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WA woman missing near Geelong

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 13 Maret 2013 | 22.16

Grandfather Wayne Whitehead with Lorrin's daughter Amelia Kaiser. Victorian Police are appealing for public assistance to help locate missing woman Lorrin Whitehead. Picture: Peter Ristevski Source: PerthNow

Missing 43-year-old woman Lorrin Whitehead. Picture: Supplied. Source: PerthNow

IT is more than once month since Cottesloe-raised Lorrin Whitehead simply vanished.

Since February 8, when she failed to show up at her workplace in North Geelong, there have been no sightings of the 43-year-old.

There have been no discoveries of what she was wearing, no records of any activity with her bank accounts or medical records, no inkling as to her whereabouts. Nothing.

Her family, the police and the close-knit Victorian community of Bannockburn are scratching their heads and searching for answers, but none have been forthcoming.

Everyone connected to this mystery is desperate for a lead, a hint, a sighting or discovery, a phone call from a witness or a message from Lorrin, who they hope will just check in and say she's all right.

But there is a just a void - an information vacuum - and that makes the task of finding her so much more difficult.

Her 20-year-old daughter and the eldest of five children, Amelia Kaiser, made a desperate plea on the front page of the Geelong Advertiser on February 14, seeking public assistance to help find her mother.

Several weeks on, she is again asking the public to cast their minds back to February 8.

That Friday, CCTV vision captured Lorrin leaving a supermarket in Bannockburn at 4.55pm, wearing black pants and a light-coloured shirt with a collar.

Earlier, about 3.30pm, she made a withdrawal from the Bendigo Bank ATM in the same street.

They are her last-known movements.

When Amelia arrived at her mum's home later that day she found the front door unlocked and wide open.

Lorrin's keys, purse and other personal belongings were still inside the house.

So was her medication for type 1 diabetes. The garage was also unlocked, her car inside. Her dogs were out the back.

Amelia was immediately concerned. Her mum was a stickler for home security and always locked the house.

Police say there was no sign of a struggle and no suggestion of foul play.

Everything was there that should have been. Except Lorrin.

Bannockburn Acting Sgt Craig Grant this week said the case had thrown up a multitude of possible scenarios, which made the investigation frustrating.

No line of inquiry can be dismissed; all possibilities must be considered.

"It has no doubt been a difficult investigation given that we've had no leads come in," Acting Sgt Grant said.

"It is also extremely tough for the family as well.

"Without any real, hard evidence it's difficult, but it is an ongoing investigation and we are desperate for public assistance, which we hope will help us to discover Lorrin's whereabouts."

He said the scope of the call for public help could be broadened Australia-wide in the hope that it might provide new information.

"The community here has been terrific in offering support and inquiring about any developments - they want to know of any news every day, but unfortunately we have nothing to report."

Police said Lorrin did not leave town on a bus or take a taxi.

They have checked all the usual avenues of inquiry.

They say she did not have a passport, so do not believe she has left the country, but cannot dismiss the possibility that she may have travelled interstate by other means.

She could be anywhere and until more information comes to hand, the possibilities, as the police readily admit, are endless.

Father's search for answers

LORRIN'S father, Wayne Whitehead, can't understand how his daughter could simply vanish.

Born in the beachside suburb of Cottesloe in Perth, Lorrin was a model student.

She attended Iona College, excelled at athletics and swimming and academically finished top five in the state at the end of secondary school.

Lorrin came to Victoria with Amelia in 1995 and married husband Teo in 1997.

Before they separated two years ago, they had four children together, Megan, Rachel, Arnold and Quade, who are now in the care of their father, who lives in nearby Maude.

Speaking briefly on Thursday, Teo Kaiser said he echoed everyone's plea for details on Lorrin's disappearance, adding that her children were in good care.

Wayne Whitehead and his wife Joan moved from WA to Queensland some years ago so they could be on the same side of the country as their grandchildren.

