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Topless woman 'forced' to wear shirt

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 09 Oktober 2013 | 22.16

'She was minding her own business' ... Ms Krigsman's lawyer. Picture: Supplied Source: NewsComAu

A photo published on Ms Krigsman's Facebook page. Source: NewsComAu

BUSTY brunette Jessica Krigsman says cops trampled on her god-given - and state-law affirmed - right to flaunt what Mother Nature gave her when they arrested her for going topless in a Brooklyn park, and forced her to cover up.

Ms Krigsman, 24, of Gravesend, filed suit Tuesday against the NYPD and the two officers who arrested her in July 2012.

Ms Krigsman had taken off her shirt and was relaxing on a bench in Calvert Vaux Park when the cops walked over and told her to cover up, according to her Brooklyn Supreme Court lawsuit.

"She was minding her own business sunbathing, and they approached her aggressively," said Ms Krigsman's lawyer, Stuart Jacobs. "They asked for ID and told her to put on her shirt."

The Brooklyn-raised Ms Krigsman, whose Facebook page is filled with sultry cleavage-baring photos, politely cited a 1992 state Court of Appeals case that ruled a woman can be topless anywhere a man is allowed to take off his shirt, but one of the cops told her to "stop mouthing off" and threatened her with arrest, court papers say.

"The female cop picked up Jessica's shirt and forced it onto her," said Mr Jacobs. "She didn't resist in any way or fight in any way. They arrested her and cuffed her, and took her to the precinct."

Ms Krigsman was arrested and held for five hours. She was eventually charged with "obstruction of a sitting area," but that charge was dropped three months later, according to the suit.

In February, the NYPD told cops not to collar women for being topless.

The memo from the chief of the department tells cops to "not issue summonses or take law-enforcement action" against anybody naked from the waist up.

The memo was revealed in a federal lawsuit filed by Holly Van Voast, a performance artist whose act includes going topless in public and who is suing the city over her own arrests.

Ms Krigsman's suit seeks unspecified damages.

Ms Van Voast claimed she's been arrested or tossed into mental wards after doffing her shirt on 10 occasions since 2011.

"NYC police officers need to be instructed on the proper handling of topless women," said attorney Ron Kuby, who represented Ms Van Voast.

"A woman has the right to be topless anywhere in the state of New York, anywhere a man can be topless . . . And frankly, forcibly putting a piece of clothing on her constitutes assault."

Among the revealing photos Ms Krigsman posted of herself on her Facebook page is one of her wearing only colourful body paint.

"Was this in my loft in Midtown?" a male friend commented. "No u wish," Ms Krigsman shot back.

On another pic, of Ms Krigsman in a bra and long dress, one friend wrote, "I see nipple!" "Damn it lol," Ms Krigsman responded.

The city Law Department said it would review the lawsuit. 


22.16 | 0 komentar | Read More

Homewrecker Bingle snags Perth hunk

Bingle and Worthington make plans together in Sydney. Source: Supplied

Lara Bingle and Sam Worthington running errands together in Sydney. Pictured: Splash Source: Supplied

Sam Worthington picking up juices in Sydney. Picture: Splash Source: Supplied

LARA Bingle's love life already reads like a Hollywood script and now the model has a real-life leading man.

Rumours of a romance between Bingle and Aussie actor Sam Worthington have been all but confirmed after the pair were caught running errands together in Sydney. 

Worthington, who is best known for his role in the sci-fi flick Avatar, stepped off a flight from China earlier today and met Bingle, 26, who was waiting in her car in a side street. 

The new couple then hit up a dry-cleaning store and cafe for fresh juice before hanging out together in the Sydney suburb of Bondi. 

The pair last saw each other less than two weeks ago, attending the Cotton On Foundation's Global Citizen Concert headlined by Bono, Kings of Leon, Stevie Wonder and Alicia Keys at Central Park in New York.

Worthington, 37, has most recently been linked with fellow Aussie Sophie Monk while Bingle ended her romance with Ksubi designer Gareth Moody earlier this year. 

Lara Bingle and Sam Worthington running errands together in Sydney. Source: Supplied


22.16 | 0 komentar | Read More

The last stand of Chopper Read

Mark 'Chopper' Read talks candidly about his battle with liver cancer.

