logo
Touching act for missing police officer

Touching act for missing police officer

Perth Now13-05-2025

The Ipswich community is set to gather to mourn the 'much-admired' police officer who went missing from Byron Bay in March.
Family, friends, and colleagues have been invited to honour Ipswich Police Inspector Jay Notaro at a memorial at Sleeman Sports Complex this Friday, more than 50 days since he went missing from Broken Head Beach near Byron Bay in northeastern NSW. Ipswich cop Jay Notaro went missing near Byron Bay. Credit: Supplied
A four day search took place after the 45-year-old senior police officer did not show up for work on Tuesday 25, March which was deemed 'out of character' by his family and colleagues.
His car was found parked at the Broken Head Beach carpark, and his surfboard was later discovered by someone walking along the foreshore. The search for 45-year-old Jay Notaro was launched at Broken Head about 12.40pm on Tuesday after his board was found abandoned and his vehicle located in the carpark. NewsWire/ Natalie Grono Credit: News Corp Australia
The board was undamaged and the leg rope was attached.
After a difficult search hampered by tough weather conditions, the effort was called off on Friday March 28.
At the time, his uncle Phil posted to social media: 'conditions this week have been horrendous and we can't thank the NSW and Queensland Police enough for a remarkable response'.
'Plus all the friends and colleagues that attended to help in any way they could. And the onslaught of messages. It's been truly humbling and heart warming. But we fully understand that they had to call it.
'The search was intensive. Now we wait for Mother Nature to decide if she will return him to us.'
It was reported that Australian actor Chris Hemsworth became involved in the week-long search, as the pair were surfing friends. Jay Notaro's family gathered on Broken Head Beach. NewsWire/ Natalie Grono Credit: News Corp Australia Detective Inspector Matt Zimmer at a press conference updating the public on the search for the missing officer NewsWire/ Natalie Grono Credit: News Corp Australia
Mr Notaro's body has never been found.
In 2024, Inspector Notaro was awarded the Damian Leeding Compassion in Policing Award by the Queensland Homicide Victims Support Group. He also helped to solve the cold case murder of Gold Coast man Greg Dufty.
Local MP Charis Mullen shared to Facebook that she would be attending the service on behalf of the Jordan electorate to offer the community's condolences.
'A memorial service will be held for former Ipswich Patrol Inspector Jay Notaro on 16 May,' she wrote.
'We are feeling the loss of such an exceptional and much-admired police officer and my thoughts are with his family and his colleagues in the Queensland Police Service.'
Mr Notaro's family have asked the media and public to respect their privacy on Friday as they gather to share memories and remember the beloved officer.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Losses will continue to mount': Bank staff's security warnings before massive scam cost customers millions
‘Losses will continue to mount': Bank staff's security warnings before massive scam cost customers millions

The Age

time6 hours ago

  • The Age

‘Losses will continue to mount': Bank staff's security warnings before massive scam cost customers millions

Similar warnings were made repeatedly in the years to come, according to the ASIC statement of claim filed to the federal court. '[C]urrently, HSBC do not have the capability to stop an online transfer of funds from one bank account to another,' said another presentation given in October 2022 to HSBC's Australian wealth and personal banking fraud steering committee. By July 2023, the court documents show that Matthew Hannan, HSBC Australia's head of fraud management, was making a 'special' presentation about an 'HSBC impersonation scam' in which he had said that 50 customers had lost money in the emerging scam, sometimes after receiving text messages that tricked them into sharing personal information. In September the same year, a slide pack for an HSBC Australia committee meeting discussing impersonation scams said that 'current limitations on desktop banking monitoring and real-time interception are impacting our ability to disrupt and prevent these attacks'. ASIC alleges that HSBC Australia didn't implement adequate real-time fraud payment monitoring, including capabilities to detect and block suspicious activity, across both mobile and online banking until about May 2024, at the tail end of the swindle. The corporate regulator also highlighted other alleged security deficiencies, claiming HSBC did not implement a digital fraud behavioral biometric system called BioCatch, and digital fraud device identification capabilities, via ThreatMetrix, for online banking until June 2024. In January 2022, the minutes of one of the bank's fraud steering committee meetings noted that 'losses resulting from these scam cases and determinations would likely have been avoided with BioCatch/ThreatMetrix implementation for transactional monitoring'. In December 2023, as the reports from the impersonation scam mounted, another internal presentation warned that until these systems were implemented for online banking, the fraud team 'cannot disrupt scams, and losses will continue to mount'. HSBC Australia customers lost $18 million via impersonation scams in the 2023 financial year, and $24 million in the first nine months of 2024, according to court documents. About 950 reports of unauthorised transactions were made to HSBC Australia between January 2020 to August last year. HSBC was due to file its defence in the case early last month, but failed to do so. At a hearing in May, Justice Elizabeth Bennett ordered the bank to provide a written explanation of their non-compliance. A solicitor acting for HSBC Australia earlier submitted that the bank had identified inaccuracies in data presented to the court that it needed to correct before it would be appropriate to file its defence. Asked about the repeated internal warnings of the bank's inability to halt suspicious transactions highlighted in ASIC's statement of claim, an HSBC spokesperson replied, 'as the matter is before the court, we are unable to comment'.

