logo
Australian man charged with cattle theft after $100,000 load of bull semen found

Australian man charged with cattle theft after $100,000 load of bull semen found

The Guardian27-06-2025
Bull semen worth $100,000 is part of a haul of allegedly stolen wagyu cattle uncovered by police in regional Australia.
A 34-year-old man from Grafton, in northern New South Wales, faces 20 charges including cattle theft and obtaining financial advantage after allegedly stealing more than 100 cattle from his employer.
A vet allegedly contacted by the 34-year-old also faces animal cruelty charges for failing to provide treatment to some of his cattle.
The cattleman was asked by his boss to sell 200 cattle, but is accused of arranging to sell 114 of the animals, including 45 valuable full-blood wagyu cows, to himself in January 2024.
Det Ch Insp Cameron Whiteside, from the NSW police rural crime prevention team, said a rural crime police unit, codenamed Strike Force Newbury, had been investigating the alleged fraud for more than a year.
He said police 'conservatively' estimated the value of each cow at about $3,000.
Police allege the sale led to a discount of almost $100,000 after the man bought the herd through a third-party at a greatly reduced price.
A search warrant allegedly uncovered a liquid nitrogen storage tank containing the bull semen.
Whiteside said the semen was worth about $100,000, due to the value of wagyu beef.
'We're talking hundreds of thousands of dollars. But that's just on face value,' he said. 'Then you've got to look at the future benefit, or the breeding capabilities of that stock also.'
Embryos for breeding were also part of the alleged haul.
After searching the 34-year-old's property, police allegedly told him to seek treatment from a veterinarian for six wagyu bulls.
Police say the vet produced false documents saying he had treated the cattle without doing so and two of the bulls later died.
The vet has been charged with committing an aggravated act of animal cruelty and failing to provide vet treatment.
He was granted bail to appear at Grafton Local Court on 11 August.
Det Ch Insp Whiteside said there were several moving parts to a complex investigation, which required the assistance of five horse-mounted police to execute warrants and specialist rural crime police from across the state. Aside from two primary investigators, officers from New England, Dubbo and southern NSW also assisted.
Whiteside described the alleged offending as 'quite complex'.
The 34-year-old is charged with 20 offences including cattle theft, animal cruelty and obtaining financial advantage by deception.
He was also granted bail to appear at Grafton Local Court on 4 August.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Cops search for man accused of killing cancer patient's dog as revenge for a fight between two animals the same day
Cops search for man accused of killing cancer patient's dog as revenge for a fight between two animals the same day

The Independent

time4 hours ago

  • The Independent

Cops search for man accused of killing cancer patient's dog as revenge for a fight between two animals the same day

Tennessee authorities are looking for a man suspected of dragging an elderly woman's dog out of her trailer and shooting it dead, just hours after the dog got into a fight with another animal. Detectives have issued an arrest warrant for Gavin Palpallatoc after he allegedly barged into the home of a terminally ill, 78-year-old woman at the Redwood Estates mobile home park, in Memphis, on Friday. The 31-year-old is now wanted for aggravated robbery, aggravated burglary, aggravated cruelty to animals and aggravated abuse of a vulnerable adult, according to a release from Memphis police. Palpallatoc was allegedly instructed to kill the dog by his friend Jane Reynolds, 52, who has also been charged with aggravated cruelty to animals. According to Memphis police, Reynolds said two animals had gotten into a small fight earlier that day in the elderly woman's backyard. The owner of the deceased dog wished to remain anonymous but said Reynolds called her after the fight and told her "I'm gonna call my friend to come put that dog down." She also showed officers text messages between her and Reynolds, who had told her "I can't stop whatever is going to happen. I'm sorry." Later on, Palpallatoc entered her home and took her dog, a Pit Bull mix named Cash. "We were sitting on the couch just watching TV, and this guy comes in and pulls him from my couch to the floor, to the porch," the woman said, adding that she had heard at least 12 gunshots, before Palpallatoc fled the scene. "He emptied the clip," she told police. "Something has got to be missing somewhere for him to come and kill that dog." A witness told police that she heard the gunfire and saw suspect Palpallatoc walking towards Reynolds with a gun by his side. He later drove from the scene in a green Honda CRV. According to WREG, the dog's owner is battling terminal cancer and adopted Cash – a stray – five years ago, after he wandered into the mobile home park. "We got a good dog," she told the outlet. "He was my life. "I was trying to rehome him and anything I could do and keep him with me as long as I could, and I had really been suffering over that and the fact that what if I go before he goes, what's going to happen."