NOTORIOUS Melbourne criminal Mark "Chopper'' Read has died after a long battle with liver cancer.

Read, who bragged of killing more than a dozen criminals, was surrounded by family when he passed away at the Royal Melbourne Hospital.

But former homicide detective Charlie Bezzina declared Read's life should not be glorified, saying: "He's been revered, and people forget his violent past."

DEFIANT: 'I'm not afraid' says Chopper

TIME'S UP: 'I'll be dead by Christmas'

"You can never lose sight of the fact that he was a criminal, and spent 23 years behind bars."

Read, whose life was immortalised in a film starring Eric Bana, was diagnosed in April last year.

Mark "Chopper'' Read has died after a long battle with liver cancer.

The 58-year old's death comes just two weeks after he performed a sold-out stand-up show at Melbourne's Athenaeum Theatre.

He was admitted to hospital just days later but went home last week to be with his family before returning to hospital.

EX-DETECTIVE: Chopper 'used to give me headaches'

Doctors had told the father of two that he would not live beyond Christmas.

In August, Read told the Herald Sun he would prove the doctors wrong.

"I took great offence at that. I told her: 'How dare you predict my death at Christmas! I'll tell you when I'm going to die, not you tell me','' he said.

Chopper Read gives his two cents on Tuppence and the Moran clan.

Read said his illness stemmed from contracting hepatitis C while in prison.

He had also battled cirrhosis.

"My time has come,'' Read said. "They told me to go home and die.''

Read's manager Andrew Parisi said he fought a long and courageous battle against cancer.

"Despite his failing health, he delighted the audience (in his last show) with his skills as a raconteur and storyteller. This is how he would wish to be remembered, as someone who spun a great yarn and made many people laugh,'' he said.

Mr Parisi said despite Read's criminal past, he had lived a quiet life with his wife Margaret in their Collingwood home for more than 15 years.

Chopper Read was a revered figure, but had a violent past.

"He worked as a writer, painter and public speaker, paid his taxes and took care of his family,'' he said.

Mr Parisi said he hoped people would remember Read for the way he changed his life, rather than his criminal upbringing.

"We ask that people reflect on how Mark was able to overcome his past and, after more than 23 years in prison, find a way to re-enter 'normal' society. It is as a husband, father and friend that Mark will be missed most deeply,'' he said.

Crime Victims Support Association president Noel McNamara said he and Read had their differences, but he bore no hard feelings.

"He was all right, apart from some of his ideas being different to mine. We had our arguments," he said.

"He was a larger than life character, I guess you'd call him."

A gravely ill Mark 'Chopper' Read talks everything from cancer to his new show with Herald Sun's Nui Te Koha.

Read had an uneasy start to easy life. He was made a ward of the state at age 14 and was placed in various mental institutions as a teenager.

In these institutions he claims he received up to 60 episodes of shock treatment.

Between the ages 20 to 38, Read spent the majority of his life behind bars for a range of crimes including armed robbery, assault, arson, kidnapping and firearm offences.

He was well known for his sadistic torture methods involving a blowtorch and bolt cutters, which were often employed to remove victims' toes.

Read, who claimed to have been involved in the killing of 19 people and the attempted murder of 11 others, was last freed from prison in 1998, after serving six years for inflicting grievous bodily harm on a bikie by shooting him in the chest.

Read's Twitter bio tells you nearly all you need to know about a man who was unashamed of the hard life he had led.

Based on the life of Notorious underworld hitman Mark 'Chopper' Read.

"23 Years 9 Months Jail. Stabbed. Bashed. Shot. Run Over. 60 serves of shock treatment. Certified 3 times. Author. Artist. Actor."

Read claimed to have been stabbed seven times and gouged to the head with a claw hammer.

He had a fellow inmate cut his ears off while in prison, which he said was part of a plan to avoid an ambush at Pentridge's H division.

Read's books were always popular with a broad readership, so much so that he became Australia's most popular crime author.

In 1991 he released Chopper: From the Inside, which sold more than 300,000 copies.

