.
Other posts show Mr Catania will join Ms Beard, who used to work in his office, at a number of “mobile office” meetings across the region.
A qualified urban and regional planner, Will Baston will stand as the Liberal Party’s candidate.
He has also worked as a consultant on “conservation and economic development outcomes for outback and regional Western Australia”, according to the Liberal Party.
It is understood the Greens will also field a candidate, to be announced on Wednesday.
Awkward contest for opposition alliance
The by-election creates an awkward situation for the Liberal-National Alliance, with both sides having to compete for votes.
However, Deputy Liberal Leader Libby Mettam said yesterday that her party’s interest was “not in competing and fighting against the National Party.”
“We will be leading and campaigning in support of Will Baston, our Liberal Party candidate, and we hope that either Will Baston or the Nationals candidate will be elected,” she said.
“Our position as the party representing all of Western Australia is to be giving people the option to vote for the Liberal Party and vote in a strong candidate, which is Will Baston.”
An even more awkward result would be if the Liberal Party won the seat, leaving both it and the Nationals with an equal number of members in the Legislative Assembly.
It is a situation understood to be unprecedented, with no clear way of deciding who becomes the Opposition Leader, leaving the parties to negotiate an outcome.
If that eventuated, the Liberals would likely have the upper hand, given they have more members in both houses of parliament than the Nationals.
However, that is an unlikely result, given the Liberal Party received just 7.9 per cent of first preference votes at the last election, compared to the Nationals’ 39.7 per cent.
The Nationals currently hold the seat on a slim margin of 1.7 per cent, or 259 votes.
Labor yet to show its hand
Labor is yet to announce whether they will field a candidate.
There is a sense though that there would be little purpose in the party doing so, given they already hold 53 of the 59 seats in the lower house.
Last month, Mr Kennedy said Labor could “stand back and let the Liberal Party and the National Party fight it out, and it won’t make any difference to the overall numbers in the Legislative Assembly”.
That is in addition to the fact by-elections are rarely won by incumbent parties, although the effect of Premier Mark McGowan’s popularity could work against that trend.
A wintry mix of hail, blustery thunderstorms and even snow flurries is on the cards for Western Australia, as the south-west corner of the state, including Perth, braces for what could be its coldest day of the year so far.
Key points:
Temperatures are expected to plummet in WA’s South West on Tuesday
The weather system could also bring strong winds and hail to parts of WA
Bluff Knoll in the Stirling Ranges could get a dusting of snow
A gusty cold front reached Perth just before midday on Monday, and is set to sweep over the remainder of the South West Land Division, reaching Geraldton to Hopetoun this evening.
While this event is not likely to be as strong or prolonged as the system that hit WA last week, causing record wind gusts in some places, it is still expected to pack a punch.
Cape Leeuwin and Ocean Reef have already recorded wind gusts nearing 90 kilometers per hour.
Hail could impact large swathe of state
Bureau of Meteorology senior forecaster Caroline Crow said the initial cold front would be followed by a pool of cold air on Tuesday, which would send maximum temperatures plummeting and bring hail to a large area of the state.
“Coming into tomorrow there will be potential hail though the South West Land Division from about Jurien Bay to Lake Grace to Esperance,” she said.
“Broadly speaking, it’s the coldest outbreak for the south-west of the state that we’re looking at for this season so far, given the region of hail potential which is quite far inland.”
She said maximum temperatures would generally be between two and six degrees Celsius lower than average on Tuesday, with temperatures in the Great Southern region struggling to reach the low teens.
“The Great Southern and south coastal district is looking at temperatures around 10C to 12C,” she said.
“And from Bunbury into inland parts of the South West Land Division, all the way to the south-east coastal district around that 12C mark.”
Perth is also forecast for cooler-than-normal weather, with a maximum of 15C expected in the city and 14C in Mandurah.
The coldest day of the year so far in Perth was on July 17, when the temperature peaked at 14.2C.
In Katanning, the coldest day was on July 30 when the mercury reached just 11.1C, Mount Barker’s chilliest day was on August 3 (11C) and Bunbury’s coldest day was on July 30 (13.9C).
Bluff Knoll could get more snow
Ms Crow said the cold blast could mean snow on Bluff Knoll, in the Stirling Ranges, for the second time in a fortnight.