‘Losses will continue to mount': Bank staff's security warnings before massive scam cost customers millions
‘Losses will continue to mount': Bank staff's security warnings before massive scam cost customers millions

Sydney Morning Herald

time6 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

‘Losses will continue to mount': Bank staff's security warnings before massive scam cost customers millions

Similar warnings were made repeatedly in the years to come, according to the ASIC statement of claim filed to the federal court. '[C]urrently, HSBC do not have the capability to stop an online transfer of funds from one bank account to another,' said another presentation given in October 2022 to HSBC's Australian wealth and personal banking fraud steering committee. By July 2023, the court documents show that Matthew Hannan, HSBC Australia's head of fraud management, was making a 'special' presentation about an 'HSBC impersonation scam' in which he had said that 50 customers had lost money in the emerging scam, sometimes after receiving text messages that tricked them into sharing personal information. In September the same year, a slide pack for an HSBC Australia committee meeting discussing impersonation scams said that 'current limitations on desktop banking monitoring and real-time interception are impacting our ability to disrupt and prevent these attacks'. ASIC alleges that HSBC Australia didn't implement adequate real-time fraud payment monitoring, including capabilities to detect and block suspicious activity, across both mobile and online banking until about May 2024, at the tail end of the swindle. The corporate regulator also highlighted other alleged security deficiencies, claiming HSBC did not implement a digital fraud behavioral biometric system called BioCatch, and digital fraud device identification capabilities, via ThreatMetrix, for online banking until June 2024. In January 2022, the minutes of one of the bank's fraud steering committee meetings noted that 'losses resulting from these scam cases and determinations would likely have been avoided with BioCatch/ThreatMetrix implementation for transactional monitoring'. In December 2023, as the reports from the impersonation scam mounted, another internal presentation warned that until these systems were implemented for online banking, the fraud team 'cannot disrupt scams, and losses will continue to mount'. HSBC Australia customers lost $18 million via impersonation scams in the 2023 financial year, and $24 million in the first nine months of 2024, according to court documents. About 950 reports of unauthorised transactions were made to HSBC Australia between January 2020 to August last year. HSBC was due to file its defence in the case early last month, but failed to do so. At a hearing in May, Justice Elizabeth Bennett ordered the bank to provide a written explanation of their non-compliance. A solicitor acting for HSBC Australia earlier submitted that the bank had identified inaccuracies in data presented to the court that it needed to correct before it would be appropriate to file its defence. Asked about the repeated internal warnings of the bank's inability to halt suspicious transactions highlighted in ASIC's statement of claim, an HSBC spokesperson replied, 'as the matter is before the court, we are unable to comment'.

‘Weekly basis': Lawyer reveals why young people are still carrying knives, despite harsher laws
‘Weekly basis': Lawyer reveals why young people are still carrying knives, despite harsher laws

West Australian

time14 hours ago

  • West Australian

‘Weekly basis': Lawyer reveals why young people are still carrying knives, despite harsher laws

Harsher penalties will do little to curb the spike in youth knife crime unless the underlying reasons why they are being carried are addressed, a leading criminal lawyer has declared. Astor Legal principal lawyer Avinash Singh said he deals with people charged with knife offences on a weekly basis, with many also involved in the illegal drug trade. 'We have represented a number of minors accused of carrying knives – generally from lower socio-economic areas carrying knives for self-defence,' Mr Singh told NewsWire. 'Unfortunately, a lot of these young people have been assaulted and/or threatened themselves. 'They feel that reporting the matter to police after the fact will do them little good, particularly if they are seriously injured or even killed,' he said. 'As such, they often feel that they have to carry a knife to protect themselves.' The hard truth then, is that harsher crimes may not reduce offending, or make the community any safer, Mr Singh said. 'While it is understandable that governments and the community demand tougher laws to combat knife crime, this is unlikely to do much to reduce it in my opinion,' he said. 'People who carry knives are unlikely to stop just because of increased penalties. 'Research has found that they stop when they are no longer exposed to an environment where carrying a knife is seen as a necessity,' he said. 'This means addressing these communities by providing resources, programs and funding to prevent the issue – something governments have continuously failed to do.' The Victorian Allan Government announced in May it will be introducing laws to ban the sale and possession of machetes following an alleged spate of machete assaults. From September 1, those carrying a 'controlled weapon' or knife in Victoria will face up to two years imprisonment or a fine of $30,700. 'In Victoria, community safety comes first. We must never let places we meet become places we fear,' Premier Jacinta Allan said. 'I hate these knives, and I will keep introducing as many laws as it takes to get them off our streets, out of our shops and out of our lives.' Those found guilty in NSW face four years imprisonment fines up to $4,400. Mr Singh said he feared 'the expanded search powers will disproportionately be used against young people from lower socio-economic areas'. 'This leads to distrust of police and can in fact have the opposite effect – that is, young people keep knives but simply avoid police and are less likely to report crimes'. He said this is already seen in the rising amount of NSW youth caught up in the criminal system following legislation changes and bail reform. 'The strictest knife crime laws at present are in NSW. While the laws have only recently been introduced, there has been a noticeable increase in the courts seeing knife offences,' Mr Singh said. 'This, along with recent Bail Act reforms in NSW, has led to a marked increase in children being refused bail and held in custody, which does nothing to address their behaviour or promote rehabilitation of offenders.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store