He also sold out at least four art exhibitions, and in 2003 sold a self-portrait to the State Library of Victoria for $1400.

Read also dabbled in a wide variety of music from gangsta rap to the the Blues.

- with Anthony Sharwood


22.16 | 0 komentar | Read More

How Chopper Read wasted his life

A gravely ill Mark 'Chopper' Read talks everything from cancer to his new show with Herald Sun's Nui Te Koha.

IT'S 1979, and a hulking young heavyweight called Mark Brandon Read heads a bunch of the most dangerous men in the prison system.

Read and other inmates of H ("Hell") Division in Pentridge have been ferried down Sydney Road to Brunswick Court.

Armed police swarm the place. A couple on the roof carry shotguns. Inside are large men with hard looks, bad suits and bulging pockets.

The biggest detective in six states, the late Garry Schipper of the late Major Crime Squad, pats down this reporter at the door with hands like Christmas hams.

I'm 22. He's about 22 stone.

Chopper playng Russian roulette. Source: News Limited

Read, then 25, and the rest of the crims are in the holding cells or prison vans backed up to court. They are there to testify - or not - about a jailhouse stabbing that would feature 20 years later in Chopper, the film based loosely on Read's bizarre and brutal life.

A big player that day is a genuinely evil prisoner, Greg "Bluey" Brazel, psychopathic son of a policeman, who would still be in the news for the wrong reasons 34 years later.

Months earlier, Brazel conspired with another of Read's prison "mates", Jimmy Loughnan, to attack Read. They slit open his belly like a slaughterman gutting a cow. In court, Brazel muddies the truth using lawyers' tricks picked up over the years.

Mark 'Chopper' Read talks candidly about his battle with liver cancer.

As prison (and AFL football) etiquette requires, Read apparently can't remember details of what he called "terrific sneak go'', although his memory seems to return afterwards.

His intestines had spilt through the gash "like sausages'', he later remarked about the attack that should have killed him.

The day after the stabbing he had horrified hospital staff by getting out of bed to do push-ups, bursting dozens of stitches. He told nurses he was preparing for a revenge attack.

But why would anyone be surprised? After all, this was the man who'd asked another prisoner, Kevin Taylor, to hack his ears off with a razor, just to show he could get out of H-Division by going to hospital. Later he would joke about starting the "van Gogh Club'' but the ear-cutting wasn't funny at the time. He lost a lot of blood.

Chopper was a manipulative liar, but he was also intelligent and funny. Source: News Limited

He already had the nickname "Chopper", which he said came from a 1960s cartoon character. By the 1990s, it would become part of the language - like Squizzy or Ned Kelly. Which is exactly what he wanted.

Like a lot of criminals, he was a lying and manipulative egotist. Unlike most, he was also intelligent, funny and hadn't been raised to be a criminal.

One of his grandfathers was a Seventh Day Adventist clergyman. The other was "Bull'' Read, a part-Chinese, part-Irish Australian who fought in World War I. Chopper's father Keith fought the Japanese in World War II as a non-commissioned officer.

Keith Read presented as a law-abiding citizen but the reality was uglier: he was disturbed by war experiences that (he told his son) included shooting Japanese prisoners.

Keith slept with a loaded rifle beside him and brainwashed his son with rabid ultra-Right bigotry. His wife insisted Mark (and daughter Debbie) attend long church services each Saturday. It was, Read joked later, a case of "Praise the Lord and pass the ammunition.''

The family moved often, from the northern suburbs to the Mornington Peninsula to Prahran, where Read left school young and roamed the streets with his "Surrey Road Gang''. They were brawlers rather than thieves.

He dreamt of getting into the army but was rejected because of his flat feet. It was a fork in the road and he turned the wrong way.

Chopper became one of the most hated men in the underworld. Source: News Limited

Soon, he was a young bouncer learning to be a standover man. Some "heavies'' were bigger and some were better fighters but he showed no fear of pain - or of consequences - and that made him dangerous.

When he was locked up, he relished the notoriety. He preyed on other criminals and became one of the most hated men in an underworld he didn't quite belong to. Inside, he led his "Overcoat Gang'' against other prison factions and he got on well with "screws'', many of them ex-soldiers like his father.

