Karma after Abbie Chatfield's ‘crazy' parking spot interaction
Abbie Chatfield, who lives in Sydney's Eastern Suburbs, shared that she was walking her dog Walter when she had the 'craziest interaction' outside her apartment block.
The 30-year-old revealed that while outside she witnessed a British woman drive up the street, almost hitting Chatfield's car, before proceeding to park 'halfway across the driveway'.
'You could not get a car out at all,' Chatfield said.
The It's A Lot podcast host said she wasn't going to say anything until the woman asked for her friend's opinion on the park. That's when Chatfield, who is dating musician Adam Hyde, tried to help the woman.
'I said, 'It actually isn't' because I thought she was confused about the parking rules,' she said.
'I've seen things online about people from England parking recklessly, and I thought maybe she was confused. She's obviously not from here and I was trying to help her to let her know it was illegal.'
But, the woman then said that she 'wasn't asking' Chatfield, and when the former reality star tried to explain that people with 4WDs and utes wouldn't be able to get out, the woman argued that 4WDs could drive 'over the gutter'.
The woman then refused to move her car, while she and her friends laughed at the Australian star. Chatfield was left stunned by the interaction, saying all she was trying to do was help the woman and her neighbours.
Chatfield also revealed that parking rangers are often in the area, saying that before Hyde obtained a parking permit he would be fined for staying as little as 10 minutes longer than he was supposed to.
'I was trying to help her. I thought she was actually wondering. Then she starts yelling at me in this Cockney accent,' Chatfield said.
But, it seemed like Chatfield got the last laugh in the end because, as she predicted, the woman copped a fine for blocking the driveway that amounted to $330.
'Well, well, well. I tried to warn her. I tried to tell her. There's also parks up the entire street but she wanted to be a c***,' she said.
'Sorry darling, it's going to cost you.'
Fellow social media users felt that the woman got what was coming to her after her rude response to Chatfield.
'I would sit on the deck with a coffee and wait for the show to start,' one social media user said.
Another added: 'I'm so petty I would have written, 'You should have listened'.'
'I feel literally so content right now,' one commented.
One social media user added: 'Oooft $330 is a big one too. She's gonna regret that.'
'I love this for her,' another said.
Another added: 'The way I'm cackling at this.'
'$330 as the fine is just so satisfying to me,' one said.
'Brilliant', 'karma' and 'splendid' were among some of the comments on the video.
One social media user said it was the 'best possible outcome'.
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ABC News
25 minutes ago
- ABC News
Muster Dogs trainer Frank Finger rebuilds life after family heartbreak
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ABC News
3 hours ago
- ABC News
All the witnesses and evidence aired so far in Netflix star Matt Wright's criminal trial
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Matt Wright walking into the NT Supreme Court alongside his wife Kaia Wright. ( ABC News: Pete Garnish ) Mr Wright has been supported by his wife Kaia Wright each day in court. You might recognise her and the couple's two young children from the Netflix show the family stars in, Wild Croc Territory. Sebastian Robinson Sebastian Robinson gave evidence via videolink. ( ABC News: Mary Franklin ) Sebastian Robinson was piloting the chopper when it crashed in 2022 and was left seriously injured. The jury's heard Mr Robinson was an experienced pilot and licensed aircraft engineer who owned his own helicopters, but mostly worked for Matt Wright's company Helibrook in the months before the accident. He suffered a traumatic brain injury and multiple spinal fractures in the crash, rendering him paraplegic. Sebastian Robinson gave evidence via videolink. ( ABC News: Mary Franklin ) Mr Robinson said that while he had no memory of the crash due to his injuries, he accepted he "must have intentionally disconnected" Chris Wilson from the sling that was suspending him 25 metres above the ground. He told jurors he was Helibrook's Head of Airworthiness and Aircraft Maintenance Control, but that the position was unpaid and "Matt controlled all aspects of his aircraft regarding maintenance scheduling". Mr Robinson gave evidence throughout the second week of the trial. Chris 'Willow' Wilson Chris Wilson was a young father who starred in Wild Croc Territory. ( Supplied ) Chris "Willow" Wilson was collecting crocodile eggs during the 2022 flight that ultimately took his life. In the first week of the trial, the jury heard Mr Wilson was attached to a sling that allowed him to be lowered onto crocodile nests from the airborne helicopter. The prosecution described it as "risky and dangerous work". Pilot Sebastian Robinson told the court — while he has no memory of the crash due to his traumatic brain injury — he must have "intentionally disconnected" Mr Wilson's sling before he fell 25 metres to his death. Chris Wilson was a young father who starred in Wild Croc Territory. ( Supplied ) Before the fatal accident, Mr Wilson had starred alongside Matt Wright in TV shows Outback Wrangler and Wild Croc Territory. Mr Wilson's wife, Danielle, has been attending every day of the Supreme Court trial in Darwin. Danielle Wilson's husband was killed in the 2022 chopper crash. ( ABC News: Dane Hirst ) Mick Burns Mick Burns is well known in the Top End's crocodile farming industry. ( ABC News: Dane Hirst ) Crocodile farmer Mick Burns was the first witness to take the stand in this trial. He attended the crash site soon after the accident with Matt Wright and off-duty police officer Neil Mellon. Mr Burns runs the business that contracted the fatal crocodile egg-collecting mission — which farms crocs for meat and sells their skins to luxury fashion brands like Hermes. Mick Burns is well known in the Top End's crocodile farming industry. ( ABC News: Dane Hirst ) Under questioning from the prosecution regarding the crash scene in 2022, Mr Burns said he didn't see anyone go near the downed aircraft's cockpit. He told jurors he saw helicopter pilot Michael Burbidge look in its fuel tank and asked him if there "was any fuel", to which he replied "yes". Neil Mellon Neil Mellon was not on duty when he agreed to attend the crash scene with Matt Wright. ( ABC News: Dane Hirst ) Former NT police officer Neil Mellon, who extracted Chris "Willow" Wilson's body from the harness, was the second witness to give evidence before the jury. Mr Mellon said Mr Wright had asked him to attend the crash and he agreed because of his experience with specialist policing. Neil Mellon was not on duty when he agreed to attend the crash scene with Matt Wright. ( ABC News: Dane Hirst ) Mr Mellon told jurors he removed Mr Wilson's phone from his body and passed it to Mick Burbidge, who then made a passing comment that widow Danielle Wilson "doesn't need to see what's on that". He said Mr Burbidge told him months later the phone was "gone" and "in the ocean". The jury's heard Mr Mellon later resigned from the police force following charges over his role in the phone's disposal. Michael Burbidge Michael Burbridge is the director of Remote Helicopters Australia. ( ABC News: Dane Hirst ) Michael Burbidge was piloting another chopper on the crocodile egg-collecting mission and was the first to arrive at the crash scene. He told jurors he "got rid of" Chris Wilson's phone after ex-police officer Neil Mellon handed it to him, saying Matt Wright had nothing to do with it. 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Mr Purcell starred in Wild Croc Territory, and told jurors he also worked as an airboat driver and tour guide in another of Mr Wright's businesses. Jock Purcell appeared in the Wild Croc Territory TV show. ( Supplied: Channel 9, Wild Croc Territory ) While waiting for CareFlight to arrive at the remote crash scene, he said nobody approached the downed chopper or checked its fuel tank. Mr Purcell later said someone, he didn't recall who, lifted the dash of the crashed chopper and — after checking it himself — he confirmed the Hobbs meter was connected. Responding to the prosecution's questions, Mr Purcell admitted he had failed to record flights more than 10 times before the fatal accident. He told jurors he had disconnected the Hobbs meter in the past, and seen Mr Wright do so previously as well. The prosecution Jason Gullaci SC is the Crown prosecutor in the Supreme Court trial. ( ABC News: Dane Hirst ) Jason Gullaci SC is the Crown prosecutor in the case against Matt Wright. In his opening address, Mr Gullaci told jurors Mr Wright had been involved in the "systemic under-recording" of flight hours for the helicopter before the fateful crocodile egg-collecting trip. He alleged Mr Wright's concern that the under-recording would be revealed motivated him to engage in a cover-up. Jason Gullaci SC is the Crown prosecutor in the Supreme Court trial. ( ABC News: Dane Hirst ) Mr Gullaci told jurors Mr Wright went into the downed helicopter after arriving at the scene, "play[ed] around with the