
BREAKING NEWS Young woman, 25, charged after stabbing victim dies in hospital after alleged attack at Adelaide home
A 25-year-old woman has been charged after a 28-year-old woman died in hospital after she was allegedly attacked at a home in Adelaide 's north.

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Daily Mail
36 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
'Disgusting' man who sneaked into stable and had sex with Shetland pony before fleeing on CCTV with no trousers on avoids prison
A 'disgusting' pervert who sneaked into a stable and had sex with a Shetland pony has avoided jail. Damion Ogeare, 43, was captured on CCTV making a 'beeline' towards the equine stables before emerging some 10 minutes later - without any trousers on. A court heard the man had arrived at the outdoor building armed with a dog lead which he used to restrain the mare, named Cassieopia. Pony owner Christine Woolley said she believed Ogeare had 'scoped' out the area in advance of carrying out the 'degrading' assault. The homeowner told the court the incident has left her feeling 'exhausted', 'angry' and 'frustrated'. Ogeare has now been handed a community order by a judge who said any right-thinking member of the public would be 'disgusted' by his actions. 'Judges in court are used to most things but sometimes certain crimes stop even a hardened judge in their tracks, and this is one of those offences,' Recorder Gordon Bebb said. Winchester Crown Court, Hampshire, heard the incident took place on January 24 last year at a home in Trowbridge, Wiltshire. Tom Wright, prosecuting, said: 'CCTV showed the defendant making a beeline for a pony stable at an address in Trowbridge, a residential address with an equestrian facility. 'It was the property of Christine Woolley.' Mr Wright said the animal owner received an alert from her CCTV camera at around 6.30pm. The footage showed Ogeare enter the stable and reappear some 10 minutes later, the court heard. When he reemerged, the sexual deviant wasn't wearing any trousers. The prosecutor said this gave Mrs Woolley 'grave concerns' over what may have happened to her livestock. It was heard that Ogeare's face could clearly be made out in the CCTV footage and he was arrested by police later on in the year. Mr Wright said DNA taken from the Shetland pony 'connected' Ogeare with the offence. His address was searched and police found a baseball cap and a dog lead. The prosecutor said: 'It had been found discarded at the address. 'The lead had evidently been used to restrain the animal, no doubt, at the time in question.' The court heard there had been 'concerns' when Ogeare had assaulted other animals in the area, as one local reported finding a dog lead on top of his cow. Mrs Wooley spoke of the impact the incident has had on her. She said: 'I am exhausted from this incident. 'Since the day I know it happened I have been unable to sleep until about 3am. 'I have been feeling very angry and very frustrated, my horses are almost a part of me. 'To have one assaulted in such a degrading manner has completely ruined my trust in society.' She continued: 'This sort of behaviour is is completely unacceptable Ogeare has now been handed a community order by a judge who said any right-thinking member of the public would be 'disgusted' by his actions 'I also have no doubt that that these acts are not only intentional, but also planned out. 'Damion clearly scoped out the area in which he wanted to target.' Mrs Woolley urged the judge to consider handing Ogeare a custodial sentence. Holly Fagan, defending, said there is little to say to mitigate the offence other than the fact there was no injury caused to the pony. 'There doesn't seem much point in trying to rationalise something like this,' she said. 'He was going through a period of acute loneliness and isolation. 'He's expressed a great deal or remorse.' Ms Fagan said he felt a 'deep sense of regret' over the events which took place and wanted to apologise to Mrs Woolley. 'Clearly, it's a beloved animal that's been violated and he's very apologetic for all the distress caused,' she added. Ogeare pleaded guilty to one count of sexual penetration of a living animal. Recorder Gordon Bebb handed Ogeare an 18-month community order with 30 days of rehabilitation activity requirements. The judge said: 'I know that any right thinking member of the public would be completely disgusted by what you did.' Recorder Bebb also ordered Ogeare to pay £299.52 in costs, and handed him a restraining order meaning he must not contact Mrs Woolley or attend her address. 'You have to stay well away from that area, do you understand,' he added. 'That will remain in place until further order.'


