logo
Two men jailed for life for murder of Aboriginal boy

Two men jailed for life for murder of Aboriginal boy

Yahoo4 hours ago

Warning: This article contains the name and images of an Indigenous person who has died. His family has given permission to use his name and image.
Two men have been sentenced to life imprisonment for murdering an Aboriginal schoolboy, in a case that shocked Australia.
Cassius Turvey died of head injuries after a brutal assault on the outskirts of Perth in October 2022. The 15-year-old's killing prompted nationwide protests and vigils, also sparking debate on pervasive racism in the country.
The killers, Jack Brearley and Brodie Palmer, were "callous and lacking in empathy" as they chased Turvey down and savagely beat the Noongar Yamatji boy with a metal pole, Justice Peter Quinlan told a packed courtroom on Friday.
Mitchell Forth, who was convicted of manslaughter, was sentenced to 12 years in jail.
The gallery cheered as Justice Quinlan handed down the sentences, while Cassius' mother Mechelle Turvey burst into tears, local media reported.
At trial, Brearley, 24, and Palmer, 30, had each blamed the other for Cassius' death.
Justice Quinlan found Brearley delivered the fatal blows, adding that he had shown "no remorse whatsoever".
Brearley had alleged that he acted in self-defence as Cassius was armed with a knife, which the judge rejected as "complete fabrication".
"You cannot make amends when you don't acknowledge the pain that you have caused.
"You cannot be remorseful when in an effort to avoid responsibility… You seek to frame an innocent man and when that does not work you give false evidence that your co-accused was in fact the killer," the chief justice said in a scathing rebuke reported by ABC News.
Palmer did not physically strike Cassius, but Justice Quinlan ruled that he was "equally responsible but not equally culpable".
The group had also assaulted other Aboriginal teenagers in what the judge described as "so-called vigilante justice [that] was completely misdirected".
A fourth offender, Ethan MacKenzie, was handed a two-and-a-half years jail term for his part in some of the other assaults.
In one case, a 13-year-old boy's own crutches were used to beat him, causing bruising to his face.
Prosecutors said the group had been "hunting for kids" because somebody had damaged Brearley's car windows.
The attack on Cassius was the culmination of a complex series of tit-for-tat events that had nothing to do with him, they said.
Justice Quinlan condemned Brearley, Palmer and Forth for their "celebration" after the assaults, calling it a "grotesque display of your complete disregard of the lives of the children you had attacked".
In her victim impact statement on Thursday, Cassius' mother Mechelle Turvey said the actions of the three men were racially motivated.
"Cassius was not just part of my life, he was my future," Ms Turvey said. "There are no words that can fully capture the devastation of losing someone you love to violence."
While Justice Quinlan did not find the attack to be motivated by race, he said the attackers' use of racial slurs "rippled" through the Aboriginal community and created "justifiable fear".
"The fear is real and legitimate. You are responsible for that fear," he said.
Aboriginal boy's killing puts spotlight on racism
Mother's grief at killing that's shocked Australia

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Japan executes ‘Twitter killer' who killed and dismembered nine
Japan executes ‘Twitter killer' who killed and dismembered nine

