
Bizarre law change sees an accused murderer on bail without any monitoring
Police believe that the deadly July 2023 shooting of three people in their cars on a street about 2am in Greenacre in Sydney 's west was sparked by a dispute between two of the city's criminal gangs.
Adam El-Shaimy, 36, has been charged with murder and two counts of shoot with intent to murder but was granted bail in October 2024 after putting up $2.2 million in surety.
One of his strict conditions was wearing an ankle bracelet.
After the NSW government banned electronic monitoring via private firms because of concerns about their effectiveness in May, crown prosecutors sought to place El-Shaimy back on remand.
Leaving the 36-year-old outside prison without an ankle bracelet would pose a unacceptable risk of flight, prosecutor Damien Hannan told Justice Andrew Coleman on Tuesday.
The judge noted that El-Shaimy couldn't be fitted with electronic monitoring run by NSW Correctives Services as that could only be done in prison.
CCTV footage was played on Tuesday of El-Shaimy and others charged over the alleged murder plot meeting up before and afterwards, and the movements of cars around the time of the shooting.
The hit was allegedly carried out after a tracker was found on a vehicle belonging to one associate Ammar Chahal, 40, leading the gang to believe that a rival crime organisation was after him, the court was told.
A plan was allegedly formed to park the tracked car on the street near Chahal's Greenacre house setting a trap.
However, the alleged gunman Anthony Pele was told not to shoot at anyone in their cars and instead to wait until anyone tried to grab Chahal from his home, El-Shaimy's barrister Philip Strickland said.
A conversation recorded by an undercover police officer showed that the shooter worked alone, the barrister argued.
'What did you do that for?' Chahal allegedly asked.
'Deal was you do it outside my house so you've got an alibi.'
Pele - who is overseas and has a warrant out for his arrest - then said he acted on his own, Mr Strickland told the court.
'It was Pele on his own bat,' the barrister said.
Ahmed Al Azzam, 25, was shot and later died in hospital while a couple in a separate car were also hit with bullets, leaving the man with life-altering spinal injuries.
While El-Shaimy was not there when the shooting occurred, he is accused of agreeing to the deadly plan and participating in it.
He was allegedly part of a convoy of white BMWs escorting Pele's vehicle to act as a distraction for police and rival gangs before the gunman's car peeled off and headed to the shooting.
Mr Strickland urged his client's continued release without monitoring, saying that El-Shaimy did not know anything about the murder plot.
In October 2024, Justice Robertson Wright described aspects of the crown case as 'verging on the speculative' when he granted bail.
Justice Coleman agreed with his colleague's assessment, dismissing the detention application and leaving El-Shaimy out on bail.
Shadow attorney-general Alister Henskens told AAP this showed the transition of private monitoring out of the system had been botched.
'Clearly the government's public electronic monitoring is failing because the court should've been given the option of putting this person on public monitoring in place of private monitoring,' he said.
El-Shaimy has not yet entered formal pleas.
His matter will return to Burwood Local Court on September 10.

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


The Sun
29 minutes ago
- The Sun
Big Brother star bought petrol for Molotov cocktail before it was hurled at reveller's head outside bar
A BIG Brother contestant bought petrol for a Molotov cocktail that was hurled at a reveller's head outside a bar. Simone Reed, 36, drove with pal Carl Wild to a garage after threatening to firebomb a pub following a furious row. 3 3 3 She then watched as Wild, 34, threw the petrol bomb at David Brotton from just a few feet away. It hit him squarely in the head. Video showed the victim thrashing around on the ground, trying to put out flames engulfing his head. Wild was also seen storming into the bar and hitting out at people before smashing up furniture and ransacking the till. Three people were taken to hospital with injuries described as 'serious but not life-threatening'. Glamour model Reed, who also appeared on X Factor, wept in court yesterday as she admitted encouraging or assisting arson. She was given bail with a home curfew between 7pm and 5am. Weeks after the attack she posed for bikini shots wearing the electronic tag used to monitor her. Teesside crown court heard the horror had unfolded in Redcar, North Yorks, in February after two groups of men clashed. One onlooker said: 'It was completely terrifying.' Reed, of Eaglescliffe, Teesside, was in Big Brother in 2017. Her barrister said she did not intend for anyone to be injured. Wild, of Redcar, admitted causing grievous bodily harm with intent and aggravated burglary. Lee Wild, 37, also of Redcar, admitted causing fear of violence. All three will be sentenced in October.


