
Bowling club manager accused of orchestrating staged robbery behind bars over DV offences
A FORMER bowling club secretary-manager who denies orchestrating a $200,000 staged robbery after hosting a major poker tournament is behind bars on domestic violence charges.
Phillip Andrew Pereira, 50, has pleaded not guilty to three charges over what detectives say was an inside job to hold up the Hamilton North Bowling Club in December.
Pereira had been on bail since his arrest in February, but last week in Maitland Local Court was taken behind bars after prosecutors made a successful detention application.
Pereira's lawyers had fought off a similar application in March after he had been charged with a domestic violence-related stalking and entering inclosed lands.
Last week he was arrested and charged again with breaching an apprehended violence order and common assault and had his bail revoked, Magistrate Ian Rodgers finding Pereira had breached his bail by committing further offences.
Pereira has pleaded not guilty to all the charges, including the fresh domestic violence offences, and will face hearings in August and September.
The charges relating to the staged robbery at the bowling club are back in court next week to get a hearing date.
The development in Pereira's case comes after two other men - former club functions manager Jamie Lee and "armed robber" John William Tutt - were sentenced for their roles in the plot to steal $218,000 from the club in the early hours of December 30, the morning after the club hosted a major Australian Poker League tournament.
The Newcastle Herald reported in May that what started out as a joke, an "off-the-cuff remark", a few months earlier about the club being robbed of the poker tournament proceeds became a reality for Lee when Tutt buzzed at the roller door about 4am.
"It's Phil," came the voice over the intercom and Lee opened the door to find Tutt dressed in black and holding a knife.
Tutt quickly put the blade away when he saw it was Lee and explained he was there for the money in the safe.
"I don't want this to happen," Lee, 45, said, according to court documents. "It's gotta happen. It needs to happen," Tutt replied.
After some discussion, Lee agreed to let Tutt take the money and Tutt then cut the cables to the CCTV hard drives and stuffed them and the cash into a bag before tying Lee up to make it look like a hold-up.
Tutt then drove away and later photographed some of the bundles of cash in his car, including one picture where his shorts and a bandage on his leg were visible.
Lee was found by another staff member tied up in the office about 5am.
He was untied, said he had been assaulted and robbed and the police were called.
Lee was treated at the scene by paramedics before being taken to John Hunter Hospital for treatment.
The State Crime Command's Robbery and Serious Crime Squad launched an investigation into the robbery, but that soon shifted focus to an inside job when police examined phone records.
On January 17, a few weeks after the staged robbery, Lee went to Newcastle police station and made a 13-page statement that he now admits was a fabricated story about being the victim of a hold-up.
In February, detectives revealed they believed the robbery had been staged and arrested Lee, Tutt and Pereira in a series of raids.
Tutt and Lee later pleaded guilty and late last month Tutt was jailed for a maximum of 16 months, with a non-parole period of six months, while Lee escaped a jail term and was placed on a 12-month intensive corrections order with 40 hours of community service.
A FORMER bowling club secretary-manager who denies orchestrating a $200,000 staged robbery after hosting a major poker tournament is behind bars on domestic violence charges.
Phillip Andrew Pereira, 50, has pleaded not guilty to three charges over what detectives say was an inside job to hold up the Hamilton North Bowling Club in December.
Pereira had been on bail since his arrest in February, but last week in Maitland Local Court was taken behind bars after prosecutors made a successful detention application.
Pereira's lawyers had fought off a similar application in March after he had been charged with a domestic violence-related stalking and entering inclosed lands.
Last week he was arrested and charged again with breaching an apprehended violence order and common assault and had his bail revoked, Magistrate Ian Rodgers finding Pereira had breached his bail by committing further offences.
Pereira has pleaded not guilty to all the charges, including the fresh domestic violence offences, and will face hearings in August and September.
The charges relating to the staged robbery at the bowling club are back in court next week to get a hearing date.
The development in Pereira's case comes after two other men - former club functions manager Jamie Lee and "armed robber" John William Tutt - were sentenced for their roles in the plot to steal $218,000 from the club in the early hours of December 30, the morning after the club hosted a major Australian Poker League tournament.