Discussing the mystery from his Gold Coast home this week, Wayne described his daughter as bubbly and self-confident, a person who rarely growled at her children, who she loved deeply.

While he said there was no doubt that her marriage breakdown had caused her some stress, it was totally out of character for her to just go missing.

Wayne returned home after coming to Bannockburn to help with the initial search in February, when police search and rescue, the dog squad and the SES combed the areas in and around Lorrin's home.

The search included grassland, bushland and waterways around the town, but yielded no clues.

"I think we've looked under every bush in Victoria, visited every spot where we thought she may have been," he said.

"We're extremely thankful to the police, SES, the dog squad and air wing for their help, to the community. They've all done as much as they can."

But it's a struggle that gets worse as time goes on.

"It's like a feeling of helplessness. I just want to wake up and discover this is some kind of bad dream that is going to be over," he said.

"She didn't want to disappear and there was nothing to suggest that was the case."

Wayne said he still held hope Lorrin would be found.

"It's now four weeks. There will always be hope, but it's getting to the stage ... I don't think you ever give up hope.

"We'd love to think she's out there somewhere. I'm not holding my breath, but we are not giving up the hope."

Wayne paid tribute to his granddaughter Amelia and her family members who had kept a brave face throughout the ordeal.

"She's got a lot of guts and we are very proud of how she is coping," he said.

"Amelia is crying on the inside, smiling on the outside, similar to all our family."

She is also trying to revisit every detail, every conversation and interaction she had with her mum in the days leading up to her disappearance in the hope it will give her some clue as to what might have happened.

But the absence of anything solid is devastating for Amelia and her family.

"It's the unknown, that's the most frightening part," Amelia said. "The longer it goes on, the harder it gets.

"Mum was looking forward and making plans - she was involved in clubs, had friends, had a job, and she was doing courses to improve her qualifications."

Lorrin was employed at Total Maintenance Solutions in North Geelong. Staff there were first to raise concerns when she failed to turn up for work, and have been lending support to the family since the day she disappeared.

Amelia said the support from every corner of the community and from Lorrin's friends and employer had been amazing, and had helped her try to maintain her own routine and work as a graduate nurse.

"I don't feel numb. I'm just trying to get on with things, but it's awful to think Mum could be out there needing our help," she said.

"It's quite difficult and a bit bizarre. I have to try to maintain a routine but I also think, 'Should I be out there looking for her?'

"I look out for her everywhere I go. Maybe one day I'll just walk down the street and I'll see her."

While Amelia and her family cling to that hope, that one day soon Lorrin will return, the possibilities of such a baffling case also fill her thoughts and swing her emotions.

"Sometimes I feel numbness, sometimes anger. There's a bit of grief, hurt and sadness too," Amelia said. "I just wish she was here now. Mum is the centre of everything.

"I'm just hoping she'll walk back in and say, 'Why is everyone making such a fuss of me? I'm only going on a holiday'.

"She's had a lot of stress over the past couple of years due to family matters, but to not have a car or wallet or ID or money is just completely out of character.

"I can't even comprehend why."

Everyone in the family is asking questions that, after four weeks and one day, have absolutely no answers.

"The second youngest sister looks at me and says, 'Mum will come home won't she?', and all I can say is, 'How much does Mum love you and how much does she tell you she loves you every day?' " Amelia said.

"She doesn't have to come home. All she has to do is call and tell us she is OK."

Lorrin is described as 170cm tall, with a medium build, brown eyes and brown hair.

Anyone who has any information regarding her disappearance, or who may have seen her in the hours leading up to her disappearance on February 8, should call 000 or Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.


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Entertainer Peter Dean dies aged 74

Entertainer Peter Dean (second from left) on a recent cruise with friend John Fryer and their wives Morag Fryer (right) and Delys Dean. Picture: Supplied Source: PerthNow

Entertainer Peter Dean has died at the age of 74. Picture: Supplied. Source: PerthNow

HE WAS known as Mr Telethon for his unfailing support for the children's charity, but Perth last night lost veteran television and radio personality Peter Dean, who died aged 74.

