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Wild moment gang of car hoons shuts down one of Australia's busiest nightclub precincts - as crowds out for dinner are choked in tyre smoke

Wild moment gang of car hoons shuts down one of Australia's busiest nightclub precincts - as crowds out for dinner are choked in tyre smoke

Daily Mail​11 hours ago
The 'reckless and irresponsible' drivers who swarmed a popular nightclub strip, causing chaos and forcing traffic diversions overnight, are being sought by police.
Large crowds gathered on Chapel Street in Melbourne 's inner east from 7pm on Saturday, prompting a significant police presence.
The event is believed to have been organised through a public Facebook group, where more than 5000 people had expressed interest in attending.
A hospitality worker on shift when the crowd descended said that hundreds of people had packed into the streets.
Inspector Georgie Swinton confirmed an operation to address the event was put into action, with multiple traffic diversions implemented to ensure pedestrian safety.
Chapel Street is a renowned dining and entertainment precinct, attracting thousands of visitors each week.
However, the strip has also been the scene of repeated criminal activity, including firebombings, brawls, stabbings, and more recently, hooning.
Footage circulating on social media, and referenced by police, shows drivers performing burnouts.
Another video shows people jumping onto a moving tow truck.
Insp Swinton described the behaviour as 'reckless and irresponsible'.
'A number of drivers engaged in dangerous driving and we will find those drivers,' she told reporters on Sunday.
'There's footage of one particular driver doing fairly reasonable burnouts. We will identity him, he will be charged and his car will be impounded.'
No arrests were made, although defect notices were handed out to several drivers for modified vehicles.
Police confirmed there was an influx of calls for assistance, mostly for the loud noise of cars participating in the planned meet.
Housing and Building Minister Harriet Shing said the behaviour of the hoon drivers as 'absolutely disgraceful'.
'Safety for people in and around our roads is of paramount importance and anybody who thinks that they can go out and live in such a cavalier fashion should be absolutely condemned,' she told reporters on Sunday.
Police have been cracking down on crime at the popular shopping strip, with almost 130 people arrested this year.
The City of Stonnington has recently endorsed a new plan for Chapel Street, aimed at enhancing public safety, improving cleanliness, and boosting business and community confidence through a targeted program of actions.
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Prime suspect in brutal cold case killing of woman, 23, whose body was found torched is mysteriously found dead on hols
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The Sun

time38 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Prime suspect in brutal cold case killing of woman, 23, whose body was found torched is mysteriously found dead on hols

