
Suspected arsonist appears in court over Melbourne synagogue fire that shocked the nation
Giovanni Laulu, 21, appeared in the Melbourne Magistrates Court Thursday after his arrest at a Melbourne home on Wednesday.
Police allege Laulu is one of three masked men who spread a liquid accelerant around the interior of the Adass Israel Synagogue then set it alight before dawn on Dec. 6. A worshipper preparing for morning prayers suffered minor burns.
Laulu is the first suspect to be caught, but police have foreshadowed more arrests. Police suspect there are also accomplices who planned the attack from overseas.
Laulu was charged with arson, reckless conduct endangering life and car theft.
Laulu confirmed his name but otherwise remained silent during the brief court appearance. He did not enter pleas or apply to be released on bail.
His lawyer told Magistrate Brett Sonnett this was not Laulu's first time in prison. Laulu was then remanded in custody and will appear in court next on Aug. 6.
Prosecutors sought 12 weeks to gather evidence against Laulu and said 11 cell phones need to be analysed. Sonnett gave the prosecution until Oct. 22 to present their case to Laulu's lawyers.
Federal and state police, plus Australia's main domestic spy agency, have been investigating the crime, which is suspected to be politically motivated. Police say more than 220 law enforcement officers have devoted more than 50,000 hours to the investigation.
State Chief Commissioner Mike Bush said Victoria Police would be relentless in pursuing and holding those involved in the synagogue arson to account.
'Victoria Police has seen first-hand the impact this incident has had in the Victorian community — the fear and distress a crime like this can cause,' Bush said in a statement.
' People deserve to be safe and feel safe, particularly when it comes to their places of worship. This is not negotiable in any way. We remain committed to identifying all those who seek to cause this kind of fear and harm, and ensuring they are brought to justice,' he added.
A wave of antisemitic attacks has roiled Australia since the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas assault on Israel triggered the war in Gaza. The synagogue attack is the only incident that has been classified as an act of terrorism, a designation that increases the resources available to the investigation.
The federal government has committed 30 million Australian dollars ($20 million) to rebuild the synagogue.
Hashtags

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


Daily Mail
43 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Major update on NSW MP Gareth Ward after he was convicted of sexual assaults
A sitting politician who argued his sexual abuse convictions were not enough to expel him from state parliament has lost a court bid to halt a vote removing him as an MP. Gareth Ward, 44, remains the member for the NSW south coast seat of Kiama while he awaits sentencing for sexually assaulting an intoxicated political staffer after a midweek event in the state's parliament in 2015. The former state families minister was also found to have sexually abused a drunken 18-year-old man at his South Coast home in 2013. A Labor-led vote to expel Ward from parliament, slated for Wednesday, was delayed after a court ordered a halt at the MP's request. That injunction was dismissed by the NSW Court of Appeal on Thursday, paving the way for a parliamentary debate on Friday as to whether Ward should be removed. 'The fact that Mr Ward has file a notice of intention to appeal does not affect the power of the assembly to expel him,' Chief Justice Andrew Bell said. The chief judge ordered the sitting MP to pay the assembly's costs of the lawsuit and rebuked him for launching the legal bid without giving his opponents proper notice on Monday, saying it was not appropriate. At a hearing earlier in the day, the MP's barrister Peter King argued a letter he received from the Labor government about the planned expulsion vote only referred to the convictions and did not lay out a case for Ward's expulsion. The letter did not detail any 'unworthy conduct' - the expulsion power Labor is relying on to turf Ward - he told a panel of three Court of Appeal judges. Four MPs have been expelled from NSW parliament, the last in 1969, under the 'unworthy conduct' power. 'Are you seriously submitting that (Ward's) convictions ... are not conduct unworthy?' Chief Justice Andrew Bell asked. 'The four counts are evidence of the fact of conviction, but they're not evidence of the facts which underlie that conviction,' Mr King replied. When the barrister tried again to make the same argument, Justice Jeremy Kirk chimed in. 'There can't be any mystery about it: he was tried publicly on an indictment,' the judge said. 'He, of all people, must know what behaviour led to his conviction.' Even if he staves off the vote, Ward faces automatic expulsion under a separate power if he fails to overturn his convictions on appeal. Mr King also attacked the proposed motion to expel Ward now as unlawfully punitive by denying him a parliamentary return if he won a conviction appeal. The jailed MP could also not speak against the motion in parliament. 