Suspected toxic waste dumper linked to explosive gas cylinders ditched on council land
'EPA is actively pursuing the alleged offender … Nonetheless, EPA considers it unlikely that the alleged offender has the necessary means to achieve a timely and effective clean-up of the DA cylinders.'
The EPA has declined to name the person who is under investigation.
Three sources familiar with the investigation but not authorised to speak publicly say the waste is linked to White, who is charged over the West Footscray fire, warehouse waste stockpiles and the subterranean dump near Kaniva, close to the South Australian border. He has pleaded not guilty.
The registration of one of the abandoned trucks was also in the name of a company run by White in 2018, according to records obtained by The Age.
White once held an exclusive contract with chemical giant BOC to 'recycle' used acetylene tanks, but more than 50,000 were allegedly found buried on the outback property from 2011 to 2018. Potentially thousands of other tanks were never found or were destroyed in the 2018 West Footscray blaze.
At Merrimu, aerial imagery shows at least 22 containers and trailers were stored on farm property beginning in April 2022. Over a two-year period, most disappeared after being moved to an unknown location. Then, in March 2025, the last two trailers were taken from the farm and parked on council land about 500 metres down the road.
The dumped waste has sparked a legal fight between the local council and the EPA, which has issued the Moorabool Shire Council with a clean-up order. A bid to have the order stayed in the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal last week failed.
An affidavit from shire chief executive Derek Madden describes claims the EPA had known about the waste on the farm property for two years after receiving information and complaints from a local landowner.
'The son (of the landowner) claimed he holds evidence … he is willing to provide evidence concerning the movement of the material and expressed frustration with the EPA's handling of the matter. He alleged that the EPA had been dealing with him and his parents for nearly two years regarding the waste issue.
'He also stated the family was told not to speak to the media by staff within the EPA as it would 'make things worse'.'
An EPA spokesman said the agency was 'aware of waste stored on trailers at an address in Merrimu' and that waste that presents a danger 'must be removed as quickly as possible and according to the law'.
'We had regulated the party alleged to be in control of that waste, as we are required to. Clearly, the waste should not have been moved to council land. Investigations as to who moved it are ongoing, and because of those investigations, as well as live legal activity, we are unable to comment further.'

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


Perth Now
6 hours ago
- Perth Now
Teacher ‘dared' girls to kiss: court
The final arguments in the trial of a music teacher accused of sexually abusing a teen girl have circled around a movie night kiss captured in a photo booth and a series of emotionally charged emails. Janelle Colville Fletcher, 40, is contesting allegations that she groomed and sexually abused the underage girl some years ago and appeared again on Monday at the South Australian District Court before Judge Joanne Fuller. The prosecution, led by Chris Allen, allege Ms Fletcher abused the girl in various locations and also that she communicated with her and another teenage girl to make them amenable to sexual activity. Some of the alleged offending happened when the two girls and Ms Fletcher were alone together in a room, the prosecution said, with the teacher allegedly performing a lap dance on a chair. She then allegedly 'dared' the two girls to kiss each other and asked if they would 'date' each other. That same night, Mr Allen said, Ms Fletcher then spent time alone with one of the girls and touched her genital area. The alleged grooming and abuse of the girl then went on for months at various locations, the prosecution said, including the home of Ms Fletcher and in Ms Fletcher's car. Janelle Fletcher is contesting the allegation that she sexually abused a teen girl. NewsWire Credit: News Corp Australia Alongside oral evidence from the alleged victims, the prosecution presented a series of texts, emails and photographs to support its case, including a photo of Ms Fletcher and the girl kissing at a cinema photo booth. In his closing address, Mr Allen said the 'objective evidence' of the photo booth kiss showed an 'unlawful sexual act'. He argued further that the 'sheer volume' of photos of Ms Fletcher and the girl together suggested a sexual relationship. 