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Woodside and Barnett at odds over Browse

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 16 Oktober 2013 | 22.16

Premier Colin Barnett is set for a showdown with Woodside. Source: PerthNow

OIL and gas giant Woodside has again been warned by the State Government that it will not be given free rein over how it develops the Browse gas project.

After doing millions of dollars' worth of preliminary work, Woodside earlier this year decided to commit to floating LNG for the Browse project, off the north-west coast, after rejecting the land-based option favoured by the government, because of inadequate economic returns.

Giving evidence to a State Government committee today, Rob Cole, Woodside's executive vice president of corporate and commercial, said it was still too early to quantify what sort of work WA companies would be offered in the project.

But Mr Barnett said whenever Woodside made its decision on how it would proceed, it would still have to also agree to State Government conditions.

The Premier has previously said WA owned 15 per cent of the gas but today put it as high as 20 per cent.

"In our estimation, 15 per cent of the gas belongs to WA and we will use that leverage to either get a supply base and hopefully also to get domestic gas into the WA economy,'' Mr Barnett said.

"And that is not unreasonable. Every country around the world places conditions on the development of their natural resources.

"This is not entirely up to Woodside - they do not, to this day, own that gas.

"It is owned 80 per cent by the Commonwealth and 20 per cent by the states, it is Australia and in particular WA who own that gas.

"We will have a say in how it is developed.''


22.16 | 0 komentar | Read More

Sex and shame: Inside the Maryville horror

Hacktivist group 'Anonymous' has declared war on the town Maryville, where charges of rape against a popular footballer were mysteriously dropped. Courtesy #OpMaryville/YouTube

IT was a "cast-iron" rape prosecution case in a small American town. Yet it was suddenly dropped amid a vicious backlash against the young victims - sparking claims of shady political influence and worse.

As the English-speaking world sits up and takes notice of the Maryville rape case, the two young girls at its heart are speaking out in an effort to be heard after their court action was suddenly silenced.

Paige Borlan, who was just 13 at the time of the attack in the Missouri community, today added her voice to that of Daisy Coleman - who was 15 - in a cry for help.

Their opponents are their local Missouri county's sheriff, chief prosecutor - and a prominent family with members that walk the halls of power.

LEFT: Daisy Coleman, the 15-year-old girl who was allegedly raped by the grandson of a Missouri state politican. RIGHT: Matthew Barnett, grandson of Missouri state Representative Rex Barnett, who is accused with raping 15-year-old Daisy Coleman Source: Supplied

At the centre of the allegations is Matthew Barnett, a star high school football player whose grandfather is long-time Missouri state Representative Rex Barnett. He is accused of being the key conspirator behind the sexual assaults.

The 17-year-old allegedly hatched the plot for three popular athletes to ply the two girls with alcohol before taking advantage of them in their impaired state.

Daisy  was dumped semi-conscious in the cold of the night on her front doorstep. Paige also was left outside her family home.

Both girls were taken to hospital with signs of sexual assault. One had to return as the bleeding would not stop.

The sheriff, after gathering evidence and obtaining confessions from three teenage suspects, initially said the case would "absolutely" result in prosecutions.

Instead, the case was simply dropped.

Paige, with her mother, speak to CNN about how their Maryville, Missouri, rape case was suddenly dropped by prosecutors. Source: Supplied

It wasn't as though there was a lack of evidence.

Barnett had already admitted to having sex with the semi-conscious 14-year-old girl.

It was hard to deny. His friend Zach, also 17, had recorded part of the assault on his mobile phone.

Barnett faced charges with felony sexual assault and misdemeanor child endangerment. Zach was charged with felony exploitation.

A third boy, aged 15 at the time of the assault, had also admitted to engaging in a sex act with 13-year-old Paige against her will.

The incident sparked outrage in the community.

Yet the inexplicable happened.

Daisy Coleman with her mother, Melinda, speak to CNN about the dropping of their rape case against the grandson of a local political kingpin. Source: Supplied

The once sleepy rural US town of Maryville turned that rage upon the victims.

Perhaps it was because Daisy was new in town.

Perhaps the accused were simply regarded as "untouchable".

Local Sheriff Darren White has also changed his tune somewhat: He appears to agree with prosecutor Robert Rice who asserted that the case was dropped simply because the Colemans chose not to press charges.

"That's a lie," Daisy's mother, asserts.

Paige's mother agreed. "We did not refuse to testify with the felony case, we were not given any information about it and we were not asked to testify," she told CNN.

Daisy's mother, Melinda, told CNN earlier this week that she and Daisy "would like to see the case reopened and I'd like to see some justice."

When CNN asked if she would testify in the case, Daisy simply said: "I would".

"My concern was that some other girls came forward and told me that the same thing happened with this same group of boys," Melinda told CNN.

"When I had talked to the Sheriff initially he told me that there had been girls who had come forward and that there had been maybe even 10 other girls that were also assaulted. So later on he said that they were all liars, I digitally recorded him saying that they were all liars and that they just wanted to crucify those poor innocent boys.

"So my concern is: what is going to take for them to do something here? Is one of these girls gonna to have to die? Are they going to end up freezing in their front yard before they do something?"

It has become a long, dirty fight.

After the attack was exposed a year ago, Daisy's mother was abruptly fired from her job as town vet.

Then things got deadly.

The 'Outback' rural United States towns of Maryville and Albany, Missouri. Source: Google Maps Source: Supplied

Coleman home burnt down

There wasn't much left by the time  Melinda Coleman arrived home, just a burnt-out structure and the haze of smoke that lingered around it.

The siding and gutters had melted. The roof was gone. Inside, piles of ash filled the rooms that had once bustled with the pleasant sounds of a family.

That morning last April when Melinda received word that emergency vehicles were gathering around her Maryville house, she had hoped for the best.

But, in Maryville, that seemed unlikely.

Since the morning her daughter had been left nearly unconscious in the frost of the home's front lawn, this northwest Missouri community had come to mean little besides heartache.

Few dispute the basic facts of what happened in the early morning hours of January 8, 2012.

Yet, two months later, the Nodaway County prosecutor dropped the felony cases against the youths.

With her children being routinely harassed, Melinda decided to retreat east to Albany.

Coleman had hoped the move would allow them to heal in peace, that the 80km separating the towns would be enough to put an end to their bitter saga.

Now, though, as she stared at the charred remains of her house, the distance didn't seem nearly enough.


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Small-town America

Three years ago, when the Colemans arrived in Maryville from Albany, there was plenty to like about their new hometown.