Washington Post

timean hour ago

  • Washington Post

Japan executes ‘Twitter killer' who killed and dismembered nine

A man convicted of murdering nine people has been executed in the first use of the death penalty in Japan since 2022, the country's minister of justice said at a news conference Friday. Takahiro Shiraishi, 34, was dubbed the country's 'Twitter killer' and sentenced to death in December 2020 after being arrested in 2017 for strangling and dismembering nine people, including several young women and girls contemplating suicide, whom he lured to his apartment using social media. Once he lured them to his home, he strangled them, sexually assaulted and robbed some of them, and cut up their corpses, The Washington Post previously reported. Eight of his victims were female, including girls aged 15 and 17. He also killed the male acquaintance of one victim, who had confronted him about the woman's disappearance. Shiraishi had called himself '@hangingpro' on one of his five Twitter accounts and offered to help people in pain, tweeting statements such as: 'If you cannot help yourself, I can help you,' public prosecutors revealed during the trial. Japanese Justice Minister Keisuke Suzuki told media at a news conference Friday the execution had been carried out after 'careful and deliberate consideration.' 'This case was driven by the perpetrator's sexual and monetary desires — truly selfish motives,' Suzuki said, adding that the 'extremely grave' killings had caused shock and anxiety in Japan. Suzuki said he signed the order for the execution on Monday but declined to provide further details, including when Shiraishi had been notified. Japan usually reserves the death penalty for those convicted of multiple murders, with executions by hanging. It was carried out at the Tokyo Detention House, Japan's public broadcaster NHK reported. The death is the first execution carried out by Japan's government since 2022, Suzuki said, adding that popular opinion was taken into account in his decision to order the execution. A majority of people in Japan supported the death penalty, he said, citing government polls. Shiraishi was first arrested in 2017 after police tracked him down when the brother of one of his victims found messages from him in her Twitter account. Police found body parts in cooler boxes and other containers in his apartment. During his trial, Shiraishi said he had not been interested in suicide, but targeted people who had written about it on social media because it was 'easier' to 'manipulate them to my way of thinking,' Japanese media reported at the time. At the time, the case prompted Twitter, now known as X, to introduce rules against promoting or encouraging suicide and social harm. Japan's government also expanded telephone and online support for people contemplating suicide. Suzuki said Friday 105 people remain on death row in Japan. However, questions have been raised about the use of capital punishment in the country following the 2024 exoneration of Iwao Hakamata, 89, who was arrested in 1966 and spent more than four decades on death row over the murder of a family of four. He was recognized as the world's longest serving prisoner on death row before his acquittal, which came after a ruling found part of the evidence against him had been fabricated and he was effectively forced into a false confession, Japan's Kyodo News reported. Human Rights Watch said in a January 2025 report the case highlighted how the country's criminal is blighted by 'hostage justice' — where lengthy interrogations can lead to false confessions — and is badly in need of reform. 'The Japanese government should end so-called hostage justice, and capital punishment,' Kanae Doi, the Japan director at the human rights agency said in a statement at the time. If you or someone you know needs help, visit or call or text the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline at 988. In Japan, the Health Ministry website has contacts for people to find support by phone or online.

Abusive husband stabbed wife to death as she pushed pram in street
Abusive husband stabbed wife to death as she pushed pram in street

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Abusive husband stabbed wife to death as she pushed pram in street