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“It might get cold enough tomorrow to see a little bit of snow up Bluff Knoll, early in the morning around 4am to 5am through until midday,” she said.
“It’s more likely to be flurries rather than really settling on Bluff Knoll.”
One weather app, Windy, has even forecast the chance of light snow on the Perth Hills early on Tuesday. However Ms Crow said that was unlikely.
“The darling scarp doesn’t have a freezing level low enough or cold enough to get a dusting of snow like Bluff Knoll,” she said.
‘Unseasonal’ rain for northern parts of WA
It’s not just the south of the state expecting a wintry blast.
Ms Crow said a band of cloud was starting to thicken up over western Pilbara and central WA, which would likely bring showers by mid-week.
“Come tomorrow, we will start seeing the potential for showers and patchy rain out of it,” she said.
“And then coming into Wednesday the eastern parts of the Pilbara and into the interior could get falls of 10 millimetres, with isolated showers up to 20mm.”
Ms Crow said the showers were unusual for this time of year, with the north of the state currently in the middle of its dry season.
She said there would also be cool temperatures for the region.
“It looks like underneath that cloud, band temperatures could be four to eight degrees below average,” she said.
Miserable weather forecast for Perth
Tuesday: Min 7C, Max 15C, Very high chance of rain
Wednesday: Min 7C, Max 18C, High chance of rain near the coast
Thursday: Min 5C, Max 18C, Partly cloudy
Friday: Min 7C, Max 20C, Mostly sunny
Saturday: Min 11C, Max 20C, Very high chance of rain
Sunday: Min 11C, Max 21C, Very high chance of rain
A 58-year-old Perth man armed himself with a large knife and tried to kill his wife after becoming angry at her for ending their 35-year relationship and taking out a restraining order against him, the WA Supreme Court has been told.
Key points:
The court was told the woman’s adult son rushed to protect her
She suffered injuries to her hands, including a ruptured tendon
The accused man denies he tried to kill her
The man, who the ABC has chosen not to name, is on trial accused of attempting to murder his wife as she lay sleeping the room of her Beeliar home, with her four-year-old granddaughter beside her, just after midnight on September 25 , 2020.
The court was told the couple’s adult son, who was staying with his mother to protect her, heard his mother’s cries for help and rushed into the bedroom.
He managed to grab his father in a bear hug and eventually forced him to drop the knife, while the woman called the police.
She had suffered injuries to her hands, including a ruptured tendon, because she grabbed the knife when her husband jumped on top of her, after entering the bedroom and turning on the light.
State Prosecutor Brett Tooker said the man had been holding the weapon at his wife’s chest while yelling things like “you’re dead, I’m going to kill you.”
Mr Tooker said the problems in the relationship started in about 2017, when the accused man started drinking alcohol heavily and mixing it with prescription medication.
The court heard the man first physically assaulted his wife in early 2018, when he put his hands around her neck, but she decided not to call the police because he promised not to do it again.
‘You better sleep with one eye open’, wife told
However, Mr Tooker said the man continued to verbally and psychologically abuse his wife who, by mid-September 2020, decided to end their relationship.
Mr Tooker said the woman told her husband to move out, but days later when he was still living at the house, police were called after she rejected his sexual advances and he said to her “you better sleep with one eye open because you’re not going to see the morning”.
He also looked at his wife and made a motion like slitting his throat before continuing to act in an intimidating way towards her.
An order banning him from the home for 72 hours was made but the court heard the man returned in the early hours of the morning and said to his wife “you don’t know how much I could get you”.
The woman then obtained an interim family restraining order which was served on her husband on September 24.
‘Spark that lit the fuse’
Mr Tooker said it was the prosecution case that “was the spark that lit the fuse” and nine hours later the accused man drove to his wife’s house armed with the knife.
The man is also charged with threatening to kill his son for allegedly saying to him, after he had restrained his father, “let me go… I can kill you as well”.
The accused man denies both charges.
His barrister, Simon Freitag SC said there was no dispute his client had made some “terrible decisions” and that he had ended up “ranting and shouting” at his wife while holding a knife.
However, Mr Freitag said the man maintained he had only wanted to scare his wife, with whom he was “trying in a very silly way” to communicate with.
