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Double demerit points come into force: Everything motorists need to know for the King's Birthday long weekend

Double demerit points come into force: Everything motorists need to know for the King's Birthday long weekend

Sky News AU2 days ago

Double demerit points will kick in from Friday across parts of the country for the King's Birthday long weekend, as police come out in force to crack down on road safety.
Police are urging motorists to take extra care while driving over the next couple of days, as the number of lives lost on Australian roads continue to climb.
While double demerit point schemes differ depending on the state or territory, police will be rolling out patrols to ensure road rules are being followed.
Here's everything motorists need to know this long weekend. New South Wales
In New South Wales, double demerit points will come into effect from 12am on Friday and remain in place until 11.59pm on Monday.
Police will be targeting speeding drivers and motorcycle riders, as well as motorists who hit the roads under the influence of alcohol or drugs.
Officers will also crackdown on fatigue and distracted driving in a bid to prevent road trauma throughout the long weekend. Victoria
Victorian police have revealed the number of lives lost has already surged to a "16-year high", with 135 deaths on the state's roads so far in 2025 - a 13 per cent increase on this period in 2024.
The last time Victoria recorded a similar road toll was in 2008 when 137 lives were lost.
Victoria has also suffered its worst May on record since 2004, with 36 deaths recorded this year.
Police have warned "speeding and distracted motorists will be a key focus" this public holiday long weekend, which is considered to be a "high-risk period" on the state's roads.
The road safety blitz, dubbed Operation Regal, will start at 12.01am on Friday and end at 11.59pm on Monday.
While Victoria does not enforce a double demerit point scheme, police stressed 7,000 road and traffic infringements were handed out on the same weekend last year.
Road Policing Command Acting Assistant Commissioner David Byrt highlighted winter presents extra challenges for motorists given the roads are often slippery and there is poor visibility.
"Whether you're travelling across the state this weekend or heading to the alpine regions, please take extra care on the roads and be sure to drive to the conditions," he said in a statement.
"We're approaching the halfway point of the year and the amount of trauma we've experienced is extremely concerning.
"These road trauma numbers of course represent actual people. People who have been killed, or whose lives are changed forever, simply from travelling on our roads." South Australia, Tasmania and the Northern Territory
South Australia, Tasmania and the Northern Territory do not impose a double demerit point scheme.
All states will enjoy a long weekend for the King's Birthday, with the popular Dark Mofo musical festival also underway in Tasmania from Friday.
Hobart Police Inspector John Toohey has asked motorists to be mindful of vulnerable road users, like pedestrians, during busy event periods.
"This year already, three pedestrians have died on Tasmanian roads, with a further 14 seriously injured," he said in a statement ahead of the long weekend.
"We're asking everyone to stay alert, avoid distractions such as phones or headphones, and only cross at designated crossings.
"With many festival events taking place at night and in low-light conditions, we're hoping to see responsible behaviour, that is, people looking out for each other, obeying traffic signals and being visible in the dark." The ACT
The double demerit points penalty will apply in the Australian Capital Territory this long weekend. Queensland
Queensland does not observe the King's Birthday in June, as the public holiday is held on October 6.
The state's double demerit point scheme operates a little differently to other jurisdictions, as the penalty applies to motorists who repeatedly commit specific offences in a 12-month period.
"This doesn't just apply during holiday periods, but at any time of the year," the Queensland government website has stated.
While it is not a long weekend in Queensland, motorists are always encouraged to take care as normal road rules apply. Western Australia
Similarly to Queensland, Western Australia does not mark the King's Birthday until later in the year in late September.
Therefore, double demerit points are not in effect this weekend.