dash" and removed some items. The prosecution's also alleged Mr Wright lied when he told police there was half a tank of fuel in the helicopter's tank when he checked it at the scene. Mr Gullaci alleged Mr Wright, by sending a friend to visit Sebastian Robinson in hospital, tried to "get his hands on documents that allow him to control what might be said to investigators". The defence David Edwardson KC (left) is the defence lawyer for Matt Wright. ( ABC News: Dane Hirst ) Prominent barrister David Edwardson KC and solicitor Luke Officer are representing Matt Wright, who they say "emphatically denies" the allegations against him. We've heard the defence question the strength of the prosecution's evidence, including the reliability of key witness testimonies. Matt Wright pictured walking to court with his wife Kaia Wright and legal team. ( ABC News: Dane Hirst ) Mr Edwardson also described the prosecution's allegations that Mr Wright had deleted items from Mr Robinson's phone as "an absolute falsehood". Mr Edwardson has said much of the prosecution's case was based on its interpretation of what were "extremely poor" quality recordings. Matt Wright is charged with three counts of attempting to pervert the course of justice. He has pleaded not guilty. The court heard allegations the chopper had enough fuel to make the trip. ( ABC News: Randi Dahnial ) Charge one alleges Mr Wright lied in a police interview about checking the helicopter's fuel tank at the scene of the crash. The prosecution said while Mr Wright told police the chopper had half a tank of fuel, covertly-recorded conversations allegedly recorded him admitting "I didn't see f***in' any fuel in the tank, zero". Sebastian Robinson told jurors the chopper did not run out of fuel and said a photo from the day of the crash, shown to the jury, showed the tank was "three quarters full". Timothy Luck, another witness who had piloted Mr Wright's aircraft in the past, said he'd filled up the chopper "completely" at Mount Borradaile minutes before the crash. Charge two The court heard Matt Wright visited the injured pilot in hospital. ( ABC News: Randi Dahnial ) Charge two relates to allegations Matt Wright visited crash survivor Sebastian Robinson in hospital and asked him to doctor flight logs. The prosecution alleges Mr Wright's requests, between March 3 and 13, 2022, were made in an attempt to hide the true amount of hours the chopper had flown before it crashed. The court's heard allegations Mr Wright had deleted notes and texts from Mr Robinson's phone and asked him to "manipulate" flight hours, but the pilot told him "no". Charge three The Crown is using evidence from secret audio recordings. ( ABC News: Randi Dahnial ) Charge three relates to conversations prosecutors say Matt Wright had between September 21 and 25, 2022. One is a secretly-recorded midnight conversation in which the prosecution alleges Matt Wright's directed an associate to burn the downed chopper's maintenance document. Prosecutors say Mr Wright can be heard saying: "Just torch it … I've got to send it to CASA (Civil Aviation Safety Authority) or the ATSB (Australian Transport Safety Bureau)". The helicopter was found damaged and in an upright position. Photo taken by Careflight and supplied by the Australian Transport Safety Bureau on April 19, 2022 ( Supplied: Careflight ) A Hobbs meter is used in an aircraft to track its time in the air or how long the engine's been running. The fewer hours that are logged, the less frequent the aircraft is required undergo costly maintenance. The prosecution's case centres on allegations Helibrook had a culture of "systemic under-reporting" that Mr Wright feared "could be used as a way to blame him for the accident". Prosecutors allege Mr Wright checked the downed chopper to see whether the Hobbs metre was attached. In a phone call to his co-star Jock Purcell — covertly recorded months after the crash and played to the jury — Mr Wright allegedly said "the Hobbs had been touched". Sebastian Robinson told jurors it was "very common" for Mr Wright's employees to disconnect his helicopters' Hobbs meters and neglect to record flight hours. Mr Robinson said it was a practice he was familiar with in the industry, before working for Mr Wright. Secret recordings The prosecution has been sharing evidence from secret recordings, taped covertly inside Matt Wright's home. ( Supplied: Pexels / ) The prosecution has been airing evidence from secret recordings, taped covertly inside Matt Wright's home between six and nine months after the crash. According to the Crown, Mr Wright was heard instructing associate Jai Tomlinson to "torch" helicopter-maintenance