The 12,000-population city, tucked into an expansive stretch of farmland along Missouri's northern border, offered an idyllic setting. It was, like many small towns, close-knit, with an old-fashioned town square and a passion for high school football. The kind of place where down-home values still reigned and you couldn't stop by the local Hy-Vee or A&G Restaurant without running into a familiar face.

For a family still struggling with the effects of a tragedy, it represented a fresh start.

Daisy Coleman pictured at home. Source: Supplied

A new hope

Just three years earlier, Coleman's physician husband, Michael, had been on his way to watch his son compete in a wrestling tournament when his truck skidded on a patch of black ice and careened into a ravine. Two of the couple's children - Daisy and Logan, ages 9 and 10 at the time - escaped through a back window. Michael didn't survive.

Hardly a day went by, it seemed, without driving past his old medical practice or the place where the wreck had occurred. Months after the death, well-meaning friends still introduced Melinda, a veterinarian, as "Dr. Coleman's widow." Even the family's home, a Victorian they had spent a decade renovating, served as a reminder of what had been lost.

And so, midway through the 2009-10 school year, Coleman decided to relocate.

"Even though it was sad to leave, in some ways it was a huge weight off our shoulders," she says now. "Just to be anonymous, in a way."

For the most part, the family settled nicely into its new surroundings. Charlie, the oldest son, became a three-sport athlete at Maryville High, eventually earning a baseball scholarship to Baker University. Logan, two years younger, was an accomplished wrestler with a good group of friends, and Tristan, the youngest, was everyone's pet.

And then there was Daisy.

Pretty and blond, she had grown up competing in beauty pageants, amassing a dresserful of trophies. Though slower than her brothers to assimilate, midway through her freshman year at Maryville High, she seemed to be finding her place.

Daisy Coleman's rape allegation drove her from hometown. Picture: Facebook Source: NewsComAu

Daisy begins to blossom

A member of the school's cheerleading team, she was already part of the varsity squad that performed at boys basketball games. Her grades, her mother says, were nearly all A's, and she had begun to make friends as part of a local dance team.

And she'd recently captured the attention of a popular senior football player, a 17-year-old with whom she had begun texting.

His name was Matthew Barnett, and for a girl still trying to make her way in a new place, the attention was flattering.

Teens test the limits

January 7, 2012, was a Saturday night, and Daisy spent it the way she spent most weekend evenings - with her best friend, a 13-year-old girl named Paige she had grown up with in Albany.

During a typical sleepover, the girls played music, made dance videos or watched movies.

On this night, however, their activities were a bit more brazen.

In Daisy's bedroom closet was a stash of alcohol from which both girls sipped. As they passed the night talking and watching TV, Daisy also texted with Barnett.

Barnett played defensive end for Maryville High School's vaunted football team, the Spoofhounds, and came from a prominent Maryville family - his grandfather had been a longtime member of the Missouri House of Representatives. Tall and handsome, Barnett had a scraggly beard and a reputation as a guy who liked to have a good time, the latter bolstered by an arrest for drunken driving.

Daisy had come to know him through Charlie; in fact, Barnett had been among the boys piled into the Coleman living room just a few days earlier, watching football on the big screen as Melinda served up chili and snacks. The two boys were football teammates, and while Charlie liked Barnett well enough, he was also wary. Enough that, upon discovering his sister was texting with the senior, he tried to put an end to it.

"I told her to stay clear of that kid," Charlie remembers. "But honestly, what teenage kid wants to (listen to) her older brother?"

Opportunity knocks

At some point that Saturday evening, the texting condensed into a plan.

Shortly after midnight, Coleman went in to check on the girls and found them watching a movie in Daisy's bedroom.

Around 1 am, the teens slipped out a bedroom window and were met by Barnett and another boy, who drove them three miles to the Barnett house.

When they arrived, sneaking in through a basement window, the girls found themselves among some of the school's most popular student-athletes. In addition to Barnett, there was junior Jordan Zech, a top wrestler and all-state linebacker; a senior football and tennis player whose family owned the popular A&G Restaurant; a third junior football player; and a 15-year-old who knew the group through an older sibling.

None of the teens commented for this story. Normally, media does not identify victims of alleged sexual abuse, but this case is widely known in Maryville, and Coleman allowed her daughter's name to be used to bring attention to the case. She also provided copied investigative records that had been sealed by authorities.

Paige's mother, Robin, also consented to the use of her daughter's name.

In the investigative records, Daisy alleges that after she arrived, Barnett handed her a large glass filled with alcohol. The boys urged her drink it and then a second glass too, she related later to her mother.

That, she would tell police, was the last thing she remembers.

Drinking from the 'bitch cup'

Daisy gave this version of events: She admits she and Paige  - a friend she considered as close as a sister - were drinking and were not acting with her mothers permission.

"Then this guy texted me and he's like, 'Hey, you want to hang out? And I was like, Well, Ill have to sneak around. It's like one in the morning," she told KCUR.org.

Barnett was a friend of Daisy's older brother, Charlie, who had been at the Colemans a couple nights before for a chili dinner. 

Barnett drove over to the Coleman's, picked up Daisy and Paige, and, along with some other boys, snuck into Barnett's home through a basement window.

There, Daisy continued drinking, using a glass that has since become infamous.

"They called it the bitch cup", Daisy Coleman said, "and its a really, really tall shot glass. I think it had lines. Like, if you drank that much, you were some rank or whatever. Like, youre a B-word if you only take half of it."

Paige recalls what happened

"It was a kind of normal day and I had went over to see Daisy in Maryville, " the youngest victim, Paige, said.

Paige also admitted to engaging in underage drinking before sneaking out with the boys in the middle of the night for a secret "party".

"We snuck out we went with them (the boys) and we got there, and I was immediately separated from her and taken into another room and sexually assaulted after I had said 'no' and pushed him away."

She said she had been taken into the bedroom by a 15-year-old boy, who was an acquaintance. He is unidentified in this article because his case was handled in juvenile court. Sheriff's records include his interview, in which he said that although the girl said "no" multiple times, he undressed her, put a condom on and had sex with her.

"After he was done and we went out to the living room we sat and waited ... I saw Daisy, and she was incoherent, couldn't talk, couldn't walk - couldn't do anything. I could immediately tell something had happened," she said.

When the two returned to the basement's common area, the Paige said Barnett asked if the girls were ready to go home. She said Daisy was unable to speak coherently and had to be carried from the bedroom.

Around 2am, the girls were driven back to the Coleman house, where, Paige said, the boys told her to go on inside, saying they would watch over Daisy outside until she sobered up.