Reuters
29 minutes ago
- Reuters
U.S. Army sergeant suspected of shooting, wounding five fellow soldiers at Fort Stewart in Georgia
ATLANTA, Aug 6 (Reuters) - A U.S. Army sergeant is suspected of shooting and wounding five fellow soldiers with his personal handgun on Wednesday at Fort Stewart Army Airfield near Savannah, Georgia, before he was subdued by other soldiers and arrested, U.S. military officials said. All five soldiers struck by gunfire were listed in stable condition following the incident and are expected to recover, though three required surgery for their injuries, according to Brigadier General John Lubas, the base commander. The suspect was identified as Quornelius Radford, 28, an active-duty logistics sergeant assigned to the Second Armored Brigade at Fort Stewart. Lubas said Radford had not previously been deployed to combat. Lubas said at an afternoon press conference that the shooting unfolded shortly before 11 a.m. local time at the suspect's place of work on base. "I don't believe it had anything to do with a training event. Other than that, I can't speak to the motivations of this soldier." He said the firearm used was not a military weapon but a personal handgun. President Donald Trump has been briefed on the shooting and is monitoring the situation, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said on X. Mass shootings are relatively common in the U.S., where guns are widely available, and military bases, which are among the highest-security places in the country, have not been spared. The deadliest was at the Fort Hood Army base in 2009, when a major fatally shot unarmed soldiers in a medical building with a laser-sighted handgun, killing 13 people and injuring more than 30. Less than five years later, a soldier at the same Texas base fatally shot three service members and injured 16 others before killing himself. In 2013, an employee of a government defense contractor killed 12 people at Washington's Navy Yard. In 2019, a Saudi Air Force lieutenant shot and killed three people and wounded eight others at a U.S. Navy base in Pensacola, Florida. Fort Stewart is located in Hinesville, about 225 miles (362 km) southeast of Atlanta and 40 miles (64 km) southwest of Savannah. Nearly 9,000 people live at the base, according to the 2020 Census. The base supports approximately 15,000 active-duty Army military personnel, as well as thousands of military retirees, family members, and others, according to its website.


BreakingNews.ie
29 minutes ago
- BreakingNews.ie
US Army sergeant shot five soldiers at Georgia's Fort Stewart, official says
A US Army sergeant opened fire at Fort Stewart on Wednesday, shooting five soldiers and prompting a brief lockdown at one the country's largest army bases, officials said. Few details were immediately available about what led to the gunfire, but the suspect is an army sergeant, according to a US official. Advertisement The official was not authorised to publicly discuss details of the investigation and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity. The army said it is investigating. The injured were treated and then moved to Winn Army Community Hospital, base officials said in a Facebook post, adding there was no threat to the community. Law enforcement was sent to the 2nd Armoured Brigade Combat Team complex shortly before 11am local time on Wednesday. Advertisement The gunman was arrested at 11.35am, officials said. Fort Stewart was locked down for around one hour on Wednesday (Russ Bynum/AP) The lockdown lasted about an hour, and three schools just outside the base took steps similar to a lockdown as well, 'out of an abundance of caution', the Liberty County School System said. The lockdown lasted about an hour. After it was lifted, cars began to move through the normal security checkpoint at the fort's main gate. The army's 2nd Armoured Brigade Combat Team was created in 2016 when the service added more than 200 vehicles to an infantry unit of roughly 4,200 soldiers. Advertisement Also known as the Spartan Brigade, the army has called the unit its 'most modern land fighting force'. Located about 40 miles south west of Savannah, Fort Stewart is the largest army post east of the Mississippi River. It is home to thousands of soldiers assigned to the army's 3rd Infantry Division and family members. The fort's three elementary schools were also locked down, community superintendent Brian Perry told WTOC-TV. Advertisement The schools have nearly 1,400 students, according to the Department of Defence. White House and Defence Department officials said President Donald Trump and Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth had been briefed on the shooting. The FBI was at the fort to help investigate, said deputy director Dan Bongino.