
The illegal act Jackie 'O' Henderson is willing to do amid major nationwide crackdown
Jackie 'O' Henderson shocked listeners on Wednesday morning when she made a surprising admission about her addiction to menthol cigarettes.
The radio star, 50, was discussing the 'massive' federal excise on tobacco amid concerns of a growing black market with her co-star Kyle Sandilands when they rang up NSW Premier Chris Minns to discuss the matter.
Mr Minns, 45, told the hosts that one of the unfortunate side effects of the federal excise is that the huge price hike on tobacco products has created a black market where they are sold at significantly lower prices.
'There's something I hate about this [excise]. Law-abiding people are being dragged into a black market,' he said.
'They go to the store and either buy a $20 packet of illegal cigarettes, or a $60 legal one. It's just a no-brainer for them.'
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Jackie then made the surprising admission that she was also considering resorting to purchasing cigarettes on the black market, due to the ban on menthol-flavoured tobacco products.
'I am going [to go black market] because of the menthols ban. You have given me no choice there,' she told Mr Minns.
Mr Minns then advised Jackie to 'always follow the law' when it comes to purchasing tobacco products - adding it was a crime to sell cigarettes on the black market, but not to purchase them.
Her surprising admission comes ahead of the NSW budget on June 24, of which Mr Minns said a decision had to be made about resources devoted to combating illicit tobacco sales.
It could mean reallocating police away from domestic violence, youth crime and gang cases to regulate tobacco sales.
'We may need to do that because I'm concerned as a constituent and as a father to see the number of high street premises being taken over by tobacco firms,' he told reporters on Monday.
'But I wonder whether we need to roll this back a couple of steps and look more closely at the federal government's massive excise on tobacco.'
The excise has driven down the number of smokers in NSW to about one in nine adults, the state's most recent population health survey shows.
The radio star was discussing the 'massive' federal excise on tobacco amid concerns of a growing black market with her co-star Kyle Sandilands, when they called NSW Premier Chris Minns (pictured) to discuss the matter
'It's meant that many people who wouldn't go near an illegal behaviour ordinarily are buying illicit tobacco almost on a daily basis,' he said.
He called for the size of the excise and its influence on illicit tobacco sales to be investigated.
Jackie previously shared her own personal story with addiction with listeners during The Kyle and Jackie O Show back in October.
Fighting back tears, Jackie shared that she checked into rehab facility the Betty Ford Clinic in California in November 2022, when she took an extended break from The Kyle and Jackie O Show that she previously claimed was due to long Covid.
Known for treating Hollywood stars including Keith Urban, Robert Downey Jr. and Lindsay Lohan, Betty Ford charges anywhere from AU$45,000 to AU$90,000 for a month-long stay.
Jackie revealed on-air that her long-time friend Gemma had been instrumental into getting Jackie into rehab.
The presenter recalled: 'It came to a head and [Gemma] was such a great friend. She said "I'm sorry Jackie, but you're not going to taper off this, it will never work. I'm checking you into rehab at the end of the week and we're going".'
'I said "don't be ridiculous, Gemma like that is such overkill. I don't have a problem that bad that I need to go to Betty Ford".'
'And she said no, we're going and we're doing it and I thank God she did that. I believe she saved my life,' Jackie admitted.
She said they caught a night flight out of Australia and boarded at the 'last moment' to avoid being seen and then jetted over to LA, where Gemma stayed with her for two days before she checked into the Betty Ford Clinic.
At the time, Kyle - who was unaware of Jackie's drug addiction - told their listeners Jackie was taking a break to 'focus on her health' after contracting Covid.
Instead, she was secretly flown out of Australia to be treated for 28 days at the world famous rehab facility for an addiction to painkillers, sleeping pills and alcohol.