Outside, he followed a twisted code of loyalty mixed with ultra-violence straight out of A Clockwork Orange. He tried to kidnap a County Court judge - in court - at gunpoint in a bizarre attempt to demand the freedom of his jailmate Jimmy Loughnan, the one who would later betray him.

On one of his brief spells of freedom, he swaggered into a nightclub with two sticks of gelignite under his overcoat and a lit cigar in his hand.

Based on the life of Notorious underworld hitman Mark 'Chopper' Read.

When Read flashed the gelignite and threatened to light the wicks he'd twisted together, the nightclub's resident "protection'' and standover man escaped through a toilet window.

This was Alphonse Gangitano, the so-called "Black Prince of Lygon Street'' that Read derided as "a plastic Godfather.''

Gangitano extorted money from half of Lygon Street, bashed off-duty police, rigged boxing bouts and waved guns around. But when he heard Read was looking for him, he went overseas. When "Al'' came back, he paid Read "a grand in the hand'' monthly after Read casually mentioned he'd met Gangitano's mother at the Vic Market.

It takes one extortionist to handle another.

At least, that was Read's version: he was never one to let tedious details get in the way of a good story. He was a natural-born yarn spinner, polishing and gathering stories over years inside.

He craved a niche in history. He got his chance in 1990 when John Silvester, then working for this newspaper's forerunner The Sun with this reporter, interviewed him in Pentridge.

Silvester had earlier written a story dismissing Read as a manipulative thug with no redeeming features. After meeting him he changed this assessment to a manipulative thug with some redeeming features.

Chopper was desperate for someone to write a book about him. Source: News Limited

Read was desperate for someone to write a book about him. He scrawled his yarns in letters and posted them to The Sun office.

Silvester and I used them as an outline to "ghost write'' a rugged little book - Chopper from the Inside - that would become an unlikely cult hit. (It was followed by sequels of varying quality. The less Read wrote, the more his "ghosts'' did.)

Read always thought he would die young. Lucky to survive his 20s, he survived when many of his contemporaries didn't.

He got out of Pentridge before the book was published in late 1991 and went straight to Tasmania to stay away from people who wanted to kill him. But a drunken escapade - shooting outlaw bikie Sid Collins in the stomach - soon put him back behind bars. His long-suffering girlfriend Margaret Cassar returned to Melbourne alone.

By the time he left jail for the last time in 1998, he had spent 23 of his 43 years in prison - and was starting to realise he'd wasted his life.

He married his first wife, Mary Ann Hodge, in Tasmania's Risdon Prison in 1995. Their son, Charlie, was born in 1999 while they lived on the Hodge family farm with a menagerie of animals.

Mary-Ann Hodge was married to Chopper. Source: News Limited

Meanwhile, film makers had come calling, fascinated by the black humour of his life story.

The makers of Romper Stomper, which had starred a young Russell Crowe, were keen for Crowe to play "Chopper''. But it was producer Michele Bennett and a young director, Andrew Dominik, who swung the deal and made a film that won critical acclaim worldwide from the New York Times to Elmore Leonard.

Read suggested a battling television comedian play him in the film: Eric Bana is now an international actor and Dominik has since made two films starring Brad Pitt.

Meanwhile, Read stayed out of trouble - apart from appearing drunk on an ABC television chat show and talking about his crimes.

He left Tasmania in 2001 to return to Melbourne. He married his first girlfriend, Margaret, who produced a son, Roy.

Chopper and Margaret. Source: News Limited

When Read revealed last year he had terminal liver cancer, it seemed his past had caught up with him.

But it's not the bullets or the knife wounds that have done him in. What led to his liver disease is hepatitis he claimed he got in Pentridge from sharing razor blades. This might even be true, although some might say prisoners also share needles. Either way, the liver turned cancerous.

He joked about death but sometimes took it seriously. I have three wills - all different - he has made over the years. The first was in his big, childish handwriting. Next was a late-night request to "look after'' both his sons if he died before they grew up, as he feared he would. The last was a smartly-typed document prepared by a solicitor.