A man described as "violent, jealous, and controlling" has been convicted of murder after he fatally stabbed his wife in broad daylight, having tracked her to a women's refuge. Habibur Masum launched a "ferocious" knife attack on Kulsuma Akter as she pushed their seven-month-old son in a pram. The court heard he left her "bleeding to death in the gutter" before calmly walking away from the scene, abandoning their baby. A court heard Masum, 26, followed Ms Akter, 27, to a refuge in Bradford where she had been staying to escape him after he held a knife to her throat following an assault at their home in Greater Manchester. After finding her through her phone location, Masum was seen on CCTV in the days leading up to the fatal attack 'loitering, watching and waiting' in streets around the hostel, jurors heard. He sent her messages threatening to kill her family members if she did not return to him, before trying to lure her out by sending her fake messages from a local GP practice pretending their son had an appointment and warning of 'increasingly dire consequences' if she did not attend. Bradford Crown Court heard Ms Akter eventually felt safe enough to leave the refuge on April 6 last year after Masum updated his Facebook page falsely claiming to be in Spain. As she was walking in the city centre with a friend, pushing her baby in a pram, Masum confronted her, the trial heard. He was seen on CCTV trying to steer Ms Akter and the pram away before pulling a knife from his jacket and launching the 'brutal attack' when he realised she was not coming with him, prosecutor Stephen Wood KC told jurors. CCTV footage of the attack, played during the trial, captured Ms Akter's screams as Masum stabbed her at least 25 times, put her on the ground and kicked her 'as a final insult' before lifting her head and deliberately cutting her throat. Mr Wood said the 'smiling killer' then calmly walked through Bradford city centre and was seen on CCTV grinning as he got on a bus, 'believing at that point he was getting away'. Jurors heard Masum travelled almost 200 miles south to Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, and was arrested in the early hours of April 9 in a car park near Stoke Mandeville Hospital, where he had gone to be treated for 'lockjaw'. During the trial, Masum refused to watch footage of the attack but jurors heard that during his first police interview he requested to see it, with Mr Wood saying he wanted to see what officers 'had on him'. When he gave evidence, Masum said he did not remember killing his wife and had taken a knife with him intending to stab himself in front of her if she did not 'listen to him'. He broke down in tears as he claimed to have 'lost control' when Ms Akter told him there would be no shortage of people willing to replace him as a father to their son. But Mr Wood said his tears 'were as fake as his claims of self harm' and that 'the only person Habibur Masum feels sorry for is himself'. He said antagonising Masum was 'the very last thing Kulsuma would do' as she knew what he was capable of. Mr Wood said the relationship between Masum and Ms Akter was 'an abusive relationship characterised by his jealousy, possessiveness and controlling behaviour'. Jurors heard the couple met and married in Bangladesh, and came to the UK in 2022 after he obtained a student visa and enrolled on a Masters course to study marketing. The defendant, who gave evidence through a Bengali interpreter, told the trial they initially had a long-distance relationship as he lived in Aylesbury while studying and she lived in Oldham with her brother. Jurors heard that in August 2022 Masum was found by police at a tram station, where he had stayed all night after an argument with Ms Akter. He was taken to hospital where he told a doctor that 'when he fights with her he feels like he is going to kill her'. They moved into a house in Oldham together in September 2022. Jurors heard that in July 2023 Ms Akter went to stay with her brother because of Masum's controlling behaviour, leading him to threaten to harm himself with a knife before she returned. On November 23 he became jealous over a 'completely innocuous' message she received from a male colleague and was accused of assault by grabbing her face, slapping her and pulling her hair. He was cleared of that charge. The court heard he told her: 'I am going to murder you, and the police will be taking me.' The following day he went into their bedroom carrying a knife and held it to her throat, jurors were told. Ms Akter's sister-in-law called the police and Masum was arrested, with Ms Akter deciding to leave him and being moved to the Bradford refuge by Oldham social services in January 2024. Masum denied the November incident and claimed Ms Akter had fabricated a domestic violence case against him as a way to stay in the UK, while he wanted to return to Bangladesh. The court heard that while Ms Akter was at the refuge, Masum sent her a photo of the front of the building with a message saying: 'I know that you are living in this place. I knew from the first day you moved here. 'If I had any wish to kill you, I could have from the first day. You do not know what you have lost but one day you will understand. Nobody will love you like I do.' The court heard Ms Akter's social worker arranged for her to be rehoused and she was due to move on April 8, but in the meantime she heard from Masum's brother that he was in Spain, and 'felt safe to leave the refuge' on the day she was killed. Masum had pleaded guilty to manslaughter but denied murder. On Friday he was found guilty of the more serious charge, as well as one charge of assault, one count of making threats to kill and one charge of stalking. He pleaded guilty to possession of a knife in public.

