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Bali villa shooting: Sydney plumber Darcy Francesco Jenson among three Australians arrested over fatal shooting

Bali villa shooting: Sydney plumber Darcy Francesco Jenson among three Australians arrested over fatal shooting

It is unclear how long the three Australians charged over the attack had been in Bali. Until recently, Jenson ran a plumbing business in western Sydney, and previously appeared in court in NSW over minor driving matters.
Coskun, also from NSW, pleaded guilty in 2023 to supplying drugs and dealing in the proceeds of crime, and was still serving a two-year non-custodial sentence. A condition of his release was not committing further crimes.
Paea I Middlemore Tupou was detained overseas and flown back into Bali to face investigators.
The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade said it stood 'ready to offer consular assistance to any citizen, should it be requested', and confirmed it was already providing consular assistance to the families of the two Australian victims.
Adityajaya said on Wednesday that two of the men were alleged to have carried out the ambush while another, 'the planner', waited outside. Bali detectives said it was likely others were involved, but they were still investigating.
Two rented getaway cars were used – the first had picked up the attackers before being dumped in Tabanan, a neighbouring district, while a second was used to drive to Jakarta, police said.
The sledgehammer had been bought at a local shop, according to investigators, who were still conducting forensic testing on masks and gloves that had been recovered. Two of the motorbikes seized were used by the attackers during the ambush, they said, while three others recovered belonged to the victims.
The Australian Federal Police would not comment on whether Indonesia had requested its co-operation since the arrests, but said no one had been arrested in Australia over the Bali ambush.
The two bikes allegedly used in the ambush were part of evidence seized by Bali police. Credit: Amilia Rosa
Any request for cooperation by Indonesia would trigger a tightly controlled process in Australia, governed by long-standing federal police guidelines on crimes that carry the death penalty, an AFP spokesman said earlier.
Ghanim, a former kick-boxer with known underworld associates, was taken to hospital after the attack with gunshot wounds, blunt-force trauma injuries and bullets still embedded in his body, and now recovering. But police said he had yet to cooperate with investigators.
Radmanovic died at the scene. Forensic doctors said he had been shot in at least four areas – chest, stomach, buttock and palm – while also suffering extensive injuries to his head and foot. On Tuesday, his family arrived at the morgue to authorise a full autopsy.
The attackers were masked and wearing helmets, and at least one had spoken in an Australian accent, complaining his bike wouldn't start, before both fled the scene, witnesses told police. The men's voices were also caught by CCTV in the area.
Mevlut Coskun one of the three Australians arrested and brought back to Bali.
Bali Police Senior Commissioner Ariasandy said authorities believed it was a targeted attack rather than a robbery as nothing was taken.
Officers recovered 17 bullet casings from the villa, Ariasandy said, but no guns or drugs.
Radmanovic's wife, Jazmyn Gourdeas, who was also in the three-bedroom villa during the attack, told police she did not recognise the men.
Gourdeas said she had fallen asleep in the locked villa before being woken by gunfire and her husband's screams.
Local media reported that she covered her eyes with a blanket before seeing two attackers wearing bright orange jackets and dark black helmets. One shot her husband in the bathroom, she said. Another woman staying at the villa with Ghanim reportedly heard loud bangs and saw the masked men fleeing.
Radmanovic has been described by loved ones as a 'kind, hardworking man devoted to his family' who left behind young children in Australia.
Radmanovic and Ghanim had been staying at the villa in Bali for a couple of months with their partners and one other person. But police said the group had so far been un-cooperative with detectives after Ghanim was released from hospital on Sunday, his leg heavily bandaged.
Ariasandy said Radmanovic, rather than Ghanim, was likely to have been the main target.
Indonesian police said Jenson was arrested at Jakarta airport while trying to flee the country.
'Based on the wounds of the dead victim, two shots to the left chest, they wanted him dead,' he said. 'Until we can ask [Ghanim] questions, we cannot verify the situation yet. It's an ongoing investigation.'
Police said the victims and witnesses remained under 'observation' and were required to stay in the country.
Ghanim served jail time more than a decade ago in Melbourne for his involvement in two non-fatal shootings, as well as drug offences.
In the Indonesian legal system, being named a suspect is the equivalent of being charged with a crime. Bali police earlier said they could ask their Australian counterparts for assistance only once suspects had been identified.
On Sunday, an AFP spokesperson said such a case was automatically deemed sensitive and any co-operation with Indonesian authorities would require special oversight and approval by the top brass.
If an arrest is made, the AFP would require direct approval from the minister for home affairs before sharing information with Indonesian authorities, having to weigh the seriousness of the crime against the likelihood of a death sentence being imposed.
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Gun crime is rare in Indonesia, and police said they were investigating where the weapons had come from.
The Australian Attorney-General's office said as a matter of long-standing policy it did not disclose if it had received or made extradition requests from other countries or comment on its consideration of such cases.
With Sally Rawsthorne

