Saturday, 26 October 2024

Queensland decides who will form the next state government today- the incumbent Miles Labor Government or the Crisafulli-led LNP Coalition. ELECTION VOTE COUNT LINKS

 

QUEENSLAND STATE ELECTION

Saturday 26 October 2024


Queensland Electoral Commission


  • Virtual Tally Room opens 7 pm Qld time/8pm NSW time at

https://results.elections.qld.gov.au/SGE2024


ABC News online


  • Queensland Votes 2024 at

https://www.abc.net.au/news/elections/qld-election-2024


  • Electorates Pendulum at

https://www.abc.net.au/news/elections/qld/2024/guide/pendulum


  • ABC 24 hr NEWS live at

https://iview.abc.net.au/video/NS1413V001S00

Featuring veteran psephologist, analyst and commentator Antony Green, also found at

https://antonygreen.com.au/qld-2024-tracking-the-early-and-postal-vote/



Cartoons of the Week


Bill Bramhall



David Rowe

 
Alan Moir


Fiona Katauskas


Cathy Wilcox




Tweet of the Week



Friday, 25 October 2024

In 2024 road fatalities in NSW rural & regional areas continue to outnumber those in metropolitan areas - at least 24 of these deaths occurred in the Northern river region


In 2024 from 1 January through to 23 October Transport NSW preliminary road fatality data recorded 245 fatal vehicle crashes across the state which caused 273 deaths - 20 of which occurred in the first 23 days of October.


The number of drivers killed outnumbered the combined total of passengers, pedestrians, motorcyclists & cyclists (139 to 134). While males far out number females among the dead (217 to 56). The largest road fatality by age cohort was the those 70 years of age and older.


Fatalities in country areas continue to outnumber those in metropolitan areas - 181 deaths on rural and regional roads compared to 92 deaths on metropolitan roads.


Up to the end of September this year the Australian Road Deaths Database revealed that NSW road fatalities included 24 deaths on Northern Rivers roads:


Clarence Valley - 8 people

Ballina Shire - 5 people

Tweed Shire - 4 people

Richmond Valley - 3 people

Lismore City - 3 people

Byron Shire - 1 person

Kyogle Shire - 0 persons.


Thursday, 24 October 2024

A rather hurried Senate Inquiry is currently considering reforms to Australia's privacy laws which may have a chilling effect on news delivery and political debate amongst ordinary citizens

 

On 19 September 2024, the Senate referred the Privacy and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2024 [Provisions] to the Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee, for inquiry and report by 14 November 2024.


This parliamentary inquiry has a very short timeframe for consideration of legal reform which apparently intends to capture the content found on all digital news and social media platforms, as well as content found on websites and online chat rooms.


Officially the Bill be considered by the Inquiry:

...would enact a first tranche of reforms to the Privacy Act 1988 to implement a number of legislative proposals agreed by the government in its Response to the Privacy Act Review (September 2023). The Bill would also introduce a new statutory tort for serious invasions of privacy and targeted criminal offences to respond to doxxing. [my yellow highlighting]


The definition of "doxxing" according to the Explanatory Memorandum displayed with the draft Bill is "the release of personal data using a carriage service in a manner that would be menacing or harassing".


A clearer description is probably along these lines; "doxxing is the act of publicly providing personally identifiable information about an individual or organization, usually via the Internet and without their consent" [Wikipedia retrieved 23.10.24].


There are concerns being expressed that the Bill as it now stands may invite misconstruction or legal overreach, as well as have a chilling effect on investigative reporting, political discourse and, the implied freedom of opinion and expression that Australian citizens now enjoy under the Australian Constitution and specifically by way of four of the seven core international human rights treaties Australia is a party to.


The Committee received 68 submissions by the 11 October 2024 closing date.


One public hearing was held in Canberra on 22 October, at which representatives from 21 different different Australian government departments/agencies, independent commissions, public broadcasters, industry and consumer groups, charitable organisations, news agencies & multinational social media corporations.


Among those submissions were 4 pages from Google, 17 pages from Meta and a 39 pages from the Law Council of Australia.


The Law Council's submission is recommended reading as it sets out its concerns and recommendations concisely and clearly.


Its submission can be found and downloaded at

https://www.aph.gov.au/DocumentStore.ashx?id=ab37ee62-de00-4125-8791-711143f3b13a&subId=768485



Wednesday, 23 October 2024

Sixty-five long unsolved murders along the NSW North Coast made the news this week - 64 being females aged between 4 & 84 years & one a teenage male


The Daily Examiner/Daily Telegraph online, 22 October 2024:


A list of more than 60 women who were brutally murdered or disappeared on the NSW North Coast, but whose perpetrators were never caught can be revealed among fears some of them could be the work of one or more serial killers.


NSW Upper House MP Jeremy Buckingham will today receive a briefing from the NSW Police over the devastating list of women who were found dead or vanished between Newcastle and Byron Bay over a 30-year-period. In all these cases, no culprit was brought to justice.


For years police have suspected that some of the deaths or disappearances of the women were connected, but while some had operations set up to explore the potential connections, others may never have been properly investigated.


Former NSW Police Deputy Commissioner Mick Willing, who commanded the homicide squad between 2011 and 2017 said the way cold cases from decades ago are prioritised has led to many not being properly reinvestigated, leaving police open to missing possible connections between cases.


There are a lot of these cases that just sit in databases and have never been reviewed,” he said.


There are unsolved homicide cases that sit there - there are many cases that are not even looked at.


So you could miss things that are connected to other things - ideally what you need is a database that links all these cases together across Australia.”


Mr Willing said while there had not been a serial killer identified in NSW since Ivan Milat murdered multiple hitchhikers along the Hume Highway in the 1980s and 90s, there was a possibility some of the disappearances along the North Coast could have the same perpetrator, though many would also be isolated incidents.


