
Man charged over death of man found on road in Paisley
Det Insp Gordon Smith previously said Police Scotland's thoughts were with the family and friends of the victim.
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Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
The chilling clue that sparked a grisly discovery in a Sunshine Coast unit - after officers stumbled on an eerily similar scene over 1,000km away
The bodies of two men have been found in a unit on the Sunshine Coast after unanswered notes pushed under the door prompted a welfare check. Queensland Police and paramedics were called to the complex on Kingsford Smith Parade in Maroochydore for a welfare check about 11.20am on Friday. On entering the unit, they found the two bodies. A crime scene was declared and investigation launched, with officers confirming there is no ongoing threat to the public. Neighbours who only knew the two men by their first names told the Courier Mail they were 'reclusive' and rarely seen. One claimed notes passed under their unit door received no response, which led to the police being called. A man who knew both men, Jacob Arthur Amos, said he was 'good mates' with the 'old school surfer' who lived in the unit complex for a number of years. Mr Amos described him as a 'kind' person who 'wouldn't hurt you'. The other man was a former Sydney resident who was a regular visitor, he said. He told the publication both men were drug users and that he had knocked on the door on Saturday to check on them. 'He wasn't answering his door and now we know why,' he said. Neighbours have claimed there was drug use and social issues in the unit tower, with the pair living in the 'rowdier' side of the complex. The tragedy comes within days of the news that the decomposed bodies of two elderly men had been found inside a rundown terrace in inner-city Sydney. The bodies of the men, who were aged in their 70s and 80s, were found in different levels of the home in Surry Hills on Thursday. The home was so decrepit that some shocked locals thought it was abandoned. Police say a woman was living with the bodies of two men for almost a month. Eleanor Barker, 63, has since spoken with detectives. Police say she isn't suspected of any wrongdoing. No arrests or charges have been laid. The only obvious signs of the tragedy on Friday were police tape cordoning off the property and dozens of officers examining the home. Described as a hoarder's house, the home was infested with rats and birds. From the street, it appeared rundown, with piles of discarded items strewn across the front. 'I mean I've always seen this house, I didn't know if people lived in it, but it doesn't really look like people do,' neighbour Aisha Mingai said. Police and forensic officers combed the property on Friday, where detectives seized electrical cables. Officers also door-knocked neighbours to gather more information. Police are now working to determine why the deaths went unreported for so long.


Sky News
2 hours ago
- Sky News
How Britain's most notorious gangster turned up at a charity lunch to fact-check a retired detective's talk
Britain's most notorious gangster and the detective who pursued him have been involved in a bizarre confrontation…at a charity lunch. Former Detective Superintendent Ian Brown was at a Kent golf club and about to give a talk on the infamous £26m Brink's-Mat gold robbery when he was summoned from the stage by officials. Mr Brown, who appeared on the award-winning Sky News StoryCast podcast The Hunt For The Brink's-Mat Gold in 2019, said: "I go outside and they say 'he's here' and I say 'who's here' and they say that table over there in the corner, that's Kenny Noye with a baseball cap pulled down over his head." Noye stabbed to death an undercover policeman during the Brink's-Mat investigation, but was acquitted of murder, though he was jailed for handling the stolen gold. After his release, he used a knife again in the M25 road-rage murder of motorist Stephen Cameron. "They said what are we going to do?" said Mr Brown. "I said are you serving food? Well, just use plastic knives." Although Mr Brown had not personally arrested Noye over Brink's-Mat he had identified him as a suspect months after the robbery. Years later he met him during an ill-fated TV interview in which he quizzed him about his role in the robbery. He said: "He told me everything I wanted to know except the truth. He still insists he had nothing to do with it." The interview was never broadcast after the prison authorities threatened to send Noye back to jail for a breach of his parole. Mr Brown, 86, said: "I went over to him and said 'thanks for coming, nice of you to pop in', but I don't believe you've turned up with your sons and grandkids to listen to me telling how you killed a police officer. "And he said 'I want to make sure you don't say I've been dealing drugs' and I said 'I've never said that Kenny'." The retired detective told Noye he wasn't going to change his presentation just because he was there. "He said 'mate, I wouldn't expect you to and I'll come up [on stage] if you want me to'. "Can you think how he's turned up with his family to listen to somebody talking about you killing the police? Now, you put logic on that." The bizarre story emerged when I rang Mr Brown after I'd been told about the meeting. I also wanted to ask him about the recent BBC hit drama series The Gold which retold the story of the Brink's-Mat heist at Heathrow Airport in 1983. "It was an absolute shambles, far too much dramatic licence and the real story was so much better," said the ex-detective, whose job had been to follow the trail of the 6,800 gold bars to the US and the Caribbean. He said he chatted to one of the show's writers for a long time in a phone call but then heard no more. "They invented people, changed a bit here and there and made it politically correct in so many ways. I'm just very sad that that is what people will believe. "And I couldn't work out who my character was supposed to be. I could have been one of the female cops." He also criticised the portrayal of Noye, now 78, as a likeable jack-the-lad character when the truth about the double killer with a volatile temper was quite different.


