logo
Woman claims she was left with fractured rib after NSW police allegedly pushed her to ground during arrest

Woman claims she was left with fractured rib after NSW police allegedly pushed her to ground during arrest

The Guardian2 days ago
NSW police are investigating an arrest in which an officer allegedly pushed a woman to the ground outside a school, an incident she says left her with a fractured rib, severe concussion and a cut to her ear.
The force confirmed in a statement that it was investigating an incident at Bungendore, in the state's south, on 22 July, after footage circulated online.
A 35-second video appears to show a woman with her back to the camera shouting at another woman, while a third stands between the pair.
An officer approaches from behind and appears to shove her to the side, causing her to fall to the ground, where she appears to strike her head against a pole.
He can be heard shouting 'keep the fuck away' as he appears to push the woman. The officer then arrests her.
The woman, who is Aboriginal, claimed in a social media post sharing the footage: 'I got knocked out! I suffered a severe concussion, I had to have my ear glued because of the cut I sustained and I also suffered a fractured rib from this assault.'
She declined to comment further. Her lawyer in the criminal matter, the Aboriginal Legal Service, has been contacted for comment. The Guardian understands the woman intends to pursue a civil claim against police at the conclusion of the criminal case.
A solicitor advising her on the civil claim, Michael Lalor, declined to comment, other than to say: 'if police are reflective of the society that they serve, the actions of police need to be judged against the values of that society'.
NSW police said in a statement that officers from the Monaro police district were called to a school on Majara Street, Bungendore, about 2.50pm on 22 July following reports a 15-year-old boy was allegedly threatened.
Police said that while officers were inside a building, a woman drove past the school when another 15-year-old boy allegedly threw a rock at her vehicle, causing the right passenger window to shatter.
'The woman stopped and got out of the vehicle, when she was threatened and chased by the boy and a 32-year-old woman known to the boy,' NSW police alleged.
'The officer and members of the public intervened and the boy was arrested. The woman, who police said was known to the boy, allegedly became aggressive towards police and attempted to physically intervene.
'Police warned the woman on a number of occasions, and while the boy was placed into the police vehicle, the woman allegedly threatened the other woman again.'
Police said a senior constable then 'returned to the scene, arresting the 32-year-old woman'. They made no comment about the footage of the arrest, other than they were 'reviewing footage circulating on social media about an incident involving a NSW Police officer'.
The boy and woman were taken to Queanbeyan police station after the incident. He was charged with stalking or intimidating with intent to cause fear of physical or mental harm (personal), contravening an apprehended violence order, and destroying or damaging property, and was granted conditional bail, to appear at a children's court on Monday.
She was charged with hinder or resist police officer in the execution of duty and two counts of stalking or intimidating with intent to cause fear or physical or mental harm, and was also granted conditional bail to appear in court on the same day.
Aboriginal Legal Service CEO, Karly Warner, said they were unable to comment on the specifics of this incident while there are legal proceedings underway.
'The Aboriginal Legal Service condemns police brutality in all circumstances. Aboriginal people are subjected to punitive police powers and excessive use of force at disproportionate rates. There is no room in our society for violence nor abuse of power especially from those who have sworn to serve and protect us.
'There are strict laws and regulations about how NSW Police exercise their powers and for good reason. Robust and independent police oversight and accountability is critical. Decisive action where police misconduct is proven is essential to support community trust in police and a society where we can all feel safe.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kathleen Folbigg compensated after spending two decades in jail for wrongful convictions
Kathleen Folbigg compensated after spending two decades in jail for wrongful convictions

The Guardian

time24 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Kathleen Folbigg compensated after spending two decades in jail for wrongful convictions

Kathleen Folbigg has been compensated an 'insulting' amount of $2m after spending two decades behind bars before an inquiry found she had been wrongfully convicted for killing her four children. Folbigg, once referred to as among Australia's worst serial killers, was convicted in 2003 and ordered to serve a minimum 25-year sentence for the suffocation murders of three of her children and manslaughter of a fourth. Her name was cleared and convictions quashed in 2023 by the appeals court just months after she was granted an unconditional pardon and released from prison. Her release came after an independent inquiry heard new scientific evidence that indicated her children may have died from natural causes or a genetic mutation. Sign up: AU Breaking News email Greens MP Sue Higginson, who was heavily involved in pressuring the government to release Folbigg after the independent inquiry, revealed the New South Wales government had compensated her just $2m. '$2m barely covers what Kathleen could have earned on a full-time salary over 20 years,' Higginson said in a statement on Thursday. 'Kathleen has not only lost 20 years of wages, she has lost her four children, her home and her employability. She has racked up legal costs fighting her wrongful conviction, she has lost her superannuation, and she has been the victim of one of the worst injustices in this state's history - wrongful imprisonment.' Legal experts had told Guardian Australia in 2023 that Folbigg should receive the biggest compensation payout in Australian history because no other wrongful conviction had caused as much harm. Lindy Chamberlain, who was wrongly imprisoned for three years for the murder of baby Azaria, was compensated $1.3m in 1992, $700,000 less than Folbigg more than two decades later. In July, Folbigg had requested released a statement saying she wanted the compensation matter resolved quickly so she could 'begin to rebuild and move forward'. The premier, Chris Minns, was asked following this if he would meet with Folbigg. But he said he would not, telling reporters: 'There's a lot of difficult calls for me to make as premier. This isn't one of them.' Sign up to Breaking News Australia Get the most important news as it breaks after newsletter promotion On Thursday, the attorney general, Michael Daley announced that Folbigg had been compensated. 'The Attorney General has decided to make an ex-gratia payment to Kathleen Folbigg following her application,' he said. 'The decision follows thorough and extensive consideration of the materials and issues raised in Ms Folbigg's application and provided by her legal representatives.' He had said that, at Folbigg's request, the government had agreed to not publicly discuss the details of the decision.