You would think there’s a possibility that some of them could be connected,” he said.


The thinking around a few of the cases was that maybe Milat might be responsible - but there is no evidence of that,” he said.


What people don’t realise about unsolved homicides is that most of them were solved by DNA but some of the old exhibits that were collected have been destroyed.”


A NSW Police spokesperson said there had been multiple investigations including taskforce Fenwick and strike force Arapaima had been established to investigate links between some of the north coast abductions...


Mr Buckingham will request parliament call for papers from police detailing how the unsolved crimes have been investigated including any possible connections.


When I looked at the list of country towns, Coffs harbour, Taree and Grafton, what you see in all these towns stretching all the way down to Newcastle there were murders everywhere that had a similar modus operandi,” he said.


That is young women who had been picked up hitchhiking, gone walking, seen getting in cars who had either disappeared or had almost egregiously been found dumped in remote areas.”


Criminal psychologist Tim Watson-Munro said the number of women who had been killed on the north coast was “extremely disturbing”


If people are going missing at the same time and place it’s a massive red flag,” he said.


Beyond Milat there may have been another serial killer or possibly two operating in the area.”


With such a significant number of people involved, there’s an argument to reopen those cases and drill down a bit further.”


WARNING: linked news articles below contain the names and images of people who have passed away.


The full paywalled article can be read at

https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/nsw/massive-red-flags-nsw-serial-killers-fears-over-dozens-of-slain-women-in-30year-period/news-story/ 00730a0e252c80f6fbfdbe475d52742e


Paywalled article with full list of names and images at

https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/nsw/revealed-the-64-women-who-went-missing-or-were-murdered-on-nsw-north-coast/news-story/dc3e4a7df768e3706dd9c1be1a91db72



There has also been a NSW Police reappeal issued on 21 October 2024 concerning the murders of three children between 1990 & 1991 in the town of Bowraville in the Nambucca Valley on the Mid North Coast hinterland. With the aim of finally finding the remains of the eldest girl.



Tuesday, 22 October 2024

Byron Shire local government still making the news re domestic violence allegations against a former mayor and now current councillor


In September 2024 Michael Lyon lost his bid for re-election as Byron Shire mayor by a very wide margin and limped into the ranks of shire councillors.


Since then.......


ECHO, 11 October 2021:


While Cr Michael Lyon was affirming himself to undertake the duties of office on Thursday morning in the Byron Shire Council Chambers, most people in the room wouldn’t have known that the ex-mayor had recently spent a night in the police watch house after allegedly breaching an AVO placed on him in August.


Staff from the Tweed Byron Police say that at about 2.20pm on Sunday, October 6, police were called to a home at The Pocket, following reports of a domestic incident.


Officers attached to Tweed Byron Police District arrived and were told a man, Cr Michael Lyon, had allegedly breached an enforceable AVO.


Cr Michael Lyon arrested at The Pocket


No injuries were reported at the premises on the day. Following inquiries, police arrested Cr Lyon at the scene.


He was taken to Byron Bay Police Station where was charged with breach apprehended Domestic Violence Order, intimidation (DV) and breach of bail.


Cr Lyon was refused bail to appear before Lismore Local Court on Monday, October 7....


As well as the new charges from the weekend incident, Cr Lyon will face two charges – one count of assault and one count of stalk/intimidate, to be heard on March 11, 2025 at Tweed Heads Courthouse, with a mention of the AVO also scheduled for that date.


ECHO, 21 October 2021:


Byron Bay’s former mayor and current councillor Michael Lyon was back in court today, following his alleged breach of an AVO earlier this month at The Pocket....


...the court was told Michael Lyon was pleading not guilty to the most recent charges of stalk/intimidation and breaching the existing apprehended violence order, both in relation to his wife.


There was then some discussion about whether all the charges could be heard on the already established date at Tweed Heads Court House on 11 March 2025. Cr Layon’s lawyer, Mr Weller, said he had made preliminary enquiries with the court, and estimated an additional 90 minutes would be required to hear the latest charges.


Magistrate Stafford asked, ‘What’s the more substantive charge?’ Mr Weller replied, ‘assault’ before attempting to say something about the alleged victim filing documents to withdraw the charge, but Magistrate Stafford cut him off abruptly.


Mr Croner confirmed that the DPP had carriage of both matters, and was happy for the cases to be run together at Tweed Heads on 11 March. The magistrate said all this was a waste of the court’s time, and that the parties should have organised themselves better in advance.


Why Tweed?


Apparently unfamiliar with the Lyon case, Magistrate Stafford then asked why the matter was ever sent to Tweed Heads. Croner explained that the case was heard outside Byron Bay because of the defendant’s position in the local community (Cr Lyon was mayor at the time of the original alleged DV charges in August 2024).


Mr Weller next sought to bring the matter forward to next Monday, but the magistrate said that was too soon, as the court’s listings were overwhelmed.


She then decided to fix the next court date (another mention, to fix a hearing date) to 11 November 2024 in Tweed Heads. Michael Lyon looked visibly distressed at this news.


A discussion of AVO and bail conditions followed, with nothing being substantively changed. Cr Lyon remains unable to visit the property at The Pocket without the prior written agreement of his wife, and he is only able to contact her via a lawyer.


Note: The most recent domestic violence crime statistics released by NSW BOCSAR show that in the twelve months to June 2024 there were 1,074 females in the Richmond-Tweed statistical area reported by NSW Police as experiencing domestic violence.

With 116 of these domestic violence assaults occurring in the Byron Shire local government area, producing a Byron domestic violence assault rate per 100,000 population of 317.7.