logo
Photos reveal bloody aftermath of $100k Sydney staffy attack

Photos reveal bloody aftermath of $100k Sydney staffy attack

News.com.au16-07-2025
Graphic photos have revealed the extent of a 'violent and terrifying' staffy attack involving a woman and her 11-year-old Shih Tzu in Sydney's south.
Bridal shop owner Mary Ioannidis, 54, was awarded more than $100,000 in damages this week in the NSW District Court after her dog Lexi was attacked in April 2020 by a greyhound Staffordshire bull terrier.
The court heard how the terrier was unrestrained when it launched at Ms Ioannidis and her dog, who was on a retractable leash, while on a walk on a suburban street in Mortdale.
Photos provided to news.com.au by Ms Ioannidis's legal team show the extent of the attack, which left Lexi with an amputated left leg.
One photo shows Ms Ioannidis sitting down after the attack, covered in blood.
Shine Lawyers associate Brittany Vella said her client had suffered 'profound consequences as a result' with the court finding Ms Ioannidis had been left with PTSD as a result of the attack.
The staffy's owner, owned by Melissa Carretero, was ordered to pay a total $101,788.63 in damages plus Ms Ioannidis' legal costs.
'There's not just the physical injuries, but long-term psychological trauma as well,' Ms Vella told news.com.au.
'Mary and Lexi were simply out for a walk when they were set upon by an unrestrained dog- an animal which dwarfed Lexi and which would have easily killed her had it not been for Mary's desperate efforts to save her.
'This was a truly horrifying attack and I hope [Tuesday's] judgment serves as a warning for dog owners to make sure their pets are always restrained and under control.'
The attack
Ms Ioannidis told the court she was left bloodied as she tried to save Lexi during the attack.
She said the large dog kept throwing Lexi from 'side to side' and ripped her 'whole paw' off at the joint.
'He kept running back and launching at me and he just kept attacking, and he just didn't stop. He didn't stop, and I was falling over and trying to get on my feet,' she said.
Ms Ioannidis also told the court she had her fingernails 'completely ripped off' in the chaos of the attack.
The court heard how there was luckily a vet nearby that provided Lexi with emergency treatment, including amputation of the leg at the shoulder.
Lexi has since died due to unrelated causes.
Ms Ioannidis told the court the trauma left her with crippling anxiety and said she has lost 10 kilograms since the attack.
Her partner said Ms Ioannidis now 'locks herself in the house' and said it was 'very hard to persuade her to leave.'
'Mentally, I don't cope with very much at the moment or since,' Ms Ioannidis told the court.
'Just my anxiety, being outside, having to run into any dogs. I didn't want to have to deal with any people.'
'I don't do anything. I don't want to go anywhere. It doesn't leave my head. I can't sleep. If I go for a walk, it has to be with someone, and I'm constantly looking over my shoulder.'
Staffy owner's defence
Ms Carretero admitted her dog attacked Lexi but denied it attacked Ms Ioannidis.
She argued to the court that Ms Ioannidis should not be entitled to recover damages for psychiatric injury suffered 'as a result of what happened to Lexi'.
She also argued Ms Ioannidis continued to work and often went to the gym since the attack.
District Court Judge John Catsanos SC found Ms Ioannidis had suffered economic loss and would continue to do so due to her PTSD.
'On balance, I find that the dog attack caused the plaintiff to suffer psychiatric injury in the form of PTSD,' Judge Catsanos said in his decision.
'[Ms Ioannidis] suffers a genuine psychiatric condition as a result of the attack.'
Judge Catsanos ruled damages for $49,500 for non-economic losses to the mental harm caused, as well as $15,000 for future mental health treatments and $35,000 due to past and future lost income.
He also ruled an amount of $2,288.63 for medication and mental health costs, which Ms Ioannidis had paid since the attack, with the total damages coming to $101,788.63.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Chilling picture emerges as death threat towards Melbourne coach Simon Goodwin rocks the AFL
Chilling picture emerges as death threat towards Melbourne coach Simon Goodwin rocks the AFL

News.com.au

time26 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

Chilling picture emerges as death threat towards Melbourne coach Simon Goodwin rocks the AFL

