Stench gas activists avoid jail over protest at Woodside's Perth headquarters
The release of the gas caused more than 1,000 people to leave the 29-storey building in West Perth in June 2023, with some complaining of physical reactions.
Kristen Morrissey, Joana Partyka and Emil Davey had all pleaded guilty to creating a false belief, while Morrissey had also admitted to a charge of causing poison to be administered.
Judge Hayley Cormann told the court while the stench gas was not meant to be harmful, it could be "toxic when inhaled in high concentrations".
"Each of you intended to create alarm or concern," Judge Cormann said.
Morrissey had gone into the foyer of the Woodside building and released the stench gas, which is used in the mining industry to alert workers to hazards.
Several of those who left the building complained of reactions such as headaches and sore throats.
Some police officers who attended also suffered headaches and dizziness.
The court had heard that a small number of workers suffered symptoms for several days, including nausea and "blotchy" rashes.
The incident prompted a large response from emergency services, including ChemCentre staff.
Police discovered the stench gas canister in Morrissey's handbag.
The day after the incident, Morrissey inadvertently recorded a conversation with Partyka on her phone.
On the recording, Partyka could be heard saying the action went to plan because the entire building was evacuated, and described it as "one of the more high profile ones that we've done."
While Kristen Morrissey was the one who released the gas, Partyka and Davey were involved in planning and preparation.
The prosecutor had told the court the intention was "to disrupt the activities of Woodside", and was not motivated by animosity towards the workers.
Prosecutor Peter Phillips said there was significant planning, and the action represented a "substantial escalation" in offending by the activists.
People were in "distress" on the day, he said, because they did not know what had occurred.
Judge Cormann accepted the three were motivated to bring attention to the environmental cause they were committed to, but said what they had done represented "forthright defiance of the law".
She said the trio did not regret their actions, and she asserted they could not continue to protest "through unlawful means".
Morrissey, 51, was given an 11-month prison sentence, suspended for 18 months.
Partyka, 40, was given a seven-month prison sentence, suspended for 12 months.
Davey, 23, was placed on a community-based order which will include 50 hours of unpaid work.
There was no reaction from the trio as the sentences were read out.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

News.com.au
an hour ago
- News.com.au
‘Fake seizure guy': Exposing decades-long Melbourne scammer
A Victorian man dubbed 'fake seizure guy' has gained notoriety for allegedly faking seizures in public to get strangers to sit on him. Dozens of locals have reported being lured into restraining him, as he pretends to convulse on the ground, only to abruptly recover and vanish moments later. The mysterious scammer, who has become somewhat of an urban legend both online and on Melbourne streets, seems to target men almost exclusively. Here, speaks to three people who claim they've fallen victim to his act. Last Monday, a man named David was walking through Princes Park in Melbourne when another man caught his eye then suddenly collapsed dramatically and began shaking. Moments later, David found himself doing something completely unexpected. He climbed on top of the man, pinned his arms behind his back as he flailed beneath him. 'At first, I thought he was having a seizure,' David tells 'He toppled over, shaking and saying, 'I need a hand'. I helped him down, and then he told me to roll him face down and hold his arms behind his back. He was really insistent, then suddenly he said, 'You need to get on top of me, Straddle me', and I did.' David, a full-grown man weighing around 85 kilos, was hesitant but trusted the man's request. 'I remember thinking, I don't know what's happening, but I'm trying to help someone in trouble.' After a few minutes of holding the man in this bizarre pose, David called over some schoolboys to help. Suddenly, the man stopped shaking, stood up, and walked off with his dog. 'It was wild,' says David. 'The whole thing was so strange.' After posting his story on TikTok, he gained 400,000 views and quickly realised this wasn't an isolated incident. Comments flooded the video from countless others who've had similar encounters – reportedly with the same man, who many have dubbed 'FSG'. One person even claimed they had an encounter with the man, believed to now be in his mid-40s, in 2003. After going down an internet rabbit hole, David discovered an entire subreddit, @fakeseizureguy, where witnesses post sightings and warnings. Eerily, one user even claimed to have seen the man in Princes Park that same morning David had the interaction with him there. In other comments, people report seeing fake seizure guy target multiple people in the same area, sometimes just minutes apart. Who is fake seizure guy? The stories all follow the same chilling script. FSG wanders into public places like parks, train stations, busy streets, and suddenly acts as if he's having a seizure. He then directs anyone willing to help him with uncanny specificity: lie him face down, pin his arms behind his back, and critically, sit on him and straddle him. According to reports, he almost always targets men, sometimes even refusing help from women. After two to four minutes, the 'seizure' ends abruptly, he stands up, collects himself, sometimes even shaking the hand of the person who helped him, and walks off as if nothing happened. Christian Hull, a popular comedian and content creator, says he also encountered the man in 2018. He had just come out of an exhibition near Queens Bridge and was standing outside on a busy street with friends. 