The Newcastle Herald reported in May that what started out as a joke, an "off-the-cuff remark", a few months earlier about the club being robbed of the poker tournament proceeds became a reality for Lee when Tutt buzzed at the roller door about 4am.
"It's Phil," came the voice over the intercom and Lee opened the door to find Tutt dressed in black and holding a knife.
Tutt quickly put the blade away when he saw it was Lee and explained he was there for the money in the safe.
"I don't want this to happen," Lee, 45, said, according to court documents. "It's gotta happen. It needs to happen," Tutt replied.
After some discussion, Lee agreed to let Tutt take the money and Tutt then cut the cables to the CCTV hard drives and stuffed them and the cash into a bag before tying Lee up to make it look like a hold-up.
Tutt then drove away and later photographed some of the bundles of cash in his car, including one picture where his shorts and a bandage on his leg were visible.
Lee was found by another staff member tied up in the office about 5am.
He was untied, said he had been assaulted and robbed and the police were called.
Lee was treated at the scene by paramedics before being taken to John Hunter Hospital for treatment.
The State Crime Command's Robbery and Serious Crime Squad launched an investigation into the robbery, but that soon shifted focus to an inside job when police examined phone records.
On January 17, a few weeks after the staged robbery, Lee went to Newcastle police station and made a 13-page statement that he now admits was a fabricated story about being the victim of a hold-up.
In February, detectives revealed they believed the robbery had been staged and arrested Lee, Tutt and Pereira in a series of raids.
Tutt and Lee later pleaded guilty and late last month Tutt was jailed for a maximum of 16 months, with a non-parole period of six months, while Lee escaped a jail term and was placed on a 12-month intensive corrections order with 40 hours of community service.
A FORMER bowling club secretary-manager who denies orchestrating a $200,000 staged robbery after hosting a major poker tournament is behind bars on domestic violence charges.
Phillip Andrew Pereira, 50, has pleaded not guilty to three charges over what detectives say was an inside job to hold up the Hamilton North Bowling Club in December.
Pereira had been on bail since his arrest in February, but last week in Maitland Local Court was taken behind bars after prosecutors made a successful detention application.
Pereira's lawyers had fought off a similar application in March after he had been charged with a domestic violence-related stalking and entering inclosed lands.
Last week he was arrested and charged again with breaching an apprehended violence order and common assault and had his bail revoked, Magistrate Ian Rodgers finding Pereira had breached his bail by committing further offences.
Pereira has pleaded not guilty to all the charges, including the fresh domestic violence offences, and will face hearings in August and September.
The charges relating to the staged robbery at the bowling club are back in court next week to get a hearing date.
The development in Pereira's case comes after two other men - former club functions manager Jamie Lee and "armed robber" John William Tutt - were sentenced for their roles in the plot to steal $218,000 from the club in the early hours of December 30, the morning after the club hosted a major Australian Poker League tournament.
The Newcastle Herald reported in May that what started out as a joke, an "off-the-cuff remark", a few months earlier about the club being robbed of the poker tournament proceeds became a reality for Lee when Tutt buzzed at the roller door about 4am.
"It's Phil," came the voice over the intercom and Lee opened the door to find Tutt dressed in black and holding a knife.
Tutt quickly put the blade away when he saw it was Lee and explained he was there for the money in the safe.
"I don't want this to happen," Lee, 45, said, according to court documents. "It's gotta happen. It needs to happen," Tutt replied.
After some discussion, Lee agreed to let Tutt take the money and Tutt then cut the cables to the CCTV hard drives and stuffed them and the cash into a bag before tying Lee up to make it look like a hold-up.
Tutt then drove away and later photographed some of the bundles of cash in his car, including one picture where his shorts and a bandage on his leg were visible.
Lee was found by another staff member tied up in the office about 5am.
He was untied, said he had been assaulted and robbed and the police were called.
Lee was treated at the scene by paramedics before being taken to John Hunter Hospital for treatment.
The State Crime Command's Robbery and Serious Crime Squad launched an investigation into the robbery, but that soon shifted focus to an inside job when police examined phone records.
On January 17, a few weeks after the staged robbery, Lee went to Newcastle police station and made a 13-page statement that he now admits was a fabricated story about being the victim of a hold-up.
In February, detectives revealed they believed the robbery had been staged and arrested Lee, Tutt and Pereira in a series of raids.