The younger girl also offered a significant detail, one later reiterated in the interviews of at least three of the boys.

As Daisy was carried to the car, she was crying.

After the attack

The sun hadn't yet risen the next morning when Coleman, groggy from a sleep interrupted, made her way toward the living room.

She had woken moments earlier to the sound of scratching at the front door - the dogs, she figured, had gotten out - and grudgingly went to investigate.

Instead, she found Daisy, sprawled on the front porch and barely conscious.

The low temperature in the area that day was listed at just 5C, and the teen had spent roughly three hours outside, wearing only a T-shirt and sweatpants. Her hair was frozen. Scattered across an adjacent lot were her daughter's purse, shoes and cellphone.

Coleman tried to process what she was seeing. Daisy had a history of sleepwalking - years earlier, she had wandered outside. Had she done it again? In her daughter's bedroom, Coleman found the 13-year-old Paige asleep. She, too, seemed confused.

Still struggling to make sense of it all, Coleman carried her daughter to the bathroom, to be undressed for a warm bath.

That's when she saw the redness around her daughter's genitalia and buttocks. It hurt, the girl said, when Coleman asked about it. Then she began crying.

"Immediately," Coleman says, "I knew what had happened."

Nodaway County Sheriff Darren White. Source: Supplied

 Rape response

Coleman called 911, which directed her to St. Francis Hospital in Maryville, where, according to Daisy's medical report, doctors observed small vaginal tears indicative of recent sexual penetration. Paige also ended up at St. Francis.

It wasn't until a captain of the Nodaway County Sheriff's Office arrived at the hospital for one-on-one interviews with each girl, however, that the full picture of the night's events began to emerge.

While the last Daisy remembered was drinking "a big glass of clear stuff," the 13-year-old's recollections proved more useful.

One by one that Sunday morning, the boys were rounded up and brought to the Nodaway County Sheriff's Office for questioning.

Barnett, who was arrested and charged with sexual assault, a felony, and endangering the welfare of a child, a misdemeanor, admitted to having sex with Daisy and to being aware that she had been drinking. He insisted the sex was consensual.

Barnett was not charged with statutory rape, as that Missouri law generally applies in cases when a victim is under 14 years old or the perpetrator is over 21. But felony statutes also define sex as non-consensual when the victim is incapacitated by alcohol.

Hospital tests around 9am, roughly seven hours after her last imbibing, showed Daisy's blood alcohol content still at 0.13.

In addition to admitting his own sexual encounter with the younger girl, according to the sheriff's office report, the 15-year-old said the boys had left Daisy "outside sitting in 30-degree weather" - even more dangerous with a high alcohol level in the bloodstream.

From him, the lawmen also learned that Barnett and Daisy's encounter had been captured with an iPhone. That led to 17-year-old Zech's felony charge of sexual exploitation of a minor. Records show that after initially declining to answer questions, Zech said he had used a friend's phone to record some of the encounter. He said, however, that he thought Barnett and the girl were only "dry humping," a term commonly used to describe rubbing together clothed. Another teen, however, told police the video featured both Barnett and Daisy with their pants down.

By midafternoon Sunday, a search warrant for the Barnett home resulted in the seizure of a blanket, bedsheets, a pair of panties found on a bedroom floor, a bottle of Bacardi Big Apple and plastic bottles of unidentified liquids. The sheriff's office also seized three cellphones, including the iPhone allegedly used by Zech.

Sexual assault cases can be difficult to build because of factors such as a lack of physical evidence or inconsistent statements by witnesses. But by the time his department had concluded its investigation, Sheriff Darren White felt confident the office had put together a case that would "absolutely" result in prosecutions.

"Within four hours, we had obtained a search warrant for the house and executed that," White told The Star. "We had all of the suspects in custody and had audio/video confessions.

"I would defy the Kansas City, Missouri, Police Department to do what we did and get it wrapped up as nicely as we did in that amount of time."

Initial reactions

News of the case shocked the town. Initially, sympathy was expressed for the girls and their families.

"We're very lucky," the sheriff told the newspaper in nearby St. Joseph. "It was very cold, in the 30s, and people die laying out in the cold like that."

He also asked residents to keep gossip and unfounded allegations to themselves, as it could hinder the case.

A sizable contingent stood by the accused athletes, however, and as the story ripped through the halls of Maryville High School, many took to Twitter and Facebook to make their allegiance known.

Two days after discovering her daughter on the front porch, Coleman says, she got a phone call from another mother warning her that online threats were being levied against the Coleman children, including a suggestion that her sons would be beaten up in the school parking lot.

Social attacks

When she checked online, she discovered that many of the comments were aimed at Daisy. On Twitter, the brother of one of the boys at the Barnett home that night wrote that he hoped Daisy "gets whats comin."

Daisy was suspended from the cheerleading squad for her role in the night's events. Barnett did not finish his senior year there, according to his lawyer.

During his Senior Night with the wrestling team, Charlie was booed by some students. Among the comments that made it back to him in the weeks following the arrests: that his mother and sister were "crazy bitches," that Barnett was blameless, and that Daisy had been "asking for it."

"There were several days," Charlie says, "I just wanted to go knock a kid's teeth out."

The mother is fired

Two weeks after the incident, Coleman says, she was told without explanation that her employment at Maryville's SouthPaws Veterinary Clinic was being terminated.

No reason was given.

Days later, carrying a hidden tape recorder, she returned to speak with her boss. In the recording, provided to The Star, Coleman asked Sally Hayse point-blank the reason for her firing.

Hayse said the possibility that Coleman might pursue civil charges in the case - which she has not done - was "putting stress on everybody in here" and "there's going to be times when we probably have stuff booked, and you wouldn't be able to come in."

Reached by The Star, Hayse acknowledged that she has ties to the family of one of the teens at the Barnett home that night and that the incident involving Daisy did complicate her relationship with Coleman.

"This is a small community, and it definitely was stressful for us here, without a doubt," she said, but "if you were to ask me point-blank (why the firing), I would say it's because our style of medicine didn't jive." She did not offer that reason to Coleman in the taped conversation.

Truth, justice... and the American way

Through it all, Coleman held tightly to a belief in justice and that the youths' punishment would provide closure for the family. She spoke with White on multiple occasions and sat down with Robert Rice, the Nodaway County prosecutor, to discuss her concerns.

"She would come to the sheriff's office on an almost daily basis," says White of the days following the arrests. "And I would sit down with her and try to answer her questions and explain to her what was going on. And the next day she'd show up, and we'd go through the same thing again.