'It was dark outside but very well lit,' Christian says. 'Out of nowhere, this gentleman appeared, and it looked like he was having a seizure. I thought, something's going on here, let's help him.' Initially, Christian tried to lie him on his side and put his jacket under his head, but the man apparently denied his efforts, instead giving Christian instructions about what to do. 'I thought it was strange he was talking while having a seizure, but I was of the opinion that he knew his body,' he says. 'So he said, 'Lie me face down, pin my hands behind my back'. I was sitting on him like a couch, but then he said, 'You need to straddle me … like a horse'.' Christian obliged, but as he began to feel uneasy about the position their bodies ended up in, the idea of calling an ambulance was floated among his friends. But after hearing this, the man asked that they not call an ambulance because he said he had 'just escaped from prison'. At this point, even more alarm bells sounded, so they contacted the police, and then the man stood up and 'bolted'. 'Later, we saw him doing the same thing 80 metres away,' Christian says. 'We yelled out to a group not to help him.' After sharing his experience online, including a photo of himself sitting on top of the man, he learnt that he had just become the latest target of fake seizure guy. Heath, another Melbourne man, said he also helped fake seizure guy while on a day out at Melbourne Zoo with his family. 'We had just parked, and I saw this man collapse onto another man. Leaving my wife and kids behind, I ran over to him. The man said, 'I have seizures all the time, can you help me restrain my arms?'' Heath recalls. 'I was basically holding him down like an arrest. I was a bit confused because his dogs just sat there, unbothered by the fact that their owner was seemingly having a seizure.' The man reportedly asked Heath to put some force into restraining him. 'He asked me to really pin him down,' he says. After a few minutes, he jumped to his feet, hugged Heath, and disappeared. For the Melbourne dad, the strangeness only sank in afterwards. 'I found out that my wife's cousin had a similar experience about 10 years ago,' he says. Why does he do this? His motives remain unclear. Some speculate that FSG might struggle with mental health issues. Others think he finds sexual gratification in being restrained beneath unsuspecting men. David says, 'At the time, I didn't think it was sexual, but looking back, having a near 90-kilo man sit on you like that. It makes you wonder'. Why hasn't he been stopped? Despite FSG's ongoing behaviour, many hesitate to report incidents to the police because of the confusing nature of his actions. Christian said he didn't file a report because, 'What can they really do, you know? I sat on a man'. However, when he did speak to the police on the night of the incident, he claims they said they were aware of the man. David also mentioned that he hadn't thought about reporting it until he shared the video and realised it was part of a wider issue. 'I wasn't traumatised by it, but I understand that it could affect others,' he says. Many also might not report because they walk away thinking they have done a good thing and helped someone. Is this what real seizures look like? A person having a seizure may display a variety of signs, including jerking movements, loss of consciousness, stiffening of the body, and confusion. There are specific types of seizures, such as simple partial seizures, where a person can sometimes speak during the event. According to the Epilepsy Foundation, if you see someone having a seizure with jerking movements, you shouldn't try to restrain them. You should also attempt to roll the person onto their side if possible. Manipulating people's good intentions Fake seizure guy has caused many who have seen his antics to rethink whether they would help a stranger again. 'People want to help, it's human nature. If someone has fallen over, I'll always go to help them. But if someone asked me to get on top of them again – there's no chance,' David says. 'It would definitely make me think twice'.

News.com.au
2 hours ago
- News.com.au
Customers, staff flee after arsonists target Melbourne cafe
A pair of arsonists have set fire to a cafe in Melbourne's southeast, forcing customers and a staff member to flee. Emergency services were called to a cafe on the Princes Highway in Noble Park shortly before midnight after two unknown offenders entered the business with fire accelerant. A staff member and two customers were still inside the cafe when the pair entered, police said. However, the customers and staff member managed to flee the cafe before the offenders used accelerant and set fire to the property. They then fled the scene, police said.. When firefighters arrived, the building completely was engulfed in flames,. 'Crews worked quickly to battle the blaze, with the scene deemed under control at 12.13am,' a Fire Rescue Victoria spokesman told NewsWire. .

ABC News
2 hours ago
- ABC News
Why is the Trump administration threatening to deport this Iranian man to Australia?
