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Judge suggests NSW police had ‘absolutely no evidence' to justify main strip-search in class action

Judge suggests NSW police had ‘absolutely no evidence' to justify main strip-search in class action

The Guardian15-05-2025

A Sydney judge says the way the New South Wales police force defended a claim it unlawfully strip-searched a woman at a music festival – including a last-minute admission – was 'of grave concern to me'.
Justice Dina Yehia made the comment in the NSW supreme court during closing arguments in a class action against the police.
The state of NSW has disputed that the vast majority of strip-searches conducted by police between 2018 and 2022 at music festivals were unlawful.
NSW police did, however, admit in court documents before the hearings began last week to unlawfully strip-searching the lead plaintiff, Raya Meredith, at a music festival in 2018.
Meredith is the lead plaintiff of a group of 3,000 people, including children, searched by police. She was strip-searched at the 2018 Splendour in the Grass festival after a drug dog sniffed in her direction but then walked on.
The class action is being led by Slater and Gordon lawyers and the Redfern Legal Centre.
Julian Sexton SC, acting on behalf of NSW police, on Thursday disputed the plaintiff's call for aggravated damages to be paid because of the force's conduct during proceedings.
He argued aggravated damages could not be awarded because Meredith had not been recalled to give evidence about how she felt about NSW police's conduct during the class action.
Yehia said in response she was 'much more concerned' about the police having three iterations of its defence before backflipping shortly before proceedings began and admitting it did unlawfully strip-search Meredith.
'That is a matter, I'll be quite honest with you, of grave concern to me,' Yehia said on Thursday.
The judge said she was concerned the police defence suggested officers had formed a reasonable suspicion to strip-search Meredith based on 'things like her demeanour, what was said outside the tent, and [the officers] recalling it was said outside the tent and not inside'.
'There is absolutely no evidence, unless you can take me to it and I've missed something,' Yehia said to Sexton.
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'All I have is the officers' statements that say either they don't remember the search, or both that they don't remember the search nor remember the lead plaintiff. In those circumstances, I'm just not sure how this could ever have proceeded in the way that it did with the initial pleadings.'
In the days before the hearing began, the state of NSW withdrew 22 witnesses, mostly police officers who had been due to contest Meredith's version of events. That change saw the case reduced from a scheduled 2o days to three days.
Sexton argued the defence was based on police 'practice' in such instances, adding it was 'not [based] on distinct recollections of somebody'.
Yehia said the police suggesting there were 'reasonable grounds' for the search due to Meredith's physical appearance and body language were 'specific matters relating to this plaintiff in circumstances where [the female police officer who searched her] not only doesn't remember, but as far as I understand it, didn't even make a notebook entry in relation to that interaction'.
Closing arguments before Yehia were expected to end on Thursday.

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Full tragic timeline of 3-week hunt for Pheobe Bishop – from airport disappearance to housemate arrests and horror find
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  • The Sun

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Should Sydney's light rail carriages be modified after second death in two years?
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Should Sydney's light rail carriages be modified after second death in two years?

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EXCLUSIVE The four-word text that sparked a tragic hunt for missing teen Pheobe Bishop - as her housemates are now charged with her murder
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EXCLUSIVE The four-word text that sparked a tragic hunt for missing teen Pheobe Bishop - as her housemates are now charged with her murder

The hunt for missing teen Pheobe Bishop was triggered by a frantic text from her sister to the last-known people to see her alive, Daily Mail Australia can reveal. Pheobe's housemates James Wood and Tanika Bromley have now been charged with the 17-year-old's murder and two counts each of interfering with her corpse. She vanished on May 15 after leaving the ramshackle home in Gin Gin, near Bundaberg in central Queensland, that she shared with Wood and Bromley. They told police they had given her an early morning lift to Bundaberg Airport to board a plane on a trip to see her boyfriend in Perth. But Pheobe never made it to check in, and her older sister Kaylea, 18, triggered the search when the family was alerted Pheobe had never arrived in Western Australia. In an text to Wood and Bromley on May 16, Kaylea demanded to know: 'Where is my sister?' Three weeks later detectives have accused the housemates of Pheobe's murder, and on Friday notified the family they had found human remains. Just hours earlier Kaylea had begged for help finding her sister's body in an impassioned plea outside Bundaberg Magistrates Court after Bromley and Wood's murder charges were heard. She sat in the far corner of the front row, staring straight ahead flanked by friends, family and a court security guard as details of the murder charges against the couple were read out. Neither Wood nor Bromley appeared in person or by video link for the hearing and afterwards Kaylea walked outside to make her heartbreaking statement. 'We just want her home,' she said tearfully through red-rimmed eyes. 'I don't know what to say, if you've got any information about Pheobe or the car, just come forward. 'Three weeks is too long for us as a family. She was loved, she's missed dearly.' Kaylea and Pheobe had a close relationship and had been planning to move out of the family home and into a house together last year. On Friday, the girls' mother Kylie Johnson paid tribute to Kaylea for facing the media to speak up for her allegedly murdered sister. 'Kaylea your strength, determination and dedication to bring Phee Phee home is such a reflection of your fierce love for your sister,' Ms Johnson posted on Facebook. 'Pheobe would be so proud of the way you handled yourself today just as we are. We WILL bring Phee home - I don't care how long it takes but we will get her home.' After the remains were found she posted again, saying: 'I didn't think my heart could break anymore then it did when you went missing, or when the charges were laid, but this! This is ripping me apart.' Pheobe was last seen on May 15 leaving the Gin Gin home, near Bundaberg in central Queensland, where she was living with Wood, 34, and Bromley, 33. The couple allegedly drove Pheobe to Bundaberg Airport at 8.30am for a flight to Brisbane and then on to Perth, where she planned to meet up with her boyfriend. She never got on the plane and Detective Inspect Craig Mansfield told reporters on Friday that, as the investigation progressed, all hope was lost of finding Pheobe alive. 'Our evidence will outline the fact that three people arrived near to the airport and three people never exited that vehicle,' he told reporters on Friday. 'Our investigation will detail the facts that we believe Pheobe was murdered and then her body was moved. 'We will allege that Pheobe was moved more than one occasion.' Pheobe had been living with the couple prior to her disappearance on May 15. The couple were arrested in Bundaberg on Thursday night and were each charged with one count of murder and two counts of interfering with a corpse. They remain in custody and were due to front Bundaberg Magistrates Court on Friday morning but did not appear via video link. The arrests came after Wood was initially arrested on Wednesday and then released without charge. The arrests came after James Wood (pictured) was initially arrested on Wednesday and then released without charge Police towed Wood's SUV which he had 'effectively been living out of it from time to time' for forensic examination The search for Pheobe had been scaled back on Wednesday after police spent weeks combing several areas of interest. They included the property in Gin Gin where Pheobe lived with Wood and Bromley and a grey Hyundai ix35, thought to have been used to take the teen to the airport. Det. Insp. Mansfield told reporters while he could not speculate on motive, he said police have 'information that would suggest some form of motivation'. Police have also towed Wood's SUV which he had 'effectively been living out of it from time to time' for forensic examination on Thursday night.

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