Tutt and Lee later pleaded guilty and late last month Tutt was jailed for a maximum of 16 months, with a non-parole period of six months, while Lee escaped a jail term and was placed on a 12-month intensive corrections order with 40 hours of community service.
A FORMER bowling club secretary-manager who denies orchestrating a $200,000 staged robbery after hosting a major poker tournament is behind bars on domestic violence charges.
Phillip Andrew Pereira, 50, has pleaded not guilty to three charges over what detectives say was an inside job to hold up the Hamilton North Bowling Club in December.
Pereira had been on bail since his arrest in February, but last week in Maitland Local Court was taken behind bars after prosecutors made a successful detention application.
Pereira's lawyers had fought off a similar application in March after he had been charged with a domestic violence-related stalking and entering inclosed lands.
Last week he was arrested and charged again with breaching an apprehended violence order and common assault and had his bail revoked, Magistrate Ian Rodgers finding Pereira had breached his bail by committing further offences.
Pereira has pleaded not guilty to all the charges, including the fresh domestic violence offences, and will face hearings in August and September.
The charges relating to the staged robbery at the bowling club are back in court next week to get a hearing date.
The development in Pereira's case comes after two other men - former club functions manager Jamie Lee and "armed robber" John William Tutt - were sentenced for their roles in the plot to steal $218,000 from the club in the early hours of December 30, the morning after the club hosted a major Australian Poker League tournament.
The Newcastle Herald reported in May that what started out as a joke, an "off-the-cuff remark", a few months earlier about the club being robbed of the poker tournament proceeds became a reality for Lee when Tutt buzzed at the roller door about 4am.
"It's Phil," came the voice over the intercom and Lee opened the door to find Tutt dressed in black and holding a knife.
Tutt quickly put the blade away when he saw it was Lee and explained he was there for the money in the safe.
"I don't want this to happen," Lee, 45, said, according to court documents. "It's gotta happen. It needs to happen," Tutt replied.
After some discussion, Lee agreed to let Tutt take the money and Tutt then cut the cables to the CCTV hard drives and stuffed them and the cash into a bag before tying Lee up to make it look like a hold-up.
Tutt then drove away and later photographed some of the bundles of cash in his car, including one picture where his shorts and a bandage on his leg were visible.
Lee was found by another staff member tied up in the office about 5am.
He was untied, said he had been assaulted and robbed and the police were called.
Lee was treated at the scene by paramedics before being taken to John Hunter Hospital for treatment.
The State Crime Command's Robbery and Serious Crime Squad launched an investigation into the robbery, but that soon shifted focus to an inside job when police examined phone records.
On January 17, a few weeks after the staged robbery, Lee went to Newcastle police station and made a 13-page statement that he now admits was a fabricated story about being the victim of a hold-up.
In February, detectives revealed they believed the robbery had been staged and arrested Lee, Tutt and Pereira in a series of raids.
Tutt and Lee later pleaded guilty and late last month Tutt was jailed for a maximum of 16 months, with a non-parole period of six months, while Lee escaped a jail term and was placed on a 12-month intensive corrections order with 40 hours of community service.

