
McCarthy raises 'concerns' with NT about return of spit hoods and youth incarceration
Finocchiaro described the meeting as "productive".
She said she outlined the Territory government's "clear focus on reducing crime, rebuilding the economy, and restoring our Territory lifestyle," she said. "Today's NT Police statistics confirm our approach is working — with 605 fewer victims of crime in just the past six months." 'As we enter our second year of government, our priorities are clear: get more kids to school, hold parents accountable, and create productive pathways for young people. Tackling these drivers is critical to reducing crime and building safer, stronger communities.' The Country Liberal Party-led NT Government has a parliamentary majority with 17 out of 25 seats and passed legislation to amend the Youth Justice Act earlier this month.
The changes included bringing back spit hoods in youth detention centres, a practise banned by the former NT Labor government following a royal commission into juvenile justice and child protection in the NT.
The amendments also included removing detention as the last resort for children and increasing the scope of reasonable force for Youth Justice Officers, along with increasing the number of offences that are not required to prioritise a youth diversion program instead of prison.
Closing the Gap outcomes worst in NT The legislation fuelled concerns raised at the Garma Festival in North East Arnhem Land about the likelihood that it would lead to increasing numbers of children in the NT prison system, and would be at odds with the agreements between the NT and Federal Government to Closing the Gap . One of the Closing the Gap targets is to ensure 'young people are not overrepresented in the criminal justice system", specifically to cut the rate of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander young people between the ages of 10 and 17 in detention by at least 30 per cent by 2031.
The Australian Human Rights Commission has raised concerns the NT Government's legislation is discriminatory and a complaint on behalf of human rights lawyers and Indigenous leaders has been lodged with the United Nations.
"Children's exposure to the justice system is a symptom of systemic racism and intergenerational trauma that compounds complex unmet needs and underlying issues such as poverty, homelessness, disability, health and mental health issues and domestic, family and sexual violence," the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner Katie Kiss said when the legislation was being canvassed. McCarthy also addressed the meeting of federal, state and territory attorneys general on Friday in Sydney. "I highlighted the escalating numbers of First Nations people in prisons across the country, in particular our youth, and reiterated that deaths in custody have to stop," she said.
"I called on state and territory Attorneys-General to do more to reduce the incarceration rates of First Nations adults and young people."
"State and territory governments have a responsibility to make decisions that align with their commitments under the National Agreement on Closing the Gap." She said the NT had the worst Closing the Gap outcomes. Finocchiaro said the tough crime measures that have been imposed by her government have reduced the number of victims of crime by 4.7 per cent in the last six months.
Compared to the same period in 2024 she said the number of house break ins has been reduced by 375 and property offences are down by 503 cases.
"Our plan to reduce crime is working, but my team and I know there is much more work to do, and we are getting on with the job." "We will continue to work with police, courts and corrections to deliver stronger laws and enforcement, better victim support, and faster justice." "Community safety will always come first under our CLP government," Finocchiaro said. She said the change since taking office was evidence that the former Labor NT government did not have the right policies in place, had placed offenders first and 'scarred' the community.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

ABC News
19 minutes ago
- ABC News
Serial rapist trusted by Australian doctor to run strip club jailed for 145 years
A male exotic dancer who persuaded an Australian doctor to buy a gay strip club in the US used the venue to prey on female patrons in the biggest serial rape case investigators have seen. Ali Quraishi, who was trusted to run "day-to-day" operations at the Portland club by its Brisbane-based owner Julian de Looze, was sentenced to 145 years in jail in February. Warning: This article contains content that may be upsetting for some readers. Quraishi plied women at Stag PDX with alcohol and lured them to a $US1,800-a-month apartment he rented solely for the purpose of raping and filming them, documenting his crimes in a diary he called his "stripper journey". Dr de Looze, who runs a department at Australia's largest hospital, the Royal Brisbane and Women's, told police and licensing officials that he knew nothing of Quraishi's crimes until after his arrest in March 2023. "Licensee De Looze explained that he trusted Ali since he had known him for a while and because he had been the one who suggested that he purchase Stag PDX," an Oregon Liquor and Cannabis Commission (OLCC) report said. Dr de Looze told licensing investigators that he texted Quraishi in jail after he was taken into custody. And Dr de Looze was present in Washington County Circuit Court last November when Quraishi was convicted on 23 charges involving nine victims, according to police. This included first-degree rape, sexual abuse, sodomy, invasion of personal privacy, unlawful