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Daily Mail
35 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Inside the dark mystery at the heart of Jodie Haydon's family: How loved one of Australia's 'First Lady' VANISHED off the face of the earth in case that mystified Aboriginal trackers
She's one of the most recognisable women in Australia, yet few people know that the Prime Minister's fiancée Jodie Haydon is not even the most famous member of her own clan. Jodie's great grandfather Bill Haydon - who her own father was named after - was known as the 'Cedar King' on account of his remarkable ability to discover and extract the high-value timber from deep and dangerous bush. But he suddenly and inexplicably disappeared in 1965 making Haydon the central figure in one of Australia's most enduring and perplexing mysteries. It sparked a massive, weeks-long search involving the army, spotter planes and the most experienced Aboriginal bush trackers. But when they failed to turn up any sign of Bill - something trackers thought was 'really weird' - the disappearance triggered a series of conspiracy theories, each one more wild than the last. At the centre of it all, of course, is a devastated family left grappling for answers. The mystery was only partially solved in 2008 following a coronial inquest, offering some closure to the Haydon clan. It is perhaps fitting that on the 60th anniversary of her great grandfather's disappearance, Jodie will also enter the history books when she marries Anthony Albanese later this year. Here, Daily Mail Australia charts the intrepid, trail-blazing life of the Cedar King - and his mysterious end. Self-made man William Edward Haydon was born on August 10, 1890 in the village of Hannam Vale, surrounded by dense forest around 30km inland from NSW's Mid North Coast. He had little formal secondary education but was well-read and exceptionally quick at numbers. Perhaps unsurprisingly, he followed his father John into the timber industry and by the age of 15, decided to leave home with just two shillings in his pocket. Two years later, he had bought his first bullock team - a pair of harnessed bulls used to haul logs and other supplies for long miles - for 200 pounds. He would go on to buy 50 more, making a name for himself in the region as an extremely hard worker and a highly effective logger. 'He was a very formidable man,' his granddaughter Geraldine Yabsley - Jodie's first cousin once removed - told Daily Mail Australia. 'He could walk 30-40 miles in a day armed with just his bush hook and a bag filled with sugar and tea.' It was in 1934 when, gazing across the remote and inaccessible Carrai Plateau in northern NSW, Bill spied an opportunity: the large number of enormous red cedar trees. Most of the accessible, low-lying cedars had been cleared in the previous century. The rich red timber, which was so valuable it was known as 'Red Gold' by settlers, was easy to work with and was used for furniture, wood pannelling, coffins and even shipbuilding. 'Cedar wood was in very high demand because it took so long for the trees to mature,' Phil Lee, President of the Kempsey Museum, said. By the time Bill was working in the timber industry, most of Australia's native cedars had already been felled. There was money to be made if he could somehow cut down and transport these remote trees to towns and settlements. Yet there was the small problem of 50km of thick bush and steep terrain to overcome. Blazing a trail The Forestry Commission said they would support a licence for Bill to harvest the wood, but stopped short of building a road, according to the Macleay Argus. So, with the help of the first Caterpillar bulldozer in the area, he built one himself. 'He was an entrepreneur, ahead of his time,' Geraldine said. 'In the 50s he was talking about using helicopters to fly timber out of the bush – years before it was done.' The toil was worth it: the money poured in and he was able to start building sawmills across the mid-North Coast. 'He opened up a lot of country. He helped pave the way to build roads and towns,' Geraldine said. 'These places and people were there because of him.' In all, Bill built ten sawmills over his lifetime, creating hundreds, if not thousands of jobs in the area. 'He was a very, very well-known man,' Geraldine added. 'He was a local legend in his lifetime. Everyone knew him. He was a fine figure of a man, six-foot-something, handsome. A very powerful personality.' The logging they did back then was a lot more selective to ensure regrowth. Unlike today, when timber companies clear whole tracts of forests, Bill and his team would travel far and wide to extract a few prized cedars. John Vader, author of Red Cedar: The Tree of Australian History, described how a typical day for Bill's team would involve setting off into the New England Escarpment with in a convoy of Land rovers equipped with snow chains and accompanied by tractors. 'From a basecamp they would descend 11 miles into the gorge, sometimes on spurs only a vehicle width and nearly perpendicular drops into breathtaking hidden valleys,' the Dorrigo Heritage Defenders page notes. 'On many occasions the only option was to drag the tractors to safety in reverse using rear mounted winches attached to a nominated sturdy tree cutting their way as they went.' One 'pretty decent' haul involved a cedar tree trunk 5.5 metres in circumference - roughly the equivalent of ten people standing with their arms outstretched just to encircle it once. It was tough but rewarding work and Bill shared the spoils around. He reportedly built 80 houses, two schools, donated the rich red cedar to Catholic churches in the area and sponsored the local footy team. 