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The Advertiser
5 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Bowling club manager accused of orchestrating staged robbery behind bars over DV offences
A FORMER bowling club secretary-manager who denies orchestrating a $200,000 staged robbery after hosting a major poker tournament is behind bars on domestic violence charges. Phillip Andrew Pereira, 50, has pleaded not guilty to three charges over what detectives say was an inside job to hold up the Hamilton North Bowling Club in December. Pereira had been on bail since his arrest in February, but last week in Maitland Local Court was taken behind bars after prosecutors made a successful detention application. Pereira's lawyers had fought off a similar application in March after he had been charged with a domestic violence-related stalking and entering inclosed lands. Last week he was arrested and charged again with breaching an apprehended violence order and common assault and had his bail revoked, Magistrate Ian Rodgers finding Pereira had breached his bail by committing further offences. Pereira has pleaded not guilty to all the charges, including the fresh domestic violence offences, and will face hearings in August and September. The charges relating to the staged robbery at the bowling club are back in court next week to get a hearing date. The development in Pereira's case comes after two other men - former club functions manager Jamie Lee and "armed robber" John William Tutt - were sentenced for their roles in the plot to steal $218,000 from the club in the early hours of December 30, the morning after the club hosted a major Australian Poker League tournament. The Newcastle Herald reported in May that what started out as a joke, an "off-the-cuff remark", a few months earlier about the club being robbed of the poker tournament proceeds became a reality for Lee when Tutt buzzed at the roller door about 4am. "It's Phil," came the voice over the intercom and Lee opened the door to find Tutt dressed in black and holding a knife. Tutt quickly put the blade away when he saw it was Lee and explained he was there for the money in the safe. "I don't want this to happen," Lee, 45, said, according to court documents. "It's gotta happen. It needs to happen," Tutt replied. After some discussion, Lee agreed to let Tutt take the money and Tutt then cut the cables to the CCTV hard drives and stuffed them and the cash into a bag before tying Lee up to make it look like a hold-up. Tutt then drove away and later photographed some of the bundles of cash in his car, including one picture where his shorts and a bandage on his leg were visible. Lee was found by another staff member tied up in the office about 5am. He was untied, said he had been assaulted and robbed and the police were called. Lee was treated at the scene by paramedics before being taken to John Hunter Hospital for treatment. The State Crime Command's Robbery and Serious Crime Squad launched an investigation into the robbery, but that soon shifted focus to an inside job when police examined phone records. On January 17, a few weeks after the staged robbery, Lee went to Newcastle police station and made a 13-page statement that he now admits was a fabricated story about being the victim of a hold-up. In February, detectives revealed they believed the robbery had been staged and arrested Lee, Tutt and Pereira in a series of raids. Tutt and Lee later pleaded guilty and late last month Tutt was jailed for a maximum of 16 months, with a non-parole period of six months, while Lee escaped a jail term and was placed on a 12-month intensive corrections order with 40 hours of community service. A FORMER bowling club secretary-manager who denies orchestrating a $200,000 staged robbery after hosting a major poker tournament is behind bars on domestic violence charges. Phillip Andrew Pereira, 50, has pleaded not guilty to three charges over what detectives say was an inside job to hold up the Hamilton North Bowling Club in December. Pereira had been on bail since his arrest in February, but last week in Maitland Local Court was taken behind bars after prosecutors made a successful detention application. Pereira's lawyers had fought off a similar application in March after he had been charged with a domestic violence-related stalking and entering inclosed lands. Last week he was arrested and charged again with breaching an apprehended violence order and common assault and had his bail revoked, Magistrate Ian Rodgers finding Pereira had breached his bail by committing further offences. Pereira has pleaded not guilty to all the charges, including the fresh domestic violence offences, and will face hearings in August and September. The charges relating to the staged robbery at the bowling club are back in court next week to get a hearing date. The development in Pereira's case comes after two other men - former club functions manager Jamie Lee and "armed robber" John William Tutt - were sentenced for their roles in the plot to steal $218,000 from the club in the early hours of December 30, the morning after the club hosted a major Australian Poker League tournament. The Newcastle Herald reported in May that what started out as a joke, an "off-the-cuff remark", a few months earlier about the club