The US government is threatening to deport an Iranian man to Australia — even though he has no connection to Australia and has lived in the US since 1985. Reza Zavvar, a 52-year-old recruiter from Maryland, has been targeted for deportation because of a marijuana possession conviction from the 1990s, his lawyer says. A court order means he cannot be returned to Iran because of the risk of persecution there. So immigration authorities say they are sending him to either Australia or Romania after arresting him in the street near his home in late June. "They got him while he was walking his dog in his quiet suburban neighbourhood," his lawyer, Ava Benach, told the ABC. "And they detained him and sent him to Texas to hold him, and they said: 'We're gonna deport you to Australia or Romania.' His family, friends and locals are fundraising for a legal fight. They say Mr Zavvar had been quietly contributing to his community for years, helping out his elderly neighbours and making sandwiches each week for those in need of food. He had adopted his dog from a local shelter and recently moved in with his mother to help care for his grandmother. "After 40 years of living in the US, Reza knows no other home," his sister, Maryam, wrote as part of an online petition. "He waits in a privately run detention centre, thousands of miles from anything familiar, while bureaucrats decide his future." Mr Zavvar's case has highlighted a controversial strategy increasingly used by the Trump administration as part of its mass deportation regime — sending migrants to countries they have no connection to, sometimes using historical low-level misdemeanours as justification. But immigration lawyers said they had not seen Australia listed as a destination before. "Most of us in the immigration bar have been hearing about cases being sent to Central and South America," said Mahsa Khanbabai, an elected director on the American Immigration Lawyers Association board. "Normally, what we've been seeing is that the Trump administration is targeting countries where they feel they have some leverage, that they feel they can push around and bully. "Australia is not a country that we would normally consider to be in such a position." The Australian government said it had not been contacted by US authorities about the case. "There have been no new agreements made with the Trump administration on immigration," a government spokesperson said. Despite repeated requests for clarification, neither Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) nor the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) explained why Australia had been selected. But in a statement, DHS assistant secretary Tricia McLaughlin said: "ICE continues to try and find a country willing to accept this criminal illegal alien." Mr Zavvar's sister said her brother had "built his life in Maryland, surrounded by his loving family, including his parents, sister, and cousins". "He was a natural athlete, excelling in football during high school, where he was affectionately known as a 'gentle giant' — competitive on the field but kind and warm-hearted off." He had a green card, allowing him permanent residence in the US — but his lawyer says his past marijuana-related conviction was later used to jeopardise that status. In 2004, an airport agent noticed his conviction and started a process that could have led to deportation. But three years later, a judge issued a "withholding of removal" order, preventing his return to Iran. DHS says his previous conviction — for attempted possession of a controlled substance — remains a reason to deport him. "Criminal illegal aliens are not welcome in the US," the department's Ms McLaughlin said. "Zavvar had almost 20 years to self-deport and leave the United States." The Trump administration has been pushing other countries to accept deportees who cannot return to their countries of origin: either because those countries will not take them back, or because of protection orders like Mr Zavvar's. The "withholding of removal" orders theoretically allow the US to deport the migrant to a different country, but that is historically rare. "We've never really seen people being sent to third countries in my 25 years of practice," Ms Khanbabai said. "When the UK started doing that a few years ago, I remember thinking, what a horrendous situation, thank God the United States doesn't do that. And now here we are seeing the US carry out these very same inhumane, what I would consider illegal, practices." The US government recently struck deals with several African countries, which have opened the door to more of these deportations. Small numbers of migrants — from countries including Vietnam, Cuba and Jamaica — have been sent to South Sudan and Eswatini. And on Wednesday, local time, Reuters reported that Rwanda had said it would accept up to 250 deportees, "in part because nearly every Rwandan family has experienced the hardships of displacement, and our societal values are founded on reintegration and rehabilitation". The Trump administration says it is delivering on an election promise to crack down on the millions of people in the US who don't have legal rights to live there, and especially those with criminal convictions. "Under President Trump … if you break the law, you will face the consequences," Ms McLaughlin said. "Criminal illegal aliens are not welcome in the US." But immigration lawyers and advocates say Mr Zavvar is among what appears to be a growing number of Iranians detained since the US air strikes on Iran in June. Green card and student visa holders, many of whom have clean records, are among them, Ms Khanbabai said. The lawyer, who is Iranian American and has many Iranian clients, said the community felt it was being targeted. "The Trump administration claimed that they were going to be going after criminals, yet the vast majority of people, including the Iranians, don't have any serious criminal offences or any at all," she said. "And so we're trying to figure out, is there an uptick of this focus on Iranians … or is this just part of the massive targeting of and scapegoating of immigrants?" Mr Zavvar's lawyer hopes her client's arrest will prove to be a publicity stunt that doesn't lead to his deportation. "I honestly think that they wanted to make a show of arresting Iranians in the wake of our bombing of the Iranian nuclear facility," Ms Benach said. "What people are going to remember is that the administration was arresting Iranians when they were certain that the Iranians were going to retaliate … and then six months from now, they might have to release them under the law, but we'll have moved on to something else."