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Twist after 'completely evil' killer who served 19 years behind bars after strangling his ex-girlfriend in a jealous rage is charged with assaulting a SECOND woman in a hotel room
A killer who spent nearly two decades in jail for the brutal murder of his ex-girlfriend has been charged with assaulting a second woman in a hotel room. William Harold Matheson, 42, was arrested on Friday morning at a home in Randwick, in Sydney 's east, after allegedly assaulting a 38-year-old woman in a Leichardt hotel room on May 17. The convicted killer will remain in custody after being charged with sexual assault without consent and sexually touching another person without consent. He had been on parole for just over two years when the alleged assault occurred, after serving 19 years in jail for the murder of 18-year-old Lyndsay van Blanken. He was released from jail May 2023 with six years remaining on his sentence after the State Parole Authority accepted he was at a 'low risk' of reoffending. Lyndsay's family opposed Matheson's release, with her mother Cynthia van Blanken warning the 'monster' still remained a danger to the public. 'If they let him out next week, they will be responsible for what happens and it won't be good,' she told A Current Affair at the time. In November 2003, Matheson strangled Lyndsay, his ex-girlfriend, to death with zip ties before he stuffed her body into a cricket bag. Her body was discovered six weeks later in the garage of a Coogee apartment after residents reported a foul odour emanating from within the complex. Matheson had grown obsessed with Lyndsay after she broke off their relationship and got engaged to an American hairdresser. He followed her home from work before committing the brutal murder in what police characterised as a jealous rage on November 24, 2003. A skilled cellist, he performed at the Sydney Entertainment Centre later that night, where he was seen acting 'quite normally' despite visible scratches on his skin. In 2006, he was sentenced to 27 years in prison with a non-parole period of 18 years. The Court of Criminal Appeal cut his maximum sentence to 25 years after finding the primary judge had made a sentencing error. On appeal, Justice Clifton Hoeben said the killing was 'brutal and cruel' and that the 18-year non-parole period should be enforced, in a judgment backed by the panel. His first parole application was refused after his non-parole period expired in May 2022, with the Serious Offenders Review Council finding his release would not be appropriate. His second application was approved the following year despite a submission from the victim's family 'strongly opposing' his release. Ms van Blanken described Matheson as 'completely evil', telling Nine News prior to his release she planned to fight his parole 'to the last minute'. 'He's actually served the equivalent of my daughter's age, which isn't fair,' she told the program. Matheson's parole was granted subject to certain conditions, including that he would live with his parents in Randwick and be monitored 24 hours a day. He was also forbidden from contacting Lyndsay's family. In granting parole, Justice James Wood said delaying release any further could harm Matheson's chance of successful reintegration into the community. 'Release at the end of sentence or deferral of release without the opportunity of undertaking a sufficient period of support and supervision on parole… particularly in a case such as this… is likely to be counterproductive,' he said. He was refused bail at Parramatta Local Court on Saturday and will appear in Waverley for an AVO hearing on July 10.