being robbed of the poker tournament proceeds became a reality for Lee when Tutt buzzed at the roller door about 4am. "It's Phil," came the voice over the intercom and Lee opened the door to find Tutt dressed in black and holding a knife. Tutt quickly put the blade away when he saw it was Lee and explained he was there for the money in the safe. "I don't want this to happen," Lee, 45, said, according to court documents. "It's gotta happen. It needs to happen," Tutt replied. After some discussion, Lee agreed to let Tutt take the money and Tutt then cut the cables to the CCTV hard drives and stuffed them and the cash into a bag before tying Lee up to make it look like a hold-up. Tutt then drove away and later photographed some of the bundles of cash in his car, including one picture where his shorts and a bandage on his leg were visible. Lee was found by another staff member tied up in the office about 5am. He was untied, said he had been assaulted and robbed and the police were called. Lee was treated at the scene by paramedics before being taken to John Hunter Hospital for treatment. The State Crime Command's Robbery and Serious Crime Squad launched an investigation into the robbery, but that soon shifted focus to an inside job when police examined phone records. On January 17, a few weeks after the staged robbery, Lee went to Newcastle police station and made a 13-page statement that he now admits was a fabricated story about being the victim of a hold-up. In February, detectives revealed they believed the robbery had been staged and arrested Lee, Tutt and Pereira in a series of raids. Tutt and Lee later pleaded guilty and late last month Tutt was jailed for a maximum of 16 months, with a non-parole period of six months, while Lee escaped a jail term and was placed on a 12-month intensive corrections order with 40 hours of community service. A FORMER bowling club secretary-manager who denies orchestrating a $200,000 staged robbery after hosting a major poker tournament is behind bars on domestic violence charges. Phillip Andrew Pereira, 50, has pleaded not guilty to three charges over what detectives say was an inside job to hold up the Hamilton North Bowling Club in December. Pereira had been on bail since his arrest in February, but last week in Maitland Local Court was taken behind bars after prosecutors made a successful detention application. Pereira's lawyers had fought off a similar application in March after he had been charged with a domestic violence-related stalking and entering inclosed lands. Last week he was arrested and charged again with breaching an apprehended violence order and common assault and had his bail revoked, Magistrate Ian Rodgers finding Pereira had breached his bail by committing further offences. Pereira has pleaded not guilty to all the charges, including the fresh domestic violence offences, and will face hearings in August and September. The charges relating to the staged robbery at the bowling club are back in court next week to get a hearing date. The development in Pereira's case comes after two other men - former club functions manager Jamie Lee and "armed robber" John William Tutt - were sentenced for their roles in the plot to steal $218,000 from the club in the early hours of December 30, the morning after the club hosted a major Australian Poker League tournament. The Newcastle Herald reported in May that what started out as a joke, an "off-the-cuff remark", a few months earlier about the club being robbed of the poker tournament proceeds became a reality for Lee when Tutt buzzed at the roller door about 4am. "It's Phil," came the voice over the intercom and Lee opened the door to find Tutt dressed in black and holding a knife. Tutt quickly put the blade away when he saw it was Lee and explained he was there for the money in the safe. "I don't want this to happen," Lee, 45, said, according to court documents. "It's gotta happen. It needs to happen," Tutt replied. After some discussion, Lee agreed to let Tutt take the money and Tutt then cut the cables to the CCTV hard drives and stuffed them and the cash into a bag before tying Lee up to make it look like a hold-up. Tutt then drove away and later photographed some of the bundles of cash in his car, including one picture where his shorts and a bandage on his leg were visible. Lee was found by another staff member tied up in the office about 5am. He was untied, said he had been assaulted and robbed and the police were called. Lee was treated at the scene by paramedics before being taken to John Hunter Hospital for treatment. The State Crime Command's Robbery and Serious Crime Squad launched an investigation into the robbery, but that soon shifted focus to an inside job when police examined phone records. On January 17, a few weeks after the staged robbery, Lee went to Newcastle police station and made a 13-page statement that he now admits was a fabricated story about being the victim of a hold-up. In February, detectives revealed they believed the robbery had been staged and arrested Lee, Tutt and Pereira in a series of raids. Tutt and Lee later pleaded guilty and late last month Tutt was jailed for a maximum of 16 months, with a non-parole period of six months, while Lee escaped a jail term and was placed on a 12-month intensive corrections order with 