
Two men sentenced to life in prison for killing Cassius Turvey
TRANSCRIPT
Two men sentenced to life in prison for killing Aboriginal schoolboy Cassius Turvey
Liberal Party MPs divided on the use of gender quotas to boost female representation in the party
In cricket, Australia and the West Indies evenly poised after day two of the first test Three men have been sentenced over the killing of Aboriginal schoolboy Cassius Turvey in Western Australia's Supreme Court. The 15-year-old Noongar-Yamatji boy, died in hospital 10 days after he was chased into bushland and beaten to death in October 2022. Jack Brearley has been sentenced to life imprisonment, with a minimum period without parole of 22 years. Brodie Palmer has also been sentenced to life imprisonment, with a minimum non-parole period of at least 18 years, and Mitchell Forth has been sentenced to 12 years in prison for his part in Cassius's death. Earlier, Justice Peter Quinlan told the court Cassius Turvey showed great promise from a young age, and was a natural-born leader with a sense of community that pointed to a bright future. He said the 15-year-old boy was robbed of his life and future promise in an act of brutality. In the courtroom, Cassius's mother Mechelle Turvey struggled to hold back tears as Justice Quinlan handed down the sentences. Senior Liberal MP Angus Taylor says he doesn't agree with his party's leader on the use of gender quotas to increase female representation in the Liberal Party. The Liberal Party had its worst election result in 80 years in May. Federal Liberal Leader Sussan Ley used her National Press Club speech this week to say it is time for the party to get serious about having more women within the party's ranks, and she is open to gender quotas being used to achieve that goal. The Liberal Party has six women among its 28 MPs Mr Taylor says he doesn't believe gender quotas are the way to go. "I have dealt with this issue in many organisations that I have been involved with over the years. I have learnt in the fullness of time in other organisations is the key is to have the right attraction processes, retention processes and most importantly mentoring processes - to attract, retain, excite and motivate great people. That is what we have to do." The Australian Competition & Consumer Commission says regulation of unsafe products in online marketplaces will be a focus for the regulator over the next 12 months. Speaking at the National Consumer Congress in Melbourne, the chair of the commission, Gina Cass-Gottlieb, says education and enforcement tools will be used to highlight the risks to consumers in the digital economy. She told SBS, the harm to consumers is multi-faceted. And in cricket, Australia's bowlers have hit back after a slow start to bowl out West Indies for 190 on Day Two of the first Test in Barbados. The visitors' fortunes changed after the controversial dismissals of the hosts' key batters Roston Chase and Shai Hope. In the second session, five wickets fell for just 55 with Beau Webster taking 2 for 20. Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood and Pat Cummins followed up with multiple wickets, while Nathan Lyon took the last one of the innings. Starc says overall he was pleased with the bowlers' performance.
"They obviously had a partnership in the middle there and played pretty well. But overall, I think it's an indifferent wicket. So throughout the two days, it's shown that if you bowl the right areas for long enough, there's enough chances. Even when the ball got a little bit older, or got changed again, the ball still did some sideways stuff. So, I think the bowlers have been in the game throughout the two days and will no doubt continue tomorrow."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

ABC News
11 minutes ago
- ABC News
Australian Army's new Precision Strike Missile fired at NT's Mount Bundey during Exercise Talisman Sabre
The Australian Army has test fired its newest long-range missile for the first time, launching the weapon from a remote army training base in the Northern Territory. The Precision Strike Missile (PrSM), which can hit distant targets with minimal warning and high accuracy, was fired from the Mount Bundey Training Area, south-east of Darwin, on Friday. It hit its target over 300 kilometres away in four minutes and three seconds, reaching speeds of roughly 4,050 kilometres per hour — more than three times the speed of sound. Fired from US-made High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS), the PrSM can strike targets at distances of up to 500 kilometres with precision — a significant leap from the Australian Army's previous long-range strike range of just 30 kilometres. At a press conference at Mount Bundey on Friday, Defence Industry Minister Pat Conroy said the new weapon marked the day the "Australian Army enters the missile age". "This is all about extending deterrence in the Indo-Pacific, all about signalling to any potential adversary that pain can be inflicted — all about deterring war through strength," he said. Developed for the United States Army, the PrSM was sent to Australia last month as part of a $310 million deal with the US. The deal locks in Australian access to munitions, technological advancements and the option for future domestic manufacturing and maintenance. The missile launch was conducted as part of Exercise Talisman Sabre, a joint military exercise involving more than 40,000 military personnel from 19 nations, including the US. This year marks the largest iteration of the exercise since it began in 2005 as a way to practice maritime operations, air combat and live-fire exercises with international partners. On Friday, the Secretary of the United States Army, Dan Driscoll, was more forthright in his assessment of where the message of deterrence was aimed at. "President Trump, [the United States Secretary of Defence] Pete Hegseth and the rest of the Pentagon team have been very clear that our pacing threat is China," he said. While the US Army's chief of staff, General Randy George, did not respond directly to questions about an imminent threat, or whether there were enhanced capabilities in China, he said keeping up with technological advancements was "what keeps us up at night". "What we are trying to do is to transform as rapidly as possible," he said. Alex Miller, the US Army's chief technology officer, said the PrSM's high speed halved the amount of warning time given to a potential enemy. He also said while the missile's explosion would not "level a city", its precision, driven by advanced navigation, was what made it lethal. "When you think about having six to seven minutes rather than 15 to 20 minutes, that's a lot less time for [a target] to pack up and roll out if they learn that they are being shot at," he said. In a statement from Mr Conroy's office, a spokesperson said future upgrades to the PrSM could include an extended strike range of over 1,000 kilometres, improved sensors and novel warheads.

