Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn charges. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn charges. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Hai, 18 tháng 3, 2013

Murder charges over farmer deaths

The son of one of two brothers shot dead on a property in Victoria has been charged with their murders.

THE son of a farmer shot dead with his brother in country Victoria has been charged with two counts of murder.

Ross Streeter, 30, was charged last night.

He will appear in the Melbourne Magistrate's Court today.

Mr Streeter had been questioned over the deaths of Doug and John Streeter at Natte Yallock last Thursday.

The men died at the Streeter Lane property they farmed after being shot.

As searchers converged on the area where the brothers died, Doug's son, Ross, was released from hospital.

Mr Streeter was taken by homicide squad to crime department headquarters to be questioned over the shooting deaths.

He was arrested on Saturday, two days after the double tragedy at the central Victoria farm operated by his father and uncle.

Ross Streeter

Ross Streeter leaves St Kilda Rd police complex, charged with two counts of murder. Picture: Andrew Brownbill

Mr Streeter was found in Avoca, near the home of his father, with what police described as self-inflicted injuries.

He was taken under police escort to the Royal Melbourne Hospital.

Searchers spent Sunday scouring land around the death scene in Streeter Lane, Natte Yallock, looking for evidence.

It is not known whether the weapon used has been found.

John and Douglas Streeter

The bodies of John and Doug Streeter were discovered at their property in Natte Yallock on Thursday.

Locals said there had been nothing to indicate the brothers felt under threat or had been troubled in the period before the tragedy at the Streeter Lane property.

A relative described the pair as good men.

"It's all a mystery. It's unbelievable. We're dumbfounded."

The men were shot between 8am and noon on Thursday, at least six hours before Doug Streeter's wife, Helen, discovered the bodies of her husband and brother-in-law.

Streeter brothers

Police and SES at the crime scene. Picture: Mark Dadswell

Investigators have called for witnesses who saw anyone acting strangely around the Streeter Lane area on Thursday morning.

Sgt Sol Solomon said the town of Avoca was reeling after the deaths of the "two highly respected citizens".

"It is an absolute tragedy for their families and an absolute tragedy for the Avoca community to lose two outstanding people," he said.

- with Rebekah Cavanagh


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Chủ Nhật, 10 tháng 3, 2013

Capriati faces charges for attacking ex

FORMER tennis World No 1 Jennifer Capriati is facing battery charges and possible arrest after being accused of stalking and punching an ex-boyfriend on Valentine's Day.

Capriati, a three-time Grand Slam champion who won 14 titles and earned gold at the 1992 Olympics, had an altercation with Ivan Brannan at the Oxygen Health & Wellness gym in North Palm Beach, Florida on February 14, the local police department says.

While Brannan was working out, Capriati, 36, "started screaming" at him before punching him "with a closed fist four times in the chest", a police report said.

A yoga instructor then stopped the former tennis pro from continuing to punch Brannan and the 28-year-old managed to lock himself in the men's locker room and call 911.

Brannan, a former Florida State University golfer, had red marks on his chest from the incident, according to the police report.

While filling out an affidavit, "his hands were physically shaking", it added.

"It was very apparent that he was in fear of physical harm."

Brannan, who dated Capriati from May 2011 to February 2012, told police that Capriati began harassing and stalking him shortly after the couple broke up. He also later brought officers documentation of seven other altercations with the former tennis pro.

The North Palm Beach Police Department in Florida subsequently requested an arrest warrant for Capriati, though it has not yet been issued by the court, a spokeswoman told AFP on Sunday.

A publicist for Capriati issued a statement on Friday stressing that the case "has not yet been assigned in Palm Beach County and has not been reviewed".

"The current facts being circulated by Mr Brannan are an over-exaggeration and the police report is one-sided in Mr Brannan's favour since they failed to get Ms Capriati's side of the story," Natalie Mikolich said in a statement cited by US media.