40 hours of community service. A FORMER bowling club secretary-manager who denies orchestrating a $200,000 staged robbery after hosting a major poker tournament is behind bars on domestic violence charges. Phillip Andrew Pereira, 50, has pleaded not guilty to three charges over what detectives say was an inside job to hold up the Hamilton North Bowling Club in December. Pereira had been on bail since his arrest in February, but last week in Maitland Local Court was taken behind bars after prosecutors made a successful detention application. Pereira's lawyers had fought off a similar application in March after he had been charged with a domestic violence-related stalking and entering inclosed lands. Last week he was arrested and charged again with breaching an apprehended violence order and common assault and had his bail revoked, Magistrate Ian Rodgers finding Pereira had breached his bail by committing further offences. Pereira has pleaded not guilty to all the charges, including the fresh domestic violence offences, and will face hearings in August and September. The charges relating to the staged robbery at the bowling club are back in court next week to get a hearing date. The development in Pereira's case comes after two other men - former club functions manager Jamie Lee and "armed robber" John William Tutt - were sentenced for their roles in the plot to steal $218,000 from the club in the early hours of December 30, the morning after the club hosted a major Australian Poker League tournament. The Newcastle Herald reported in May that what started out as a joke, an "off-the-cuff remark", a few months earlier about the club being robbed of the poker tournament proceeds became a reality for Lee when Tutt buzzed at the roller door about 4am. "It's Phil," came the voice over the intercom and Lee opened the door to find Tutt dressed in black and holding a knife. Tutt quickly put the blade away when he saw it was Lee and explained he was there for the money in the safe. "I don't want this to happen," Lee, 45, said, according to court documents. "It's gotta happen. It needs to happen," Tutt replied. After some discussion, Lee agreed to let Tutt take the money and Tutt then cut the cables to the CCTV hard drives and stuffed them and the cash into a bag before tying Lee up to make it look like a hold-up. Tutt then drove away and later photographed some of the bundles of cash in his car, including one picture where his shorts and a bandage on his leg were visible. Lee was found by another staff member tied up in the office about 5am. He was untied, said he had been assaulted and robbed and the police were called. Lee was treated at the scene by paramedics before being taken to John Hunter Hospital for treatment. The State Crime Command's Robbery and Serious Crime Squad launched an investigation into the robbery, but that soon shifted focus to an inside job when police examined phone records. On January 17, a few weeks after the staged robbery, Lee went to Newcastle police station and made a 13-page statement that he now admits was a fabricated story about being the victim of a hold-up. In February, detectives revealed they believed the robbery had been staged and arrested Lee, Tutt and Pereira in a series of raids. Tutt and Lee later pleaded guilty and late last month Tutt was jailed for a maximum of 16 months, with a non-parole period of six months, while Lee escaped a jail term and was placed on a 12-month intensive corrections order with 40 hours of community service.


The Advertiser
4 days ago
- The Advertiser
Rogue Scholar attacker pleads guilty to headbutting woman in shocking assault
A QUEENSLAND builder, who headbutted, punched and slapped a woman in a Newcastle bar in a shocking attack that triggered widespread outrage and led to the formation of a rally against gendered violence, has pleaded guilty. Douglas William Kelvin Wood, 43, of Ipswich, was represented by solicitor Chris Watsford and excused from attending Newcastle Local Court during a mention of his matter on Thursday afternoon. Wood pleaded guilty to assault occasioning actual bodily harm over the attack on Britt Mitchell at the Rogue Scholar on March 15 after prosecutors agreed to withdraw a charge of affray. He will be sentenced in September. The Newcastle Herald reported last month that Wood was out with workmates celebrating the completion of a major project and was dancing wildly on the dance floor of the Newcastle West bar about 11.15pm when he suddenly slapped Ms Mitchell across the face. Wood turned to walk away and continue dancing when Ms Mitchell grabbed him and said: "What the f--- did you do that for? "You just hit me, you knocked my glasses off my face", according to court documents. But after being confronted, 43-year-old Wood laughed and said, "what are you going to do about it?" The pair exchanged further words before Wood removed the sunglasses from the top of his head and headbutted Ms Mitchell in the face. Bleeding profusely from her nose, Ms Mitchell threw a drink in her attacker's face and then left the dance floor. She sat at the bar and asked staff for a cloth for her nose, but police said Wood had followed her. He grabbed her by the shirt and punched her in the back of the head. When people rushed in to intervene and pull Wood away, he kept hold of Ms