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That might soften the blow! Bruce Lehrmann shares a wine with his lawyer - after failing to get $50,000 out of Daily Mail Australia for absurd reason

That might soften the blow! Bruce Lehrmann shares a wine with his lawyer - after failing to get $50,000 out of Daily Mail Australia for absurd reason

Daily Mail​4 days ago
Bruce Lehrmann has been pictured enjoying a glass of wine with lawyer Zali Burrows in a cosy Tasmanian bar after yet another major court loss.
The former political staffer and his solicitor were spotted having an early evening drink at Mary Mary in Hobart's fashionable Salamanca Place, before heading next door to Peppina Italian restaurant.
Lehrmann and Ms Burrows shared a bottle of red with their meal before leaving the Parliament Square precinct so that she could catch a flight back to Sydney on Tuesday.
Earlier in the day, Lehrmann had sent Ms Burrows along to Hobart Magistrates Court to seek a restraining order against a Daily Mail Australia reporter, after he unsuccessfully demanded $50,000 in damages for a story he didn't like.
It is now 15 months since Federal Court judge Michael Lee found on the balance of probabilities that Lehrmann raped his one-time colleague Brittany Higgins in Parliament House.
Six months after Justice Lee ruled Lehrmann had not been defamed by Network Ten during an interview with Ms Higgins, the Centrelink recipient was crying poor in the same court.
Responding to Ten's demand Lehrmann provide $200,000 security to appeal against Justice Lee's decision, Ms Burrows said her client was 'pretty much unemployable' and did not have the funds.
'The only shot he'd probably ever have in making money is by going on OnlyFans or something silly like that,' Ms Burrows told the court.
Justice Wendy Adams ultimately found Lehrmann did not have to put up the $200,000, but he still faces picking up $2million of Ten's legal costs for the original trial if he loses his appeal.
Last week, Lehrmann demanded Daily Mail Australia pay him $50,000 plus legal costs, and take down a story he claimed portrayed him in a bad light.
Lehrmann also sought an interim restraining order against reporter Karleigh Smith who had written the piece about his new life with a 45-year-old mother-of-two in a Tasmanian hamlet.
Daily Mail Australia did not take down the story, did not pay Lehrmann a cent and successfully challenged the interim order on Tuesday after a hearing in Hobart Magistrates Court.
When Ten sought the $200,000 security from Lehrmann, Ms Burrows described her client as 'arguably Australia's most hated man' and said he was too 'scared' to appear in person in the Federal Court.
On Tuesday, he again chose to stay away from proceedings when Ms Burrows sought the interim restraining order.
The court heard the order would cover Lehrmann as well as Kelly Walker, with whom the 30-year-old had been living at Port Huon, about 55km south-west of Hobart.
Lehrmann has been acting as a male nanny to Ms Walker's two sons, who are said to call him 'Uncle Bruce', which was the subject of a story published by Daily Mail Australia on July 1.
Lehrmann and Ms Burrows shared a bottle of red with their meal before leaving the Parliament Square precinct so that she could catch a flight back to Sydney on Tuesday
That story ran under the headline which began: 'Bruce Lehrmann's last chance saloon'.
'We found the despised party boy hiding at the end of the Earth - and he's shacked up with a single mum who has a LOT to say to the local haters,' it continued.
Lehrmann outlined in an affidavit produced for the restraining order application the 'extraordinary and unorthodox' lengths he had gone to avoid publication attention.
'I have been the subject of intense and ongoing media scrutiny since 2021, much of it vile, false and extremely hurtful,' he wrote.
'I have received credible threats to my safety, online abuse, and been physically stalked by journalists or private individuals on multiple occasions.
'I have long suffered mental health trauma because of the coverage, and this has been well documented publicly and in the Federal Court of Australia.
'As a result, I take extraordinary and unorthodox precautions to ensure my safety and wellbeing.'
Ms Burrows claimed Lehrmann had suffered significant distress and psychological injury as a result of being 'pursued' as part of Daily Mail Australia's investigation.
'My client will be providing evidence of personal injury to his mental condition,' she told magistrate Jackie Hartnett.
Ms Burrows claimed Smith and a photographer 'dangerously' followed Lehrmann in a car on a dirt road, which Smith has vehemently denied.
Barrister Nic Edmondson, acting for Smith, said the Sydney-based reporter had only visited Tasmania for work once - to write the story about Lehrmann - and she had not returned to the state since.
Mr Edmondson submitted a restraining order risked unfairly impacting on Smith's freedom of speech and would prevent her writing future stories about Lehrmann.
'She is entitled to engage in the type of conduct that she did, in following Mr Lehrmann and in photographing Mr Lehrmann,' Mr Edmondson said.
Ms Burrows claimed Lehrmann had suffered further psychological harm because Smith was represented by Mark O'Brien Legal, a law firm which had previously acted for him.
Mark O'Brien Legal has been engaged for more than a decade by Daily Mail Australia to provide legal services to the publisher and its journalists.
Ms Hartnett rejected Lehrmann's application for an interim order and set the matter down for a November 13 hearing.
'I am not satisfied on the material before me that an interim order is appropriate,' she said.
Hours later, Lehrmann and Ms Burrows were pictured together by a freelance photographer who had not been commissioned by Daily Mail Australia and had offered the images to other media outlets.
Asked to comment on what had happened in court, Lehrmann said: 'We are very grateful to the magistrate for getting a fast hearing on the case.'
Ms Burrows is also representing Lehrmann in another case in which he has pleaded not guilty to stealing a Toyota Prado from a farm in the Huon Valley, south of Hobart.
That matter returns to court in September.
Lehrmann sued Ten and presenter Lisa Wilkinson over a February 2021 interview on The Project in which Ms Higgins alleged she had been raped on a couch at Parliament House almost two years earlier.
While Lehrmann was not named, he claimed he was easily identifiable as the onetime colleague Ms Higgins said had sexually assaulted her in the office of Senator Linda Reynolds.
The defamation case came after Lehrmann, who has always denied raping Ms Higgins, faced a criminal trial which was abandoned due to juror misconduct in 2022.
Lehrmann is separately accused of twice raping a woman in October 2021 the morning after they met at a strip club in Toowoomba, west of Brisbane.
Ms Burrows filed an application in Toowoomba District Court in June seeking a permanent stay in Lehrmann's pending trial on the rape charges.
Lehrmann's appeal against Justice Lee's decision in the defamation matter is listed for hearing in the Federal Court on August 20.
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Sione Tuipulotu interview: Private school saved me from life of crime
Sione Tuipulotu interview: Private school saved me from life of crime