Capriati also took to Twitter herself to defend her behaviour.

"I pushed a man that was verbally assaulting me away from me. This man has been tormenting and abusing me for so long. The truth will prevail," she wrote.

And on Sunday, she added: "These lies and turmoil are only happening because of this man!Look at what he has done to the MOTHER of his own son not just me!!"

Brannan's ex-fiancee, cook Christine Corley, then wrote back: "He is doing the same thing to you as he did to me!!" and "I feel your pain!"


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Thứ Sáu, 1 tháng 3, 2013

Men face teen sex crime charges in Ballina

DETECTIVES in northern NSW have charged three men have with sex offences involving a 15-year-old girl.

Officers from Strike Force Bissenberger, which was formed in June last year, arrested two men at a house shortly after midnight on Saturday, while the third man was arrested at his home about 1.30am (AEDT), police said.

All three were taken to Ballina Police Station.

A 39-year-old man was charged with two counts of aggravated sexual assault of a victim aged under 16; and a 37-year-old man and a 41-year-old man were charged with one count each of aggravated sexual assault of a victim aged under 16.

The men were refused bail and were due to appear in Lismore Court on Saturday.

Detective Inspector Greg Moore commended the work of his detectives.

"It is a tribute to their dedication and skill that we have been able to put these people before the court," he said.


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Thứ Năm, 21 tháng 2, 2013

Pistorius cop faces shooting charges

Hilton Botha

Investigating officer Hilton Botha, who is in charge of the Oscar Pistorius murder case, faces charges over an alleged shooting incident. Source: AFP

THE investigating officer in Oscar Pistorius's murder case is facing seven charges of attempted murder, police have confirmed.

Hilton Botha reportedly opened fire on a bunch of terrified passengers in a mini-bus in a drunken shooting incident with three other officers in 2011, South Africa's Eyewitness News reports.

The dramatic twist comes as Pistorius arrived at court for the third day of his bail hearing after being charged last week with shooting dead his model girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp.

Botha, who drew ridicule yesterday for his bungling testimony during Pistorius's bail hearing, has denied he and the other officers were drinking.

He told Eyewitness News shortly after news of the charges broke that he and the two officers were investigating a case and tried to pull the taxi mini-bus over.

South African Olympian Oscar Pistorius has enjoyed a better day in court, after a police detective testified that there was nothing 'inconsistent' with the athlete's story.

When the driver refused to stop, they shot at the wheels, he said. 

Botha said he was convinced the attempted murder case against him had been withdrawn and only found out it had been reinstated when another officer told him, Eyewitness News reports.

Police spokesman Nevile Malila told Eyewitness News: "There was a decision to taken by the DPP's office to charge the members, each one of them with seven counts of attempted murder. That was the number of people that were in the taxi"

South African journalists and overseas correspondents are providing up-to-the-minute coverage of the Pistorius murder case from both inside and outside the courtroom via Twitter.

Malila said Botha, who was ridiculed yesterday for his bungling testimony at Pistorius's bail hearing, was a seasoned detective and there were no plans to take him off the murder case.

The prosecution case against Pistorius began to unravel yesterday with revelations of a series of police blunders and investigating officer Botha's admission that authorities have no evidence challenging the double-amputee Olympian's claim he killed his girlfriend accidentally.

Detective Botha's often confused testimony left prosecutors rubbing their heads in frustration as he misjudged distances and said testosterone - banned for professional athletes in some cases - was found at the scene, only to be later contradicted by the prosecutor's office.

The second day of what was supposed to be a mere bail hearing almost resembled a full-blown trial for the 26-year-old runner, with his lawyer, Barry Roux, tearing into Botha's testimony step by step during cross examination.

Police, Botha acknowledged, left a 9 mm slug from the barrage that killed Reeva Steenkamp inside a toilet and lost track of illegal ammunition found inside the house.

And the detective himself walked through the crime scene without wearing protective shoe covers, potentially contaminating the area.