“He was trying to get his point across in a drunken, stupid method and using a knife for emphasis as a tool of fear,” Mr Freitag told the jury.
He also said that while it “sounded harsh”, the man could have succeeded in killing his wife if that was what he had intended.
“She was in a very vulnerable position… she didn’t see the knife until he turned on the light,” Mr Freitag said.
Mr Freitag said the man did admit causing injuries to his wife’s hands, but he denied had intended to cause her death.
“It’s a crime of causing grievous bodily harm, not of attempted murder,” he said.
Grace* did not know, or perhaps did not want to admit, she was in an abusive relationship until her husband became physically violent.
Key points:
Fear and lack of money stop many women leaving violent men
A university course trains those working in the field
Experts say attitudes towards family violence need to change
When he did, it was a catalyst for her to leave, but not right away.
“I even talked police out of laying charges against him in the early stages of it,” said Grace, whose name has been changed to protect her identity.
“I’d put it down to [his] mental health in all honesty, it’s only later after much study that I have a much better understanding that, that was purely an excuse for a lot of it.”
It took a further three years before Grace accessed support services, which for her in Victoria was an organization called The Orange Door.
“I think twice I went and sat in the car outside [The Orange Door] and I went, ‘nah I can’t do it, can’t go in’,” she said, a slight tremble cracking through her otherwise steady voice.
“Just because I couldn’t … I didn’t want to tell my story.
“I didn’t want to be honest about the things that I had put up with and what I’d gone through because in my head I was going, ‘well why didn’t I leave earlier?’
“‘Who would go through that? No-one in their sane mind’ was what my narrative was.”
Shame, fear and dependency
The feeling of shame overwhelming Grace as she sat in her car that day is not uncommon among victim-survivors of family and domestic violence (FDV).
According to a number of professionals who work in the field, it is one of the common misconceptions about FDV that can have far reaching and devastating consequences for those who are already at their most vulnerable.
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Michael Flood is an associate professor at Queensland University of Technology (QUT) whose work in the school of justice includes dispelling some of the most common and persistent misconceptions about FDV.
“There are very understandable reasons why women might stay with a partner who is being abusive towards them,” he said.
“Their fear, their commitment to the relationship, their concerns about harm to the children, their lack of alternative sources of housing and income, their dependency, their social isolation, many of which are deliberately engineered by perpetrators.”
A ‘wicked’ social problem
As part of his work in the FDV field, Dr Flood is responsible for QUT’s graduate certificate in domestic violence responses.
When it began in 2016, the online course was the only one of its kind in Australia, but Dr Flood said he knows of at least five other professional qualifications in domestic and family violence now being offered at universities.
“We’re dealing with a wicked social problem, a complex and pervasive social problem,” he said.
“We need skills and training for the people who will come into contact with that problem.
“Certainly, recent stories from the Queensland Police and elsewhere tell us that police, too, may not be very skilled at responding to these issues.
“I think a key learning from some of the most recent inquiries is that a whole lot more training and education, if not culture change, is necessary in our police services, and in some of the other services that respond or should respond to victim- survivors and perpetrators.”
Police responses questioned
Police responses to FDV have been under an increased — and public — level of scrutiny as of late, especially in Queensland.
The inquest into the murders of Hannah Clarke and her three children at the hands of their father and her estranged husband was followed by another into the killing of Doreen Langham by her ex-partner.
There is also an ongoing inquiry into how Queensland Police respond to FDV matters – all of it highlighting significant areas of concern and leading to calls for more thorough face-to-face, and ongoing training for police across the country.
A recent government report identified WA as having the highest overall rate of family and domestic violence related assault in the country.
“Este [Hannah Clarke] inquest and other recent reports on family violence are being reviewed for their applicability to WA Police Force policy and practices,” a spokesman for the state’s Police Minister, Paul Papalia, wrote in a statement.
Police jurisdictions across the country are reporting that FDV call outs make up a significant proportion of their work, with many turning to improved officer training to try to better address the issue.
The QUT course, which attracts students from professions including social work, law, psychology, and law enforcement, looks at how disadvantage and privilege contribute to domestic violence and how to respond effectively to it.
Dr Flood said it was a complex issue, and one that was not only about physical violence.