Telegraph

time28 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Sione Tuipulotu interview: Private school saved me from life of crime

Sione Tuipulotu is talking about his childhood growing up in Frankston, a suburb of Melbourne. It is not some idyllic recall of golden days. The Scotland captain will happily talk all day, but he does not do cliched answers. He did not grow up dreaming of playing international rugby, whether for his native Australia or Scotland, for whom he qualifies via his grandmother, Anne Thompson, who in 1963 moved with her parents and siblings from Greenock, outside Glasgow, to within an hour of Melbourne. No, at the age of 13 Tuipulotu feared, in his own words, that he was 'going down the wrong path'. 'Gang violence was always around but I was more scared of my dad than any gang in our neighbourhood,' says Tuipulotu. 'There is not much opportunity for kids where I was from. Boredom gets the best of a lot of kids in my area. You are bored and looking for something to do and quite often that leads to trouble. I stopped going to school a lot and I was getting into trouble when I did go to school.' 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The days when he 'ran down the right wing' in football quickly came to an end. Despite the distractions as a pupil at the Elisabeth Murdoch College, he excelled at several sports, but his rugby prowess attracted the attention of a private school, St Kevin's College, which offered him a full scholarship. Yet this is only the first stage of his journey from the backstreets of Frankston to a place in the British and Irish Lions side to face Australia in the first Test on Saturday. He was a kid looking for a purpose, and more importantly, for someone to put their arm around him. Do that, and he would give you everything. That it was a Scottish arm changed his life. The early days at his new school, however, initially left him cold. 'At first, I wanted to make my parents proud because it was an opportunity they could never afford themselves. But for the first couple of years, I had a chip on my shoulder. I thought none of the kids were like me. I didn't have anything similar with them; their parents were wealthy. When I came back home on the train, I would take my blazer off because I was embarrassed. I didn't want to come back to Frankston and all the boys see me in this fancy blazer. 'At one stage they were at a crossroads to get rid of me, because I was still getting in trouble. But one teacher called Robert Windle, who went to school in Edinburgh, put his arm around me and drove me through school. He had been to Merchiston, and it was funny that I would later end up playing with a number of boys who went there. 'He was the first XV coach but was also more mentoring, not on my rugby side, because he knew that came easy to me, but for the school stuff. I played for the first XV as soon as I joined the school at 14, I was physically developed for my age although at that stage I was more of a finesse player. It was only when I got older that I fell in love with the collision aspect of the game. 'Bob's interest made me really competitive. Once someone showed they cared about me, I didn't want to let them down and that's when everything changed for me. 'School became so important because I would spend three hours every day on the train to get there and back, so by the time I got back after rugby training it was late. I started taking rugby really seriously then, too, and zoned in on what I wanted to do. 'Going into my last year in school, I would keep my blazer on when I got off the train. I had figured out in my brain that the school had saved me from a lot of things and rugby had kept me busy.' 'We were overlooked by Australian rugby' If those formative years proved critical, when he left knowing that he wanted to become a professional rugby player, the frustrations and disillusionment of the 13-year-old Tuipulotu soon returned as he felt players in Melbourne were not given a fair chance by the Australian system, even when the Rebels were established as a Super Rugby franchise. 'I can give you a list of the Melbourne boys who were let go by the Rebels, and it would surprise you,' he says. 'For example, I played with Emmanuel Meafou, who is at Toulouse now. He was told he was never going to be fit enough. Hunter Paisami was told he was too small and would never play Super Rugby. 'It was the same for Monty Ioane. These were all Melbourne kids who didn't get the opportunity to play for Melbourne. That's all we wanted to do at the time, represent our state. There's a tight-knit community down there in Victorian rugby, and we felt like we were always overlooked in the grand scheme of Australian rugby because we grew up in what was perceived as a non-rugby state. They used us for marketing purposes, because we were Melbourne kids, but we never ended up getting much of an opportunity. 