"It was like living through the movie 'Groundhog Day.' "

In early March, however, while awaiting a hearing for Barnett and Zech, Coleman says, she received a call from a friend with local political ties: The word was that favors were being called in and that the charges would be dropped.

Coleman says she didn't give the call much credence, but she passed the message on to her lawyer, who wrote to the county prosecutor inquiring about the rumors.

Less than a week later, Coleman was at the grocery store when she got another call.

The felony sexual assault charge against Barnett, as well as Zech's sexual exploitation count, had been dismissed.

The Nodaway County Courthouse in downtown Maryville. Picture: Twitter Source: Supplied

Abandoned by the law

Located a hundred miles north of Kansas City, Maryville serves as the seat of Nodaway County. It's a college town, home to 7000-student Northwest Missouri State University and its powerhouse Division II football program, and is small enough that most longtime residents are connected in some way.

When a reporter visited Maryville police to obtain copies of Zech's arrest record, for instance, the department employee who pulled the file was the mother of one of the five boys at the Barnett home that night.

"It's a big town in a rural area, but it's still a rural area," says author Harry MacLean, who spent four years living in Nodaway County while researching "In Broad Daylight," his best-selling book on the murder of Skidmore bully Ken McElroy and the town cover-up that followed.

" They do tend to revolve around the influence of several families. All of those small towns are like that there. There's four or five or six families that carry the weight."

And in Maryville, the Barnett name carries a good deal of weight.

Meet the local barons, the Barnetts

Rex Barnett served 32 years with the Missouri Highway Patrol's Troop H before embarking on a fruitful political run. In 1994, the Republican was elected as a state representative, serving four terms before leaving the House in 2002.

He also has political ties to prosecutor Rice. Barnett's granddaughter worked as a volunteer on the campaign of US Rep. Sam Graves, who also employs Rice's sister as an aide in constituent services.

In the aftermath of the dropped charges, this wasn't lost on many in the town.

A petition, generating more than 1200 signatures, was posted on the website Change.org to request an investigation by Attorney General Chris Koster. Emails were sent to the capital, Jefferson City, as well. The office ultimately said it didn't have the authority to review Rice's decision.

"I wanted to make sure that everything that was being done was on the up-and-up," says Amanda Amen, the petition's author and an acquaintance of the mother of the 13-year-old. "Because at the time, there were a lot of rumors."

In a phone interview, Rex Barnett said that from the time of his grandson's arrest, he made a point not to meddle in the case.

"As far as contacting anybody, even to get information, I wasn't even going to do that," he said. "Because I knew that any contact whatsoever by me with the sheriff's department or prosecuting attorney - or any witness, as far as that goes - would have been bad for me and bad for the case."

A spokesman for Graves, whose name came up in relation to the case in discussions online and around town, released a statement to The Star on August 7: "Sam literally knows nothing about this situation. The first our office heard of it was on Internet blogs."

Last week, after a consultant for Graves contacted the newspaper, the spokesman provided an amended statement: "The first Sam had ever heard of it was when The Star called his office for comment. However, as the father of two girls, he understands the families' outrage and their search for answers."

Records sealed

When the charges were dropped, in accordance to Missouri law, all records pertaining to the case were sealed, such as interviews with nearly a dozen witnesses, the results of tests done on bedclothes and the rape kits. The video wasn't found, according to the prosecutor, though Charlie Coleman told his mother it was passed around at school.

Melinda Coleman says Rice never informed her of his decision. Nor, she claims, did he return the voice messages that she and her attorney left with his office seeking an explanation.

Rice later denied this to The Star, though a letter written to him by Coleman's attorney on March 19, a week after the charges had been dismissed, states: "I called your office multiple times last week in an attempt to obtain accurate information so that I could explain your decision to my client. You did not return my telephone calls."

After initially declining to speak with The Star this summer, Rice later agreed to an interview with a reporter who showed up unannounced.

Lack of evidence cited

Sitting in his nicely decorated town square office - on one wall is a small collection of framed NMSU jerseys, on another is a framed photo of Graves - he defended his decision, calling the rumors of political favors a "total red herring."

Rice said charges were dropped for lack of evidence, but he added, declining to go into the specifics, that information brought to his attention regarding what happened "before, during and after" the incident also played a role in his actions.

"There wasn't any prosecuting attorney that could take that case to trial," he said.

"It had to be dismissed. And it was."

 Attackers' parents demand apology

The parent of one of the teens at the Barnett house that night was the only one to comment briefly to The Star: "Our boys deserve an apology, and they haven't gotten it yet."

In a later interview, Rice called it a case of "incorrigible teenagers" drinking alcohol and having sex. "They were doing what they wanted to do, and there weren't any consequences. And it's reprehensible. But is it criminal? No."

Robert Sundell, who represented Barnett, echoed that sentiment: "Just because we don't like the way teenagers act doesn't necessarily make it a crime."

For his part, White, the sheriff, maintains "no doubt" a crime was committed that night. The doctor who treated Daisy the following morning called the prosecutor's decision to drop the charges "surprising." And one longtime Missouri attorney believes the Colemans' status as relative outsiders played a part in the cases' dismissals.

"The fact that the family wasn't from Maryville made it a lot easier for the prosecutor to drop those charges," he said.

The mother of the 13-year-old Albany girl, who asked that her name not be used, puts it more bluntly:

"If that had been one of my sons - and my sons would rather cut their hands off than do something like that - but had that been one of my kids, they would be sitting in a maximum-security prison somewhere doing 25 years. There's no doubt in my mind."

A Sheriff's silence

"The only people's stories that have been inconsistent throughout this whole thing are the Colemans, the victims in this thing," Sheriff White said earlier this week. But he did not provide any examples.

When challenged about the case by CNN this morning, Sheriff White simply said:"The sheriff's office handled this case flawlessly. We did our job, we responded and we put people in jail."

However, he distanced himself from the treatment of evidence and the conduct of the prosecution case, stating there was "a lot of outrageous accusations (being) made by people".

Driven from town

For the Colemans, the dismissal of the charges spelled the beginning of the end to their life in Maryville.

In the days that followed, a new round of vitriol made its way online.

"F-k yea. That's what you get for bein a skank : )," read one tweet, one of many expletive-filled comments posted publicly.

The reaction wasn't surprising, according to Julie Donelon, president of the Metropolitan Organization to Counter Sexual Assault.

Some form of victim-blaming occurs in virtually every sexual assault case, she says, but it can be particularly intense in small towns, where "the victim and her family members are having to see not only the perpetrator and the perpetrator's family, but also those people . who have expressed disbelief in her story."