“Domestic violence is as much about a kind of daily dripping tap of abuse, of control and so on, that may not be particularly physical, it may involve only threats of violence or a perpetrator, in very subtle or sneaky ways, reminding the victim of the possibility of them using violence,” he said.
The situation is compounded when children are present.
“We know very well now that whenever there are children in a household where there’s domestic violence, they are deeply affected by that violence, affected just as much by witnessing or being around that violence as if they are being assaulted themselves,” he said.
Dr Flood said about 40 students completed the course each year, about 87 per cent of whom were women.
He would like to see more men enter the FDV response and prevention workforce.
Police officer sees hope
Patrick Hayes has been with Victoria Police for 22 years, becoming a family violence liaison officer two years ago, and is also a facilitator for QUT’s graduate certificate in domestic violence responses.
When it comes to the track record of police in dealing with FDV, Sergeant Hayes holds few punches.
“Has there been mistakes made in the past? Absolutely. There’s no denying that at all,” he said.
“What’s encouraging is that we’re recognizing this, and we’ve started to work more collaboratively. We are making headway.”
Restraining order ‘just a piece of paper’
On her third attempt, Grace finally found the courage to get out of her car and enter The Orange Door for support.
She is now working in the area of FDV case management while undertaking the QUT course, which she describes as having “confronting content”.
When it comes to her own experiences and her own trauma, Grace said her journey was ongoing.
After her ex-husband was found guilty of numerous breaches of a violence restraining order, she has now been granted a rare long-lasting order against him, which runs for 40 years.
But she feels the judicial system is letting victim-survivors down.
The consequences faced by her ex-husband for multiple breaches appear to her to be no more than verbal reprimands and ends he will never pay off.
She said the court’s actions had made her feel more unsafe.
“Just by not holding breaching accountable, there’s no deterrent. At the end of the day … it’s just a piece of paper,” Grace said.
Living invisibly
And while Grace rates her own interactions with police as positive overall, there is one aspect she still struggles to come to terms with.
She was told by police she needed to change her phone number, move house and protect her address and her place of work so she would be ‘safe’.
“I think the onus of that needs to be taken away from a victim-survivor and placed at the perpetrator’s feet,” she said.
“It’s not my responsibility to make someone else toe the line or behave responsibly, but that’s exactly what I was told.
“And I did try and live invisibly for a lot of years… it’s not an easy way to recover when you’re trying to be invisible.
“Practically, it’s sound advice — it’s just something I shouldn’t have to do.”
Dr Flood agrees.
“Whether they take place in schools or in sporting context or in the community, we need to shift the attitudes, the behaviours, inequalities that feed into domestic and family violence in the first place,” he said.
Moving “violent young offenders” out of Western Australia’s only youth detention center to a separate unit at an adult prison has “worked”, the WA government says.
Key points:
The government says Banksia Hill is running well following the transfer
Figures show there has been a dramatic rise in self-harm at the facility
A former children’s court president has spoken out about conditions at the center
The comments follow widespread criticism of conditions for children being held in detention, in both the existing Banksia Hill Detention Center and an ad hoc facility set up in a section of Casuarina — one of the state’s maximum security male prisons.
Last month the Department of Justice moved 17 children, including one aged 14, to the unit at Casuarina, dubbed “Unit 18.”
Their hands and ankles were reportedly shackled during the move.
The department said the move was prompted by widescale damage to cells at Banksia Hill, and detainees had to be relocated so the cells could be repaired.
Reports of self-ham emerge following transfer
There have been subsequent reports of four of those children being taken to hospital after attempted self-harm.
The West Australian has reported four children harmed themselves with shards of broken glass, something the ABC has been unable to immediately verify.
The Department of Justice declined to provide figures on the number of children at Unit 18 that had self-harmed or attempted suicide since they were moved there on June 20.
The department said there were now 16 children inside Unit 18.
Corrective Services Minister Bill Johnston said he would not comment on individual cases, but added the “good news” was that Banksia Hill was now running well.
“While we still have this difficult to manage cohort at Unit 18, for the overall majority of young offenders who are at Banksia Hill, they’re now in a much better environment,” he said.
“It was not functioning to have these young offenders causing violence at Banksia Hill, and so that the other kids who were not being violent, were not acting out, were not getting the services they need because the facility was constantly going into lockdown.”