'They look like girlfriends (in the photographs) … in a relationship between girlfriends,' Mr Allen said. In her testimony from last week, Ms Fletcher said the photo booth kiss was a 'pretend kiss' she did not want or mean to happen. 'It was meant to be a pretend kiss like we had done previously where our lips don't actually touch, and in that particular photo we got close and she did sort of pull me in and the photo went off, yeah,' Ms Fletcher said. There is dispute between the defence and prosecution about the correct sequence order of photos from the booth. The prosecution says the correct sequence runs from top to bottom in the order of one, two, three and then four. In 'photo 4', Ms Fletcher appears happy and the prosecution argues this shows she was happy to kiss the girl and not shocked or upset by it. Ms Fletcher and her defence team, led by Andrew Culshaw, claim that photo was taken before the kiss and should not be seen as approval of the act, with the correct sequence of photos running one, two, four and then three. Mr Culshaw also argued the photo did not show child sexual abuse because the girl had turned 17 at the time of the photo, and so she was therefore not a child when the kiss happened. The defence argued Ms Fletcher was also no longer in a position of authority at the time. 'What Your Honour has, in my submission, is evidence of a kiss at a time when it was legal,' Mr Culshaw said. The prosecution also argued that a series of emotionally expressive emails from Ms Fletcher to the girl revealed the 'true nature' of the relationship between them. In one email, Ms Fletcher told the girl 'I want something serious not something short term'. In others, she said 'my feelings for you are not lust but love' and 'right now, we can't be open. Right now we will have to continue as we are in secret …' Ms Fletcher holds a PhD in music education. NewsWire Credit: News Corp Australia Ms Fletcher had earlier argued the emails showed non-sexual 'love' for the girl, but Mr Allen dismissed that argument on Monday as 'absurd'. 'This is not 'I love you' in some sort of Catholic way,' Mr Allen said. Mr Culshaw, in his closing address, acknowledged under questioning from Judge Fuller that the emails appeared 'terrible' on a first or literal reading in that they seemed to suggest the pair had been in a sexual relationship. But he argued a deeper reading of the emails fit with Ms Fletcher's testimony. She claimed last week that they were written to keep the girl happy and guide her away to a more age-appropriate relationship. 'These emails are consistent with a relatively young teacher, in her early 30s, who had got herself in too deep … and so was trying to deal with the situation and extricate herself from it,' Mr Culshaw said. Ms Fletcher holds a PhD in music education. She told the court that she was heterosexual and believed in the Catholic faith. She was still legally married to a man, though the pair had separated, she told the court. The judge-alone trial continues.


West Australian
6 hours ago
- West Australian
Defence and prosecution deliver closing arguments in Janelle Fletcher child sexual abuse trial
The final arguments in the trial of a music teacher accused of sexually abusing a teen girl have circled around a movie night kiss captured in a photo booth and a series of emotionally charged emails. Janelle Colville Fletcher, 40, is contesting allegations that she groomed and sexually abused the underage girl some years ago and appeared again on Monday at the South Australian District Court before Judge Joanne Fuller. The prosecution, led by Chris Allen, allege Ms Fletcher abused the girl in various locations and also that she communicated with her and another teenage girl to make them amenable to sexual activity. Some of the alleged offending happened when the two girls and Ms Fletcher were alone together in a room, the prosecution said, with the teacher allegedly performing a lap dance on a chair. She then allegedly 'dared' the two girls to kiss each other and asked if they would 'date' each other. That same night, Mr Allen said, Ms Fletcher then spent time alone with one of the girls and touched her genital area. The alleged grooming and abuse of the girl then went on for months at various locations, the prosecution said, including the home of Ms Fletcher and in Ms Fletcher's car. Alongside oral evidence from the alleged victims, the prosecution presented a series of texts, emails and photographs to support its case, including a photo of Ms Fletcher and the girl kissing at a cinema photo booth. In his closing address, Mr Allen said the 'objective evidence' of the photo booth kiss showed an 'unlawful sexual act'. He argued further that the 'sheer volume' of photos of Ms Fletcher and the girl together suggested a sexual relationship. 