logo
BREAKING NEWS ABC personality charged with 40 child abuse and assault offences spanning over three decades

BREAKING NEWS ABC personality charged with 40 child abuse and assault offences spanning over three decades

Daily Mail​04-06-2025
A veteran ABC cameraman has been charged with over 40 child abuse and assault charges spanning over three decades.
Trevor James Scroop, from South Australia, who also did a stint with the Department for Child Protection, was arrested and thrown behind bars in March 2023.
The 65-year-old allegedly abused multiple children over a 34-year period between 1989 and 2023, The Advertiser reports.
He was still employed at the ABC when his alleged offending started.
A suppression order about the details of the alleged offending was revoked in a District Court on Wednesday following a request from prosecutors.
Scroop, from Hillcrest in Adelaide 's southeast, has pleaded not guilty to a multitude of child abuse and offence charges.
The court previously heard Scroop had worked with Indigenous children in the Northern Territory in his role with the Department for Child Protection.
He has been charged with 12 counts of sexual abuse of a child, eight counts of indecent assault, three counts of aggravated indecent assault, one count of gross indecency, six counts of unlawful sexual intercourse, four counts of assault and two counts of aggravated assault.
Scroop is further charged with one count of attempted aggravated inciting or procuring a child to commit an indecent act, one count of aggravated inciting or procuring a child to commit an indecent act, one count of aggravated compelled sexual manipulation, one count of aggravated procuring a child for sexual activity, one count of attempted indecent assault, and three counts of possessing child exploitation material.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Terrified boy savagely beaten by THREE football player bullies at Christian summer camp while fourth filmed
Terrified boy savagely beaten by THREE football player bullies at Christian summer camp while fourth filmed

Daily Mail​

time24 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Terrified boy savagely beaten by THREE football player bullies at Christian summer camp while fourth filmed

A student athlete was filmed being savagely beaten by three football players while taking part in a Christian summer camp. The horrific ordeal, which has gone viral online, occurred during a Fellowship of Christian Athletes (FCA) camp at Presbyterian College in South Carolina on July 7. According to lawyers representing the boy, the perpetrators were DW Daniel High School football players - whose friends also recorded the punch-up. Their football coach, Chris Stone, has been put on leave following the fight. Several students have been criminally charged over the gory attack, the school board announced, without providing further details. Daily Mail has contacted Pickens County Sheriff's Office for further details. In the frightening footage, the victim was punched in the face by one individual before another person attacked him inside a dorm room. The unnamed boy was pushed onto the bed by the two, who continued to assault him. The young man attempted to block their punches with his hands. He was then pushed out of frame as one individual said, 'I got to get in here', before they joined in with the beatdown. While the three carried out the attack, another could be seen filming it. The group then backed away from the boy before one returned to punch him in the head. As the three left the room, one of them said: 'Don't even get up', as another added: 'Watch your s*** next time, you know we are not the same n****.' In a statement to Malarkey News, the boy said his attackers had accused him of using racial slurs prior to the assault, which he has denied. He said the attack left him with a 'serious' concussion, and bruises across his head and ribcage. He added that he is no longer able to participate in combat sports. The law firm representing the boy said the camp was a school-sanctioned event with the FCA renting out the campus when the incident took place. In a statement earlier this week, the Pickens County School District Board of Trustees said that several DW Daniel High students were criminally charged after the fight. They said: 'The full Board of Trustees of the School District of Pickens County was made aware late last week that a very serious incident occurred at a school sponsored football camp at Presbyterian College earlier this month. 'Board members have now seen the disturbing video that is circulating on social media. 'This incident, which involved numerous student athletes, resulted in the injury of one student and criminal charges for several students.' It added: 'This matter is serious, not acceptable, and is being addressed by the administration and law enforcement. 'According to the statement all of those involved are minors, and that they are all facing disciplinary action at school and athletic levels. 'The Board is appalled that this serious incident occurred and that a student was injured during a school-sponsored event.' The football coach of the Daniel High School team Chris Stone has also been placed on administrative paid leave as the district conducts an investigation. Stone was brought in to lead the team in April of this year, with the victim saying in his statement that Stone was inside the building at the time. 'Multiple teammates were coming in and out while I was trapped in my room, but nobody thought to get a coach', the boy said. In a statement, 8th Circuit Solicitor David Stumbo said his office was aware of the fight and was monitoring the situation. The Fellowship of Christian Athletes said that the behavior of those captured on their camp 'falls unacceptably short of our standards'. The law firm said they released the footage in hopes of other people coming forward with information that could help the investigation.

How will Australia's under-16s social media ban be enforced, and which platforms will be exempt?
How will Australia's under-16s social media ban be enforced, and which platforms will be exempt?

The Guardian

time25 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

How will Australia's under-16s social media ban be enforced, and which platforms will be exempt?