Mr Dean's career in broadcasting spanned more than five decades and included Channel 7 and radio stations 6IX and 6PR.

But it was for his tireless work with Telethon that he was perhaps best known.

Mr Dean died after battling motor neurone disease.

His former co-host on 6IX's record-breaking morning show in the 1960s and 1970s, John Fryer, 79, said his friend would be remembered for his roles with Telethon and the Logie-winning program, Anything Goes.

Mr Fryer told PerthNow he went on a cruise with Mr Dean and their wives recently after he heard his former colleague "wasn't travelling so well''.

"It was just to have a reunion and it was great,'' Mr Fryer said.

"He started to come out of his shell and he started to be like the Peter Dean I knew of old.''

Together the two men had hosted a hit breakfast radio show on 6IX which ran for a record breaking 16 years.

Mr Fryer said Mr Dean was "just a great guy''.

"He was one of the boys,'' he said. ``He always had that great showbusiness blood in him.''

Mr Fryer said his friend would do anything to raise money for Telethon.

In the 60s they hosted the midnight to dawn shift on the television fundraiser.

"We were a bit naughty -- we had strippers on and a few things that people seemed to enjoy,'' Mr Fryer said.

"Peter would do anything... rip his shirt off... but then Peter was that sort of guy. If it was fun, he was in it.''

In a statement today, Channel Seven Perth managing director Mario D'Orazio paid tribute to Mr Dean.

"Deano was a classic entertainer, always ready with a quip, always ready to ad lib out of danger and sometimes into danger! There was never a dull a moment,'' Mr D'Orazio said.

"He set the standard for live performance in WA, and he had an enormous heart, being a key star of Telethon for many, many years.

"We'll miss him dearly.''

Mr Dean is survived by his wife, Delys, and their four children.


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'Coward' Mercanti cops 7 years

BACK YOU GO: Bikie Troy Mercanti, pictured leaving Casuarina Prison in August 2011, will spend at least the next four years behind bars. Picture: Richard Polden Source: PerthNow

VICTIM: Tammy Kingdon, who was repeatedly bashed by former partner, bikie Troy Mercanti. Picture: Kerris Berrington Source: PerthNow

NOTORIOUS Perth bikie Troy Mercanti has been jailed for nearly seven years for bashing former partner Tammy Kingdon during 15 years of physical abuse.

Mercanti, 45, was sentenced to six years and 10 months jail by District Court judge Simon Stone, eligible for parole after four years and 10 months and back dated to March 3, 2012.

Mercanti pleaded guilty on Monday morning after two weeks of the three week trial, to one count of grievous bodily harm and three counts of aggravated assault causing bodily harm.

A charge of assault occasioning bodily harm was dropped by the prosecution.

In his sentencing remarks, Judge Stone said Mercanti's late guilty pleas to four of the five charges against him did not warrant him any leniency for his term of imprisonment because the court had already gone through two weeks of the trial and Ms Kingdon and even his own mother Sybil Mercanti had to give evidence.


It is understood that it was his mother's evidence against him, confirming she saw a Christmas Day punch to Ms Kingdon's face in 2006, that led to Mercanti's change of plea.

Judge Stone said there were aggravating factors to the assaults, including that they were done within a domestic relationship, were deliberate beatings, humiliating for Ms Kingdon and their children were at times near by.

In his sentencing remarks, Judge Stone also referred to eight other instances of violence by Mercanti against Ms Kingdon that were not charges, but gave "context" to the bikie's "pattern of behaviour" to his partner.

"I'm satisfied your late pleas of guilty were a result ... of a realisation of conviction was inevitable," he said.

He also said Mercanti's pleas were not made as a desire to "administer justice" and before handing down his sentence, said "you are a coward".

In her victim impact statement, Ms Kingdon said all she wanted was a family unit for her children and hoped Mercanti's previous terms of imprisonment would stop him from beating her.