dissemination of intimate images and assault. Dr de Looze, who is clinical director of acute medicine at the Royal Brisbane, declined an interview request from the ABC. The venue issued a statement saying Quraishi's "disturbing criminal actions were shocking to Stag PDX and its corporate officer". "These criminal actions were in stark contrast to the values upheld by Stag PDX, its employees and its corporate officer and were not known at the time," it said. "Stag PDX expresses its utmost sympathy with the victims of these crimes, and all those affected by them." Portland Detective Maggie Brown, speaking to the ABC in the first media interview of her 21-year career, said that it was "by far the biggest sex assault case I've ever worked". Detective Brown said there were more victims in other jurisdictions. Quraishi kept offending even after police raided his apartment and seized his phone in February 2023. The next month, he raped a woman from the club, whose friends contacted Stag that night to report the assault. But Quraishi was still employed by Stag when arrested weeks later. "Ali knows police are digging around, he knows I now have two cases on him, that I've served a warrant on this apartment, that I've taken his cell phone, that I'm poking around, like, 'I'm now in your space, and I'm looking through all your stuff,'" Detective Brown said. Detective Brown said that while there was no suggestion of criminal conduct by Dr de Looze, her police reports recorded multiple witness accounts of him failing to act on staff complaints about Quraishi's behaviour at work. "They were all trying to raise these concerns with Julian, and they told me, 'For whatever reason, Maggie, Julian protects him, and we don't understand why,'" she said. These complaints are under investigation by Oregon's Bureau of Labour and Industry (BOLI), with former staff alleging they suffered reprisals, including dismissal, for speaking up about Quraishi. In an interview with police and licensing officials from the Oregon Liquor and Cannabis Commission (OLCC) in May 2023, Dr de Looze described the relationship between Quraishi and other staff as "fractured and difficult", Detective Brown said. "He was getting complaints, and he wasn't sure what was true and what wasn't true," she said. "When we asked him about any sexual harassment allegations or complaints, he said he didn't know about any until Ali was arrested." The ABC obtained CCTV recordings from September 2021, in which bartender Franki Lucas told Dr de Looze that Quraishi was "an abuser" who targeted women at the club, including a patron who suspected he had drugged her and stolen her phone. Ms Lucas alleged that Quraishi had told her that "he's going to get me pregnant and I should carry his child" and then "pulled his dick out [and] charged me with his penis in the kitchen". Dr de Looze responded: "Is everything Ali's fault?" An OLCC report obtained by the ABC shows that when an investigator asked Dr de Looze how he was able to run a business from his home in Australia, he said he "trusted Ali to run the day-to-day operations". The OLCC investigated complaints about Quraishi, including "drug and alcohol use while [on] duty, masturbating in front of patrons/employees, inappropriate touching of patrons/employees, sexual harassment, pressuring bartenders to overserve customers, specific ones in particular, and complaints regarding how he would have people fired if they complained about his behavior". It said Dr de Looze "ultimately admitted to having at least some knowledge of Ali drinking on duty, telling people he (Licensee De Looze) would 'stick up for him' if anyone complained about his behavior, and a sexual harassment claim from Brittany Brock, a former bouncer at Stag PDX". He told the licensing officials that he "didn't learn of the other allegations until after Ali's rape arrest". An OLCC spokesman told the ABC there was "an open investigation [which] is not completed, and for that reason, we can't comment". The venue told the ABC it "takes any issue raised by its American regulators seriously and, as a good faith actor in such matters, is unable to provide commentary relating to any ongoing investigation or any review process". "Stag PDX has always cooperated proactively with its regulators," it said. "Stag PDX maintains comprehensive employee policies to prevent harassment, discrimination and retaliation, investigates complaints and takes appropriate action to enforce those policies in compliance with prevailing American and Oregon law and regulation." Ultimately, the judge found there was a "tidal wave of consistent testimony" from Quraishi's victims, Detective Brown said. "The consistent statement was, 'He would buy me a drink, told me he owned the club, and then I woke up in this strange apartment and had no memory of how I got there,'" she said. Some victims have never seen the videos Quraishi secretly made. At the sentencing, the detective said former employees thanked her "because for so long they have been trying to tell people and to get some sort of action about Ali and the problems that he was creating and the unsafe work environment that he was creating". "I got very positive feedback from them that it was good to see that he was held accountable and obviously the BOLI thing was moving forward, so there was some movement on what they had been observing all these years," she said. The Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries (BOLI) did not respond to the ABC. Complaints to BOLI include one by former Stag general manager Matthew Aspiri, who said his concerns about Quraishi were "dismissed and brushed aside". "Many people were fooled and lied to," Mr Aspiri said.