Australians using a range of social media platforms including Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, Snapchat and X will need to have their age checked to ensure they're 16 or older when the social media ban comes into effect from early December. Sign up: AU Breaking News email How will it work? And what information will people need to hand over? From 10 December, new laws will apply to platforms that meet the government's definition of an 'age-restricted social media platform', which has the sole or significant purpose of enabling social interaction with two or more users, and which allows users to post material on the service. The government has not specified by name any platforms that will be included in the ban, meaning any site that meets the above definition could be included except if they meet the exemptions released on Wednesday. The prime minister, Anthony Albanese, has said that the covered platforms include – but are not limited to – Facebook, Instagram, X, Snapchat, and YouTube. The communications minister, Anika Wells, said these platforms would be expected to take reasonable steps to deactivate accounts for users under 16, prevent kids registering new accounts, check ages, and also prevent workarounds to bypass the restrictions. The government said platforms would be exempt if they had the primary purpose of: Messaging, emailing, voice calling or video calling. Playing online games. Sharing information about products or services. Professional networking or professional development. Education. Health. Communication between educational institutions and students or their families. Facilitating communication between providers of healthcare and people using those providers' services. It will be up to the eSafety commissioner to determine which platforms meet the criteria for an exemption. In practice, this means that LinkedIn, WhatsApp, Roblox, and Coursera would likely be exempt if assessed to meet the criteria. LinkedIn had previously argued to the government it was not of interest to children. In theory, it could also mean YouTube Kids could be exempt from the ban if it meets the criteria for an exemption, given it does not allow comments on videos. But the government has not confirmed this, and YouTube has not commented on whether it would seek an exemption for its service designed for children. Platforms that have not been named by the government but do not meet the exemption criteria will also need to consider whether they need to bring in age assurance by December. This would include services like Bluesky, Donald Trump's Truth Social platform, Discord and Twitch. A common misconception about the social media ban is that it will only apply to children. In order to ensure teens remain off social media, the platforms will need to check the ages of all user accounts in Australia. How they will do that is not prescribed, but it will be informed by the outcome of the age assurance technology trial, the full report of which is due in August. The government has legislated that although ID checks can be one form of age assurance, it can't be the only one accepted. It's expected Australia will follow a similar path for age assurance that launched in the UK in July, which includes options such as: Allowing banks and mobile providers to confirm a user is over 18. Asking site users to upload a photo that is then matched with photo ID. Use of facial age estimation technology. In addition to that, platforms could potentially infer user ages based on account behaviour or age. For example, if you signed up for Facebook in 2009, you would be over 16 by now. YouTube has also flagged it will use artificial intelligence to determine user ages. Albanese has compared the social media ban to alcohol restrictions, and said there will no doubt be children who manage to get around the ban, but he argued it was still worth doing. In the UK, where age verification was brought in this week for accessing pornography websites, there has been a surge in people using virtual private networks (VPNs), which hide a user's real location, enabling access to blocked websites. Four of the top five free apps on the Apple app store in the UK on Thursday were VPN apps, with Proton, the most popular, reporting a 1,800% increase in downloads. The Australian government has said it expects the platforms will implement 'reasonable steps' to account for how teens may seek to avoid the ban. Platforms that do not take what the eSafety commissioner determines to be 'reasonable steps' to keep kids off their service can face a fine of up to $49.5m that will be determined in the federal court. What 'reasonable steps' means will be up to the commissioner to determine. When asked on Wednesday, Wells said: 'I think reasonable steps is reasonable.' 'These are meant to be working rules, and they also need to sort of correct any errors as they arise. Because these are not set-and-forget rules, these are set-and-support rules. They are world-leading. But this is manifestly too important for us not to have a crack.'

Australia's intelligence boss reveals the common act that is putting the country at risk - so are YOU guilty of it?
Australia's intelligence boss reveals the common act that is putting the country at risk - so are YOU guilty of it?

Daily Mail​

time25 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Australia's intelligence boss reveals the common act that is putting the country at risk - so are YOU guilty of it?

Australia's intelligence boss has warned that people who boast about their access to sensitive information are openly painting themselves as targets for foreign spying operations. ASIO director-general Mike Burgess chided people who held security clearances or who had access to classified information openly promoting themselves on social media at the annual Hawke lecture at the University of South Australia on Thursday. More than 35,000 Australians indicated they had access to classified or private information on a single professional networking site, he said, adding 7000 referred to working in the defence sector and critical technologies. Nearly 2500 boasted about having a security clearance, he said. 'All too often we make it all too easy,' he said. Almost 400 people explicitly said they worked on the AUKUS project, under which Australia will acquire nuclear-powered submarines as the keystone of its military power. Mr Burgess put the cost of espionage - including the theft of intellectual property resulting in lost revenue and responding to incidents - at $12.5 billion in 2023/24. This included cyber spies stealing nearly $2 billion of trade secrets and intellectual property from Australian companies. The number came from a conservative Australian Institute of Criminology analysis that took into account details for ASIO investigations, he said. Hackers stealing commercially sensitive information from one Australian exporter gave a foreign country a leg up in a subsequent contract negotiation, 'costing Australia hundreds of millions of dollars', Mr Burgess said. The director-general also revealed details of multiple espionage operations as he warned officials, businesses and the general public about interference threats and the impact of lax security. Russian spies were deported in 2022 after an ASIO investigation found they were 'recruiting proxies and agents to obtain sensitive information, and employing sophisticated tradecraft to disguise their activities', he said. Russia, China and Iran were singled out as adversaries but 'you would be genuinely shocked by the number and names of countries trying to steal our secrets', he said. ASIO, the nation's domestic intelligence agency, disrupted 24 major espionage and foreign interference operations in the last three years, more than the previous eight years combined. Mr Burgess said spies used a security clearance-holder to obtain information about trade negotiations and convinced one state bureaucrat to log into a database to obtain details of people a foreign regime considered dissidents. The director-general also detailed how a foreign intelligence service ordered spies to apply for Australian government jobs, including at national security institutions, to access classified information. Another example included a visiting academic linked to a foreign government breaking into a restricted lab with sensitive technology and filming inside, he said. 'They are just the tip of an espionage iceberg,' Mr Burgess said. Foreign companies tied to intelligence services had also tried to access private data, buy land near military sites and collaborate with researchers developing sensitive technology. 'In recent years, for example, defence employees travelling overseas have been subjected to covert room searches, been approached at conferences by spies in disguise and given gifts containing surveillance devices,' Mr Burgess added. Hackers had also broken into the network of a peak industry body to steal sensitive information about exports and foreign investment, as well as into a law firm to take information about government-related cases, he said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store