The daily harassment became too much, Coleman says. Daisy and Logan transferred to Albany High School, making the 160km round trip daily.

Initially, Coleman refused to consider leaving Maryville altogether - even after, she says, her lawyer suggested it might be in the family's best interest.

"Part of me is stubborn enough to stay just to say, 'No, you're not going to win,' " she says.

So it was not until August last year, she says, that she finally knew "this was never going to be OK."

She went to Rice's office for a deposition on the case's lone remaining charge, Matthew Barnett's misdemeanor of endangering the welfare of a child for leaving Daisy in freezing temperatures.

After speaking with a rape advocate, the mothers had initially declined to participate for fear the questioning would be used against them. They later changed their minds and agreed to meet with the prosecutor.

According to Coleman, Daisy was excused from the room after briefly discussing the case. But for the next two hours, she says, Rice proceeded to angrily ask her about the petition and demanded to know where Coleman had heard that political favors might be involved.

Rice responds that he never raised his voice during the meeting. Sundell, who was also present, adds: "It may have happened in a different room, when I wasn't there, but not during the deposition."

The misdemeanor endangerment charge, too, was soon dropped.

Mothers blamed

The sheriff blames the mothers for the lack of prosecutions: "They refused to speak and give their story." The women say they were eager to work with authorities until the felony charges were dropped.

That August, with Charlie off to Baker University and the younger children set to begin a new school year, the family moved back to Albany - or as White, the sheriff, puts it, "went back to Gentry County, where they came from."

Even after leaving, however, it wasn't over with Maryville.

Coleman still had a house there, unoccupied and up for sale - until that Sunday morning six months ago.

According to Capt. Phil Rickabaugh of the Maryville Fire Department, the cause of the fire wasn't immediately determined.

"We started to dig in and investigate it," he said, but the structure was deemed unsafe. "Several weeks later, an insurance investigator came in, and it was heavily investigated by private parties. (But) we never have heard anything else out of that."

The cause, Rickabaugh says, remains unknown.

Peace reigns - not justice - in Maryville

For the most part, things in Maryville have returned to normal.

The high school football team is off to its usual dominant start, sporting a 7-0 record following last Friday's 50-10 win over Smithville. The college is preparing for its homecoming festivities, and the A&G Restaurant still fills up quickly on Sundays after church.

Many in town are happy to put the episode behind them, including White, who makes little attempt to mask his opinion of Coleman, a woman he says "clearly has issues."

"We did our job," he says. "We did it well. It's unfortunate that they are unhappy.

"I guess they're just going to have to get over it."

 Wounds won't heal

Getting over it, it turns out, hasn't proved all that easy.

Since that night in January, Daisy has been in regular therapy. She has been admitted to a Smithville hospital four times and spent 90 days at Missouri Girls Town, a residential facility for struggling teens.

Last May, shortly after returning home from college, Charlie found his sister collapsed in the family's bathroom, where she had ingested a bottle of depression medication.

It was her second suicide attempt in the past two years.

Though she agreed to appear in a segment for local radio station KCUR - "You're the s-word, you're the w-word . b-word. Just, after a while, you start to believe it," she said in the interview - she has since declined to speak publicly about the incident.

The 13-year-old hasn't fared much better, her mother says. Her child suffers from flashbacks and nightmares and for a long time after the incident dragged her mattress into her brother's bedroom at night.

Still, she says: "We didn't suffer nearly what the Colemans did. (My daughter) had support here. People believed us here.

"It's been utter hell for Melinda," she continues. "I didn't have to lose my job over it. I didn't have to lose a house over it. I didn't have to lose where I had gone to move on with my life. And she did."

The young men present at the Barnett home that night, meanwhile, seem to have moved on.

Two are now members of Northwest Missouri State University athletic teams, and Barnett is enrolled at the University of Central Missouri, his grandfather's alma mater. Based on his Twitter account, before it was locked to non-friends, the events of the past two years haven't dampened his enthusiasm for the opposite sex.

In a recent retweet, he expressed his views on women - and their desire for his sexual attentions - this way:

"If her name begins with A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z, she wants the D."


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Bride's sex with groomsman by error

A bride accidentally jumping into bed with her new husband's groomsman, had sex with him and then tried to charge him with rape. Source: Supplied

A BRIDE mistakenly had sex with her new husband's groomsman after jumping in to the wrong bed. She then filed rape charges against him.

The groomsman, surnamed Ruan, was staying at the home of the bride, surnamed Huang, and the groom, surnamed Wu, after the couple ceremony in Napo County, Guangxi, on August 30.

Ms Huang went to an outhouse bathroom during the night and entered the wrong room on her return, the Global Times reports.

When she woke she realised what had happened and ran through the house yelling, "help! I've been raped."

After everyone gathered it was decided that the groomsman should pay the newlywed couple 20,000 yuan ($3500) but he refused saying he didn't feel that he was the one who was in the wrong and didn't have the money anyway.

The couple took the matter to police but a county-level court ruled that the groomsman was not guilty of rape.


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Is this the funniest flower girl entrance ever?

Flower girl Celina Tannous seriously stole the show at a Sydney wedding last month. Picture: Abraham Joffe from untitled film works Source: Supplied

WEDDING guests know not to ever outshine the bride, but that didn't stop this flower girl from well and truly stealing the show.

All eyes were on Celina Tannous who made one hell of an entrance at Linda and Nicholas Kastanias's wedding at Doltone House in South Sydney last month.

The six-year-old stole the limelight from her older sister Rachel, who was also a flower girl, and page boy Christian Bounassif, as she broke away to freestyle her way down the aisle to the delight of 350 guests.

But it didn't end there with the anything-but-shy Sans Souci student tossing her flowers in favour of carving up the dance floor for another long minute.

Award-winning cinematographer Abraham Joffe from untitled film works captured the flower girl's incredible entrance and posted it to YouTube last month. It's since been viewed 17,500 times.

Celina's mum Mary said her "show pony" daughter, who loves singing and Nicki Minaj, had been practising her moves for a couple of months in the lead up to the big Greek and Lebanese wedding.

"We asked her if she was going to do something amazing and she said 'yeah' but we didn't really think she'd do it," she said.

"She's always been our show girl ... but we thought she was just like that in front of the family.

"It's changed the way I look at her and it's made me think about what I should do with her. People are saying I should enrol her in dancing or acting and that she should do commercials."

Back off bride, the dance floor's mine! Picture: Abraham Joffe from untitled film works Source: Supplied

But Celina, who was attending her first wedding, is unfazed.

"She was fine afterwards. She just danced a bit before getting picked up about a quarter-way through the wedding. She had to go to school the next day," Mrs Tannous said.