THE prime suspect in a brutal cold case killing of a 23-year-old woman whose body was found burned has mysteriously been found dead. Alleged serial rapist and murderer Kevin Steven Correll, 69, was previously identified as the most likely person to have killed Rachelle Childs in 2001. 5 5 The lead suspect in the cold case that continues to puzzle investigators more than 20 years on died while on holiday in Pa Tong, Thailand, last week. Tragic Rachelle's corpse was found dumped in bushland in Gerroa, just south of Sydney, Australia, about 100km from her home on June 8. Her corpse had been partially burned - in what cops suspect was an attempt to destroy DNA evidence. Unleaded petrol had been doused over her face and other parts of her body as part of the heinous attack that rocked the sleepy town of Gerroa. She was also partially undressed - and police believe the depraved killer either smothered or strangled her to death. Cops failed to charge anyone over her murder - following early investigation blunders which led to the case going cold for years. Thai authorities said details surrounding the death of Correll are scarce - and his sudden passing remains a mystery. A member of Correll's family said police had already showed up at his son Mitchell's house to inform them that an autopsy was already underway. The family member told The Daily Telegraph: "Not sorry he's gone just sorry that Rachelle's family aren't going to get the justice that they so deserve." And his estranged daughter, Jazz, said that she only heard of her dad's death after speaking to her brother on Saturday. She told the newspaper: "I feel sad for his many victims." The botched police investigation into Rachelle's murder is widely believed to have been severely mishandled. Local cops lost a crucial piece of CCTV evidence that was believed to show Rachelle with her killer at a petrol station on the night of her death. Another police officer contaminated DNA found on a bedsheet, while others forgot to properly collect her phone records. Correll worked as Rachelle's boss at the used car dealership Camden Holden where they both worked at the time of her horrific killing. He was voluntarily quizzed three separate times by police regarding her death - but detectives never managed to gather enough evidence to convict him. This was despite the fact that his alibi for the night of Rachelle's death could never been confirmed or corroborated. Correll had previously been accused of rape. In the 1980s, a woman was heard screaming by police - and after they rushed towards the sound they found Correll half undressed. The woman told cops that she was being assaulted - and despite being charged, Correll was later found not guilty. Three other woman also accused Correll of rape in three separate occasions - but he was found not guilty in court. Correll was one of the last people to see Rachelle alive when she left work the day before her death. Fellow employees reported Rachelle telling them she was going to meet up with someone at the Bargo Hotel that evening but she did not say who it was. The hotel had no CCTV inside, and cops never questioned everyone who was there on the night. After the hotel meeting, Rachelle called her sister on the phone for a short chat - the last time anybody ever heard from her. A motorist who was driving on the road where Rachelle was found told police he had seen a 1978 Holden Commodore matching the description of the one she owned. The car was parked off the highway and sitting about 200m away from where Rachelle was found the following day on the morning on June 8. A separate witness recalled seeing the car later on with its boot mysteriously open in the same location at 11pm. And they claimed that there had been one person standing up next to the vehicle with a second person lying on the ground. Correll's alibi was that he drove from Camden to Campbelltown to meet his partner on June 7. 5 5

Prime suspect in horrific cold case murder of 23-year-old woman is mysteriously found dead in Thailand
Prime suspect in horrific cold case murder of 23-year-old woman is mysteriously found dead in Thailand

Daily Mail​

time5 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Prime suspect in horrific cold case murder of 23-year-old woman is mysteriously found dead in Thailand

The suspected killer of a young woman whose partially burned body was found in bushland in NSW more than 20 years ago has been found dead in Thailand. Accused serial rapist and murderer Kevin Steven Correll, 69, died while on holiday in the South East Asian country last week. Correll was identified by police as the most likely to have killed 23-year-old car saleswoman Rachelle Childs on June 8 in 2001. Police did not charge anyone over her murder after the early investigation was repeatedly botched. Ms Child's body was found dumped in bushland in Gerroa, south of Sydney, about 100km away from her home. Unleaded petrol had been poured over her face and other parts of her body in what had been an apparent attempt to hide DNA evidence. She was found partially undressed and was likely either smothered or strangled to death. Authorities in Thailand have said the details surrounding the death of Correll remain a mystery. A member of Correll's family said police turned up to his son Mitchell's house to inform them an autopsy that was already underway. 'Not sorry he's gone just sorry that Rachelle's family aren't going to get the justice that they so deserve,' they told the Daily Telegraph. His estranged daughter, Jazz, found out her father was dead after speaking to her brother on the phone Saturday. 'I feel sad for his many victims,' she told the publication. Consular assistance is being provided to Correll's family in Australia, a DFAT spokesman confirmed. Many believe the initial police investigation into Ms Child's death had been thoroughly mishandled by local police before they handed it off to homicide detectives. Local police lost a crucial piece of CCTV footage which showed Ms Childs with what could have been her murderer at a petrol station on the night of her death. Other mistakes by the police unit included one officer who contaminated DNA found on a bedsheet in her car and others who did not collect her phone records properly. Correll was Ms Child's boss at the used car dealership, Camden Holden, where they both worked when she died. He was voluntarily questioned on three occasions by police regarding her death but detectives were unable to gather enough evidence to convict him. This is despite the fact that his alibi for the night of Ms Child's death could not be corroborated. Correll had previously been in court accused of rape. In once incident in the 1980s a woman's screams attracted police, who found him with his pants down, and she told them she was being assaulted. Correll was charged but a jury found him not guilty later in court. He had three other women also accused him of rape in separate incidents but was found not guilty in court. In the 1980s personal attacks against alleged victims in the witness box over their clothing or dating history was common. Another of his accusers said he had threatened her with a knife and threatened to kill her children. Correll was one of the last people to see Ms Childs alive when she left work the day before her death. Other employees recalled her telling them she was going to meet up with someone at the Bargo Hotel that evening but she did not say who it was. There was no CCTV inside the hotel and police did not manage to question everyone who was there on that night. After the meet Ms Childs rang her sister for a brief chat which was the last anybody ever heard from her. A motorist who was driving along the road where Ms Childs was found recalled to police having seen a 1978 Holden Commodore matching the description of the one she owned. The car was parked off the highway about 200m away from where Ms Childs was found the following day around 10.20pm on June 7. Another witness recalled seeing the car later with its boot open in the same location at 11pm. They told police there had been one person standing up next to the car while a second person was lying on the ground. Correll's alibi was that he drove from Camden to Campbelltown to meet his partner on June 7. He had been in a three-month long-distance relationship with a Thai woman when he died.