Improvements in behavior following move
He said there had not been any significant disturbance at Banksia Hill since moving those children on July 20.
And the Minister said some of the young offenders at Unit 18 were starting to improve their behaviour.
“Now, it’s not sustained and I’m not going to comment on individual cases but as we are confident those young offenders can reintegrate into Banksia Hill, we’ll continue to bring them back,” he said.
But he granted the Intensive Supervision Unit (ISU) at Banksia Hill was not “fit for purpose”.
“We know we need to improve the ISU so it has a more therapeutic environment,” he said.
“At the moment we have violent and disturbed offenders in ISU, that’s completely unacceptable.”
He said a new unit would be constructed at Banksia Hill to provide a more therapeutic environment.
According to figures provided to WA Parliament during budget estimates, the average hours children at Banksia Hill spent outside their cells each day was 9.37 in 2020-2021, falling to 7.6 hours in 2021-2022.
Self-harm on the rise at Banksia
There has been a dramatic rise in suicide attempts and self-harm incidents in the past three years.
There were two recorded suicide attempts, one of which was serious, and 105 minor self-harm incidents at Banksia Hill in 2020.
That compares with 31 suicide attempts – six of them serious – and 314 minor self-harm incidents in 2021.
In 2022, there had already been 20 suicide attempts and 285 self-harm incidents by June 20.
The longest-serving president of the Children’s Court of WA, retired Judge Denis Reynolds, has told the ABC the transfer of children to a unit at Casuarina represented a “broken” system.
He said the court had lost confidence in the state’s justice system.
Judge says likely figures tip of the iceberg
The former judge said the 20 suicide attempts so far this year likely only represented the type of the iceberg.
“We need to also look at those children who have also gone back into the community,” he told ABC Perth.
“Many of them turned 18 and subsequently committed suicide in the community, or perhaps in an adult prison facility.
He believes in excess of 100 young lives of former Banksia Hill detainees had been lost to suicide in the community in the past two decades.
The WA government has committed $7.5 million to building a crisis care unit at Banksia Hill and an additional $2.6 million will be spent on fencing and “hardening works” for Jasper Unit at Banksia.
Another $3.5 million will be spent on preventing children from being able to climb onto the roofs at the facility, and another $2.5 million on upgrading the CCTV system.
The department told Parliament it had recently developed a new operating philosophy for Banksia Hill that would have a greater emphasis on rehabilitation and therapeutic models.
Recidivism rates for young offenders have been on a downward trend since 2017-18, falling from 58.7 per cent of offenders to 49.2 per cent in 2021-2022.
It has been six months since a devastating bushfire ripped through WA’s Wheatbelt region, and impacted farmers are still counting the cost.
Key points:
A fire started after a permitted stubble burn reignited in “catastrophic conditions”
The blaze destroyed 45,000 hectares and multiple homes
Locals say a permit should never have been issued and are calling for a public inquiry
The Shire of Corrigin, 220 kilometers east of Perth, was among the regions hardest hit.
About 45,000 hectares of land was burned, four homes, and dozens of buildings destroyed, and more than 1,000 livestock perished after a prescribed stubble burn reignited in what authorities labeled “catastrophic conditions”.
One farmer caught in the fire’s path was Steven Bolt, who estimated millions of dollars in losses from the February blaze.
Mr Bolt is deputy chief of Corrigin’s Volunteer Fire Brigade and said the fire, which engulfed his property, could have been prevented.
“We all knew the risk coming that weekend, and for a permit to be issued is absolutely staggering, and the fire should never have happened, and the permit should have never been issued,” he said.
The neighboring Shire of Bruce Rock permitted the stubble burn several days before the blaze started on February 6.
An investigation by the WA Department of Fire and Emergency Services (DFES) found the authorized burn-off was reignited in 43-degree temperatures before it spread rapidly in strong winds.
No total fire ban was in place at the time, but Mr Bolt contacted authorities with his concerns.
He said his pleas were ignored.
“I told [them] this was going to happen and now it has, and we need all the resources we can find, particularly air support, because we were never going to stop that fire,” he said.
‘We don’t like coming out here anymore’
Tim and Shannon Hardingham run a farm 10km east of Corrigin.
Between paddocks of vibrant yellow canola crops now lies a metal scrap yard.