Mitchell's shirt and almost completely ripped it from her body in the melee. Eventually, to get away from her attacker, Ms Mitchell managed to get out of the shirt, leaving her in the venue in only her bra. The attack left Ms Mitchell with a broken nose. She went to Newcastle police station to make a statement, and police later obtained CCTV footage from inside the venue that they say captures the entire incident from multiple angles. Police say they identified the attacker as Wood, but by then, he had returned to Queensland. He was charged a few weeks later and appeared in court for the first time last month. The assault triggered public outrage and prompted Ms Mitchell and her partner, Hayley Goldie, to organise a rally labelled "Enough is Enough", to raise awareness of and support for victims of gendered violence. A QUEENSLAND builder, who headbutted, punched and slapped a woman in a Newcastle bar in a shocking attack that triggered widespread outrage and led to the formation of a rally against gendered violence, has pleaded guilty. Douglas William Kelvin Wood, 43, of Ipswich, was represented by solicitor Chris Watsford and excused from attending Newcastle Local Court during a mention of his matter on Thursday afternoon. Wood pleaded guilty to assault occasioning actual bodily harm over the attack on Britt Mitchell at the Rogue Scholar on March 15 after prosecutors agreed to withdraw a charge of affray. He will be sentenced in September. The Newcastle Herald reported last month that Wood was out with workmates celebrating the completion of a major project and was dancing wildly on the dance floor of the Newcastle West bar about 11.15pm when he suddenly slapped Ms Mitchell across the face. Wood turned to walk away and continue dancing when Ms Mitchell grabbed him and said: "What the f--- did you do that for? "You just hit me, you knocked my glasses off my face", according to court documents. But after being confronted, 43-year-old Wood laughed and said, "what are you going to do about it?" The pair exchanged further words before Wood removed the sunglasses from the top of his head and headbutted Ms Mitchell in the face. Bleeding profusely from her nose, Ms Mitchell threw a drink in her attacker's face and then left the dance floor. She sat at the bar and asked staff for a cloth for her nose, but police said Wood had followed her. He grabbed her by the shirt and punched her in the back of the head. When people rushed in to intervene and pull Wood away, he kept hold of Ms Mitchell's shirt and almost completely ripped it from her body in the melee. Eventually, to get away from her attacker, Ms Mitchell managed to get out of the shirt, leaving her in the venue in only her bra. The attack left Ms Mitchell with a broken nose. She went to Newcastle police station to make a statement, and police later obtained CCTV footage from inside the venue that they say captures the entire incident from multiple angles. Police say they identified the attacker as Wood, but by then, he had returned to Queensland. He was charged a few weeks later and appeared in court for the first time last month. The assault triggered public outrage and prompted Ms Mitchell and her partner, Hayley Goldie, to organise a rally labelled "Enough is Enough", to raise awareness of and support for victims of gendered violence. A QUEENSLAND builder, who headbutted, punched and slapped a woman in a Newcastle bar in a shocking attack that triggered widespread outrage and led to the formation of a rally against gendered violence, has pleaded guilty. Douglas William Kelvin Wood, 43, of Ipswich, was represented by solicitor Chris Watsford and excused from attending Newcastle Local Court during a mention of his matter on Thursday afternoon. Wood pleaded guilty to assault occasioning actual bodily harm over the attack on Britt Mitchell at the Rogue Scholar on March 15 after prosecutors agreed to withdraw a charge of affray. He will be sentenced in September. The Newcastle Herald reported last month that Wood was out with workmates celebrating the completion of a major project and was dancing wildly on the dance floor of the Newcastle West bar about 11.15pm when he suddenly slapped Ms Mitchell across the face. Wood turned to walk away and continue dancing when Ms Mitchell grabbed him and said: "What the f--- did you do that for? "You just hit me, you knocked my glasses off my face", according to court documents. But after being confronted, 43-year-old Wood laughed and said, "what are you going to do about it?" The pair exchanged further words before Wood removed the sunglasses from the top of his head and headbutted Ms Mitchell in the face. Bleeding profusely from her nose, Ms Mitchell threw a drink in her attacker's face and then left the dance floor. She sat at the bar and asked staff for a cloth for her nose, but police said Wood had followed her. He grabbed her by the shirt and punched her in the back of the head. When people rushed in to intervene and pull Wood away, he kept hold of Ms Mitchell's shirt and almost completely ripped it from her body in the melee. Eventually, to get away from her attacker, Ms Mitchell managed to get out of the shirt, leaving her in the venue in only her bra. The attack left Ms Mitchell with a broken nose. She went to Newcastle police station to make a statement, and