"She doesn't talk about the wedding.

"I think she understands she's on YouTube, and we show it to her sometimes and say 'wow, it's now had 15,000 views', but she doesn't seem interested."

Yeah, I'm pretty amazing. Picture: Abraham Joffe from untitled film works. Source: Supplied

The youngest of three siblings, Celina is probably too busy scheming how to spend the cash she made at the wedding.

Hugely popular MC John Alten, who is friends with the flower girls' parents, promised Celina $10 to "perform her best" at the reception.

But the cheeky kid told him straight up that her fee was actually $100.

After stunning the guests with her popular performance, Mr Alten was forced to cough up.

Not bad coin for a six-year-old.

Continue the conversation via Twitter @newscomauHQ | @itsKShort | @untitled_films | @abrahamjoffe

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Statement from News Corp Australia

News Corp Australia statement Source: News Limited

This afternoon News Corp Australia was made aware of a vulnerability in the security of our email newsletter database. Some personal information about people who subscribe to our email newsletters was potentially accessible from outside the company.

The information does not include credit card details or passwords.

We shut down the relevant systems promptly. The personal information then became inaccessible.

We have found no evidence of malicious access to the relevant information. We will continue to examine this question.

We sincerely apologise for what has happened.

We are investigating this matter thoroughly to ensure this does not happen again.


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Rape accuser 'driven out of town'

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 15 Oktober 2013 | 22.16

Hacktivist group 'Anonymous' has declared war on the town Maryville, where charges of rape against a popular footballer were mysteriously dropped. Courtesy #OpMaryville/YouTube

Daisy Coleman. Source: Supplied

HACKTIVIST group Anonymous will target a town where charges of rape against a local footballer were dropped and the young victim was run out of town.

Daisy Coleman, the alleged victim, has been named in publications and broadcasts with the permission of her mother Melinda in order to draw attention to the case, the Kansas City Star reports.

Anonymous, who have bought publicity to two other rape cases, say the 14-year-old victim has been denied justice and they will target the Missouri town of Maryville where her house mysteriously burned down.

"We demand an immediate investigation into the handling by local authorities of Daisy's case. Why were the suspects initially arrested and then released? How was the video and medical evidence not enough to put one of these football players inside a courtroom?" the group said in a video recently released online.

Anonymous said the entire town was responsible for allowing charges relating to the alleged assault of Daisy and her friend to be dropped and for the harassment which Daisy's family say they received after they went to the police.

"If Maryville won't defend these young girls, if the police are too cowardly or corrupt to do their jobs, if justice system has abandoned them, then someone else will have to stand for them. Mayor Jim Fall your hands are dirty. Maryville expect us. We are Anonymous. We are legion. We do not forgive or forget."

In January 2012, in the 12,000-person town of Maryville, Daisy reported she had been raped by a popular 17-year-old boy from her school. She told police she was invited to a party where she had so much alcohol she could not stand, and had sex with the boy. The incident was partly filmed by one of the alleged perpetrator's friends on his phone.

Daisy's best friend, aged 13, also had sex with a 15-year-old boy. She told police she went into a bedroom with the 15-year-old boy, who was an acquaintance. The case was handled in juvenile court, but the Star accessed police records of his interview, in which he said although the girl said "no" multiple times, he undressed her, put a condom on and had sex with her.

The 17-year-old - the grandson of a longstanding local political figure - and his friends later allegedly left Daisy outside her front door in minus-5C weather, wearing only a T-shirt and track pants. Daisy was discovered by her mother after several hours, her hair frozen and with frostbite on her extremities.

Undressing Daisy inside for a warm bath, Mrs Coleman said she saw evidence of sexual activity.

She phoned emergency services, who directed her to a hospital. The 13-year-old also attended hospital.

Police arrested two teenagers within hours and charged them with felonies, but a few weeks later the prosecutor dropped the rape charges, citing insufficient evidence.

Initial police inquiries resulted in the 17-year-old being charged with sexual assault, a felony, and endangering the welfare of a child, a misdemeanor, having admitted to having sex with Daisy and to being aware that she had been drinking. He insisted the sex was consensual.

The 17-year-old accused by Daisy was not charged with statutory rape, as in Missouri that law generally applies in cases when a victim is under 14 years old or the perpetrator is over 21. But statutes also define sex as non-consensual when the victim is incapacitated by alcohol. Hospital tests roughly seven hours after Daisy stopped drinking showed her blood alcohol content still at 0.13.

In addition to admitting his own sexual encounter with the younger girl, according to police records, the 15-year-old said the boys left Daisy "outside sitting in 30-degree (-1C) weather" - more dangerous with a high alcohol level in the bloodstream.

From him, investigators also learned about the film shot on a third boy's phone, leading to that boy's felony charge of sexual exploitation of a minor.

By the time the police had concluded their investigation, Sheriff Darren White felt confident the office had put together a case that would "absolutely" result in prosecutions.

"Within four hours, we had obtained a search warrant for the house and executed that," Sheriff White told The Star.

"We had all of the suspects in custody and had audio/video confessions.

"I would defy the Kansas City, Missouri, Police Department to do what we did and get it wrapped up as nicely as we did in that amount of time."

Although sympathy initially was with the girls, a sizable number of people stood by the accused boys and their families.

In an interview, the prosecutor who dropped the charges against the boys called it a case of "incorrigible teenagers" drinking alcohol and having sex.

"They were doing what they wanted to do, and there weren't any consequences. And it's reprehensible. But is it criminal? No," he said.

For his part, Sheriff White maintains "no doubt" a crime was committed that night. The doctor who treated Daisy the following morning called the prosecutor's decision to drop the charges "surprising".

Daisy was soon subjected to cyber bullying, including victim-shaming. She was suspended from the cheerleading squad for her role in the night's events and twice attempted suicide.

Mrs Coleman lost her job at a veterinary surgery. She says it was because the case put too much strain on work relationships in the clinic, while her boss says it was also a mismatched work ethos.

Veterinarian Sally Hayse told the Star: "This is a small community, and it definitely was stressful for us here, without a doubt."

But, she said, "If you were to ask me point-blank (why Mrs Coleman was fired), I would say it's because our style of medicine didn't jive".

Daisy's three brothers were threatened and bullied at school, often by boys they had counted as friends. One of them was booed at his final wrestling match of the year.

Mrs Coleman felt she had no choice but to leave the town. Eight months later, in April, the house she was trying to sell burned down. Fire investigators have been unable to determine the cause but Mrs Coleman suspects arson.

