logo
Arnaud Harixcalde Logan charged with 'malicious mischief' after allegedly damaging case of Stone of Scone in Scotland

Arnaud Harixcalde Logan charged with 'malicious mischief' after allegedly damaging case of Stone of Scone in Scotland

A man from Australia has been charged with "malicious mischief" for allegedly smashing a glass case holding the Stone of Scone, an ancient symbol of Scottish nationhood.
Arnaud Harixcalde Logan, 35, appeared at Perth Sheriff Court on Monday in Scotland to face the charge, which is similar to vandalism.
Mr Logan, whose address was given as Sydney, was not asked to enter a plea and was ordered to be detained until a hearing next week.
Police said that they were called to a "disturbance" at Perth Museum in central Scotland on Saturday, after reports of a kilt-wearing man attempting to smash the case containing the royal rock.
The 150-kilogram sandstone block was used in the crowning ceremonies of medieval Scottish monarchs at Scone Abbey, near Perth.
It was stolen by England's King Edward I in the 13th Century and taken to Westminster Abbey in London, where it was installed under the seat of the coronation chair.
It has been used in coronations at the abbey ever since — first of English and then of British monarchs. The English and Scottish crowns were united under one monarch in the 17th century.
The stone's presence in London long irked Scottish nationalists.
In 1950, it was stolen from Westminster Abbey by four Glasgow university students, but was returned in time for the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953.
It was given back to Scotland in 1996, 700 years after its seizure, and displayed in Edinburgh Castle, with the understanding that it would return to England for use in future coronations.
Sensitivities around the stone meant that it had to be moved to London in secrecy and amid tight security for the coronation of King Charles III in 2023.
Last year it was put on display at the newly renovated Perth Museum where, according to the building's website, there are "a range of 24/7 security measures in place at the Museum to protect this precious object."
Culture Perth and Kinross, which oversees the museum, said the stone was not damaged in the incident.
AP/ABC
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New Chinese criminal software 'Darcula' tricking consumers into falling for fake websites
New Chinese criminal software 'Darcula' tricking consumers into falling for fake websites

ABC News

time3 hours ago

  • ABC News

New Chinese criminal software 'Darcula' tricking consumers into falling for fake websites

Peter Davis was unwinding with friends and red wine on a Friday evening in October last year when everyone got hungry. "We soon started to think about pizza," he said. The 55-year-old looked up his favourite pizza joint — Crust Pizza — via Google and clicked on the first result, which happened to be a sponsored result. He logged into his Crust account, and the site showed him he had earned a free pizza for his loyalty. Mr Davis ordered two pizzas for about $25. It took so long that he thought the transaction would time out, and he would have to do it all over again. "At that moment, my ANZ bank app sprang to life and notified me of a transaction to authorise," he said. He quickly clicked on the app and approved the transaction. But the payment processing wheel kept spinning on the website. Another notification from his ANZ app told him his payment had gone through. Except it was a payment of $570.93, and it had gone to a business called Soax Ltd London. The ANZ app gave him the option to dispute the transaction, but a message told him the payment was pending and could not be disputed until it was complete, which he thought was good news. "If it's pending, surely I can contact ANZ staff and they can stop the scam from completing," Mr Davis said. He spent the next few hours ringing any ANZ support number he could find, with little success. "I got through to a human in one instance, and she reiterated that she could do nothing while the transaction was pending, but gave me another emergency number," he said. "This other number did not answer, did not have a message bank, and just rang out when called." Mr Davis said he had to give up eventually and go to bed. On Sunday, the $570.93 transaction went through. He immediately raised the dispute in the ANZ app and explained he had been scammed via a Crust Pizza website. His theory at the time was that Crust Pizza had been hacked. The ANZ disputes team replied to Mr Davis a few days later and said that, because the transaction was authenticated using 'Verified by Visa' and approved with the ANZ Plus app, the bank could not "classify the above transaction as fraudulent" and was "unable to return the money". "Because I had authorised the transaction, that was the end of it," Mr Davis said. But he wouldn't let it go. He found Visa's merchant guidelines document that listed the accepted grounds and circumstances for a charge-back. "While it did seem my grounds were somehow not sufficient for a charge-back, in another respect, they were very sufficient," he said. He figured out that if he had disputed the charge based on 'payment made, but goods not received', he could get his money back. So, he opened a new dispute with ANZ. ANZ called him, he said, to warn him about changing his story. "At the time of the transaction, I genuinely thought I paid for pizzas that would be delivered. Later, I learned [it was a scam], but it was all still theory at [that] stage, so my new dispute was based on what I knew at the time of the transaction," he said. The bank agreed to process the dispute with Visa. But he needed to show evidence he had contacted the merchant for a refund. "The problem here is that there was no merchant, only scammers," he said. He tried to find the scam website again, but it had disappeared. Instead, the URL sent people to a YouTube video of Rick Astley singing Never Going To Give You Up. His bank account showed he had paid the almost $571 to a company called Soax Ltd London, which was a real company providing software services in the United Kingdom. The company had a website with an email address on it. A few days later, a response dropped into his inbox that said the company had found the account associated with the pizza payment, and it was going to refund Mr Davis the full amount. ANZ said it would not comment on the case. Mr Davis said he was left with lingering questions about the responsibility of Google when it came to fake website scams. They took money from a scammer to list a fake website at the top position in their search results. He also sent a complaint to Google's support team about the scam site being the first search result he was offered, but only received back a message that said: Google "has received information that your credit card details may have been compromised and you should remove this card from your Google wallet". A spokesperson from Google wrote in a statement that the company investigated the domain and could not find ads associated with it. They said on average, 90 per cent of ads on Google results were from verified advertisers, and the company reviewed ads for violations using artificial intelligence and human reviewers. The Soax company in the UK had been used by the scammers to hide their IP address and location, which allowed them to evade detection. It would have also helped the scammers harvest data from the legitimate Crust Pizza websites to make their fake site look authentic. It is a scam technique that has become easier for criminals to pull off thanks to Chinese software provider 'Darcula V3', a sophisticated subscription service that uses the software Magic Cat to duplicate legitimate websites. Brett Winterford, head of global threat intelligence at data security company Okta, said Darcula was an example of new and sophisticated 'phishing-as-a-service'. "[It's] marketed in cybercrime forums that provide attackers with rented access to phishing infrastructure required to launch phishing campaigns," he said. Phishing is when a scammer uses fake websites, texts, or emails to persuade someone to give up personal information. It's also called "social engineering" and is one of the top five scams targeting Australians. Mr Winterford said Darcula was one of several phishing-as-a-service kits that used generative artificial intelligence to mimic real websites. "Darcula [offers] a DIY phishing kit that can clone any brand's website," he said. Mr Winterford said the latest phishing software was challenging to defend against. "Organisations cannot rely exclusively on email content filtering or the services of telecommunications providers to block phishing lures," he said. "Darcula lures are sent to targets using messaging services like Rich Communication Service (RCS) and iMessage, rather than email or SMS." Using RCS and iMessage allows scammers to bypass SMS firewalls and spam filters and reach more potential victims. The only reliable defence against these services is password-less, phishing-resistant authentication. Mr Winterbone said passkey protection was a reliable way people could protect themselves against fake websites because passkeys only worked with the original domain and would not work with a fake domain. "If I registered my key with myGov, for example, my passkey will only work for and not for any other domain," he said. "Every Australian should demand that their online service providers introduce passkeys as an optional method of authentication, with a long-term plan to phase out passwords altogether."