Chopper in September 2013. Source: News Limited

The man who in his better moments worried about his sons was Mark Read. "Chopper'' was the stage name for the grotesque character he played so long that he couldn't drop the charade. Sometimes he confused the two.

The last words of that first book resonate more now than when I typed them in 1991.

"I know I have said that I regret nothing - but the truth is that I regret plenty. I regret my whole life.''


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Shark victim's horrific injuries revealed

Greg Pickering is in a stable condition after 10 hours of surgery in the wake of yesterday's horrifying attack.

Watch footage from a previous diving trip Greg Pickering and his friends embarked on, which also featured a cameo from a large shark.

Two-time shark attack victim Greg Pickering, 55, arriving at the Esperance Hospital by ambulance. Picture: Mick Sonneman. Source: PerthNow

Approximately the spot where a man in this 50s was attacked by a shark, 180kms east of Esperance. Source: PerthNow

The front page of The Sunday Times in 2004, featuring a story about the attack on Greg Pickering. Source: PerthNow

SHARK attack victim Greg Pickering has undergone 10 hours of surgery and is in a stable condition after yesterday's horrifying attack.

Mr Pickering - who survived an attack by a 1.5m bronze whaler in March 2004, while spearfishing with a friend about 9km off Cervantes - was working about 180km east of Esperance yesterday when he was attacked again, by what's believed to be a great white shark.

Just before 9am this morning a Royal Perth Hospital spokeswoman said Mr Pickering was out of surgery and in a stable condition. He is expected to speak to the media about his ordeal in the next few days.

Tonight, Nine News reports that Mr Pickering was bitten on the head and chest, and that he has lost an eye in the attack.

Nine News also reports that Mr Pickering endured hours of travelling by boat and car before he could receive medical treatment.

His quick-think diving colleagues applied pressure on his wounds with anything they could find as he endured a 40km boat tow back to shore.

At the same time, a crew on a nearby boat lent assistance and used a satellite phone to arrange a rendezvous point with paramedics.

Recent shark attacks in WA

Abalone diver Greg Pickering, who is also a game fisherman. Source: News Limited

Early this afternoon, the WA fisheries department cancelled a "catch and kill" order for the shark.

Director General Stuart Smith issued a statement saying the order had been cancelled because there was no longer an imminent risk of another attack.

"There have been no further sightings of a white shark in the area and it is likely that the shark responsible for the attack is no longer in this general locality," Mr Smith said.

"Efforts have also been made to advise people camping around Cape Arid about the incident which has reduced the likelihood of them entering the water."

Capture gear was deployed at the site of the attack yesterday and re-set at 5am this morning.

Earlier today, the department said the shark posed an imminent threat to campers to the area during school holidays.

But Mr Smith conceded this morning it was possible the wrong shark could be caught.

"We probably won't know for sure unless there's evidence of DNA that we will be able to test,'' he told ABC radio this morning.

Mr Smith admitted the DNA results would not come back until after the animal was killed.

But he added that the size of the animal would also help to determine if it was likely to be the shark that attacked Mr Pickering.

Mr Smith said the department's shark experts had informed him that the shark could have swum away from the area or it could remain lurking in the waters for some time.

It is the second time a kill order has been issued in WA.

On the previous occasion, two tiger sharks were caught and released after they were tagged, but the great white shark the department was looking for was not found, Mr Smith said.

A department spokeswoman said a decision on whether to continue with the kill action would be made this afternoon.

Australian Underwater Federation WA spearfishing representative Graham Carlisle told PerthNow that Mr Pickering was an active and respected member of WA's diving community and had held the position as records officer with the federation for many years.

"Greg has always been involved in the ocean life; he's spent a lot of his time in the water both for pleasure and for work," he said.

"He would have had a number of close calls, as would any spearfisherman.

"The more time in the water, the higher probability something will happen. That's just an accepted reality of the work.

"The guys are very cautious, they're very careful in general."

Mr Carlisle said the diving and spearfishing community was very close-knit in WA.

"All the abalone divers know each other and the spearfishermen are just as tight," he said.

A victim of a shark attack near Esperance is ferried by the Royal Flying Doctors at Jandakot. Picture: Jordan Shields Source: PerthNow

Emergency response to attack

Police were alerted to the attack at 10.25am yesterday morning. It's believed Mr Pickering suffered serious injuries.