SBS Australia
7 hours ago
- SBS Australia
Trump to meet with Zelenskyy after no deal reached at Alaska summit
Listen to Australian and world news, and follow trending topics with SBS News Podcasts . Ahead of the high stakes meeting with Vladimir Putin, US President Donald Trump said he would know within two minutes of meeting the Russian leader whether it would be a success. It took almost three hours before the leaders emerged from the meeting behind closed doors. It was the first face-to-face meeting between Mr Trump and Mr Putin since 2019, with the Russian leader ostracised by Western leaders since Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. After their meeting, Mr Trump and Mr Putin emerged to speak before reporters in Anchorage, but they took no questions. "I believe that we had a very productive meeting. There were many, many points that we agreed on - most of them. I would say. A couple of big ones that we haven't quite got there. But we have made some head way. There is no deal until there is a deal. I will call up NATO in a little while. I will of course call up President Zelenskyy." Mr Trump later told Fox News that he rated the meeting a 10 out of 10 - even though he revealed no details of the points of agreement and disagreement. "There is not that much. There is one or two significant items (of disagreement). But I think they can be reached. Not it is really up to President Zelenskyy to get it done. And I would also say the European nations. They have to get involved a little bit. But it is up to President Zelenskyy. And if they like, I will be at the next meeting. They are going to set up a meeting between President Zelenskyy, President Putin and myself, I guess. Not that I want to be there, but I want to make sure that it gets done. We have a pretty good chance of getting it done." It is a change in the tone Mr Trump had a few weeks ago when he issued a August 8 deadline for Mr Putin to show a genuine commitment to a ceasefire - or face stronger sanctions. At the post-meeting press conference, Mr Putin was keen to cast the meeting as a success for him - in receiving the invitation, but also on the prospect of a Russian-US economic reset. "I expect that today's agreement will be the starting point - not only for the solution of the Ukrainian issue. But will also help us bring back business and pragmatic relations between Russia and the US." He says he has not shifted in his position on the full-scale invasion in Ukraine. "We're convinced that in order to make the settlement lasting long-term, we need to eliminate the primary roots, the primary causes of the conflict. And we have said it multiple times, to consider all legitimate concerns of Russia and to reinstate a just balance of security in Europe - and in the world on a whole." And at the end of the press conference, Mr Putin was eager to secure another meeting with the US President. Donald Trump: "Thank you very much Vladimir." Vladimir Putin: "Next time in Moscow." Donald Trump: "Oh, that's an interesting one! I will get a little heat on that one but I could see it possibly happening. Thank you very much Vladimir. Thank you all! Thank you!" Vladimir Putin: Thank you so much." Matthew Sussex is a fellow at the Australian National University's Strategic and Defence Studies Centre. He says there was a lot of theatre and optics involved in the high stakes visit - and Mr Putin got what he wanted. "Yes, it's certainly a win for Vladimir Putin. The optics of it were that, you know, he came to American territory, but American territory in Alaska, which of course previously was part of the Russian Federation and there was a lot of media talk in Russia and billboards going up saying, you know, Alaska is Russian and we will take that back. So he got a photo opportunity with Donald Trump. So it makes him look, look respected and valued and making the American president travel all the way to Anchorage to meet him. And at the same time, he basically dodges those sanctions that Trump had threatened." Mark Cancian is a senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington DC. He says despite the convivial language between Mr Trump and Mr Putin, the Alaska summit was planned haphazardly from start to finish. "The press conference was startling - even bizarre - in the sense that the meeting was expected to last maybe six hours and broke up after about three. Then the press conference was called very abruptly. The journalists race into the room. The parties come on stage and speak their piece. Putin starts off and Trump responds, and then they trip off after a couple of minutes, they take no questions and Putin gets on his airplane, flies away. And I don't think anyone quite expected a result like that. On the other hand, the words spoken were very friendly. Both Putin and Trump were encouraging about the future, but vague. And this is clearly the first step on, you know, what could be a long journey." He says negotiations to end wars can take a long time to finalise, but there is a positive for Ukraine in that the worst outcome was avoided. "Another encouraging thing was Trump saying that the Europeans and Ukraine, President Zelenskyy, had to be part of this agreement, and that had not come through quite clearly again about a week ago. The concern is that the pressure will go on to Zelenskyy to give up territory, to make an end to the conflict and get it over with as Trump would say. The Ukrainians are very reluctant to give up territory." Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelenskyy says he has been briefed on the Alaska meeting in a phone call with Mr Trump. The call also ended with an invitation for him to come to Washington DC on Monday (18 August local time). He says he has accepted the invitation and looks forward to discussing "all of the details regarding ending the killing and the war".

ABC News
11 hours ago
- ABC News
Man charged with murder over death of Elmars Kalejs, who was found unconscious in Perth car park
A 48-year-old man has been charged with murder over the death of a WA father who was found with serious injuries lying next to his car on Good Friday. WARNING: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised that this article contains an image of a person who has died, used with the permission of their family. Elmars Kalejs, 53, was found by a passer-by on April 18, sprawled unconscious next to his silver Holden Commodore sedan in a car park near the Settlers' Common Environmental Centre in Bedfordale in Perth's south-east. He was taken to Royal Perth Hospital and treated for head injuries and broken ribs, but died two months later on June 24. WA police had appealed for information to help them piece together how Mr Kalejs sustained his injuries. At the time, his daughter Courtney Mallard said her family wanted to know what happened to him so they could have closure. She described him as a loving, gentle man who "lived off the land". Today police revealed they had charged the 48-year-old man, of Cloverdale, with murder. He is due to face the Perth Magistrates Court tomorrow.