police later obtained CCTV footage from inside the venue that they say captures the entire incident from multiple angles. Police say they identified the attacker as Wood, but by then, he had returned to Queensland. He was charged a few weeks later and appeared in court for the first time last month. The assault triggered public outrage and prompted Ms Mitchell and her partner, Hayley Goldie, to organise a rally labelled "Enough is Enough", to raise awareness of and support for victims of gendered violence. A QUEENSLAND builder, who headbutted, punched and slapped a woman in a Newcastle bar in a shocking attack that triggered widespread outrage and led to the formation of a rally against gendered violence, has pleaded guilty. Douglas William Kelvin Wood, 43, of Ipswich, was represented by solicitor Chris Watsford and excused from attending Newcastle Local Court during a mention of his matter on Thursday afternoon. Wood pleaded guilty to assault occasioning actual bodily harm over the attack on Britt Mitchell at the Rogue Scholar on March 15 after prosecutors agreed to withdraw a charge of affray. He will be sentenced in September. The Newcastle Herald reported last month that Wood was out with workmates celebrating the completion of a major project and was dancing wildly on the dance floor of the Newcastle West bar about 11.15pm when he suddenly slapped Ms Mitchell across the face. Wood turned to walk away and continue dancing when Ms Mitchell grabbed him and said: "What the f--- did you do that for? "You just hit me, you knocked my glasses off my face", according to court documents. But after being confronted, 43-year-old Wood laughed and said, "what are you going to do about it?" The pair exchanged further words before Wood removed the sunglasses from the top of his head and headbutted Ms Mitchell in the face. Bleeding profusely from her nose, Ms Mitchell threw a drink in her attacker's face and then left the dance floor. She sat at the bar and asked staff for a cloth for her nose, but police said Wood had followed her. He grabbed her by the shirt and punched her in the back of the head. When people rushed in to intervene and pull Wood away, he kept hold of Ms Mitchell's shirt and almost completely ripped it from her body in the melee. Eventually, to get away from her attacker, Ms Mitchell managed to get out of the shirt, leaving her in the venue in only her bra. The attack left Ms Mitchell with a broken nose. She went to Newcastle police station to make a statement, and police later obtained CCTV footage from inside the venue that they say captures the entire incident from multiple angles. Police say they identified the attacker as Wood, but by then, he had returned to Queensland. He was charged a few weeks later and appeared in court for the first time last month. The assault triggered public outrage and prompted Ms Mitchell and her partner, Hayley Goldie, to organise a rally labelled "Enough is Enough", to raise awareness of and support for victims of gendered violence.


7NEWS
7 days ago
- 7NEWS
Juvenile killer appeals 14-year sentence for Emma Lovell's Boxing Day murder
The juvenile offender who brutally murdered mum Emma Lovell in a Boxing Day home invasion has launched a shock appeal, arguing the 14-year sentence he received is 'manifestly excessive.' Now 20, the man admitted to stabbing the North Lakes mother-of-two in the chest during a violent break-in at her family home in 2022. He had previously pleaded guilty to murder, armed burglary at night, malicious act with intent, and assault in company causing bodily harm. At sentencing last year, Justice Tom Sullivan handed down a 14-year youth detention order, well above the usual 10-year maximum under Queensland' s youth justice laws. He cited the teen's 'particularly heinous' conduct, which included stabbing both Emma and her husband Lee and kicking Lee in the head after he was wounded. 'This offending was atrocious and would create outrage in the community,' Justice Sullivan said at the time. Now, the killer's legal team is seeking to have the sentence reduced, claiming the judge erred by ruling the crime met the threshold for an extended sentence, and that not enough weight was given to the teen's early guilty plea. The appeal has left Emma Lovell's widower, Lee Lovell, and their two daughters, Kassie and Scarlett, devastated. 'So if they take that away, it's like putting less value on Emma's life,' Lee told 7NEWS. 'The best I can hope for is that they're gonna uphold the 14 years.' The appeal follows a controversial earlier decision in which the other teen co-accused was acquitted of both murder and manslaughter — despite participating in the same break-in. The Lovells were attacked in their home north of Brisbane at about 11.30pm on Boxing Day. Emma was stabbed in the heart, and despite attempts to save her with open-heart surgery on the front lawn, she died at the scene. Lee suffered serious injuries but survived. During sentencing, Justice Sullivan revealed confronting details including how the offender had attempted to stab both multiple times, and how the knife blade snapped due to the force used. The court also heard the teen had a significant history of break-ins, but had never previously been jailed. Legal experts say it could be months before a ruling is handed down.