forms — which investigators had been looking for — more than six months after the crash. "Just burn the c**t," Mr Wright is alleged to have said. Another secret recording allegedly captures Mr Wright telling his wife, Kaia Wright, "I don't write shit down. I don't even have a f***ing log book" of flying hours. Mr Wright's defence team said he "emphatically denies" the prosecution's cover-up allegations, and said the secret recordings were "extremely poor" quality. The prosecution has also played a secret recording from Mr Wright's visit to pilot Sebastian Robinson in hospital. Cocaine use Alkaloid substance as cocaine white powder lines with Euro notes is seen in this photo illustration. On 9 August 2023 in Brussels, Belgium. (Photo illustration by Jonathan Raa/NurPhoto via Getty Images) ( Getty Images: Jonathan Raa/NurPhoto ) The jury's heard a blood sample taken from pilot Sebastian Robinson after the crash contained traces of cocaine. However, in its opening statement the prosecution said the evidence would show it was below the "prescribed amount for enforcement" under aviation regulations and would not have affected pilot's control. The defence alleged Mr Robinson had been consuming cocaine at a birthday party two days before the crash, but the injured pilot said he had no memory of that gathering. Mr Robinson denied the prosecution's suggestion he'd been "a raging cocaine junkie" and "a drug dealer" but admitted to "trafficking" small amounts of cocaine to friends and others. Pilot Jock Purcell told jurors Mr Robinson had a reputation as a "party animal" and was a "regular and frequent user of cocaine". Logbooks Generic image of some kind of logbook or admin documentation. ( Supplied: Pexels / Connor McManus ) Evidence heard about helicopter flight records relates to Matt Wright's second and third charges. The jury's heard claims Tim Johnston, a colleague of Matt Wright, visited the injured pilot Sebastian Robinson in hospital and "pressured" his brother to hand over a flight logbook. Jurors heard Mr Robinson's mother then rang Mr Johnston and asked him to hand back the logbook, which he did. Mr Johnston gave evidence that he was given the pilot's diary, but gave it back after he said Mr Wright told him he'd "done the wrong thing". The court's also heard allegations Mr Wright visited Mr Robinson in hospital and asked him to to take "15 to 20 hours off" the crashed chopper's flight records. The prosecution's also aired bugged phone calls in which Mr Wright is alleged to have instructed an associate to "torch" helicopter maintenance forms. The prosecution's case centres on allegations Mr Wright's company Helibrook had a culture of "under-reporting" flight hours, that the Netflix star feared "could be used as a way to blame him for the accident". Covid-19 rule-breaking A spot for a vaccination check in queue. ( ABC News: Danielle Bonica ) The court's heard claims Matt Wright was an "anti-vaxxer", in testimony by pilot Sebastian Robinson. The injured pilot told jurors Mr Wright was not allowed to go on crocodile egg-collecting trips on Aboriginal land at the time of the crash due to Covid restrictions in place then. In visiting the hospital, Mr Robinson also alleged the TV star broke Covid restrictions, due to him being unvaccinated. Fuel tank Petrol pump generic image. ( Supplied: Marek Studzinski on Unsplash ) Evidence heard about the level of fuel in the chopper at the time it crashed relates to Matt Wright's first charge. The prosecution's alleged Mr Wright lied in a police interview about checking the downed chopper's fuel tank. The evidence includes covertly-recorded conversations in which Mr Wright allegedly contradicts his statement about the level of fuel in the tank. Pilot Sebastian Robinson has told jurors he "knew in his heart" that the helicopter did not run out of fuel during the crash, and described other accounts as "rumours and whispers". Another witness, Timothy Luck, said he was "very confident" he refuelled the chopper at Mount Borradaile shortly before the crash. The ABC has launched a new podcast, The Case Of, which has kicked off with twice-weekly episodes on Matt Wright's criminal trial. ABC Northern Territory court reporter Olivana Lathouris, along with Stephen Stockwell, unpack the prosecution's case against Mr Wright and how his legal team will defend the charges. If you have any questions you'd like them to answer in future episodes, you can email thecaseof@


Daily Telegraph
11 hours ago
- Daily Telegraph
The Block 2025 Episode 16 recap: Defiant Han gets epic dressing down from host Scott Cam
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