Mother accused of murdering baby boy in Perth named
Mother accused of murdering baby boy in Perth named

News.com.au

time13 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Mother accused of murdering baby boy in Perth named

A mother accused of murdering her seven-month-old baby boy in a Perth home has been named. Jacinta Beth Sells, 31, is charged with murdering her son early Monday morning, in what police allege is a domestic violence homicide. Police and paramedics were called to the Balcatta residence about 3am following reports a child had been seriously injured. The infant was found with suspected stab wounds and was declared dead at the scene. WA Police Commissioner Col Blanch said police will allege the death is a family violence incident, with family members present at the time. 'There was a male, a female and a young person,' he said. 'This is a trauma that no one will ever recover from, the family are deeply affected.' Mr Blanch said first responders arrived to a 'horrific' crime scene. 'There would be very few cases where you would have a crime scene of such a horrific nature for our officers and for first responders involved,' he said. 'It's something that will most likely haunt them for the rest of their careers.' Ms Sells appeared in court in Perth on Wednesday. She did not apply for bail and was remanded in custody. She is scheduled to appear in Stirling Gardens Magistrates Court in August.

Vandals to pay $26,000 for lewd act and damage to Dorrigo War Memorial
Vandals to pay $26,000 for lewd act and damage to Dorrigo War Memorial

ABC News

time13 hours ago

  • ABC News

Vandals to pay $26,000 for lewd act and damage to Dorrigo War Memorial

A couple has been convicted of vandalising a 103-year-old war memorial in northern New South Wales in the days leading up to Anzac Day commemorations. Joshua Claridge, 28, and Toni Cardow, 24, from the state's Central West were on holiday visiting family in Dorrigo when they damaged the town's marble soldier statue after an evening drinking at a pub on April 19. The couple surrendered to Orange police station on April 24. In Coffs Harbour local court on Wednesday, Magistrate Jeff Linden said the defendants were charged for "effectively desecrating a war memorial." In statements to police, Mr Claridge said he climbed onto the statue and "took hold of the rifle to pull himself up", causing a portion of the stone barrel to break off. Magistrate Linden said Ms Cardow's actions were also serious. "In my view, a specific deterrence is needed." Court documents said the pair told police they intended to return the stone rifle barrel to the monument, but "there were too many people around to do so discreetly." Instead, they posted it to the Dorrigo RSL Club the following day. Court documents also revealed a worker at the pub found a second piece of marble in the hotel the following morning and took it to Dorrigo RSL Club. Defence solicitor Carlo Bianchino told the court the pair had "extreme remorse for what happened", demonstrated by Claridge's negotiations with Bellingen Shire Council to pay the insurance excess of $25,000 for the damage. He told the court Ms Cardow felt she had been "villainised" on social media following the incident. "[She] hopes the community of Dorrigo can forgive them for their grave mistakes," Mr Bianchino said. The defence asked the magistrate to record no conviction and instead order a compensation payment. But the magistrate convicted Claridge of intentionally or recklessly destroying or damaging property and wilfully damaging a war memorial. Cardow was convicted of committing an offensive act on a war memorial. The magistrate sentenced Claridge to a 12-month community corrections order, issuing a fine of $400 and ordering him to pay $25,000 to Bellingen Shire Council in compensation. Ms Cardow was fined $750. Dorrigo RSL sub-branch secretary Phillip Corlis said he expected the cost of the statue's repair to increase, as two more pieces had since fallen from the damaged cenotaph. Mr Corlis said the vandalism occurred just six days before Anzac Day, and the community had to gather around a broken stone statue for the service. "It was heart-wrenching," he said. Mr Corlis said he was disappointed the pair were not ordered to issue a public apology. "Desecration of a memorial is shocking, absolutely shocking — why would you do something like that?" Bellingen Shire Council, which owned the monument, said in a statement it was "committed to returning the memorial to its rightful condition as soon as possible."

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