He was taken to shore by divers on a nearby boat and transferred to Esperance Hospital by St John Ambulance just before 2pm.

Paramedics hand over a man who was attacked by a shark at Esperance Hospital. The 55-year-old male diver was working about 180km east of Esperance when he was attacked. Picture: Mick Sonneman Source: PerthNow

The Royal Flying Doctor Service landed at Jandakot Airport yesterday evening and transferred Mr Pickering to Royal Perth Hospital.

Diver working while attacked

Mr Pickering was working for Southern Wild Abalone when he was attacked.

The company's manager Marcus Tromp told the ABC a nearby diving vessel came to help the man, brought him back to shore and called for help.

The remote area of coast they were diving off is only accessible by 4WDs.

Mr Tromp said the man suffered "substantial injuries".

"Another diver's boat was in the vicinity so they have come to assist the crew, give first aid and obviously to bring the diver's vessel to shore and administer first aid while this diver remained on the deck of his boat and rendezvous with the ambulance," Mr Tromp said.

"He would have been preparing for his daily business and unfortunately this has occurred.

"Obviously, there has been some substantial injuries with any encounter with a shark but at this stage, again, still quiet sketchy."

Abalone diver Greg Pickering. Picture: Andrew Brooks Source: News Limited

Mr Tromp said the victim lived in the area and the company was liaising with his family.

"I understood that he was still conscious and in good hands as far as first aid goes," he said.

"All divers, especially at that age, have had a passion for the ocean for their entire life.

Diver Greg Pickering with his 307lb IBSRC world record yellowfin Tuna. Picture: Terry Maas. Source: PerthNow

Victim survived 2004 attack

Mr Pickering was spearfishing about five nautical miles from Cervantes when he was attacked twice by a 1.5m bronze whaler in March 2004.

The shark mauled his shin and calf, ripping through his wetsuit.

In an interview with the Ten Network, he said: "The shark just turned on me and charged at me and it latched onto my leg and it bit twice.

"It wasn't excruciating pain, I was surprised.

"I could see there was a big chunk of skin hanging off and the wetsuit was sort of holding it together."

He said he'd had many close encounters with sharks during more than thirty years of abalone diving.

"If sharks are hungry they can snap," he said.

"All can be calm and then they just explode into action."

Witness Alan Ogden told The Sunday Times at the time that Mr Pickering "was a pretty tough bloke".

"He was quite calm about it," Mr Ogden said.

"He said it was not hurting as much as he thought it would."

Abalone diver Greg Pickering stands on the upturned hull of his abalone boat at Thevenard Wharf in 2009. Picture: Andrew Brooks Source: News Limited

Fisheries adamant on shark threat

Fisheries Director General Stuart Smith said hooks and lines were set yesterday afternoon based on GPS coordinates from the diver's boat.

If they caught a "sizable white shark", he said it was likely it would be destroyed with a firearm or knife. 

"My decision to give that order was based on our imminent threat guidelines," Mr Smith said.

"I found that there was a high hazard given an attack had occurred and we believe there's a reasonable likelihood that it is a white shark and therefore a species with a known history of attacking people.

"I took into account that it's currently school holidays and there are likely to be people on the south coast holidaying, camping and potentially using the water. I formed the view that there's an imminent threat of further attack.

"If a sizable white shark is caught in the waters over the coming hours, I am likely to give the order to destroy that shark. I don't have any particular desire to destroy a shark, but my overriding concern is to ensure public safety."

Fisheries Director-General Stuart Smith. Source: PerthNow


Mr Smith said about 130 sharks had been tagged off the coast of WA and SA, but it was not known whether the shark involved in today's attack was being monitored.

Mr Barnett government introduced a shark mitigation strategy, including "catch and kill" orders, last year following a spate of five fatal attacks in 12 months.

Recent sightings around WA

Surf Life Saving WA said 285 sharks were sighted in the metropolitan area and South-West WA in the past financial year, compared to 247 the previous year. 