Prosecutor Justin Whalley called for the maximum terms of imprisonment on all four of the charges.

"He should be punished as a criminal offender who enacted a series of cowardly, brutal and unprovoked assaults on a defenceless woman smaller than himself," Mr Whalley said.

During his closing submission this morning, Mercanti's counsel Colin Lovitt QC continued to try to argue the assaults were not as extensive as Ms Kingdon said they were, at times coming to loggerheads with Judge Stone over the matters.

Mr Lovitt said his client had said to him on the first Friday of the trial after Ms Kingdon started giving evidence that he wanted to change his plea, but changed his mind over that weekend.

He then changed his mind again last Friday after his mother gave evidence and Mr Lovitt said one of the reasons for his change of plea was so that other witnesses, including Ms Kingdon's sister, Brooke Lewis, did not have to experience giving evidence.

He also apologised to the court for the time and effort spent on the trial on behalf of his client.

After more than two hours, Mr Lovitt closed his submissions by describing the relationship at the centre of the trial as one of "fatal attraction".

"They're two peas in a pod, they both abused alcohol and drugs, they both were addicted to sex, they both were party animals," he said.

On the charge of grievous bodily harm, Mercanti was sentenced to two years and 10 months prison, on count three - the first charge of aggravated assault - he was sentenced to 18 months imprisonment.

For the other two counts of aggravated assault, Mercanti was sentenced to two years and two years, six months in prison respectively.

The sentences for counts one, three and five were accumulated for the total sentence of six years and 10 months, with the two years sentence for count four to run concurrently.
 


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Sally Ayhan's latest weather update

GET the latest on what the weather's been doing today, plus the forecast for the next 24 hours and week ahead, with Channel 9's weather presenter Sally Ayhan.

Channel Nine's new weather presenter Sally Ayhan gives PerthNow readers a unique insight into what's been happening with the local weather and a sneak peek into what temperatures to expect over the next 24 hours.
 
For Sally's full weather report, including the 7-day forecast, make sure you tune in to Nine News at 6pm tonight.
 


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WA teacher shared nude photos online

A WA teacher has been counselled for posting naked photos of himself on a personal blog.

A parent raised the matter with a Perth school principal after the photos were believed to have been circulated among students via social media.

The principal notified the Education Department of the incident last week and has counselled the teacher about his actions.

The teacher is understood to be "extremely remorseful for his actions". He immediately shut down the site that contained the images.

Education Department director-general Sharyn O'Neill said she expected "better judgement" from teachers.

"I am surprised that teachers haven't yet got the message that their private and professional lives get connected directly through social media," she said.

"I expect better judgement from our teachers."

The Education Department has assessed the incident and is satisfied that no further action is warranted, based on the information that is currently available.

yasmine.phillips@news.com.au


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Historic Perth home on sale for $25m

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 12 Maret 2013 | 22.16

PRESTIGE: One of WA's most historic Peppermint Grove homesteads, Chiritta, is on sale for a reported $25m. Source: PerthNow

PRESTIGE: One of WA's most historic Peppermint Grove homesteads, Chiritta, is on sale for a reported $25m. Source: PerthNow

PRESTIGE: One of WA's most historic Peppermint Grove homesteads, Chiritta, is on sale for a reported $25m. Source: PerthNow

PRESTIGE: One of WA's most historic Peppermint Grove homesteads, Chiritta, is on sale for a reported $25m. Source: PerthNow

ONE of Western Australia's most historic and prestigious homes is up for sale for what could be one of the state's highest ever property prices - an estimated $25 million.

Chiritta, which dates back to the late 1890s, was built by Augustus Roe, the former police magistrate of Western Australia and the son of John Septimus Roe - WA's original surveyor-general and one of the Perth's founding fathers.

The amazing 4080 square metre property boasts seven bedrooms, including an attic room, six bathrooms and two studies.