News.com.au
44 minutes ago
- News.com.au
‘Brown-noser': Crass statue appears outside Richard Marles electoral office in Geelong
A crass piece of political art has accused Richard Marles of being 'Australia's biggest brown-noser' as the defence minister signed a 50-year treaty alongside his UK counterpart. The installation, outside Mr Marles electoral office in Geelong, depicted a large nose with an apparent fecal smear. Affixed to a light post by chain, the work is attributed to The New Radicals and names Mr Marles. The protest art comes as Mr Marles signed a new five-decade treaty with the United Kingdom to cement the AUKUS submarine pact in his home city. Dubbed 'The Geelong Treaty', the defence minister said the agreement would enable co-operation on the SSN-Aukus submarine. 'In doing this, AUKUS will see 20,000 jobs in Australia. It will see, in building submarines in this country, the biggest industrial endeavour in our nation's history, bigger even than the Snowy Hydro scheme,' Mr Marles said. 'In military terms, what it will deliver is the biggest leap in Australia's military capability, really, since the formation of the navy back in 1913.' The new treaty was announced following the annual AUKMIN talks in Sydney on Friday. Alongside his counterpart, UK Secretary of State for Defence John Healey, the two men celebrated the treaty with a beer at a Geelong brewery. Spotted in Geelong's CBD on Saturday afternoon, the piece has vanished by 5pm.

News.com.au
an hour ago
- News.com.au
Footy prodigy on brink of NRL deal becomes big-shot bikie before incredible transformation in jail
Owen Turnbull could have been an NRL star but he threw it all away for booze, cash and women. The former Canberra Raiders and Parramatta Eels junior makes no bones about it — he was 'a waste of talent'. 'I was on the cusp of the NRL and I threw it all away for the bikie life,' he said. 'There was a lot of pressure from my dad to play footy and I guess I just turned my back on it. I was young and naive, I got into that mindset of doing all the things like drinking and girls that I felt like I'd missed out on because of footy.' That pivotal decision sent Turnbull down a dark path into a world of drug dealing, violence, and eventually a jail cell. At the time he thought he'd found his people — bikie brothers who had his back. 'My first ever line of cocaine was with my president at the time. I was too scared to do it. I watched a doco back in the day and a guy had his first line and he died from it, so I was always too scared to do that.' But four years after he joined the Rebels he became 'really dependent'. 'I was a broke bum for a lot of years until I started hustling and making money with the pingas, all the cocaine, bottles of Valium. I was making a killing and then, yeah, we're doing like an ounce a week of cocaine.' Turnbull defected from the Rebels and became sergeant at arms of the Canberra chapter of the Nomads. He had his share of enemies. 'I was on social media back and forth and this guy was warning he was gonna come and shoot up my house and I was like 'whatever'. 'I was laying in bed with my girlfriend and I looked out the door and there were flames. I opened the door and this kid with balaclava was standing there with a gun I opened the door and said 'go on then c**t' ad he did it. 'It's funny to look back now, it was only pellets but it still stung and burned and he ran away and there I was putting out the first with a shoe in my undied.' What wasn't so comical was the second time a gunman came after him. 'It was a real wake up call. They came with pistols and shot up the place. It went through my parents' room and thankfully my mum was overseas at the time. 'For a couple of hours police did all the measurements of where the bullets went and one of the trajectory was that it would have hit my mum while she was sleeping. Yep, that was a big wakeup call.' Turnbull said his time in jail for drug trafficking made him realise he didn't belong there. He needed to find a way to turn things around. Watching inmates shooting up ice, others behaving like grubs, he thought 'this is not me, I grew up a nerd, playing videos and watching cartoons'. That's when he decided to keep his head down, get away from the bikies who never really had his back and just do his time. 'I was at the right place at the right time when I got out of prison,' he said. However someone must have seen the potential in him. 'One of the cops that arrested me asked if I wanted to do a gang exit thing with QLD police.' The exit program - the first of its kind - was called Project Kairos. It helped members of outlaw motorcycle gangs to leave their criminal lifestyle and reintegrate into society. 'I did that and the detective helped me so much. I then got invited to talk in Melbourne in front of American DEA agents and I've done other talks for police and NRL.' Today Turnbull is making an honest living - but the road to being a clean skin isn't always a smooth one. 'I've gone from a bikie to a nerd. I tried to get into certain jobs but I had trouble getting work places. So since August last year I have focused on my card business. Ive got thousands of Pokemon and sport cards and so I decided to really focus on turning that into a business. 'The first one I sold was a very rare Lebron James rookie card.' It seems police were not convinced Turnbull would stay on the straight and narrow. In April 2023 police raided his home, believing he was selling drugs again. 'I had a bedroom full of my cards, the business was registered so it all sorted out but they thought my text messages about rookie cards, Lebron James and things were some kind of code... it was mad.' Turnbull has a message for anyone thinking gang life is glamorous, but also for young footy players about to come into money on their first contracts. 'A lot of the boys have just got their first contracts, like I can tell them what to watch out for, like don't get used, be cautious of who you're hanging around with. 'Be careful of who you are taking photos with, uploading on social media, like just basically stuff that what I went through. 'Be careful who you trust because it's really easy to throw away your opportunity.'