A chance to change: the Sydney home helping break cycles of trauma, violence and jail
A chance to change: the Sydney home helping break cycles of trauma, violence and jail

The Guardian

time6 hours ago

  • The Guardian

A chance to change: the Sydney home helping break cycles of trauma, violence and jail

Josh* says he's not a violent man, but he has done violent things. It was only after a quarter of his life spent in and out of prison that he came to see the violence didn't happen in a vacuum. 'I had a pretty crap upbringing,' he says, sitting in the courtyard of a nondescript home on a quiet street in inner Sydney. The 42-year-old Gamilaroi man is warm and a fast talker. 'It was me and my brother,' he says. 'I didn't know my parents that well. There was always drugs and alcohol in the home, so I was pretty broken there.' Josh says his childhood was marked by run-ins with the police for breaking into homes and theft. 'It's sort of the lifestyle that I wanted when I was a kid,' he says. 'It's weird because that's what we thought was cool. Violence was accepted, drugs were accepted.' When he was about 30, married and with a family, his brother died by suicide. 'That's when my whole life changed,' he says. 'That's when I started using drugs hard, and that's when the domestic violence started.' Thousands of men in New South Wales prisons have carved a similar path through life. But Josh is among the lucky few who have received help to change it. Last June the number of people held on remand in NSW, and the number of Indigenous people in prison, reached a record high. The same month the Minns government passed legislation making it harder for domestic violence offenders who commit serious offences to get bail. But this had only a small impact on the custody population, according to Jackie Fitzgerald, the executive director at the Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research (Bocsar). The real driver, Fitzgerald says, has been the number of people charged with lower level domestic violence offences such as intimidation and breaching apprehended domestic violence orders. With more men in prison on domestic violence offences, experts say the obvious question is what is being done to prevent them reoffending on release. 'We know prison doesn't rehabilitate,' says Jess Hill, an investigative journalist and domestic violence advocate. A 2018 report concluded there was no difference in the likelihood of reoffending between offenders who start the domestic violence-focused program in prison – DVEQUIPS – and those who don't. But in any case these are offered only to the 14% of domestic violence inmates who have been sentenced for violent offences. The rest have been convicted on less serious charges or have yet to be tried. Rainbow Lodge is a home for men who are on bail or who have just been released from prison. It's where Josh came some months ago. He had been remanded in custody for nine months on domestic violence charges when he stood before a judge desperate to get bail. After the death of someone close to him, he had stopped using drugs. This made life inside more dangerous. 'It's hard if you're trying to do good in jail. You don't fit in. 'I was contemplating getting a fake address just to get out of jail,' he says. '[But] if I got out and I was homeless, I would have fallen back in with the old crowd.' He got lucky. The judge, rather than bailing him to live in the community or returning him to prison, opted for a third option: Rainbow Lodge. It's the largest of its kind in the state, and there are just eight rooms. It will soon expand to 13 with funding from the City of Sydney and generally runs with a mix of government and private funding. The ageing terrace on a leafy street in a residential area has a kitchen where the men cook together, and common living spaces. They each have their own room. Each is tidy with artworks and pictures of their families lining the walls. Cultural workers, psychologists and men with lived experience drop in to see the men and run programs such as art and music therapy. Men who have been through the three-month program are told to drop in again when they like, and they regularly do. The gate is always open. Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email 'I know it's safe here,' Josh says. He says he had long felt alone and isolated, but much less so since being at the Lodge. The manager, Claude Robinson, says he gets phone calls every day from lawyers, parole officers and others asking if there is a bed free. There rarely is. The main aim is to break the cycle of offending and jail time. It's not specifically for violent men, but Robinson says it's on the rap sheet for most. 