Fear of sharks turns away swimmers

In the South-West alone, 162 sharks were sighted last year, including a school of 60 hammer head sharks at Bunker Bay in January.

SLSWA carried out 751 patrol hours in 2012/13, up from 620 hours in 2011/12.

- with AAP


22.16 | 0 komentar | Read More

Schools prepare to tighten belts

Written By Unknown on Senin, 07 Oktober 2013 | 22.16

NO VOICE: Despite protests from United Voice teachers and members (pictured above) schools will have to find ways to deal with funding cuts, says the Education Department director-general.

WA SCHOOLS are facing their first ever "year of belt-tightening" in 2014 and will have to find ways to deal with funding cuts, the Education Department director-general has told a parliamentary committee.

Sharyn O'Neill came under fire today for using "weasel words" at the Education and Health Standing Committee hearing into her department's budget, as committee members queried whether she was in contempt of parliament for not revealing at the last hearing in June that a long-service leave levy was being considered.

The levy, which will see schools pay $600 per teacher and $400 per school support staff to help cover the cost of leave liability, is part of a raft of education cuts introduced in the transition to a new public school funding model for 2015.

The cuts also include a 30 per cent slash in funding for support programs, a stay on teacher numbers next year, and the loss of 500 jobs.

At the hearing today, Ms O'Neill said the levy was expected to bring in $15 million a year, but would only make a dent on the cost of the leave liability, which she put at about $60 million, meaning further savings would need to be found.

Committee member and Labor MP Janine Freeman quizzed Ms O'Neill on why she had not told the committee about the levy at a time when she knew it was under discussion, suggesting she was "not totally open with the committee" and may be in contempt of parliament.

Ms O'Neill said she had answered all questions and felt it was unreasonable to suggest anyone was misled.
Outside the hearing, Liberal MP and parliamentary chair Dr Graham Jacobs said the committee would decide at their next meeting whether to ask further questions or pursue the alleged contempt.

"There is a concern that we had weasel words, if you like," Dr Jacobs said.

"We will deliberate as a committee next when we come back to Parliament as to whether we go further with some of the questions.

"What we have to do today and in subsequent days in this committee is to establish a confidence in the Department of Education and the way they are managing so-called reform."
Ms O'Neill told reporters outside the hearing she had answered every question at the last committee meeting.

"I think I've been open, I've answered the questions I've been asked," she said.

"We've always known since mid-2012 that there is a leave liability. We're looked at a range of strategies. We're always trying to minimise the impact on schools and so were in a discussion about a range of things."

The director-general said 2014 would be a tough year for public schools.

 "In 2014, schools are going to have to find a way to do things a little differently," she said.

"We have had efficiency dividends put in place before, and on every other occasion we haven't had to have any impact in fact on schools.

"This year we're asking for a contribution towards leave liability."

Opposition education spokeswoman Sue Ellery said Ms O'Neill had "laid bare the lie from the (education) minister and the Premier that this is all about reform".

"I know from talking to schools across Western Australia that schools are shocked by the extent of the cuts, they're shocked that they're the ones being asked to take money out of the education of West Australian children," she said.

"Ms O'Neill has made it very clear that 2014 is about school budget cuts.

"The department will be forced to implement further cuts to cover staff leave liability."
 


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Harris trial set for April next year

A London court has been told veteran entertainer Rolf Harris will plead not guilty to 13 child sex offences.

Rolf Harris at Westminster Magistrates' Court on September 23. AFP PHOTO / ADRIAN DENNIS Source: AFP

Australian entertainer Rolf Harris is due to face trial in April 2014 on 13 child sex offences, a London court has heard.

Harris, 83, was excused from attending a preliminary hearing at the Old Bailey criminal court on Monday morning.

The artist and singer is now likely to next appear in court for a plea and case-management hearing in mid-January. His trial is provisionally set to start on April 30.

Harris is facing six counts of indecently assaulting a 15-year-old girl in 1980 and 1981 and three charges of indecent assault on a girl aged 14 in 1986.

He is also charged with four counts of making indecent images of a child in the first half of 2012.

The prosecution will present expert computer evidence and the defence will rely on expert witnesses in rebuttal.

For the offences committed after 1985 Harris could face up to 10 years' jail.