Authorities, Roux asserted, were selectively taking "every piece of evidence to try to extract the most possibly negative connotation and present it to the court.''

The case has riveted South Africa - and the world - with journalists and the curious crowding into the brick-walled courtroom where Pistorius, dubbed the Blade Runner for his prosthetic legs, faces a charge of premeditated murder in the Valentine's Day slaying.

Pistorius says he mistook Steenkamp for an intruder and shot her out of fear, while prosecutors say he planned the killing and attacked her as she cowered behind a locked bathroom door.

Yesterday's hearing seemed to start out well for the prosecution, with Botha offering new details of the shooting that appeared to call into question Pistorius's account of the moments leading up to the 29-year-old model's death.

Ballistic evidence, he said, showed the bullets that killed her had been fired from a height, supporting the prosecution's assertion that Pistorius was wearing prosthetic legs when he took aim at the bathroom door. The athlete has maintained he was standing only on his stumps, and felt vulnerable and frightened as he opened fire from a low position.

Projecting a diagram of the bedroom and the bathroom, prosecutor Gerrie Nel said it showed Pistorius had to walk past his bed to get to the bathroom and could not have done so without seeing that Steenkamp was not asleep there.

"There's no other way of getting there,'' Nel said in disputing Pistorius's claim that he had no idea Steenkamp was no longer in bed when he pumped four bullets into the bathroom door, striking her with three.

Botha backed the prosecutor up, saying the holster for Pistorius' 9 mm pistol was found under the left side of the bed, where Steenkamp slept, and it would have been impossible for Pistorius to get the gun without checking to see if she was there.

"I believe that he knew that Reeva was in the bathroom and he shot four shots through the door,'' the detective said.

Botha described how bullets struck Steenkamp in the head and shattered her right arm and hip, eliciting sobs from Pistorius, who held his head in hands.

However, when asked if Steenkamp's body showed "any pattern of defensive wounds'' or bruising from an assault, Botha said "no.'' He again responded "no'' when asked if investigators found anything inconsistent with Pistorius' version of events, though he later said nothing contradicted the police version either.

Testimony began with the prosecutor telling the court that before the shooting, a neighbor heard "non-stop'' shouting between 2am. and 3am at Pistorius's upscale home in a gated community in the capital, Pretoria.

However, Botha later said under cross-examination that the witness was in a house 550 metres away, possibly out of earshot. He cut that estimate in half when questioned again by the prosecutor, as confusion reigned for much of his testimony.

At one point, Botha told the court that police found syringes and two boxes of testosterone in Pistorius' bedroom - testimony the prosecution later withdrew, saying it was too early to identify the substance, which was still being tested.

"It is not certain (what it is) until the forensics'' are completed, Medupe Simasiku, a spokesman for South Africa's National Prosecution Agency, told The Associated Press. It's not clear if it was "a legal or an illegal medication for now.''

The defense also disputed the claim. "It is an herbal remedy,'' Roux said. "It is not ... a banned substance.''

Still, Botha offered potentially damaging details about Pistorius's past, saying the athlete was once involved in an accidental shooting at a restaurant in Johannesburg and asked someone else "to take the rap.''

The runner also threatened men on two separate occasions, Botha said, allegedly telling one he'd "break his legs.''

The detective said police found two iPhones in Pistorius's bathroom and two BlackBerrys in his bedroom, and none had been used to phone for help. Guards at the gated community did call the athlete, Botha said, and all he said was: "I'm all right,'' as he wept uncontrollably.

Roux later suggested that a fifth phone, not collected by the police, was used by Pistorius to call for help.

The question now is whether Botha's troubled testimony will be enough to convince Chief Magistrate Desmond Nair to keep Pistorius in prison until trial.

While Pistorius faces the harshest bail requirements under South African law, the magistrate has said he would consider loosening them based on testimony in the hearing.

More to come

with wires


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