'When I left Melbourne, I left angry, and I saw so many other kids miss out on opportunities. Later on in your career, you think that it was meant to happen, but I definitely still have that chip on my shoulder of being turned away. I will carry it for the rest of my career. 'It is something I'm really passionate about, even on this tour because at the end of the day, I still represent Melbourne kids. That's where I'm from. I know a lot of those kids are supporting the Wallabies as they should, but even if a couple of them support the Lions because I'm playing for them, then I will feel that I have won.' After seeing the Rebels squad recruit many Western Force players when it was originally cut from Super Rugby in 2017, he moved on to Japan before Scotland came calling, with an offer to join Glasgow Warriors. It felt like another arm around his shoulder, and once again he was prepared to give all that he had. Which brings us to his sense of identity. Some have criticised the number of players in the Lions squad who were not born or raised in Britain or Ireland. Tuipulotu does not shy away from the issue. 'I really understand the people that are angry,' he adds. 'I'm not angry that anyone feels like that, to be honest. If anything, I understand it. If I open my mouth and they don't hear a Scottish accent, I understand how that might upset people, but my accent is my accent. 'When I left Australia, I wasn't ready to play for the Wallabies. I have never said that. All I said was that my talent was mismanaged. Going to Scotland, my talent was managed correctly. The coaches had a massive [impact] on my career, first Danny Wilson, then Franco Smith and finally Gregor Townsend. 'I can't say enough about Gregor because when I got to Scotland, I wasn't the finished product – I'm still not the finished product, I know that – but I needed time in the saddle to learn and he gave me that. 'He stuck by me maybe because he could see my potential and the reason for my success is because he stuck by me. He put his arm around me and I never want to let him down because of that. 'It was the same with my mum and dad when they sent me to that school, it was the same with my teacher when he put his arm around me, I didn't want to let my coach down. I think that is my personality, I am driven by not wanting to let people down. 'I feel like I am where I am supposed to be. I've captained Scotland now. I've gained many, many new friends and my son was born in Glasgow.' 'Boys from back home told me to shut up' Tuipulotu's backstory means that the Scotland captain is ready to face his native Australia with arguably an extra edge compared to his team-mates. He is primed for any abuse from the Australian players or supporters. 'I am ready for it,' he adds with a chuckle. 'Like I said, I play my best rugby when there's a big chip on my shoulder. If they are going to add to the chip, it just helps me and I will get more emotionally invested so that will only be a good thing for me. 'It comes with the territory. There are going to be things said on both sides. That's why I love rugby, that's why I love sport. It is not the things that you say are necessarily going to get the job done. It is the things that you do. There is always going to be noise, it is the biggest tour in the world, but it is cool that you get to answer it.' There are still some answers to deliver after Australia's defeat by Scotland last November when Joseph Sua'ali'i lined up Tuipulotu at centre for a massive tackle, only to injure himself in the process. Tuipulotu gave him a send-off but Sua'ali'i delivered a pointed warning, 'I'll see you next time'. 'It was quite a noisy game,' the Lions 12 recalls. 'But that made the game so fun for me. I know a lot of those boys from back home and played rugby with them. They were telling me to shut up because I was so motivated, but it was all good fun.' Finally, I ask him about his tattoo and the answer should leave no one in any doubt about his commitment to the Lions' cause. It is from the cover of an album by Lauryn Hill, the American rapper. ' The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill is my mum's favourite album,' he adds. 'We grew up on Lauryn Hill's music. It was quite a spontaneous tattoo, to be honest, because I'm not covered in them. I got it because of my mum and the influence she had on me. The story of my upbringing is that I was pretty terrified of my dad, but my mum raised me and I know how excited she is to see me play for the Lions. All my family in Australia had the red merchandise even before I had! 'Me playing for the Lions is as big an achievement for them as it is for me. To get on this tour, you have to be lucky in your own life, but to be there, you have to be lucky to have parents to have put you in a position to do well. That's the story for me. Me playing in this tour is not just a representation of my own work but also theirs. And my granny is going to be there with her bells and whistles on, too. I am just desperate to contribute as much as I can.'