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An Aston Martin, fine art and a yacht: Police probe millions spent protecting detention company luxury
An Aston Martin, fine art and a yacht: Police probe millions spent protecting detention company luxury

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An Aston Martin, fine art and a yacht: Police probe millions spent protecting detention company luxury

The latest allegations about the AFP's targeting of Canstruct – the Australian government's biggest South Pacific contractor – pose a fresh political challenge for the Albanese government after it campaigned hard on integrity and sought to position Australia as an honest broker in the face of China's use of financial inducements and suspected corruption to seed influence. Loading This masthead's previous reporting prompted the 2024 Richardson Inquiry, which found that Canstruct – along with several other firms, including those with links to suspected arms and drug smuggling, Iranian sanctions busting or corruption – had secured massive offshore processing contracts in PNG and Nauru due to systemic failures of vetting and due diligence by Home Affairs. 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'It was so obvious that the Australian government did not want anyone to come off Nauru and it was the department's job to ensure that.' 'Pressure was applied from the government to the department, who would apply pressure to Canstruct to deliver services in Nauru, some of which were not operationally required. This pressure manifested itself through what I perceived as over-payments, inability to verify services, incorrect and undocumented processes regarding staffing.' 'I perceived that there was a failure to obtain value for money and ongoing breaches of APS [Australian Public Service] ethical standards and code of conduct, Commonwealth Procurement Rules, and maintenance of appropriate government records and probity breaches.' Among the examples provided to detectives by Elias is a February 2021 case involving an asylum seeker who 'had been beaten up severely by a group of Nauruan nationals' and required urgent medical care in Australia. The man's 'life was in the balance', but while Home Affairs was 'trying to get a plane to land in Nauru to have the transferee transferred to Australia for urgent treatment … a Nauru government official apparently stated he would not turn the landing lights on for the plane at night unless he was paid $5000. I found this shocking.' Another example cited by Elias involves allegations of Canstruct getting paid to train then-president Aingimea's guard dog. 'The Department of Home Affairs had to state repeatedly in internal minutes and Commonwealth records that to support contract extensions that we were getting value for money,' he said. 'I state that the department was not getting value for money at all. I was complicit in this deceptive process during my role at the department during 2020 and 2021.'

An Aston Martin, fine art and a yacht: Police probe millions spent protecting detention company luxury
An Aston Martin, fine art and a yacht: Police probe millions spent protecting detention company luxury

Sydney Morning Herald

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  • Sydney Morning Herald

An Aston Martin, fine art and a yacht: Police probe millions spent protecting detention company luxury