Japan executes man dubbed the "Twitter killer," convicted serial killer who murdered and dismembered 9 people
Japan executes man dubbed the "Twitter killer," convicted serial killer who murdered and dismembered 9 people

CBS News

timean hour ago

  • CBS News

Japan executes man dubbed the "Twitter killer," convicted serial killer who murdered and dismembered 9 people

Japan on Friday executed a man dubbed the "Twitter killer" who murdered and dismembered nine people he met online, in the nation's first enactment of the death penalty since 2022. Takahiro Shiraishi, 34, was hanged for killing his young victims, all but one of whom were women, after contacting them on the social media platform now called X. He had targeted users who posted about taking their own life, telling them he could help them in their plans, or even die alongside them. According to the BBC, his Twitter profile contained the words: "I want to help people who are really in pain. Please DM [direct message] me anytime." He killed the three teenage girls and five women after raping them. He also killed the boyfriend of one of the women to silence him, the Associated Press reported. Justice Minister Keisuke Suzuki said Shiraishi's crimes, carried out in 2017, included "robbery, rape, murder... destruction of a corpse and abandonment of a corpse". "Nine victims were beaten and strangled, killed, robbed, and then mutilated with parts of their bodies concealed in boxes, and parts discarded in a garbage dump," Suzuki told reporters in Tokyo. Takahiro Shiraishi covers his face inside a police car in Tokyo, in this photo taken by Kyodo November 2017 and released by Kyodo December 15, 2020. KYODO / REUTERS Nine dismembered bodies were found in coolers and tool boxes when officers visited his flat, which was dubbed by media outlets as a "house of horrors," the BBC reported. Shiraishi acted to satisfy "his own sexual and financial desires" and the murders "caused great shock and anxiety to society," Suzuki said. "After much careful consideration, I ordered the execution." Japan and the United States are the only two G7 countries to still use capital punishment, and there is strong support for the practice among the Japanese public, surveys show. There was one execution in 2022, three in 2021, three in 2019 and 15 in 2018, the justice ministry told AFP. Shiraishi was sentenced to death in 2020 for the murders of his nine victims, aged between 15 and 26. After luring them to his small home near the capital, he stashed parts of their bodies around the apartment in coolers and toolboxes sprinkled with cat litter in a bid to hide the evidence. His lawyers had argued Shiraishi should receive a prison sentence rather than be executed because his victims had expressed suicidal thoughts and so had consented to die. But a judge dismissed that argument, calling Shiraishi's crimes "cunning and cruel", reports said at the time. "The dignity of the victims was trampled upon," the judge had said, adding that Shiraishi had preyed upon people who were "mentally fragile". The grisly murders were discovered in autumn 2017 by police investigating the disappearance of a 23-year-old woman who had reportedly tweeted about wanting to kill herself. Her brother gained access to her Twitter account and eventually led police to Shiraishi's residence, where investigators found dismembered body parts. Executions in Japan Executions are always done by hanging in Japan, where around 100 death row prisoners are waiting for their sentences to be carried out. Nearly half are seeking a retrial, Suzuki said Friday. Executions are carried out in secrecy, where prisoners are not even informed of their fate until the morning of their hanging, according to the Associated Press. Japanese law stipulates that executions must be carried out within six months of a verdict after appeals are exhausted. In reality, however, most inmates are left on tenterhooks in solitary confinement for years, and sometimes decades. There is widespread criticism of the system and the government's lack of transparency over the practice. Shiraishi's execution was the first under Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's administration, the Japan Times reported. In 2022, Tomohiro Kato was hanged for an attack that killed seven people in 2008, when he rammed a rented two-ton truck into a crowd in Tokyo and went on a stabbing spree. The high-profile executions of the guru Shoko Asahara and 12 former members of the Aum Shinrikyo doomsday cult took place in 2018. Aum Shinrikyo orchestrated the 1995 sarin gas attacks on Tokyo's subway system, killing 14 people and sickening thousands more. If you or someone you know is in emotional distress or suicidal crisis, call the National Suicide Prevention Hotline at 1-800-273-TALK (8255). For more information about mental health care resources and support, The National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) HelpLine can be reached Monday through Friday, 10 a.m.–6 p.m. ET, at 1-800-950-NAMI (6264) or email info@

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