At his first court appearance a fortnight ago the 83-year-old indicated through his lawyer, Sonia Woodley QC, that he would be pleading not guilty to the charges.

On Monday at the Old Bailey the judge asked Ms Woodley to confirm the case would be going to a trial.

"It is,'' she told the court.

A frail-looking Harris appeared in Westminster Magistrates Court two weeks ago for his first court appearance.

He spoke only briefly to confirm his personal details and was later mobbed by a large press pack as he slowly walked from the court building with his wife Alwen and daughter Bindi.

The Australian remains on conditional bail under which he is banned from having contact with anyone under 18 unless he's accompanied by someone over the age of 21.

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Oh ship! Luxury cruiser sinks boat

A boat collided with other boats moored at the Mandurah Marina, during the set up for the Mandurah Boat Show. Pictured is damage to a houseboat and the mast of a boat that was sunk. Picture: Daniel Wilkins Source: PerthNow

A BOAT has sunk and several others have been damaged in the Mandurah Ocean Marina after a luxury yacht smashed into them.

Mandurah Boatshow director Peter Woods told PerthNow they were setting up for the upcoming show when the incident happened just after 3pm.

"A Fairline (luxury yacht) backed into another yacht and it sunk," he said.

"It was pretty unfortunate. Accidents happen in boating. The other boat was in the wrong place at the wrong time."
Mr Woods said no one was injured, but a couple of houseboats and another power boat were damaged in the crash.

The reversing boat was a multi-million dollar vessel.

"It was drama more than anything, but it's sorted out now," he said.

The Mandurah Boatshow is being held at the marina from October 11 to 13.

The boat collided with other vessels moored at the Mandurah Marina, during the set up for the Mandurah Boat Show. Picture: Daniel Wilkins Source: PerthNow


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Hit-run rampage in Huntingdale

A HIT-AND-RUN victim believes he was deliberately struck by a car that police believe had earlier run down a 66-year-old woman in Huntingdale.

Bill Isgar, a father of two, was hit by the car while standing on the verge on Balfour Road in Huntingdale on Saturday.

He received injuries to his arm, but the driver did not stop.

"The car just swerved in towards me, belted my arm," Mr Isgar told reporters.

"As I watched him drive away, he actually accelerated away and swerved back out again and kept going.

"He looked through his rear view mirror and gave me a bit of a wave, and then put his arm out, and drove off down the road."

Police believe the same dark blue Holden Commodore sedan ran down a woman in the same suburb while she was walking to the shops only minutes before striking Mr Isgar.

The woman is in a serious condition in Royal Perth Hospital with internal injuries and broken bones.

Police have seized a Holden sedan from a Thornlie home and believe it was involved in the hit and runs, but they are still trying to identify who was driving the vehicle at the time.

Witnesses are asked to come forward with information.

Anyone who saw the care in the area on Saturday between 12pm and 2pm should contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000. 
 


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Callum Pinner murder: local, 36, charged

Police have launched a murder investigation after 19yo Callum Pinner was found dead with stab wounds to the neck in the Perth suburb of Doubleview. Courtesy Channel Nine.

MURDER INVESTIGATION: The fatally wounded teenager, Callum Pinner. Picture: Nine News Source: PerthNow

Callum Pinner, who was found dead on a Doubleview street with stab wounds to the neck. Picture: Nine News Source: PerthNow

MAJOR Crime Squad detectives have charged a 36-year-old man with the murder of Callum Pinner, a party-goer who was found dead on a Doubleview street.

The accused man, of Karrinyup, will appear in the Perth Magistrates Court tomorrow charged with one count of murder.

Police said late today that a search was continuing for a second man allegedly at the scene.

Mr Pinner, 19, died on the verge of Grand Promenade in Doubleview after an group of partygoers apparently clashed with two men. When police arrived at about 1.30am, after responding to residents calls about disturbance, they discovered Mr Pinner with a fatal stab wound to the throat.

M Pinner had been at a house party with about 60 friends.

Friends told Nine News that Mr Pinner was a "sociable, fun-loving guy who would always stick up for his mates."


Anyone with information regarding this investigation is urged to call Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

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