'We take the men nobody else will,' he says. They are men like Jarred, who says he has been in custody on six occasions for domestic violence offences. 'I asked my solicitor to try to get me into a rehab, and two weeks later, he had me in a bed here,' he says after finishing one of the daily programs at the Lodge. 'I'm very lucky to be here. [I like] being around all the boys here that want the same thing as me. 'In prison, it's a totally different environment. It's dangerous. There is a hell on earth, and it's jail. 'If anything you get worse.' The men all have the same undercurrent to their story: trauma and drug use as a Band-Aid. It's a clear cause of their theft or violence offences, Robinson says, therefore it is obvious what needs to be done to stop it – though not easy to achieve. 'For a lot of the guys, they've never been given an opportunity where people take the time to explain what's happened in their lives,' Robinson says. A psychologist who works for corrections and spoke on condition of anonymity says the department is trying to move towards a trauma-informed approach in its programs, but 'it's slow going'. 'I don't think they're finding that the current suite of programs are targeting the right needs.' He says change is slow because it means changing the culture in prisons, and 'treating offenders as people who have trauma issues and working through those issues rather than treating them as a number who don't get anything'. Josh says he couldn't recall anything he learned from domestic violence-focused programs while on a three-year stint in prison. 'EQUIPS is taught out of text books,' he says. '[This] is culture and it stems to your roots,' he says of programs at the Lodge. 'The teachers here, they've all got lived experience, so you relate to them different. They talk to you different.' Josh says his favourite part of the program has been time spent with Uncle Bubbly, one of the elders who helps out at the Lodge. 'He teaches me a lot about being a man,' Josh says, his voice quivering with emotion. Ivan Clarke created one of the programs run specifically for Indigenous men at the Lodge, Healing the Warrior. When Guardian Australia visits a session, held in another location nearby, Clarke is standing in front of a semi-circle of men talking about anxiety and trauma. 'We grew up being singled out for being black,' Clarke tells the men, who frequently nod while he speaks. Clarke tells them how being judged from a young age creates anxiety, which turns into being in a constant fight-or-flight mode. That only compounds in a violent home, he says. 'Think about the fear this creates. That stuff travels with us right into our adult life, if we don't tackle it, it stays with us. Sign up to Breaking News Australia Get the most important news as it breaks after newsletter promotion 'That doesn't make us bad men, it makes us traumatised men.' This is his main message. He says the program works because it's delivered by men like himself who have been through what the men have been through. 'The only way that this has worked is because it's designed by Aboriginal men with lived experience. It's facilitated and delivered to Aboriginal men who are living the experience,' he says. Over a year ago, the Lodge secured funding – and the approval of the governor – to run the same program for men on remand at John Morony Correctional Centre near Windsor, in Sydney's north-west. They wantto expand it to all remand centres. One man now at the Lodge, who cannot be named for legal reasons, did the program when he was in jail. 'To walk into the program and see that it was an elder, man that was awesome,' he says. 'I hadn't seen it in prison before.' He went into juvenile detention at a young age. 'It started the process for me,' he says. He then turned to drugs. 'If I wasn't getting high, I'd still feel the trauma,' he says. He says doing the program while on remand meant he finally had someone he could ask: 'Why am I feeling like this?' 'I'd been trying to get my life straight but I had no one to turn to.' There are few programs when men are on remand, because they are presumed innocent. Yet alleged domestic violence offenders spend an average of three months in custody – some up to a year, Hill says. 