Matt Wright: Famous croc wrangler's evidence tampering trial begins
Matt Wright: Famous croc wrangler's evidence tampering trial begins

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

Matt Wright: Famous croc wrangler's evidence tampering trial begins

Famed Australian crocodile wrangler Matt Wright urged friends to "torch" evidence and tried to pressure a hospitalised witness after a fatal helicopter crash, prosecutors have told his former Netflix star is accused of three counts of attempting to pervert the course of justice over the crocodile-egg-harvesting disaster in 2022. Mr Wright's friend and Outback Wrangler co-star Chris "Willow" Wilson, who was suspended from the aircraft in a sling, died when it hit the ground. Pilot Sebastian Robinson also was seriously Wright has pleaded not guilty, and his defence team deny he tampered with any evidence. In their opening address to the Northern Territory (NT) Supreme Court, the prosecution said it was not alleging that Mr Wright was responsible for the crash, but accused him of interfering with the was not on board but was among the first on the scene in Arnhem Land, about 500km (310 miles) east of court was told he had a "play around" with the dashboard of the damaged helicopter and falsely reported its fuel tank Jason Gullaci SC also claimed Mr Wright was involved in "systemic under-recording" of flight hours and, worried he might be blamed for the crash, tried to destroy or alter the logs for the helicopter jury was on Thursday shown transcripts of secret recordings made inside Mr Wright's home, including a "critical passage" in which prosecutors claimed he was discussing requests from aviation authorities looking into the incident."Just torch it. I don't know where it is but I'm thinking it's either there - I've got to send it to CASA (Civil Aviation Safety Authority) or the ATSB (Australian Transport Safety Bureau)," Mr Wright said, according to the transcript provided by Gullaci also told the court that Mr Wright had visited Mr Robinson at a Brisbane hospital to put "the hard word" on the injured pilot. He alleged Mr Wright asked Mr Robinson to transfer flight hours from the crashed aircraft to another the defence's opening statement, lawyer David Edwardson SC said that under-recording flight hours was standard practice for many pilots in the NT – but Mr Wright "emphatically denies" he broke the law trying to cover this parties agree that authorities were ultimately provided the correct, original flight records, he said, and recordings captured inside Mr Wright's home and relied upon for two of the key allegations were "extremely poor".He added that the defence would dispute the evidence of conversations between Mr Wright and Mr Robinson, saying the pilot's credibility - as well as his extended family's - was "seriously in issue".Mr Wright is best known globally as the star of National Geographic's Outback Wrangler and Netflix's Wild Croc Territory reality shows. The 43-year-old also owns several local tourism businesses and has been a tourism ambassador for trial is expected to run for up to five weeks.

Australian woman chained to her bed 'so she didn't sneak out to have sex with other men'
Australian woman chained to her bed 'so she didn't sneak out to have sex with other men'

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Australian woman chained to her bed 'so she didn't sneak out to have sex with other men'

A man has been charged with a raft of domestic violence offences, accused of kidnapping and assaulted his partner who was allegedly chained to a bed. Zane Woodward, 34, appeared in court on Thursday, two days after Broadie McGugan, 32, finally escaped from him and fled to the local police station in the NSW Illawarra region. Harrowing details were laid bare in court, where police allege Ms McGugan was detained at an Oak Flats home and chained to the bed at night. She was only unlocked from the bed to eat and use the toilet, court documents allege. The court heard that Wodward's alleged torture began recently to prevent her from 'sneaking out' to have sex with other men. Woodward was charged with kidnap with intent to commit a serious indictable offence, two counts of assault occasioning actual bodily harm – DV, take and detail a person with intent to obtain advantage, common assault and intimidation.

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