Mrs Coleman had originally moved her family to Maryville in 2009 after the death of her husband, a doctor, in a car crash three years earlier. She hoped for a new start there.

If you or someone you know may be at risk of suicide contact Lifeline 13 11 14, beyondblue 1300 22 46 36, or Salvo Care Line 1300 36 36 22.


 


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Ponting takes aim at Pup, selectors

A look back at the most important moments of Ricky Ponting's time in cricket.

RICKY Ponting bares his soul like never before in his soon to be released autobiography, At The Close Of Play.

Here, we present some of the best extracts from the book, including Ponting's thoughts on getting dropped from the one-day side, retiring from Test cricket, and what he really thinks of Michael Clarke's leadership.

Ponting on ... getting dropped from ODI team

Inside, I was seething. Not for the first time in my career I had to keep a lid on what I was really thinking. These blokes had been appointed as the result of the Argus Review, a document that stressed the need for better communication between players and selectors. John Inverarity's new selection committee never gave me the chance to retire from ODI cricket, which - after 375 games, 50 more than any other Australian - I think I deserved.

Ponting on ... standing down from Test captaincy
Only 43 people had led Australia in a Test match. It would have been nice to be departing on the shoulders of my team-mates, victorious, rather than at a press conference after a defeat. One comfort was that it was totally my decision.

No one had knifed me; instead, a number of people tried to talk me out of it. Tim Nielsen thought it was vital I stayed in the job for as long as I could while the team was developing.

Ricky Ponting's new book is sure to ruffle a few feathers. Picture: Sam Mooy.

Senior figures from Cricket Australia contacted my manager, James Henderson, who had been looking after me since 2007, straight after the quarter-final to say, 'Don't let Ricky make any stupid decisions. At least make him hold fire until after the games in Bangladesh.'

But my mind was made up.

Ponting on ... Michael Clarke as vice-captain

It was true that I'd been a little disappointed with some of the things he'd done - or more accurately, hadn't done - as vice-captain, but I was now comfortable with the idea of him taking over.

It wasn't that he was disruptive or treacherous, and publicly he said all the right things, but he had never been one to get too involved in planning sessions or debriefs at the end of a day's play, or to volunteer to take on any of the captain's workload.

Michael Hussey has put to rest any rumours of an ongoing rift between himself and Australia captain Michael Clarke.

More than once, Tim Nielsen and I had encouraged him to take on more of a leadership role within the group, but when Pup was down on form or if he had a problem away from cricket, he'd go into his shell.

Ponting on ... Clarke's commitment to team ethos

It never worried me if a bloke didn't want a drink in the dressing room, but I did wonder about blokes who didn't see the value in sticking around for a chat and a laugh and a post-mortem on the day's play.

This was the time when we could revel in our success, pick up the blokes who were struggling, and acknowledge the guys who were at the peak of their powers. Pup hardly bought into this tradition for a couple of years and the team noticed.

Ponting on ... being embarrassed by South Africa in Brisbane

Test captain Michael Clarke believes you can't get anywhere being selfish whilst quick James Pattinson gives credit to coach Darren Lehmann

I went into this Test in the best of form. Now for the first time I started to think maybe I'd never come good, not at the top level. I didn't feel inadequate or embarrassed. Instead, I was thinking of myself as being like a kid who'd used all his tokens at the show. It was as if someone had decided that I'd scored all the runs I was supposed to score in Test cricket.

Ponting on ... being embarrassed by South Africa in Adelaide

In the second innings, I scratched my way to 16, at which point Steyn pitched one short of a length outside off-stump, maybe reverse swinging away a fraction; a ball best left alone. I played a "nothing shot", indecisive, bat on an angle; if it had found the middle of my bat it would have been a tame push to cover. Instead, the ball took a thick inside edge and ricocheted back into my stumps.

"F--k!" I shouted in exasperation. I looked back at the stumps. "F--king idiot," I said loudly to myself.

Ponting on .. deciding to retire from Tests

Ricky Ponting with wife Rianna and their two children after his final Test at the WACA. Picture: Daniel Wilkins.

I SAT on the edge of the bed, looked at Rianna, and quietly said what I'd been thinking since I'd unstrapped my pads a few hours earlier...

"I'm not sure I can do this anymore. I don't think I can keep putting myself through it."

Rianna looked at me and summed up the situation in a moment. I never had any doubts that she was the right woman for me and times like this confirmed it.

"You don't have to," she said gently. "You don't have to keep putting yourself through this."

We were in Adelaide, the place where Gilly and Marto had both hit the wall, and now it had happened to me. The day I never thought would come had arrived. I'd held it inside until I got back to the hotel, but the moment I sat on the bed the words spilled out.

Ricky Ponting (C) with Michael Clarke (L) after Ponting's final Test match. Picture: Daniel Wilkins.

Ponting on ... telling his father he was going to retire

I rang Dad, who was watching a Twenty20 Big Bash game on the television. "G'day Dad," I said. "What are you doing?"

"I'm watching blokes make runs, something you haven't been doing lately!" he quipped.

Dad was a constant. It was always good to talk to him.

However, his mood quickly changed when I told him I'd decided to retire.

"No, not yet mate," he said quietly. There was silence. As he tried to keep going, I could sense a tear in his voice. "No, just go out there and bat," he mumbled. "Shut everyone up."

At The Close Of Play, by Ricky Ponting, is on sale from October 21: http://www.amazon.com/Ponting-At-Close-Play-ebook/dp/B00DQ2F4BO/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1381376969&sr=8-1&keywords=ricky+ponting


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10 things nannies won't tell you

10 things nannies won't tell you. Source: Supplied

MORE Australian families are employing nannies to care for children in their own home.

The demand for in-home childcare has increased so much that last year the Australian Nanny Association was established to provide a support network for professionals in the field.

It's an attractive option for families striving to achieve a work-life balance but, before entering an agreement, it's worthwhile considering the implications, as outlined by our friends at MarketWatch .

These are the things that nannies will not tell you about - until it's too late.

1. "Your kid loves me more than you''

Nannies spend so much time with children, some kids become more attached to their caretaker than to their own parents, says Chicago-area psychologist Elizabeth Lombardo. "I had a child ask to call me Mommy," says former Atlanta nanny Sarena Brook Carter, 35, which, she adds, wasn't surprising: "The parents were never there, I got the kids up and put them to bed and went everywhere with them."

2. "You're the worst part of my job''

Parents are the worst part of the job, nannies say, for many reasons. They sometimes become jealous of the caretaker-child relationship and act out by yelling at the nanny, for instance. Or they develop typical terrible-boss behaviours: asking the nanny to do tasks he or she didn't sign on for, demanding lots of extra work hours, or just being downright unpleasant to work with.

