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BREAKING NEWS Childcare workers sacked after investigation into 'nappy rash' photos - as parents are notified

BREAKING NEWS Childcare workers sacked after investigation into 'nappy rash' photos - as parents are notified

Daily Mail​19 hours ago
Three childcare workers have been sacked following an investigation into 'inappropriate' nappy rash images of children at an Adelaide daycare.
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Revealed: Footy great's 'gut-wrenching' act straight after he killed the 'love of his life' in horror crash when he was more than four times over the drink-drive limit
Revealed: Footy great's 'gut-wrenching' act straight after he killed the 'love of his life' in horror crash when he was more than four times over the drink-drive limit

Daily Mail​

time34 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Revealed: Footy great's 'gut-wrenching' act straight after he killed the 'love of his life' in horror crash when he was more than four times over the drink-drive limit

Former Geelong player Ray Card pleaded guilty on Monday to a charge of culpable driving causing the death of his wife, Amanda McDonald, during a car accident following a wedding in Lara on Saturday, November 16, 2024. The County Court of Victoria heard that Card, 68, had a blood alcohol reading of 0.226 following the crash. Card had also pleaded guilty to a second charge of causing serious injury to a 19-year-old woman, who had been in a separate car travelling in the other direction at the time the incident occurred. The court heard that Card and McDonald, who was described as the 'love of his life', had been drinking before leaving the wedding to drive home in the former footballer's Ford Ranger. The pair had stopped at a restaurant before driving onto the Ring Road heading towards Bacchus Marsh Road. They went around a bend and saw headlights coming towards them, with Card braking before swerving right across the road into the opposite lane. Both cars collided on their passenger sides, and McDonald was killed in the crash. Card (pictured) also pleaded guilty to a second charge of causing serious injury to a 19-year-old woman, who had to be airlifted to hospital The 19-year-old woman, who was sitting in the passenger seat of the other car, a BWM, was airlifted to The Alfred Hospital and later underwent multiple surgeries. On Monday, Card's barrister, Geoff Steward, also told the court that the body camera footage captured following the accident showed the former AFL player's 'Gut-wrenching, life-changing, grief-stricken remorse'. 'It's hard to watch, his despair, his grief,' Steward said. He then pointed to how Card's immediate concern was for his wife and not himself. The former Geelong player had also shown his remorse to the 19-year-old woman who was injured in the crash, writing her a letter to apologise. He had also asked for his own bail to be revoked. McDonald's family had also been forgiving of Card, with Steward calling their statement an 'extraordinary' display of support. Steward noted one of McDonald's daughters said that Card 'always will be a part of this family.' In total, 14 character references were given by the defence. Former Geelong captain Damien Bourke was among those who appeared in court. Bourke said: 'Ray's always been one to give himself, rather than take anything.' Crown Prosecutor Jordan Johnson also read victim impact statements to the court. In one statement, the parents of the 19-year-old, who was airlifted to hospital following the incident, expressed their terror after finding out about the crash and had driven to the site of the incident, before heading to the Geelong hospital and then The Alfred, searching for their daughter. They added that she had suffered 'terrible stress' during her long and slow recovery. The woman has suffered from PTSD as a result and had spent her 20th birthday, Christmas and New Year in a wheelchair. She has also suffered from concussion symptoms and pain. 'It breaks my heart to see her suffer like this,' her mother wrote. Card made 110 appearances for Geelong between 1977 and 1987.

Wild moment inmates start trading blows before their visiting loved ones join in amid violent jailhouse brawl
Wild moment inmates start trading blows before their visiting loved ones join in amid violent jailhouse brawl

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Wild moment inmates start trading blows before their visiting loved ones join in amid violent jailhouse brawl

A violent brawl between inmates and visitors erupted inside a New South Wales prison when a routine visiting session went wrong. The clash at Bathurst Correctional Centre, 210 kilometres west of Sydney, kicked off on the morning of February 8 and left one prison officer hospitalised with a broken arm. Shocking footage obtained by Nine News showed one male inmate walking across the visitor's room towards another prisoner sitting with loved ones. The pair, aged 29 and 36, then allegedly started throwing a series of punches. The altercation escalated quickly, drawing in three other visitors, two women aged 28 and 32, and a man aged 32. The male visitor was seen allegedly joining in on the attack when the two inmates failed to break it up, before five corrections officers were forced to step in. A third inmate also tried to break up the brawl before he was dragged away by a guard. One corrections officer ended up being crushed as the fight carried on, leaving him in hospital with a broken arm. Public Service Association president Nicole Jess said it was lucky more people, especially women and children visiting, weren't hurt. 'We've got alert systems that are in place, but we don't know what the visitors are doing and then they come in and they know someone that we just don't have the alerts on, and something like that erupts,' she said. Police have charged the 32-year-old woman with assault and affray. The 32-year-old man and 28-year-old woman have also been charged with affray, along with the two inmates. All five appeared in Bathurst Local Court this week.

BREAKING NEWS Australian 'criminal royalty' Bertie Kidd dies at 91 after extraordinary 60-year crime career
BREAKING NEWS Australian 'criminal royalty' Bertie Kidd dies at 91 after extraordinary 60-year crime career

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

BREAKING NEWS Australian 'criminal royalty' Bertie Kidd dies at 91 after extraordinary 60-year crime career

One of the most prolific major criminals Australia ever produced has died aged 91. Lifelong criminal Bertie Kidd died in a Melbourne hospice this week. For 60 years, Kidd was among the most notorious identities within the local underworld, infamous to several generations of cops and crooks. His own lawyer once suggested Kidd was 'the most complete criminal' in the nation's history. Others have referred to him as 'Australian criminal royalty.' Kidd was 85 when he was released from prison in 2018, amid warnings from those who knew his background and capabilities he was just as dangerous as ever. Kidd was a master safe-breaker, forger of currency and fixer of races. He made millions more staging gold bullion thefts, armed robberies and home invasions. He has also been a prime suspect in two underworld murders and was investigated over the near-fatal shooting of another gangster, all of which he denies doing. While largely unknown outside criminal, correctional and policing circles, English-born Kidd hits the news every decade or so. The last time was in 2015 when Immigration Minister Peter Dutton was determined he be deported the second he stepped foot outside jail. Kidd arrived in this country in 1947 as a 14-year-old as a Ten Pound Pom and has since then considered himself Australian. His family has said any move to send him back to the country of his birth would be 'inhumane'. He started in Melbourne, took his trade up to Sydney, and spent 27 years in prison during three major stints - much of it in maximum security. Kidd got away clean with the vast majority of his crimes, which he likes to call 'projects'. For three years the federal government fought to have the frail felon deported, a battle he won due to his 1950s National Service. He was born in London in 1933 and christened Bertram Douglas Kidd but changed his first name to Robert in the 1960s. He has remained known as Bert or Bertie. 'Even though I've been caught for some, I might have got away with others,' Kidd told Daily Mail Australia in 2019.

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