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE When Zoran plunged to his death at a Bali hotel, his heartbroken fiancée begged for answers. After a year-long 'whispering campaign', there's been a shocking development
The mystery of a football coach killed in a fall at a five-star hotel in Bali has taken a fresh legal twist with his fiancée facing criminal charges. Zoran Vidovic died after falling from the balcony of a rooftop restaurant while on holiday with his partner of four years, Melbourne lawyer Zagi Kozarov, just weeks after he had proposed.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Should Sydney's light rail carriages be modified after second death in two years?
For the second time in two years, a pedestrian has died after being struck by a tram on Sydney's light rail. New South Wales police said they found a man under a tram carriage in Surry Hills on Thursday afternoon. Paramedics treated him at the scene, but he died. Police said initial inquiries showed the man was attempting to cross the light rail track between two carriages when the tram began moving and trapped him. In May 2023, a teenage girl died after attempting to cross a street in Sydney's CBD between two tram carriages. She became trapped underneath one of them when the tram started moving, suffering fatal injuries. Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email That two similar deaths occurred just two years apart meant police, the premier, and transport bureaucrats fielded questions from the media this week over whether the light rail network, and the trams themselves, should be made safer. Dr Geoffrey Clinton, a senior lecturer in transport management at the University of Sydney, said it was 'probably wise' for the government to investigate additional safety measures to stop people from attempting to climb over them. Sydney's light rail network uses a few different tram models – what bureaucrats call 'rolling stock'. What they have in common is that they typically have separate carriages that are coupled together to form a longer vehicle, unlike trams in Melbourne, which have only one carriage. Many of the trams now have 'danger' signs on the joinery between the carriages, warning people not to try to climb over them. Clinton said the state government or the network's private operator, Transdev, could consider additional signage. 'Or even something like a net between the two carriages to discourage people from trying to clamber through,' he said. He posed the idea of running the trams twice as frequently with only one carriage, making them half as long, but said it didn't 'seem like a feasible solution'. '[That] would very expensive to do and wouldn't add to the capacity of the network, but it would double the labour cost,' he said. The transport minister, John Graham, declined to comment. A Transport for New South Wales (TfNSW) spokesperson said the man's death was 'extremely distressing'. The NSW police inspector, Anderson Lessing, on Thursday said that after speaking to witnesses and reviewing CCTV, it appeared the man had stepped between the tram carriages off the platform at the light rail stop on Devonshire Street. 'There's obviously risk involved, but it comes back to personal responsibility when you do cross the tram line, and it's that balance that we have to get right,' he said. Sign up to Breaking News Australia Get the most important news as it breaks after newsletter promotion The TfNSW coordinator-general, Howard Collins, expressed his condolences to the man's family and first responders. He said the Office of the National Rail Safety Regulator (ONRSR) would work with Transdev to establish whether any safety recommendations could be made or whether the death was 'a case of really unfortunate misadventure'. The ONRSR also reviewed the 2023 light rail death. On Friday, there was some confusion between the government and Transdev over whether the operator had received a report from the regulator. ONRSR later confirmed its investigation reports were not released to operators. The Australian Transport Safety Bureau and NSW Office of Transport Safety Investigations said they had not reviewed the 2023 death and would not to review Thursday's one either. '[We] have reviewed the initial available information and determined that, as in the 2023 occurrence … it is unlikely an independent transport safety investigation would identify any new or unknown transport safety factor that could prevent an incident of this nature from occurring in the future,' a spokesperson said. The premier, Chris Minns, said he was sorry for the man and his family, but he wouldn't be drawn on whether the government was considering any safety upgrades. 'The safety regulator's in place,' he said. 'It's obviously the case that whenever there's a terrible event like this, a terrible incident, they conduct an investigation.' Terry Lee-Williams, a transport planning strategist, said it was 'awful that somebody died', but overall, Sydney's light rail network was safe and 'actually quite a low speed system'. One suggestion for improving safety could be replacing the trams with the concertina-like ones used in Melbourne, he said, but this would be costly. He said Sydney's trams were a 'standard design' and similar to those operated in many European countries. 'You don't see much of the Melbourne-style trams around the world because they're less accessible,' he said. 'Sydney has very narrow, windy streets.'