3. "I can't save your kid's life (or treat injuries)''

If a child is injured - or worse, in a life-and-death situation - the childcare provider may or may not know what to do. Some 13 per cent of nannies surveyed in the US admitted that they aren't certified in CPR, and 20 per cent reported that they don't have a first aid certification.

4. "My presence is a threat to your relationship."

It's not just the rich and famous who engage in a little hanky-panky with the nanny. While this behaviour is rare, it does happen. Often, it's because they're convenient - the nanny is in the home - and there can be a high level of emotional intimacy because you are jointly caring for the child. Some couples actively seek out caretakers that neither one will be attracted to, experts say.

5. "You're not paying me enough''

Most nannies are paid under the table. This can be problematic for people employing domestic workers because it's illegal in most cases. A US survey found only 38 per cent of nannies got a raise in 2011, only about half got a year-end bonus, and roughly one in four didn't get compensated for travel expenses.

6. "I'll sue you''

Some childcare workers find that their working conditions are so awful, they're worth going to court over. While it's the celebrity cases that typically make the news - Sharon Stone and Alanis Morissette have been sued by their nannies - it's not just famous people that get taken to court by their household help. The biggest thing that nannies sue their employers for is wages, as many nannies are entitled to minimum wage and overtime but don't receive it. After that, the most common complaint is on-the-job injury.

7. "I'm smarter than you are''

Childcare providers nowadays are often better-educated than in previous decades. Within the relatively elite circle of nannies surveyed in the US in 2011, 85 per cent have a least some college under their belt, 30 per cent have a bachelor's degree, and 6 per cent have a master's or Ph.D. Conequently wages increase as skills increase.

8. "Your secret's not safe with me."

What happens in your home doesn't always stay in your home. Nannies talk to each other, friends and sometimes (ahem) the media about their bosses. Former nanny Pam Behan, for example, wrote a book - Malibu Nanny - about her experiences as a nanny for the Kardashian clan; former nanny Suzanne Hansen did the same, penning You'll Never Nanny in This Town Again (published in 2006) about her experiences working for a high-powered Hollywood agent among others.

9. "I know about that nanny cam."

More and more parents are using nanny cams to "secretly" spy on their nannies: Brickhouse Security, a leading US security and surveillance firm, says it has seen a spike in both sales and searches for nanny cams on its site.

10. "You'd better do a thorough background check on me."

Unlike many other professions, like doctors and lawyers, there is no official license required to serve as a nanny. In the US, only six per cent of nannies have attended nanny training school, and nearly 16 per cent of nannies have three or fewer years of experience. These facts make it especially important for parents to thoroughly check a child caretaker's background.

Click here for more MarketWatch news

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Businessman a victim of 'money and revenge'

A BUSINESSMAN whose battered body was found in the boot of his own car outside a motel took up to six hours to die, a Perth court has heard.

Ambrose John Clarke and his brother Xavier Gerard Clarke are on trial in the WA Supreme Court for the murder of Peter John Davis, 57, in what prosecutors claim was a killing motivated by anger, money and revenge.

Prosecutors allege Mr Davis was lured to Malaga on May 30, 2011 where he was murdered over a perceived debt, and was found the next day in his vehicle at the rear of the Great Eastern Motor Lodge in Rivervale, east of the city.

In her opening address today, prosecutor Carmel Barbagallo said Mr Davis met with foul play between 6.45am and 8.20am.

He was beaten, choked, smothered and rendered unconscious before being wrapped in black plastic and left in the boot of his 4WD, she said.

Mr Davis took between three and six hours to die, Ms Barbagallo said.

The court heard that years earlier, Ambrose Clarke, 49, started a franchise of Mr Davis' roofing business, but the relationship soured when Mr Davis accused Clarke of stealing money and reported him to police.

Clarke then started a new business with a new partner, but that relationship also ended.

When they severed ties, the former business partner sought help from Mr Davis on some jobs, which further upset Clarke, the court heard.

By May 2011, Clarke was under financial pressure with about $115,000 owed to his credit card and other costs.

Clarke also believed he was owed about $300,000 from Mr Davis, prosecutors alleged.

He then began intimidating and threatening the victim and his family with a the help of an unlicensed debt collector, the court heard.

Ms Barbagallo also alleged Clarke bought a new phone using a fake name and address days before Mr Davis' death and asked Xavier Clarke, 47, to call Mr Davis to lure him to a job to give a quote.

The jury was shown photographs of where Mr Davis was allegedly murdered and Ms Barbagallo said there was easy access to the back of the building that could not be viewed from the street and and did not have security cameras.

The defence team has yet to address the jury.


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Rotto plan a blow for families

Rottnest Island is one of the state's major tourist attractions. Source: PerthNow

PRIVATISING services on Rottnest Island could push the price of a holiday out of reach for most West Australians, the Opposition says.

Fremantle Labor MP Simone McGurk said Rottnest Island Authority staff had been told the State Government planned to privatise a number of services on the island, including accommodation, tours, transport, boat moorings and the golf course.

Rottnest Island is one of the state's major tourist attractions. Source: PerthNow

"The Barnett Government must reveal plans to privatise any of these services on Rottnest Island," she said.

"I am concerned that if services on the island are privatised than the important job of managing Rottnest's heritage buildings and the environment on the island could be neglected.

Rottnest Island is one of the state's major tourist attractions. Source: PerthNow

"If prices and service levels are controlled by private operators, what guarantee does the Government give that this won't push a holiday on Rottnest out of the reach of ordinary Western Australians?"

The ABC reports the privatisation proposal is part of a new strategic plan by the Rottnest Island Authority to make running the island more profitable.

Tourism Minister Liza Harvey said the Government "from time to time" puts additional investment into Rottnest because the island does not cover all of its costs.

Rottnest Island is one of the state's major tourist attractions. Source: PerthNow

She said the new plan was a statutory requirement of the Authority to put together five-year plans.

"The existing plan is due for expiry," she told ABC Radio.

"This is just a statutory process. As far as what's in the plan, that hasn't been considered by Government at this point in time." 

Rottnest Island is one of the state's major tourist attractions. Source: PerthNow

Ms Harvey said there was significant private sector investment in Rottnest Island already.

"The challenge with Rottnest is that it's always been a relatively small season," she said.

"Where private sector can do the work more efficiently than government and provide a service ... I think we need to engage those operators and try and make sure people have a really good tourism experience."
 


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