'They look like girlfriends (in the photographs) … in a relationship between girlfriends,' Mr Allen said. In her testimony from last week, Ms Fletcher said the photo booth kiss was a 'pretend kiss' she did not want or mean to happen. 'It was meant to be a pretend kiss like we had done previously where our lips don't actually touch, and in that particular photo we got close and she did sort of pull me in and the photo went off, yeah,' Ms Fletcher said. There is dispute between the defence and prosecution about the correct sequence order of photos from the booth. The prosecution says the correct sequence runs from top to bottom in the order of one, two, three and then four. In 'photo 4', Ms Fletcher appears happy and the prosecution argues this shows she was happy to kiss the girl and not shocked or upset by it. Ms Fletcher and her defence team, led by Andrew Culshaw, claim that photo was taken before the kiss and should not be seen as approval of the act, with the correct sequence of photos running one, two, four and then three. Mr Culshaw also argued the photo did not show child sexual abuse because the girl had turned 17 at the time of the photo, and so she was therefore not a child when the kiss happened. The defence argued Ms Fletcher was also no longer in a position of authority at the time. 'What Your Honour has, in my submission, is evidence of a kiss at a time when it was legal,' Mr Culshaw said. The prosecution also argued that a series of emotionally expressive emails from Ms Fletcher to the girl revealed the 'true nature' of the relationship between them. In one email, Ms Fletcher told the girl 'I want something serious not something short term'. In others, she said 'my feelings for you are not lust but love' and 'right now, we can't be open. Right now we will have to continue as we are in secret …' Ms Fletcher had earlier argued the emails showed non-sexual 'love' for the girl, but Mr Allen dismissed that argument on Monday as 'absurd'. 'This is not 'I love you' in some sort of Catholic way,' Mr Allen said. Mr Culshaw, in his closing address, acknowledged under questioning from Judge Fuller that the emails appeared 'terrible' on a first or literal reading in that they seemed to suggest the pair had been in a sexual relationship. But he argued a deeper reading of the emails fit with Ms Fletcher's testimony. She claimed last week that they were written to keep the girl happy and guide her away to a more age-appropriate relationship. 'These emails are consistent with a relatively young teacher, in her early 30s, who had got herself in too deep … and so was trying to deal with the situation and extricate herself from it,' Mr Culshaw said. Ms Fletcher holds a PhD in music education. She told the court that she was heterosexual and believed in the Catholic faith. She was still legally married to a man, though the pair had separated, she told the court. The judge-alone trial continues.

The Age
15 hours ago
- The Age
Nick McKenzie investigation leads Age's Kennedy Awards finalists
The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald have been recognised with 15 finalist nominations in the Kennedy Awards for Excellence in Journalism. The awards, named in honour of the late Herald crime reporter Les Kennedy, this year attracted more than 900 entries of exceptional quality, Kennedy Foundation chairperson Carl Dumbrell said. The Age 's nominations were led by Nick McKenzie's investigative series Building Bad, which looked into allegations of intimidation and corruption in the building industry. It was nominated for outstanding investigative reporting in a joint Nine Network entry from The Age, The Sydney Morning Herald, The Australian Financial Review and 60 Minutes. Senior reporter Sarah Danckert and Carla Jaeger are finalists in the outstanding business reporting category for their story Cash for the Boys, which looked at how underworld figures pulled the strings at ASX-listed technology group Dubber. Loading Age senior writer Michael Bachelard and Age investigative reporter Charlotte Grieve were nominated for outstanding environmental reporting for their story on whether carbon offset schemes in the outback are working. Foreign affairs and national security correspondent Matthew Knott and photographer Kate Geraghty are joint finalists in the outstanding foreign correspondent category for their work on the Israel-Hezbollah war. Former chief political correspondent, now European correspondent, David Crowe is nominated for outstanding columnist. Travel writer Andrew Bain and the Herald's Kate McClymont and Harriet Alexander were among other finalists.