But it is the blue-chip location of Peppermint Grove on the edge of the Swan River which could make it one of the most expensive houses in Perth's history.

In 2009, a Mosman Park property sold for $57.5 million - the highest price ever paid for a house in Australia at the time - and in 2007, a home in leafy Claremont sold for $23 million.


The Peppermint Grove property is being sold by the founders of Channel 9 Perth, Ann and Denis Cullity, who bought the heritage-listed home 52 years ago from the Roe family.

It also offers a grand formal drawing and dining rooms, a study, two offices, a sunroom, a family room, an informal dining room and a five-car garage.
 


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Excavator driver injured in rollover

RESCUE DASH: The RAC Rescue chopper is on its way to Herron, south of Perth, to the scene of an excavator rollover. Source: PerthNow

AN Injured excavator driver has been airlifted to Royal Perth Hospital after his earthmoving machine rolled over in Herron, north of Lake Clifton in WA's South West.

It is believed the driver of the earth-moving machine has been seriously injured in the accident near Old Coast Road in Herron.

The injured excavator driver was airlifted to RPH, where he landed about 12.50pm and was transferred to the Emergency Department, where he is being assessed by medical staff.


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Chaplain denies knowlege of porn on USB

PORN TRIAL: Former Perth College Chaplain Matthew David O'Meara, who is alleged to have been in possession of child pornography. Picture: Richard Polden Source: PerthNow

A CHAPLAIN at a prestigious private girls school on trial over child porn charges has been accused of trying to pin blame for images found on a USB on other members of staff.

Matthew David O'Meara is on trial in the District Court over four counts of possessing child pornography after USBs were found containing photos and videos of young girls on them at Perth College in August 2010, where he worked.

The charges came after a drama teacher who used an office in the chapel near Mr O'Meara's found a lost USB drive.

When she eventually opened it with the help of students, she found sexual images of young girls that concerned her.

The school's head of IT John Garnett was given the the thumb drive and found several sexual photos and videos of girls who he guessed were aged eight to 12 years old, as well as scanned electoral roll documents for Mr O'Meara and his wife.


During the prosecution's case, a man who received counselling from Mr O'Meara, Andrew McCarthy, also gave evidence.

Mr McCarthy was seeing Mr O'Meara in June and August 2010 for help over his marriage breakdown to a senior teacher at the school who was having an affair with another staff member.

Mr McCarthy only came forward to the prosecution during the first trial last year and said he was compelled to come forward because he remembered thumb drives in Mr O'Meara's laptop in the office.

Yesterday Mr O'Meara started giving evidence and said his first encounter with Mr McCarthy was at a social event for staff at the start of the school year.

Mr McCarthy and his wife used to live in a Beaufort Street house owned by the college because of her position in the school, but the couple were asked to move out for the new chaplain and his family.

When Mr McCarthy and Mr O'Meara met, he said "here's the bloke who stole my house" which the chaplain believes was said "with an edge."

Today Mr O'Meara admitted he was scared of Mr McCarthy, because of aggressive tendencies, but he continued to counsel him.

Mr O'Meara also said he walked in on the assistant chaplain who shared his office using a laptop under Mr O'Meara's log in.

He reaffirmed that he did not own or download files on to any of the thumb drives found in the office, and he did not know how scans of electoral roll forms for him and his wife made it on to one.

Mr O'Meara said the forms were scans of hard copy forms he brought into his office to post, but left them there when he found out the details could be updated on the Internet.

Prosecutors put it to Mr O'Meara that he was trying to put Mr McCarthy and the assistant chaplain in the frame for the downloads, after trying to blame Mr Garnett at the last trial.

Mr O'Meara said that was "certainly not" the case.

"I'm not targeting anyone, I'm telling the truth," he said.

Mr O'Meara's wife is expected to give evidence this afternoon.


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Aussie Test axings shatter Langer

SHATTERED: WA coach Justin Langer.  Picture: Alf Sorbello Source: The Sunday Times

AUSTRALIAN cricketing great Justin Langer has said he is "shattered" over the recent disciplinary action against members of the touring team in India, in particular Shane Watson.