The latest allegations about the AFP's targeting of Canstruct – the Australian government's biggest South Pacific contractor – pose a fresh political challenge for the Albanese government after it campaigned hard on integrity and sought to position Australia as an honest broker in the face of China's use of financial inducements and suspected corruption to seed influence. Loading This masthead's previous reporting prompted the 2024 Richardson Inquiry, which found that Canstruct – along with several other firms, including those with links to suspected arms and drug smuggling, Iranian sanctions busting or corruption – had secured massive offshore processing contracts in PNG and Nauru due to systemic failures of vetting and due diligence by Home Affairs. 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But police have told witnesses they are seeking advice from the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions on whether Canstruct or any individuals could be charged for defrauding the Commonwealth. In detailed sworn witness statements obtained by the AFP, Home Affairs assistant secretary Derek Elias, who oversaw Australia's offshore contracting regime, describes how the department agreed to allow Canstruct to seek reimbursement for insurance costs above $3.5 million as long as it was 'supported by substantiated evidence (including market soundings)'. But Elias told police he could 'not recall sighting any market sounding documents' and that after he had raised concerns about Canstruct's repeated overcharging of Home Affairs, and sought to push the company to 'make savings' of taxpayer funds, he 'developed an impression that the insurances were an area that Canstruct would not negotiate on'. Elias is on leave from Home Affairs, having accused the department in an ongoing legal stoush of causing him ill health because of what he alleges is his role in overseeing the government's corruption-prone, dysfunctional and wasteful management of offshore processing. According to what Elias told federal agents, Canstruct was among the beneficiaries of Home Affairs' failings. His witness statement alleges that 'from around March 2021 … my team had calculated that Canstruct was being paid too much and had been overpaid for services which had not been delivered or required over an extended period of time'. Elias claims Canstruct's rolling contracts each generated huge windfalls that should never have been paid to the firm, and that he was 'gobsmacked' when he learned of Canstruct's alleged profiteering, including by being paid for services that were never delivered or not needed. 'By the time we finished negotiations in June 2021, we concluded that the Department of Home Affairs had been paying Canstruct excessively, possibly more than $16 million more per [contract] extension,' he said, adding the department was then not getting value for money as required by government procurement rules. 'It was an enabling environment for Canstruct to make as much money as they wanted and the department had little negotiating power. These $16 million effectively belonged to the people of Australia. I found this morally objectionable.' Home Affairs has previously denied Elias' claims that it wasted millions of dollars on services that were never delivered or that should never have been performed. It declined to comment on Tuesday, saying the 'matters may be subject of an investigation'. The statement reveals the AFP also grilled Elias about his knowledge of Canstruct's decision to sub-contract firms controlled by powerful Nauruan politicians to provide goods and services on Nauru. Loading 'Specifically, federal agent[s]... asked me if money was being paid to a government official in Nauru by Canstruct, what would the Department of Home Affairs' view be in relation to prominent people receiving money from Canstruct. That, in my opinion, would be alarming.' This masthead has previously revealed how firms overseen by high-ranking Nauruan politicians, including then president of Nauru, now Foreign Affairs Minister Lionel Aingimea, were paid millions of dollars by Canstruct and Home Affairs to help service Australia's offshore detention regime. At the same time some of these payments were made, the Australian government and Canstruct were seeking these same politicians' support to ensure Nauru kept hosting the offshore processing of asylum seekers. Nauru recently agreed to keep accepting asylum seekers bound for Australia, although a new service provider, MTC, has replaced Canstruct. Loading Elias also told federal agents that Home Affairs misused taxpayer funds to maintain ongoing Nauruan government support, including in circumstances in which asylum seekers' health and safety were compromised. 'I believed the department was paying several unnecessary fees and maintaining services no longer operationally required (such as the crane at port) and of significant dollar value to the government of Nauru,' his police statement alleges. 'Nauru was holding Australia to ransom and the department's role was to make sure that no one [seeking asylum] came off Nauru. I was increasingly concerned. The department was effectively paying Nauru whatever they wanted to ensure that refugees would not come off the island.' 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The man's 'life was in the balance', but while Home Affairs was 'trying to get a plane to land in Nauru to have the transferee transferred to Australia for urgent treatment … a Nauru government official apparently stated he would not turn the landing lights on for the plane at night unless he was paid $5000. I found this shocking.' Another example cited by Elias involves allegations of Canstruct getting paid to train then-president Aingimea's guard dog. 'The Department of Home Affairs had to state repeatedly in internal minutes and Commonwealth records that to support contract extensions that we were getting value for money,' he said. 'I state that the department was not getting value for money at all. I was complicit in this deceptive process during my role at the department during 2020 and 2021.'

Pierce Brosnan trades licence to kill for sheriff's badge in revenge tale
Pierce Brosnan trades licence to kill for sheriff's badge in revenge tale

Sydney Morning Herald

time2 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Pierce Brosnan trades licence to kill for sheriff's badge in revenge tale

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