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Millions of pieces of evidence collected in Brisbane Russian spy case

Millions of pieces of evidence collected in Brisbane Russian spy case

The Age19 hours ago
Federal prosecutors sifting through millions of pieces of evidence in the case against accused Russian spies have asked for more time, with many documents still yet to be translated into English more than a year after the couple were arrested in Brisbane.
Kira Korolev, 41, and her husband Igor Korolev, 63, were taken into custody at their quiet Everton Park home in Brisbane's inner-north in July last year following a major Federal Police and ASIO foreign interference investigation.
Both face charges of preparing for an espionage offence, with the AFP alleging Kira Korelev, who held a role with the Australian army as an information systems technician, travelled to Russia while on leave and instructed her husband to send sensitive material from her work account so it could be shared with foreign authorities.
The curious case was heard with little fanfare between dozens of routine alleged crimes at Brisbane Magistrate Court on Friday morning.
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Commonwealth prosecutor Ellie McDonald requested the case be delayed about three months, citing large quantities of evidence including documents that still required translation from Russian.
'We'll be seeking another lengthy adjournment,' she told the court.
'If I can indicate the scale of material in relation to this matter, there were originally 9 million items tagged on the devices … of which there were 12.'
McDonald confirmed a third brief of evidence was served this week.
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Women's rights rally braces for trans storm

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ABC News

time5 hours ago

  • ABC News

Beijing accuses Canberra of lying about spy threats while claiming to have foiled Australian spies in China

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Sydney Morning Herald

time6 hours ago

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Louis Christopher credits the disconnect between what agents have promised and what vendors will accept as the predominant cause of stale listings on the market for months longer than expected. SQM Research found that in the year to May there were 7019 properties on the market for more than 180 days in Sydney, an increase of 29.5 per cent on the previous year. Likewise, in Melbourne there were 9614 properties still for sale in Melbourne after 180 days, a 15.8 per cent increase in stale listings. A slow sales campaign is not something agents want either. Seller advocate Bernadette Hayes said agents would rather sacrifice a higher result, and therefore commission, for a faster sale. The revenue stream for many agents is not about maximising their commission but maximising sales volume, especially for those who have to split their commission with the franchise head office, Hayes said. 'The more properties they list and sell, the more they make.' A Victorian government report on the state's property market, commissioned in 2022 but never released, contains recommendations to discourage agents lying to vendors to win listings, according to co-author Enzo Raimondo. Loading Raimondo, a former long-term head of the Real Estate Institute of Victoria, calls the practice ' overquoting '. 'It does occur, and it's time for it to be eradicated as much as possible … I think the first step is to release the report,' he said. NSW Fair Trading, meanwhile, is consulting on potential changes to rules governing price guides. Under pressure An agent's first lie is telling owners they can sell for more than their property is worth, said Chris De Celis, a long-time agent in Sydney's western suburbs. The lies that follow are the agent's attempts to crunch the seller on price and manufacture interest from buyers. Merryn Calear knows too well what can go wrong between the hope-filled start of a sale campaign and the reality a few months later. When she listed her Coogee home last year, she was told by Roger Wardy and his team at Ray White Touma Taylor that they would push for $4.2 million. Calear said to sweeten the deal, she was also told the agents would only charge her half price for the advertisements, on a short-term contract and all while they already had a buyer who wanted to buy on her street. A doctor, no less. 'It just all looked golden,' Calear said. She signed an agency agreement that stipulated a guide of $3.7 million to $4.07 million. 'Keep in mind this in (sic) an agreement [that] allows us to guide a price we feel is relevant to get to our goal price,' Wardy texted. It was a scenario he texted Calear that played out on another of his recent sales, a four-bedroom house on Wentworth Street Randwick: 'We started at $3.8m, reserve $4.5m and sold $5.3m.' According to Calear, Wardy said he could definitely achieve a sale price of at least $4 million. Wardy denies that, and said he advised a likely selling range of between $3.4 million and $3.64 million. And while Calear maintained she wouldn't sell for less than $4 million, buyers were given a guide of $3.7 million. Worse, she said: 'The only offers that came in were all around $3 million. The only offer in writing was for $2.98 million. 'That's a $1 million difference. And meanwhile we are still living there, so we had to stage it twice a week to look like it was a home without two kids and a dog living in it. It was such a palaver.' Calear said that as the campaign rolled on, she was advised to cancel the auction because there were only two parties. She said that a few weeks later, Wardy asked her to sign a new agreement with a guide of $3.2 million to $3.52 million given the broader market had started floundering. Throughout she maintained she would only sell for $4 million. A week before Wardy's agency agreement was due to expire, buyer's agent Matt Spooner found a Bronte couple willing to pay $3.5 million. Calear said she wanted to think about the offer over a weekend, but Wardy wasn't waiting. According to Calear, and Wardy's own texts, he told buyers the only reason she hadn't signed was because she was attending to her sick child in hospital. None of Calear's children were sick, nor in hospital. When Calear still hadn't signed the next day, he asked her not to stand outside the house in case the buyers saw her again because 'I told them you were in hospital with your kid'. Wardy's take on the incident differs to his texts. 'When I relayed this to the buyer, I said that given she wasn't responding to calls or messages, she may be attending to a serious issue, potentially even at the hospital. The intention was not to mislead but to retain the buyer's interest during a period of silence from the vendor.' Calear cancelled the agency agreement. 'I felt he was dragging me into something really dirty,' she said. A week later, Calear signed with a new agent, who sold the house a few weeks later for $3.5 million to a different buyer. The last Calear heard from Wardy was in an email in which he demanded a 2.2 per cent commission on the sale. He has not been paid.

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