'In short, he is to be expelled by a kangaroo court,' Mr King said. Lawyers for parliamentary speaker Greg Piper denied the proposed expulsion was punitive. Instead, it was the lower house protecting the trust and confidence of its members as well as the community, barrister Craig Lenehan SC argued. Ward had been given 'all the procedural fairness in the world', including an offer to provide lengthy written submissions against his expulsion, in circumstances where parliament could have just moved against him without notice. Any expulsion of Ward will trigger a by-election in the electorate he has held since 2011. Initially running under the Liberal banner, he secured a 2023 poll win as an independent, despite having been charged with sexual assault and suspended from parliament. A vote to expel him is almost certain to pass with support from leaders of Labor and the coalition. 'The Opposition is ready to have Gareth Ward expelled from parliament forthwith,' Opposition Leader Mark Speakman said in a statement after Thursday's court ruling. Ward has been remanded in custody ahead of his sentence for the sexual assaults. 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028


BBC News
43 minutes ago
- BBC News
cvgv9mnr8e1o (GIF Image, 1 × 1 pixels)
Neve Gordon-Farleigh BBC News, Bedfordshire Bedfordshire Police CCTV from 5 February shows Jesbir Singh Khela and his vehicle at an Esso patrol station in Norton Way in Letchworth Police have released a CCTV image of a man taken the day before he was found dead in a burned-out car The destroyed Skoda Octavia was found by Bedfordshire Police in a field off the B659 Langford Road on 6 February shortly before 07:30 GMT. The body of 47-year-old Jesbir Singh Khela, known to people as Jessy, from Letchworth, Hertfordshire, was found in the driver's seat and the force is treating his death as murder. Det Insp Justine Jenkins, said: "[We] are again appealing to anyone who may have seen anything suspicious on the evening of Wednesday 5 February into the early hours of Thursday 6 February to come forward. "Even the smallest detail - something that may have seemed insignificant at the time - could prove vital to our investigation." Bedfordshire Police Jesbir Singh Khela, 47, was known to some as Jessy CCTV released by the force showed the 47-year-old and his vehicle at the Esso petrol station in Norton Way, Letchworth, at about 13:22 on 5 February. The force added that at the time the vehicle may not have been displaying its taxi roof sign. The car left central London shortly after 01:00 on 6 February and had been travelling towards Letchworth via the A41 Watford Way and Barnet Way, before it was found in Langford, police said. Det Insp Justine Jenkins, said: "Six months have passed since Jesbir's death, and our thoughts remain with his family and loved ones as they continue to come to terms with their loss." The force said a man in his 30s was arrested in June in connection with the incident and has since been released on bail while inquiries continue. Follow Beds, Herts and Bucks news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X. More on this story Murder probe after body found in burnt-out car Related internet links


Daily Mail
43 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Brit who vanished from Greek sunbed while husband slept 'was seen walking away from the scene'... as it emerges she 'also disappeared in London in 2020'
The British woman who vanished from a Greek sunbed six days ago while her husband slept was seen walking away from the scene, as it emerges she also disappeared in London in 2020, according to Greek media. Michele Ann Joy Bourda, 59, had been swimming at Ofrynio beach in the city of Kavala at around noon on Friday before she suddenly went missing, beginning an investigation by land and sea into her whereabouts. An image shared by Greek outlet ANT1 reportedly shows the last sighting of Mrs Bourda, enjoying a snack with her Greek husband, Christos, at a cafe near the beach three hours before she vanished. The couple had gone to the beach early in the morning and spent several hours there before Mrs Bourda's husband fell asleep. When he woke up, his wife had vanished from the sunlounger, but her belongings remained. A sports instructor claimed he saw a woman who resembled Mrs Bourda swimming in deep waters and said that he urged her to not go any further, LBC reports. But sources are now saying they saw her walking away from the scene in northern Greece, according to Ilia Live. This is not the first time Mrs Bourda has gone missing, the report claimed. In London 2020 following a dismissal from work, the woman vanished before she was later found by the police. She has reportedly been suffering with health problems in recent times, spurring her husband's anxiety about her current whereabouts. In the photograph from the beach cafe, Mrs Bourda is pictured wearing a dark swimming costume and sunglasses, and appears calm as she chats with her husband, who is shown in the photo wearing a white cap. When he woke from his slumber on the beach to find that Mrs Bourda was not by his side, he asked the owners of a nearby shop if they had seen his wife, to who he reportedly revealed that she 'was not very well'. Speaking to Greek outlet Protothema, one of the shop owners said: 'The couple were together and at some point the husband fell asleep and it seems that the wife went in to swim. 