Nigel Farage pledges to tackle 'lawless Britain' with radical plan that could see offenders sent to jails in El Salvador
Nigel Farage pledges to tackle 'lawless Britain' with radical plan that could see offenders sent to jails in El Salvador

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Nigel Farage pledges to tackle 'lawless Britain' with radical plan that could see offenders sent to jails in El Salvador

Nigel Farage will has set out a radical new crime package designed to tackle 'lawless Britain'. The Reform leader will take the fight to Labour on crime with a series of measures that will require the police to investigate all crimes – and see serious offenders spend years more behind bars. Mr Farage will pledge a 'zero tolerance' approach designed to halve Britain's crime rate. Writing in the Daily Mail today, Mr Farage says he is putting criminals 'on notice' that Britain's soft-touch justice system will come to an end if Reform win the next election. Measures include the introduction of 'saturation stop and search' in high crime areas, with as many as one in five people stopped to send out a message that crime will not be tolerated. Thousands more prison places will be built on disused Ministry of Defence land. And the most serious offenders could be forced to serve their time in jails overseas, including in El Savador's notorious supermax prisons. Mr Farage warns that law-abiding members of the public have been left felling 'helpless' by the way crime has been 'normalised' in recent years – and pledge to 'take back control of our streets from the criminals who currently plague them'. 'Reform UK will be the toughest party on law and order this country has ever seen,' he writes. 'We will cut crime in half. We will take back control of our streets, we will take back control of our courts and prisons. If you're a criminal, I am putting you on notice. In 2029 you have a choice to make: be a law-abiding citizen or face serious justice.' Mr Farage will set out details of the package today as he begins a new campaign on fixing Britain's 'broken' criminal justice system. He is likely to face tough questioning over how Reform would find the billions of pounds needed to recruit thousands more police officers and build a string of new prisons. Reform sources said the bill would be dwarfed by the annual cost of crime in the UK, which is estimated at up to £250 billion. The plan will begin with a 'zero tolerance' approach to policing. Along with expanded use of stop and search, under-18s in high crime areas could face curfew orders. Police forces will be ordered to investigate all reported crimes and arrest all those caught shoplifting to tackle the epidemic of thefts plaguing the retail sector. Reform will also adopt a 'commit the crime, pay the price' approach that will lead to some offenders facing dramatically longer sentences. Sex offenders and those convicted of serious violence or carrying a knife will no longer be eligible for early release. Those handed life sentences will serve them in full. By contrast, Labour is currently considering proposals that would make most offenders eligible for release after serving just a third of their sentence. A new 'totting up' system will mean that anyone convicted of a third serious offence could face life in jail. Mr Farage will argue that Reform could free up more than 10,000 prison places by deporting most foreign criminals currently languishing in British jails. A further 12,400 prison places will be created using pre-fabricated structures erected on MoD land – a process Reform sources said could take as little as 18 months. The party will also look to do deals to create a 'dynamic' system that would allow up to 10,000 convicts to serve part of their sentence in jails overseas. The last Tory government looked at deals to send prisoners to the Netherlands to ease overcrowding, while Labour is reported to have held discussions with Estonia. Reform will cast its net wider, with sources saying the worst offenders, such as Soham murderer Ian Huntley, could be sent to brutal jails in El Salvador, where Donald Trump has been deporting alleged foreign gang members. Labour dismissed the proposals last night, saying Reform MPs had voted against recent measures to crack down on crime. Policing minister Dame Diana Johnson said: 'They should focus more on practical solutions to support our police, combat crime, deliver justice for victims of crime rather than chasing headlines , spouting slogans and trying to divide communities.'

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

The Sun

timean hour 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

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