BlueBet fined for allowing man to gamble $700k despite ‘clear red flag behaviours'
BlueBet fined for allowing man to gamble $700k despite ‘clear red flag behaviours'

The Guardian

time6 hours ago

  • The Guardian

BlueBet fined for allowing man to gamble $700k despite ‘clear red flag behaviours'

A man who 'binge gambled' $40,000 in an 11-hour session was awarded VIP status by the bookmaker BlueBet and assigned a dedicated personal manager who encouraged him to keep betting and took a cut of his losses. A regulator has found it wasn't until the man had gambled $700,000 four months later and displayed multiple 'clear red flag behaviours' that BlueBet checked whether he could afford to be betting so much. The Northern Territory Racing and Wagering Commission (NTRWC), which regulates most online gambling companies in Australia, described Bluebet's conduct as 'unacceptable' and 'extremely concerning'. The regulator found that when the man complained about having run out of money to gamble, his VIP manager supplied him with bonus bets, deposit matches and placed funds directly into his account. Sign up: AU Breaking News email On one occasion, when the man's request for an inducement was initially declined, he requested his account be closed. Within two minutes, the VIP manager had placed $500 of bonus bets into his account. The man had already lost $4,000 that day. A federal parliamentary inquiry, led by the late Labor MP Peta Murphy, called for inducements like bonus bets to be banned. It warned they encouraged riskier bets, higher losses, and undermined harm minimisation messages. BlueBet, according to the regulator, prioritised the retention of a profitable customer over its legislated 'responsible gambling responsibilities'. It found no evidence the VIP manager had been trained in harm minimisation. 'Instead of monitoring the situation and engaging in meaningful responsible gambling actions, BlueBet chose to award the complainant VIP status and assign a dedicated VIP account manager, whose commission was tied to the complainant's net gambling revenue,' the NTRWC decision said. Bluebet told the regulator that it called the man for a 'responsible gambling check-in' after he repeatedly failed to place bets on his credit card due to insufficient funds. But the regulator found this call, which went unanswered, was prompted, in part, by 'payment processing issues' and not concern for his wellbeing. On the day after the phone call, the man continued gambling and requested bonus bets from his VIP manager. 'At no stage did the account manager make mention that BlueBet was concerned about his wagering activities from a responsible gambling perspective,' the NTRWC decision said. 'Rather, the VIP manager continued to encourage the complainant to wager with BlueBet through the promise of the provision of upcoming bonuses.' In the two weeks after the unanswered phone call, the man gambled close to $400,000 with BlueBet. The man's gambling account was eventually closed when he texted his manager to say he wished he 'had been pulled up earlier by you guys' as he had lost everything. Sign up to Breaking News Australia Get the most important news as it breaks after newsletter promotion 'Given the numerous earlier red flags, it is extremely concerning that it took the complainant himself reaching out to BlueBet for his account to be closed,' the decision said. 'BlueBet missed multiple opportunities for timely and appropriate action and it's disappointing that the responsibility fell on the complainant rather than BlueBet taking a more assertive role in protecting the complainant from further harm.' Despite finding Bluebet's conduct to be extremely concerning, the bookmaker was fined $53,380, which is less than 10% of the $570,000 the man lost. This was the maximum penalty available to the commission. The Tasmanian independent MP Andrew Wilkie has previously called for financial penalties to be massively increased to ensure gambling companies are effectively punished for their misconduct. 'It should be an amount that hurts the company financially and hurts them so much that they think, 'heavens, we can't afford that again',' Wilkie said in 2023. 'It should hurt them so much that shareholders say to the board, 'that must not happen again'.' BlueBet merged with gambling company Betr earlier this year and no longer operates as a stand-alone brand. The conduct examined by the regulator took place during 2021. In Australia, Gambling Help Online is available on 1800 858 858. The National Debt Helpline is at 1800 007 007. In the UK, support for problem gambling can be found via the NHS National Problem Gambling Clinic on 020 7381 7722, or GamCare on 0808 8020 133. In the US, call the National Council on Problem Gambling at 800-GAMBLER or text 800GAM.s

Explosive messages between Army major and his late wife reveal his affair two years before he was accused of drowning her on a kayaking trip then moving to Thailand
Explosive messages between Army major and his late wife reveal his affair two years before he was accused of drowning her on a kayaking trip then moving to Thailand

Daily Mail​

time7 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Explosive messages between Army major and his late wife reveal his affair two years before he was accused of drowning her on a kayaking trip then moving to Thailand

Text messages between a retired Australian Army major and the wife he is accused of killing reveal the alleged fallout of an affair he had while posted to Papua New Guinea. In one message, Jacqueline Davidson appeared to refer to her husband Graeme's lover as a 'black count' and accused the pair of having sex while she was trying to call him.

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