Four players were last night dropped from Third Test availability - James Pattinson, Michael Johnson, Usman Khawaja  and Watson - for failing to respond to a peer review of the side's performance in the second Test.

Watson's father said the bewildering move, announced by coach Mickey Arthur, had left the all-rounder uncertain of his future in international cricket and possibly ready to walk away.

Langer expressed his disappointment at the disciplinary action, saying he was "shattered".

"I hate gossip and I'd like to hear it from the horse's mouth - and hopefully I will in the next few days - but if what we're hearing is exactly right, I'm really shattered for the Australian cricket team," Langer told 6PR.


"I came into the West Australian cricket team with this talk of culture and this need to improve culture. Well, I just find that what's happened overnight and now with Watto coming home ... Shane Watson is one of the nicest blokes you'll ever meet in your life, he is a fantastic bloke.

"To see him make a decision like that (returning to Australia), on the back of being left out of the Test match, I just find it really, really disappointing."

Being left out of the side made for an easy decision for Watson, who opted to return to Australia to be by wife Lee's side as she prepared to give birth to the couple's first child.

Watson's father, Bob, told Brisbane's  The Courier Mail that playing for Australia was not his son's only option.

"Playing Test cricket for Australia is the ultimate thing ... but if it comes down to it he is pretty good at Twenty20 cricket and the Indian Premier League," Bob Watson said.

"He doesn't have to play for Australia to keep playing cricket and earning some pretty good money at the same time. I am not sure whether it has got to that stage yet.

"If he goes true to form, he will ask my opinion and if and when he does I will tell him what I think."

The decision to suspend Watson from selection further drives a wedge of division between the deputy and his captain, Michael Clarke, with the pair long-suspected having a rocky relationship.

Langer strongly backed Watson's decision to be on-hand for the birth and said he believed Clarke should not have a position on the board of selectors.

"I don't think that the captain should be a selector," he said.

"I'll give you an example; we made a very tough call a few weeks ago on Marcus North, who's been a past captain, and Adam Voges and Michael Hussey have been captains of the West Australian cricket team.

"When I spoke to Marcus North, I was able to say that, 'Just so you know, Adam Voges and Mike Hussey, who are good friends of yours, have fought very hard to keep you in the team and I'd expect nothing less from them'.

"I'd do the same for Matthew Hayden or Damien Martyn or Ricky Ponting, I'd expect nothing less.

"But, if they were selectors, then it's very hard to be able to say that.

"The captain has a big enough job as it is and I look back on Steve Waugh, Ricky Ponting and Alan Border and some great leaders, and they weren't selectors.

"In my opinion, I don't believe the captain should be the selector in any cricket team."
 
Follow Glen Foreman on Twitter: @glen_foreman
 


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Cat-fight draws big crowd to city mall

Three people have been charged over a violent brawl which was captured on a mobile phone and posted online.

Two girls have been charged after a public fight in the Murray Street Mall. Source: PerthNow

Two girls have been charged after a public fight in the Murray Street Mall. Source: PerthNow

THREE people have been charged over a violent brawl which was captured on a mobile phone and posted online.

The disturbing footage shows dozens of teenagers cheering on as two girls punch, kick and tear at each other's hair in the Murray Street mall at the weekend.

During the one-minute video, a young girl is repeatedly hit over the head and one girl's top is ripped off, revealing her breasts, but the pair continue fighting as a big group of onlookers cheer on.

The video ends with one girl pinned against a wall holding the other girl's hair, while a third person tries to break them up so they can continue fighting.

A 15-year-old boy and 15-year-old girl, both from Balga, have been charged with two counts each of disorderly conduct and one count of obstructing a public officer.


A 20-year-old woman from Willetton was charged with disorderly conduct.

The three will appear in the Perth Children's Court and Magistrates Court on March 26.


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