A chilling photo of Melbourne Demons coach Simon Goodwin's vehicle has sparked widespread fears for the 48-year-old's safety following his side's heartbreaking defeat to St Kilda on Sunday. The Saints were comprehensively outplayed through the opening three quarters, with Melbourne looking well on the way to victory after being up by 46 points. FOX FOOTY, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every match of every round in the 2025 Toyota AFL Premiership Season LIVE in 4K, with no ad-breaks during play. New to Kayo? Join now and get your first month for just $1. Then the script got completely flipped in the fourth quarter as the Saints stormed home with a remarkable Nasiah Wanganeen-Milera goal after the final siren giving St Kilda a memorable win. You can watch the miracle comeback in the player above. However, the historic feat was marred shortly after as fears for the Demons coach's safety emerged. A social media post of what appeared to be Goodwin's car was shared online just after 6pm by an anonymous account named 'Kozzy Owns You'. The post implied someone was waiting by his vehicle in an underground car park, ready to harm him. 'I'm currently waiting outside Simon Goodwin's car: Don't fret, Melbourne fans you won't need to worry any further,' the post read. Footy fans were quick to call out the unhinged behaviour, as the matter was referred by the club to the AFL Integrity Unit. 'I know passionate supporters can get upset sometimes, but this isn't acceptable,' one person wrote. 'Yeah nah, I think this one ends in court champ,' another commented. 'Dude, it's just a game. I've learned to laugh at the amount of bad footy being played this year … not get mad about it. Maybe you should take my advice,' a third added. Shockingly, on Monday morning, the account doubled down on the threats, this time to Goodwin and various other news networks who reported on the vile post. 'I f**king own you,' the post read, which tagged 9News, the AFL, Fox Footy, the Herald Sun and The Age. understands the car in the image does not belong to Goodwin and the photo was not taken at Marvel Stadium, where his vehicle was parked on Sunday night. The AFL has been contacted for comment. Fan banned for death threat to Carlton coach Michael Voss The Goodwin threat came just two weeks after a Collingwood supporter was banned from the MCG for five years for threatening Carlton coach Michael Voss. 'I'd like to report 23 missing persons and pre-emptively report the murder of Michael Voss,' the threat read. Speaking about the ordeal earlier this month, Voss said it exposed the dark side of working in the footy world. 'I always felt like football made you feel like you belong – and that's what football clubs are all about,' Voss said. 'You have a sense of belonging, it's about families, about communities. It's about bringing people together. 'I also remember as a 12-year-old at Morningside Football Club and having a brand new footy … it was like the best gift I ever got, it was my first brand-new Sherrin. 'I used to smell it and always have it in my hands. It sort of really inspired me to ultimately follow my dreams – and that was really impactful on me. 'And then I've also seen the dark side of football, where we blame, we become victims, and it's this environment where things are quite toxic. We think showing passion is about anger – and it's not about that at all. 'There's a way we need to behave and there's a way we need to go about it – and when things are tough, you've got to show that support the right way. Not the wrong way.'

Former Ready Steady Cook host Peter Everett charged with sexually touching 16-year-old boy
Former Ready Steady Cook host Peter Everett charged with sexually touching 16-year-old boy

News.com.au

timean hour ago

  • News.com.au

Former Ready Steady Cook host Peter Everett charged with sexually touching 16-year-old boy

Former Ready Steady Cook host Peter Everett has been charged with sexually touching a 16-year-old boy. The Australian TV host was arrested at a home in Toukley on the NSW Central Coast on Saturday, NSW Police confirmed to Officers from the Tuggerah Lakes Police District began investigating the alleged incident the day before Everett's arrest. 'Following extensive inquiries, police arrested a 66-year-old man at a home at Toukley,' a statement from NSW Police read. 'The man was taken to Wyong Police Station where he was charged with sexually touch another person without consent.' Everett spent Saturday night behind bars ahead of his hearing at Parramatta Local Court on Sunday. He pleaded not guilty to the charge. His next court appearance is scheduled on September 3 at Wyong Local Court. has contacted Everett for comment. Everett, who was granted bail during the hearing, reportedly denied the charge when he was approached outside court by Nine News. Everett, whose TV career began in 1998 as an interior designer on Changing Rooms, has fallen on hard times in recent years, opening up in 2022 about selling his prized possessions to make ends meet. Everett, who was best known for hosting the Channel 10 daytime cooking show Ready Steady Cook for five years until his abrupt axing in 2011, told 4BC Afternoons at the time he had been auctioning off his personal items just 'to survive'. 'There's been a lot of sales on my behalf. I'm selling anything … (I'm) not down to the garage sale yet, but I've been selling off a lot of things,' Everett candidly said. 'It really hasn't been an easy time. It hasn't. The entertainment industry, a lot of my friends far less fortunate than I have had it really, really bad.' Host Rob McKnight then asked if Everett was struggling financially, 'You literally are at the point where you're selling stuff off?' 'I'm very open about that. You've got to survive somehow,' Everett answered. 'They're only possessions. Funnily enough, during this Covid time, sales were big. Auctions were huge. So it turned out that it was a good time to sell. 'It's kept me going, I can tell you. So thank you everyone for buying.' Everett last appeared on Aussie screens on season 3 of The Celebrity Apprentice Australia in 2013. In a wide-ranging interview with in 2019, Everett said he was doing it 'a bit tough financially', and was finding it difficult to get his foot back in the door in showbiz. 'When you're not getting an income and you're just using what you've got, it's very dire, let me tell you,' he said. 'It worries me too. I don't have an agent. I'm not the best at seeking work. I don't want to annoy anyone I know in the industry and ask if there are any jobs going. 'I'm not doing very much. I do a little bit of charity here and there but not very much else at all. I feel I still have a lot to offer and I want to offer it.' Despite resurrecting Ready Steady Cook 's ratings when he replaced Nick Stratford as host in 2006, Everett was brutally sacked before Christmas in 2010. 'I was at the airport about to leave on a trip and I got a phone call from Rory Callaghan (who was the chief executive officer of Southern Star Productions at the time) saying that I think I'm greater than the show,' Everett told us. 'I said [to him], 'I am a large part of the show, but I just want the best for the show'. 'I said, 'If my ego was so great and I was greedy I would have asked for a pay rise', which I hadn't had in three years, even with the great ratings we had. 'He said, 'While you're away, we're going to interview new people for the show'.' Everett lived in Redfern for several years, having bought a home in the Sydney suburb in 2004. He later sold it for $1.4 million in 2012.

