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City of Nedlands referred to Corruption and Crime Commission

City of Nedlands referred to Corruption and Crime Commission

A Perth local government embroiled in several highly publicised controversies has been referred to WA's corruption watchdog, though it is unclear why.
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Man shot by police in Townsville charged with assault and drug offences
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Man shot by police in Townsville charged with assault and drug offences

A man shot by police during a stand-off in north Queensland last month has been charged with offences including assault and possession of drugs. Specialist police officers were called to Carthew Street in Townsville on July 27 after reports a 29-year-old, allegedly wanted for serious crimes, had been sighted. The Kelso man was shot by an officer at the loading dock of Willows Shopping Centre before being taken to Townsville University Hospital, where he is now in a stable condition. He was charged this week with offences including assault occasioning bodily harm, threats, drug offences, failing to dispose of a needle and syringe, and two counts of receiving tainted property. He was also charged with unrelated weapons and explosives offences. Townsville District Acting Superintendent Damien Crosby previously said the Kelso man was well-known to police and confronted officers before he was shot. A police spokesperson could not confirm at the time whether the man was armed during the shooting incident. "This is a tragic incident and we pass on our thoughts to all those involved," Superintendent Crosby said. "Police officers immediately rendered first-aid … before [paramedics] arrived." Police Union president Shane Prior defended the actions of police amid what he said was an increasingly dangerous work environment for officers. "Policing has never been more dangerous than … it is right now. "Every week, we have 12 officers assaulted or seriously assaulted at the hands of perpetrators and those officers are injured." The incident is the fourth police-involved shooting in Townsville since January, and has sparked renewed calls for an inquiry into shootings. The Kelso man is due to appear in the Townsville Magistrates Court on Tuesday. Investigations by the Ethical Standards Command into the shooting are ongoing.

Former WA Police officer Gary Edward Fitzgerald allegedly had sex with teenager in police station
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time33 minutes ago

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Former WA Police officer Gary Edward Fitzgerald allegedly had sex with teenager in police station

A WA Police officer had a sexual relationship with a 16-year-old girl he met while on duty, and even had sex with her in the interview room at Fremantle Police Station, a Perth court has been told. WARNING: This story contains details which may distress some readers. The District Court has heard the former officer encouraged her to participate in threesomes, with the complainant thinking she "couldn't say no" because he was with the police force. Gary Edward Fitzgerald, 55, is on trial, charged with five counts of sexual penetration of a child over 16, under their care, supervision or authority. The time period covered by the prosecution case is from 1999 through to 2001, when Mr Fitzgerald was a serving officer. The prosecution said Mr Fitzgerald first went to the 16-year-old girl's home with another officer after she had called police, worried about a housemate who had run away. Following some "flirty comments", he handed her his card with his mobile phone number on it, prosecutor Danya Borkowski said. She said a sexual relationship soon started, with encounters "every week or so". On one occasion, the court heard, Mr Fitzgerald said he had "too much paperwork" and asked her to go to Fremantle Police Station with a made-up story about "an incident at Coles". When they were in the interview room, the pair had sex, Ms Borkowski said. Mr Fitzgerald later asked for the teenager to have a threesome with himself and a woman at his Samson home, the court was told. The prosecutor said the pair also had a threesome with a man Mr Fitzgerald was living with in Bull Creek. Ms Borkowski told the jury a 16-year-old can't be considered as giving consent if Mr Fitzgerald was in a position of authority as a police officer. "She believed she couldn't say no," the prosecutor said. Mr Fitzgerald's lawyer said his client thought the complainant was an adult woman at the time. Defence lawyer David McCallum called on the jury to give his client "a fair go". He told the court that what would be in dispute was whether the then teenager was in his care, supervision or authority. "He was never in a position to have any lawful authority over her," Mr McCallum said. Appearing in court via videolink, the complainant described in detail the sexual acts she engaged in with Mr Fitzgerald and others. She told the court that when she first met Mr Fitzgerald, and they had gone looking for her housemate in Cottesloe, she made a flirty comment. She was sitting alongside him in the police vehicle and found there was something "digging" into her. "Is that your gun or are you happy to see me," she said she asked him. The woman told the court she believed she was seeing the officer for about a year but said it was "sex on call" and was not "really a relationship". She said she felt it was the "price to pay" for him being available for issues related to her housemate. She told the court she believed she "owed him" for being on call, but she also described herself as "naive". The trial continues.

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