'You've got these people in a holding bay and most of the time we're not doing anything with them,' she says. Hill says there needs to be a greater focus on justice reinvestment – focusing on what drives reoffending rather than a purely punitive approach. Asked if she backs what the Lodge is doing, she says she supports whatever has been shown to work. 'Whether it's in prisons or in communities or both, ideally, [justice reinvestment] makes complete sense on every balance sheet, whether that be a fiscal balance sheet or whether it be on a recidivism balance sheet.' Locking up domestic violence offenders costs the state more than $320,000 a day, according to corrective services figures. In the government's budget, released in June, the corrective services budget increased by 35%, from $1.7bn in 2024-25 to $2.4bn. There was an 80% increase in the capital expenditure budget for prisons. Hill says government policy is focused on punishment rather than stopping the cycle of reoffending. 'There's definitely a zeitgeist towards tough on crime. We've seen that all across the country. It's very difficult to get paradigm shifting reform through in Australia, depressingly so.' Nicole Yade, a chief executive at Women's and Girls' Emergency Centre, says: 'It's really not as simple as locking people up and the problems go away.' She sees the complexity first-hand, with more than 200 women and children staying in refuges run by the centre every night. 'An AVO doesn't make a difference, they just continue to breach the AVO and then they're locked up again, and they're out again, and they breach it again, and then the cycle continues. 'If we only work with women and children, we're missing half the story.' 'I don't think that prisons are therapeutic environments, and I'm not sure if that work is possible in a prison, to be honest.' About half the men who come through the Lodge last the full three months. Most of those who drop out end up back in prison. Robinson, who has been on the board of the Lodge since 2014, says that doesn't mean they have lost their chance to change. He knows this because he was once one of those who dropped out. He came through the Lodge in 2006 after four and a half years in prison on drug offences. At that point he says it was more of a halfway house. It didn't have the programs it has today. 'I ended up back in jail six weeks later because I got an inheritance, and I just ended up at the Cross again, sitting in the Astoria Hotel with my girlfriend shooting it all up,' Robinson says. Back in prison he did a program known as Ngara Nura, which has since been axed. He says this is what changed him. 'I remember I got to that program and they said to me: you're not a bad person but your behaviour is unacceptable,' he says. 'No one had ever separated the two, and I think that's what we try to do here in Rainbow.' Robinson and Clarke say support for men who are outside prison is just as important as for those inside. Many domestic violence offenders never reach sentenced custody, with 74% of DV offenders serving their sentence in the community, according to Bocsar. Clarke says it's important for judges to have that third option when they know prison or a return to the community are both wrong. He and Clarke want to see a Lodge equivalent in every region. But they say the key is having men like them with lived experience to run it. Josh is among the 50% of men who complete three months at the Lodge. 'It's given me time to explore who I am and what I really want,' he says. 'I'm still learning today.' The next step, away from the people at the Lodge who have become like family, can be the most difficult. The Lodge helps all those who leave find a house, and stays formally connected with them for another two years to ease their transition. The men are told to visit for a chat or drop into a program whenever they like. 'I know when I leave here I'll stay in close contact with them,' Josh says. 'They're people I want to keep in my life.' He says his life might have been different if he had come to the Lodge 12 years ago, after his brother died. 'I'm not a violent person, but I've done violent things, and when someone's on drugs, they turn into a totally different person. 'I needed help at that moment. It's sad that that's not offered to people. 'They just throw you in jail and forget about you.' Full names of the men interviewed have been redacted

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