The Hardinghams said the past six months had been the hardest of their lives, and much of the recovery was still ahead of them.
“People who haven’t been through it have a lot of empathy, but there’s a daily struggle in what to do next because there’s just so much to do,” Ms Hardingham said.
“The single biggest cost that is shocking to us is the asbestos clean-up, which we’ve been quoted around $250,000 to clean up.”
The couple now avoids coming out to the farm and have chosen to keep their kids away.
“It doesn’t even resemble the same farm,” Mr Hardingham said.
Please for answers
The burning permit that led to the fire was issued by the Shire of Bruce Rock, which declined to comment on the issue.
Shire president Stephen Strange said it had been a difficult time for the region, but praised the work of local authorities, volunteers, and the state government.
“The recovery will be ongoing for years and years to come… the farmers themselves have done a good job getting the landscape back into pretty good condition,” he said.
“The communication has been very good between affected landholders, community members, and the shire.”
In a statement, DFES acting deputy commissioner Jon Broomhall said the Bruce Rock Shire was within its rights to grant the burning permit, and an “after-action review is currently underway, focusing on the four bushfires that occurred across the state that day.”
But local farmers and firefighters said they had so far been left in the dark.
Mr Bolt was calling for a separate investigation into the Correcting fire.
“This needs to be a standalone inquiry. The issue of the permit being given is different to what occurred in the other fires,” he said.
“We haven’t even come close to being able to discuss the issues that have led to this catastrophe through this area,” he said.
Law firm Hall & Wilcox has been engaged by insurers representing impacted landholders, with inquiries still in the early stages.
Ms Hardingham said a thorough investigation could help prevent similar incidents in the future.
“We don’t find ourselves privy to much information about what went wrong,” she said.
“It would be nice to think it will never happen to anyone again and that people could learn from our loss and what we’ve gone through.”
Competitive Pokemon trainers are both excited and terrified at the recent rule changes in the video game championships (VGC), where players compete against one another via pokemon sword and Shield in an array of leagues. Mythical Pokémon are now allowed for official tournament play for the first time. This means that nobody is safe from heavy-hitters like Megearna or Victini, and the community is scrambling to find counters. Some of the most truly diabolic players have already started to add broken Pokémon to their own teams.
The rules for the latest Series 13 ranked matches, starting September 1, were posted yesterday for pokemon sword and Shield, this series focused on the Galar region, The rules mainly remained the same from the last series, except for an extended eligible Pokémon list. The information was originally spotted by the Pokemon fansite Serebiiand Kotaku was able to confirm the full list of eligible Pokémon in the Pokémon Homemobile app.
Mythical Pokémon are better known as event legendaries, and are normally close to impossible to obtain through normal gameplay. This group includes Mew, Celebi, Jirachi, Arceus, and so on. Previously, you had to participate in special in-person events in order to obtain these rare Pokémon. Now, the only mythical Pokémon that are excluded from the eligibility list are the ones that can’t be obtained in Sword and Shield.
These days, mythical Pokémon are much easier to obtain than in the past. The dreaded Megearna can be obtained by completing the Alola Pokédex in pokemon sun and moonand Mew can be captured and transferred over from the Pokémon GO app. Victini can be captured in the Pokémon Sword and Shield DLC. So not being able to access limited time events is less of a competitive disadvantage now than it has been in the past.
The new series rules complicates the meta further: There are no restrictions on the number of legendary and mythical Pokémon that players can bring to a ranked match. Previously, up to two legendaries had been allowed in tournaments under the “GS rules” introduced in PokemonHeartGold and SoulSilver.
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Up to $200 off
Vertagear Summer Sales 2022
Ergonomic premium quality Vertagear has a number of gaming chairs on sale right now. One in particular that caught our eye is the PL4500 which is embroidered with Swarovski crystals down to $500. You can also get one of their RGB kits to add a set of lights to either the top cutout sections around the headrest or a bottom LED kit for $200 to light up underneath like your chair is in Need for Speed: Underground 2.
Series 13 kicks off September 1, and runs until October 31. After that, things will shift over to the freshly released violet and Scarlet, with their mid-November release. For now there’s absolutely nothing stopping competitors from being curb stomped by a full squad of broken legendaries and mythicals. And VGC Pokemon players have absolutely no mercy.