‘Just do it': Abbie Chatfield sparks outrage with shocking call to American ‘incels'
‘Just do it': Abbie Chatfield sparks outrage with shocking call to American ‘incels'

News.com.au

time2 hours ago

  • News.com.au

‘Just do it': Abbie Chatfield sparks outrage with shocking call to American ‘incels'

Abbie Chatfield is under fire for a video heavily insinuating 'incels' should harm US President Donald Trump. The Sydney-based social media personality, 30, a prominent left-wing podcaster and influencer, shared the clip to TikTok where she referenced 'incels' and asked 'when are you going to do it?', without directly naming the President. Incel, short for 'involuntarily celibate', refers to an online subculture of young men who blame women for denying them sexual attention. A number of so-called incels have been involved in violent attacks, most notoriously Alek Minassian, 32, who killed 10 people and injured 16 when he drove a van into a crowd of pedestrians in Toronto, Canada, in 2018. Chatfield, who regularly posts videos railing against Mr Trump, did not directly name the President in her video, but hinted he should be harmed while making a gun symbol with her fingers. 'Americans, when are you going to do it?' she said. 'Why is it not already done? Every day, there's another [gun symbol] happening, right? Awful for your country, right? Awful, right? Why don't we redirect this energy to something else, you know? 'There's all these incels, 'no one wants to f**k me', so they go and do [gun symbol]. You know what would actually make people respect you a little bit, and maybe want to f**k you? Is if you did it. 'You'd get heaps of fan mail. Oh my God. Oh my God. Just do it. Like, you're all doing it every day anyway. Like, I don't f**king get it.' Chatfield's management has been contacted for comment. Chatfield, a former Bachelor star who now hosts the popular podcast It's A Lot, has more than 1.2 million followers on Instagram and TikTok. Social media users condemned the video, which comes as the US experiences a disturbing rise in politically motivated violence. 'This isn't free speech,' wrote X user Chris Mate. 'It's not activism. It's incitement — and at the very least, she should be detained and questioned by federal police.' Another user wrote, 'This is the person who Albanese promotes.' Chatfield interviewed Mr Albanese on her podcast in February in the lead-up to the election. The pair discussed a range of issues including political strategy and voter engagement, climate change, women's rights, Mr Albanese's upcoming wedding, the war in the Middle East and Mr Trump. Chatfield, a vocal Greens supporter, later came under fire from feminist activist Clementine Ford, who branded her a 'f**king fake' over her political views, particularly on Palestine. Mr Trump has already narrowly survived two assassination attempts. Thomas Matthew Crooks, 20, shot then-candidate Trump in the ear at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, on July 13 last year, killing crowd member Corey Comperatore, 50, and severely injuring two others. Crooks was immediately shot and killed by Secret Service snipers. Just nine weeks later, on September 15, Ryan Wesley Routh, 59, allegedly attempted to assassinate Mr Trump at his golf club in West Palm Beach, Florida. The North Carolina construction worker was allegedly lying in wait with an AK-style rifle in the bushes by the golf course when he was spotted by a Secret Service agent, who opened fire and caused Mr Routh to flee the scene before being captured nearby. He has pleaded not guilty to five federal charges, including attempted assassination. His trial has been set for September 8. In addition to the attacks on Mr Trump, a number of other high-profile killings have recently shocked the US. Luigi Mangione, 27, accused of gunning down health insurance CEO Brian Thompson, 50, in New York in December, has attracted a large fanbase of largely left-wing, female supporters. Mr Mangione has pleaded not guilty to state and federal charges including murder and will return to court in December. Last month, a Minnesota Democratic state representative and her husband were killed in their home in a 'politically motivated assassination', with another politician and his wife surviving being shot multiple times. Vance Boelter, 57, was captured after a massive manhunt. Mr Boelter plans to plead not guilty to murder charges, which could carry the death penalty.

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