'He was a very generous man. He was always helping out the nuns and after the floods in 1949-50, he helped relocate a number of families from downtown to higher land near the Kempsey hospital,' Geraldine added. Bill commissioned a film called 'Red Gold' in the 1950s charting the history of cedar getters on the north coast. By the morning of April 28, 1965, his reputation as the 'Cedar King' was firmly established. But just 24 hours later, he disappeared forever. The vanishing Bill, his son Jack and a local Kempsey man called Jack Clarke had set out for the Washpool State Forest in northern NSW a couple of days earlier. They had a government contract to find red cedar for new double decker railway carriages and, at the age of 75, it was, with bitter irony, to be Bill's last job before retirement. On April 28, Bill's son and Jack Clarke left their camp in the Willowie Scrub to look for cedar in a nearby gully while Bill decided to stay behind to scout for the red gold nearby. The going was harder than they'd anticipated and the two Jacks were forced to camp overnight. They returned to camp the next day but there was no sign whatsoever of Bill. A massive search party was launched - one of the largest in NSW history - involving hundreds of bushmen, soldiers and police. But they failed to turn up any trace of Bill - apart from some markings he'd left on red cedar trunks. Geraldine was just six years old when he went missing. 'But I remember it was clear as day,' she said. 'All the people coming and going in the house. All of the crying. Mum and my sister went up to the forest to help look and to help feed the men.' The mystery Geraldine, 67, published a book in 2009 alongside a journalist Kathleen Davies called: 'Bill Haydon, The Cedar King - The man behind the legend'. 'When writing the book I spoke to people who were there and who were involved in the massive search party,' she said. 'They all said it was very strange. Really renowned trackers, some of them aboriginals, were able to follow his trail through some cedar trees where he had left markings. 'They found that he had walked off a little bit and then stepped on to a fallen, moss-covered log. 'But the curious thing they all said was that he never got off that log. His tracks just stopped there. It was as if he had vanished on the spot. 'The trail just ended. Some of the trackers said they expected to find his body there but there was nothing. 'They all said it was really weird. And this was coming from expert bushmen.' Mr Lee, who is also President of the Macleay River Historical Society, agreed that his disappearance was 'certainly strange'. 'He was an expert bushman so he probably left the markings on the trees to find his back to camp. But he just never got there,' Mr Lee added. The search was eventually bolstered by 120 soldiers and a Cessna aircraft sent down from Queensland. But after weeks of combing the dense bush it was eventually called off. The investigation His disappearance had a devastating impact on the family that echoed for years afterwards. 'My grandfather's wife - Olivetta - Granny Haydon to us, they said she cried to the day she died in her nineties. She missed him something terrible,' Geraldine said. 'He was a very strong personality so when you took the rudder away they were lost.' The lack of closure of not finding a body gave rise to wild conspiracies, especially given that northern NSW is full of strange happenings. There have been well-documented sightings of a black panthers and UFOs in the regions dark forests. 'I know people that swear they have seen a Yowie in the Upper Macleay valley,' Mr Lee said. Some claim that Bill was taken by one of the mythical Aussie beasts. 'People said all sorts of silly nonsense about his disappearance. We've heard every story going,' Geraldine said. 'Some people claim he actually staged the whole thing and ran away. 'Some swore that they saw him at a race course years afterwards, others claimed he'd been taken by aliens. 'But he would never ever have left our granny. He was a very family-oriented man.' The lack of closure was exacerbated by the fact that a death certificate was never issued. In the process of writing and researching her book, Geraldine pushed for a coronial inquest into Bill's disappearance. 'The police investigated it. They even visited my mother Winnifred in her care home and took DNA in case her grandfather ever shows up,' she said. 'The magistrate was very apologetic and couldn't believe a death certificate had never been issued.' Bill Haydon's legacy continues in the current generation, with Jodie's father Bill being named after him. Her branch of the family settled further south, on the Central Coast where she and Albanese bought a $4.3 million clifftop home in Copacabana. Searching for answers So what happened to the Cedar King? Mr Lee, who is also President of the Macleay River Historical Society, believes he knows the answer. 'There had been mining in the area so he could have easily fallen into the mouth of an overgrown mine shaft,' he said. It's a conclusion that Geraldine also thinks is most likely. The area had been mined for tin in the 1880s. Miners would dig holes just a couple of metres in diameter, which would eventually fill with water and be covered by foliage. 'It was thick bush back then. Very much like a rainforest so it is absolutely possible that even an experienced bushman, which Bill very much was, could have taken a step and fallen into one of the shafts,' Geraldine said. 'If there was water down there and it was wet and cold, he would have died from exposure before anyone could have heard him.' While that remains the most likely outcome, theories will always swirl without a body. 'If only we could find his body the story would end. But there is no closure,' Geraldine added. 'We know he went into the bush but he never came out. It is the big mystery – it's what carries on his legend.' 'But let's be real: it's national park. It's a complete wilderness. There's as much chance of you or I winning the lottery as them finding him.'


