
UK prosecutors authorised 21 criminal charges against Andrew and Tristan Tate
Romanian Gendarmes from the Special Intervention Brigade escort Andrew Tate outside the Tate brothers residence in Pipera, Ilfov, near Bucharest, Romania, August 21, 2024. Inquam Photos/Octav Ganea via REUTERS/ File Photo

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New Straits Times
35 minutes ago
- New Straits Times
Austrians endure shock, horror after gunman kills 10 at school
AUSTRIANS were dumbfounded by grief and horror after a 21-year-old gunman killed 10 people in a high school shooting spree on Tuesday morning, unleashing a new kind of violence to the Alpine country unaccustomed to such slayings. Parents of pupils, top government officials and local residents in the southern city of Graz were lost for words after the young man, who has not been named, opened fire at the school where he had recently been a pupil. "Terrible. There's nothing else to make of it, is there?" said Monika Leiner, a 55-year-old IT consultant who lives near the school. "I'm a bit older, and I've seen quite a few things but I can't remember (a shooting with) so many deaths." Police have given no motive for the killings though Austrian newspaper Kronen Zeitung said officers found a farewell letter during a search of the suspect's home. Authorities said the man did not graduate from the school and Austrian media published unconfirmed reports he had suffered from bullying. Hundreds of police rushed to the scene after shots rang out at around 10 a.m. Shortly afterwards the perpetrator was dead, having shot himself in a toilet, authorities said. The killings were the worst Austrian school shooting on record. The government declared three days of national mourning and political parties cancelled upcoming events. In the afternoon, people arrived to leave flowers and candles by the school. President Alexander Van der Bellen said it was hard to express what the country was feeling. "This horror cannot be put into words," he said. Long queues also formed outside a blood donation centre in Graz. "Today is a hard day for all of us in Graz. I'm here to (donate) my blood to help other people who need it," 25-year-old Stephanie Koenig told Reuters. Police cordoned off the school and few parents of pupils there have so far made their feelings public. The mother of one pupil told state broadcaster ORF that her son had called her during the shooting. "It's impossible to grasp," said the woman, who was not named by the broadcaster. "I was just happy that he was on the phone and that I could hear him. But now I keep thinking about how others are doing." "He just told me that he had to run out and that he'd hidden in the garden. Everything else is too much for me now, including everything else he said," she added. Nola, a 21-year-old student and local resident, told Reuters a friend of one of her friends was among the victims. "A friend of mine goes to that school. She found out that a friend of hers died," she said. "She called me immediately afterwards in tears and said 'Hannah is dead! Hannah is dead!' and her parents were also beside themselves."


The Star
44 minutes ago
- The Star
Australian murder suspect denies drying deadly mushrooms
Erin Patterson's phone records three months before the lunch placed her in a part of Australia where death cap mushrooms had been sighted. - Reuters SYDNEY: An Australian woman accused of murdering three people with death cap mushrooms denied Wednesday (June 11) that she turned the fungi into dry powder for the fatal meal. Erin Patterson, 50, is charged with murdering her estranged husband's parents and aunt in July 2023 by spiking a beef Wellington lunch with the mushrooms. She is also accused of attempting to murder a fourth lunch guest -- her husband's uncle -- who survived the dish after a long stay in hospital. Patterson denies all charges in the trial, which has made headlines worldwide. She says the beef-and-pastry dish, which she cooked in individually sized portions, was poisoned by accident. Three months before the lunch, phone records placed Patterson in the Victoria state township of Loch, where a sighting of death cap mushrooms had been posted online, the court heard. Prosecutor Nanette Rogers alleged that within two hours of finding death cap mushrooms in Loch, Patterson bought a dehydrator to use on the fungi. Patterson admitted buying the dehydrator. But she denied purchasing it to dry death cap mushrooms or that she went to Loch to find the dangerous fungi. A month later, phone records placed Patterson in a second town in the area, Outtrim, days after a sighting of death cap mushrooms had been posted online, the jury heard. Patterson denied she went to the area to find the fungi, but said she may have driven by the area. Rogers suggested Patterson "blitzed" the death cap mushrooms into a powder in order to hide them in the meal. "Disagree," Patterson said. The court heard Patterson had told people that she served the beef Wellington leftovers to her children a day after the lunch, as her sickened guests lay in hospital. The accused said she scraped off the mushroom and pastry from the dish because her children were fussy eaters. The prosecutor asked Patterson why she would feed leftovers to her children, while knowing or suspecting that the same meal had put her guests in hospital. "I didn't know or suspect that," Patterson replied. The prosecutor accused her of telling a "lie about feeding the leftovers" because it gave her "some distance from a deliberate poisoning". Patterson replied: "I don't see how it could, but I disagree." The lunch host had also invited her estranged husband Simon to join the family meal at her secluded home in the Victoria state farm village of Leongatha. But Simon turned down the invitation saying he felt uncomfortable going, the court heard earlier. The pair were long estranged but still legally married. Simon's parents Don and Gail, and his aunt Heather Wilkinson, attended the lunch. All three were dead within days. Heather's husband Ian fell gravely ill but recovered. Patterson has previously said she struggled with her weight and an eating disorder, and that she booked a gastric bypass assessment for herself at a facility in September 2023. But the accused said she was embarrassed about the operation. Instead, Patterson says, she misled her in-laws, telling them she had cancer and would likely need treatment in the hope that they would help care for her children. Under questioning from the prosecutor on Wednesday, Patterson accepted that the facility never offered services related to gastric bypasses, and that it in fact specialised in procedures relating to skin, hair and nails. Her medical records did not mention anything about weight loss surgery or treatments, nor did she obtain a referral to a specialist for the gastric bypass, the court heard. The trial in Morwell, southeast of Melbourne, is expected to last another two weeks. - AFP


The Star
2 hours ago
- The Star
Poland charges citizen with spying for Russia
WARSAW (Reuters) -Poland has detained and charged one of its citizens with spying for Russian intelligence services, the State Prosecutor's Office said on Wednesday. Warsaw says its role as a hub for supplies to Ukraine has made it a target for spies and sabotage from Russia. Moscow has repeatedly dismissed such accusations. "The prosecutor charged the detained Polish citizen Wiktor Z. with declaring readiness to act for the intelligence of the Russian Federation and conducting activities for its benefit," the State Prosecutor's Office said in a press release. These included collecting and transmitting information concerning, among other things, the functioning of facilities key to Poland's defence, according to the statement, which did not elaborate. "The suspect, Wiktor Z., is 28 years old and has higher education. According to the findings, he acted out of ideological motives and pro-Russian beliefs," it added. Wiktor Z. was detained on June 4 by Poland's Internal Security Agency and could face between eight years and life in prison, according to the press release. The Russian embassy in Warsaw did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment. Warsaw says Moscow has been behind a series of acts of sabotage in Poland, including a huge fire at a Warsaw shopping centre last year, as well as cyberattacks and disinformation campaigns. Moscow has accused Warsaw of 'Russophobia'. (Reporting by Karol Badohal; editing by Philippa Fletcher)