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The Victorian mother-of-two at the centre of a mushroom poisoning case had the opportunity to tell her own story this week as she took the stand at her triple-murder trial. Erin Patterson, 50, is facing trial after pleading not guilty to the murders of her husband's parents and aunt, and the attempted murder of his uncle. Simon Patterson's parents, Don and Gail Patterson, and Gail's sister, Heather Wilkinson, died in the week after the lunch after falling ill from mushroom poisoning. Prosecutors alleged she deliberately poisoned the beef Wellington lunch on July 29, 2023, with death cap mushrooms intending to kill or seriously injure her four guests. Her defence, on the other hand, has argued the case is a 'tragic accident' and Ms Patterson also consumed the death caps and fell sick, though not as sick as her guests. 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'So, as I was cooking it down, I tasted it a few times and it seemed a little bland to me, so I decided to put in the dried mushrooms that I'd bought from the grocer that I still had in the pantry,' she said. Ms Patterson told the jury she had purchased a packet of dried mushrooms in April the same year from an Asian supermarket in Melbourne, initially intending to use them for a pasta dish but deciding against that because they had a strong flavour. She said she now accepts it was possible she had stored wild mushrooms she foraged from her local area and dehydrated in the same Tupperware container. 'At that time, I believed it was just the mushrooms that I'd bought in Melbourne … Now I think that there was a possibility that there were foraged ones in there as well,' she said. Ms Patterson told the jury she first became interested in foraging for wild mushrooms during Covid and educated herself online. 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Previously, the jury heard from mycologist Dr Tom May that the mushrooms pictured were 'consistent with amanita phalloides (death caps) at a high level of confidence'. Questioned on if she accepted the mushrooms pictured were death caps, Ms Patterson said: 'I don't think they are'. She also denied she had foraged these mushrooms in the nearby town of Loch on April 28 after seeing a death cap mushroom sighting post on citizen science website iNaturalist on April 18. Dr Rogers suggested the image recorded Ms Patterson weighing the mushrooms to calculate the 'weight required for the administration of a fatal dose'. 'Disagree,' Ms Patterson responded. Mushroom cook tells jury she lied to health authorities because she was scared Ms Patterson said she first learned her in-laws had fallen ill the day after the lunch on a phone call with her estranged husband on July 30. The following day, she told the court, she attended the local Leongatha Hospital too seek treatment for gastro when the resident doctor, Dr Chris Webster, said 'we've been expecting you'. 'I think I said to him, 'Why? Why are you asking?', and he said that there's a concern or we're concerned you've been exposed to death cap mushrooms,' she said. 'I was shocked but confused as well … I didn't see how death cap mushrooms could be in the meal.' Ms Patterson told the court she first began to suspect foraged mushrooms may have ended up in the lunch at Monash Medical Centre when Simon accused her of poisoning his parents. In his own evidence, at the start of the trial, Simon Patterson told the jury he did not say this to his wife. Ms Patterson told the jury on August 2, the day after her release from hospital, she disposed of her dehydrator at the Koonwarra Transfer Station. 'I was scared that they would blame me for it,' she said of the decision. 'Surely if you loved them (her in-laws) you would have notified health authorities about the possibility of the foraged mushrooms in the container?' Dr Rogers asked. 'Well I didn't,' Ms Patterson replied. 'I had been told people were getting treatment for possible death cap mushroom poisoning so that was already happening.' Ms Patterson confirmed she did not notify anyone of her suspicions and lied to both police and health authorities in the following days by claiming she did not forage for mushrooms. She was taken to a series of messages exchanged with public health officer Sally Anne Atkinson, where Ms Patterson insisted the only mushrooms in the meal were from Woolworths and an Asian grocer. Asked what her state of mind was in relation to the Asian grocer, she said she 'still thought it was a possibility, but I knew it wasn't the only possibility.' Ms Patterson told the court she first learned of Heather and Gail's deaths as police searched her home on August 5 and continued to lie. 'It was this stupid knee-jerk reaction to just dig deeper and keep lying. I was just scared, but I shouldn't have done it,' she said. Ms Patterson claims she vomited after deadly lunch Ms Patterson also told the jury she had long struggled with both her weight and relationships to food since childhood – describing it as a 'rollercoaster'. 'Mum would weigh us every week to make sure we weren't putting on too much weight … I went to the extreme of barely eating then to, through my adulthood, going the other way and bingeing,' she said. She told the court she had engaged in binge eating until she was sick then 'bringing it back up' since her 20s and no one knew. In the lead up to the July 29, 2023, lunch, Ms Patterson said she had been engaging in this behaviour 'two or three times a week'. She told the court that at the lunch with Don, Gail, Heather and Ian, she only ate some of her serving, but consumed about two-thirds of an orange cake after her guests left. 'I had a piece of cake and then another piece of cake and then another,' Ms Patterson said. 'I felt sick. I felt overfull, so I went to the toilets and brought it back up again.' Ms Patterson is expected to return to the witness box and continue giving evidence when the trial resumes on Tuesday.

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