Daily Mail
35 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Alleged killer cop Beau Lamarre-Condon reveals the biggest mystery over what happened to the two men he's accused of shooting dead - and the 'two person disposal job' in the aftermath
A woman accused of helping dispose of the bodies of two men allegedly shot dead by ex-NSW cop Beau Lamarre-Condon is a longtime friend he met through her partner, Daily Mail Australia can reveal. Lamarre-Condon has been charged with the murders of television presenter Jesse Baird, 26, and his Qantas flight attendant boyfriend Luke Davies, 29, at Paddington in Sydney 's eastern suburbs in February 2024. The 29-year-old has not entered pleas to two counts of murder but says he has offered to provide information about a second person he claims helped dump Mr Davies and Mr Baird's remains. A source close to Lamarre-Condon told Daily Mail Australia he had made the offer to police and the Director of Public Prosecutions but they had not responded to his approach. '[He] wants to do the right thing for the families and is happy to assist investigators with information about who else played a part in the incident,' the source claimed. 'So far both the DPP and the officer in charge have failed to reply to the offer made by [Lamarre-Condon's] legal team for assistance.' Lamarre-Condon is accused of bundling Mr Davies and Mr Baird's bodies into surfboard bags after he allegedly killed the couple and dumping them about 180km south-west of Sydney. The source said Lamarre-Condon disputed a witness's statement to investigators that she had waited at the fence line of a Bungonia property where the bodies were first dumped for 15 to 20 minutes. Phone records indicated Lamarre-Condon and the witness, previously described by police as 'an innocent agent', were at the farm for almost two hours, the source claimed. 'Police also located two sets of white overalls at the scene where bodies were located which indicates it was a two-person job,' the source said. A NSW Police spokeswoman said: 'As this matter is before the court, we are unable to comment.' A spokeswoman for the DPP said the same thing. The woman Lamarre-Condon claims helped dispose of the bodies lives in Sydney and got to know him through her partner, who had been a schoolmate. Police located Mr Davies and Mr Baird's remains on February 27 last year, eight days after Lamarre-Condon allegedly shot them dead with his Glock service pistol. A day before the bodies were found, Deputy Commissioner Dave Hudson revealed an alleged timeline of events leading up to and following the men's deaths. Mr Hudson said gunshots were heard coming from Mr Baird's home on the morning of February 19. Later that evening, Lamarre-Condon allegedly hired a Toyota HiAce van from Sydney Airport and on February 21 drove the vehicle to the Southern Tablelands with a female companion. The woman allegedly helped Lamarre-Condon buy an angle grinder and padlock from a hardware store then the pair drove to a property at Bungonia. Mr Hudson said the angle grinder was used to cut a padlock from a gate and that padlock was then replaced. 'The acquaintance was left at the top of the property for a period of 30 minutes,' he told reporters at a press conference. 'The accused disappeared for that period in the HiAce van, returning to pick up the acquaintance and then they returned to Sydney later that afternoon. Mr Hudson said Lamarre-Condon's companion was not involved in the alleged murders and was merely an 'innocent agent'. 'The acquaintance is not a suspect in this matter,' he said. 'We don't believe that she was fully aware of what had taken place.' Mr Hudson alleged Lamarre-Condon later returned to the Bungonia property carrying two torches provided by the woman, having bought weights from a department store about 11pm. Police allege Lamarre-Condon moved the bodies from their original location to another Bungonia property because he became concerned his female friend was suspicious of him. Lamarre-Condon allegedly left the property about 4.30am and drove to Newcastle where he asked a former policewoman if he could borrow a hose to clean the van. She is not accused of any wrongdoing and had spoken to police when her suspicions were raised. About 10.30am the next day, February 23, Lamarre-Condon walked into Bondi police station and was arrested. The bodies of Mr Davies and Mr Baird were found at the second Bungonia location on February 27 several hours after detectives spoke with Lamarre-Condon in the Metropolitan Remand and Reception Centre in Silverwater. Lamarre-Condon has spent more than a year in prison since the shootings, which were allegedly the result of a months-long campaign of 'predatory behaviour' targeting Mr Baird. The former celebrity chaser reportedly briefly dated Mr Baird before the Studio Ten and Totally Wild presenter began a relationship with Mr Davies. The case returned to Downing Centre Local Court last month after confidential discussions between prosecutors and the alleged killer's Legal Aid lawyer Alex Curnick. Both sides agreed 'things are progressing,' magistrate Megan Greenwood was told. A forensic psychiatrist's report was also tendered after Lamarre-Condon was assessed in previous weeks. Lamarre-Condon, who was sacked from the police force in March last year, is also charged with breaking and entering with intent to commit an indictable offence. Before becoming a police officer, Lamarre-Condon ran a celebrity blog, posing in photos with dozens of celebrities including Taylor Swift, Selena Gomez, Miley Cyrus, Harry Styles and Katy Perry. Lamarre-Condon is expected to appear via an audiovisual link when his case returns to court on June 17.


Daily Mail
42 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Rogue Labor MP reveals why Albo is 'seriously an idiot' after a stunning move that benefits absolutely nobody: PVO
Keep your friends close... Josh Frydenberg's former spinner Kane Silom has been appointed director of communications for the much-diminished federal opposition.