'When the husband woke up and didn't see her next to him, he came to the store and asked us if we had seen his wife, who had disappeared. 'He also told us that his wife was not very well, and that she had problems.' The shop keeper went on to say that Mrs Bourda's husband 'was a bit stressed' and told them that 'his wife had done this before, that is, she had disappeared'. 'This is what he told us, that she had gotten lost again and that she wasn't very well, the woman had problems.' Police have been searching on land for the tourist, while Greece 's Hellenic Coast Guard have been scouring the sea, but the central port authority in Kavala said on Monday night it had paused its targeted search and rescue efforts. A Silver Alert was issued after the police failed to immediately locate the tourist and authorities have warned that she may be in danger. Silver Alerts are usually used to notify citizens about the disappearance of elderly people, especially those with dementia or Alzheimer's. 'Her life is in danger. If you know anything, contact the Silver Alert service, 24 hours a day, at the National SOS Line 1065,' the alert by the Greek missing persons charity, Lifeline Hellas, said. While Greek media are still referring to the woman as a tourist, there is some speculation that the couple were living locally, in a village in Serres. Mrs Bourda, described as timid by her neighbours in Glasgow, was said to very adventurous and active. One said: 'She has always dressed in walking gear with a fleece and boots or a cagoule. She is really into the outdoors.' Neighbours would regularly see her and her husband Christos out walking with backpacks on as they loaded the car for another day trip in the wild. One of her neighbours said: 'They've got bikes, and are quite active. They like to go walking, they like to go wild swimming. 'They would go, and they would often be away for the whole day in the summer, and then if we saw them coming in and out and they would say, "oh, we've been somewhere up north and we were swimming". And I would see her sometimes sit and reading in the garden.' Those who lived nearby admitted they were shocked upon hearing that Mrs Bourda had been reported missing while holidaying in Greece. Another added: 'The couple are very private and keep themselves to themselves. She is very quiet and timid and he is a bit more commanding. They moved to Glasgow about six years ago because their son is studying here.' 'They are retired and tend to go everywhere together even though they have two cars. They are quite guarded and private but I'm very shocked that she has gone missing.' A map shows how the 10.5-mile-long Greek beach where Mrs Bourda vanished after lounging on a sunbed is surrounded by expansive fields, residential houses and a huge fishing pond. She was last seen wearing a rhinestone-embellished two-piece beaded swimsuit, yellow beach shoes and a pair of red horn-rimmed sunglasses. She is described as being 5ft 6in, of a slim build with blue eyes and shoulder-length hair. The Daily Mail contacted the FCDO for comment on whether the UK Government was assisting in the search for Ms Bourda. It comes after a 60-year-old British tourist went missing in June while on holiday in Greece. His hired car was found abandoned on the island of Karpathos in 38C heat and he was last seen by the owner of his rented accommodation on June 27. Meanwhile, fears are growing for a British woman who disappeared from a Spanish tourist hotspot last week. Jennifer Frances Lacey, 41, vanished from the municipality of Vera on Monday, July 28. Her disappearance was reported by the SOS Missing Persons Association on Thursday and she is described as measuring 5ft 2in, having curly brown hair, blue eyes and wearing prescription glasses. A Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office spokesman told the Daily Mail: 'We are supporting the family of a British woman who was reported missing in Spain.' At least ten foreign tourists were found dead or disappeared last year in Greece while going for a hike, often in high temperatures, the New York Times reported. It also comes days after the search for an elderly British man who went missing on a trip to ancient Turkish tombs ended in tragedy. Following a three-day search in and around the ancient tombs of Kaunos in Turkey for the 79-year-old, investigators found a body. The man was reported missing by his daughter, who he travelled with to Çandır, a village in Muğla's Köyceğiz district in southwestern Turkey, for a holiday together on July 26. At 10.30am that day, her father began a trip by rowboat to the nearby rock-cut temple tombs of Kaunos, also known as the Lycian rock tombs, but she lost contact with him and has not heard from his since. Following his daughter's report, Turkish authorities launched a search for the man with a 19-person team, consisting of the Köyceğiz Gendarmerie District Command, Muğla AFAD and an NGO. An investigation is now underway to understand exactly how the man went missing.