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Nimroy Hendricks: Social worker had concerns for killer child

Nimroy Hendricks: Social worker had concerns for killer child

BBC News2 days ago
A former social worker has told an inquest there were safety concerns surrounding a violent 14-year-old girl who went on to stab a man to death in West Sussex.Nimroy Hendricks, 24, was found in Russell Way, Three Bridges, Crawley, in October 2020, with a stab wound to the chest, hours after the teenager had threatened to stab her mum in the neck.In 2022, the girl was sentenced to five years in prison for the manslaughter of Mr Hendricks.Court-imposed reporting restrictions mean BBC News can only refer to the now 18-year-old female as Child A.
West Sussex, Brighton & Hove Coroner's Court heard how Child A had attacked her mother multiple times and was violent at school.Referrals sent to West Sussex County Council's social services department had warned of a "high risk of significant harm" and that the teenager could "act aggressively to others".The concerns for her wellbeing grew when two men reportedly followed Child A into a bathroom at one of the temporary accommodation sites she had been moved to with her mother.Mr Aquinuce Hlomuka, who previously worked for the council, told the court: "I was worried she would be coming into contact with dangerous males."It was very, very worrying. She shouldn't have been in that situation."
Four days missing
Child A went missing in the days leading up to Mr Hendricks' death before police located her and left her in the care of someone claiming to be her cousin.However, Child A had no family in the area.Messages read out at the inquest on Monday revealed how a social worker raised the issue with the authorities."Child A was found last night and went to stay with a family friend," they said. "This does need a [strategy meeting] today if we can fit that in."Sussex Police had responded by saying: "This needs to be done ASAP if she has been missing for four days!"Despite the police scheduling an urgent meeting, no one from social services attended after Mr Hlomuka said he had left his laptop at home and had no access to emails.Ifeanyi Dan-Jumbo, who manages the family safeguarding service, told the court she had not been copied into any communication, and described the social services computer program as "not a very straight-forward system".The inquest continues.
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Report on Queensland CFMEU referred to police after ‘threats of violence, intimidation, misogyny' alleged
Report on Queensland CFMEU referred to police after ‘threats of violence, intimidation, misogyny' alleged

The Guardian

time20 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Report on Queensland CFMEU referred to police after ‘threats of violence, intimidation, misogyny' alleged

The findings of an investigation commissioned by the administrator of the Queensland branch of the CFMEU, which found the union 'embraced a culture which encouraged and celebrated the use of threats of violence, intimidation, misogyny and bullying', have been referred to the police. The report, titled Violence in the Queensland CFMEU, was conducted by Centre for Public Integrity senior counsel Geoffrey Watson. It was released on Wednesday night. It concluded that the union made a 'mockery of union values' through an alleged culture of intimidation under the former leadership. Administrator Mark Irving said the reviewer interviewed 55 witnesses, was provided with documentation and videos relating to alleged incidents and received the full support of the union. 'Much of this was not done in private and the fact that it has taken so long to be called out is partly due to the fear of retribution by those targeted,' Irving said. Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email Alleged incidents detailed in the report included a fake bomb threat at a work site in Brisbane, the use of video to identify work site safety inspectors to expose them and their family to harassment, and intimidation of many people within and outside government, including ministers. Much of the alleged abuse detailed was gendered, including the routine use of the word 'cunt' to women. The report notes an alleged incident from about 2022 when a workplace health and safety inspector attended a site at Brendale north of Brisbane. An employee said to be holding a functioning angle grinder allegedly approached, yelling 'I want to take you outside and bash the shit out of you.' In another alleged incident a workplace health and safety inspector was attending the funeral of his friend's wife when he was allegedly approached by three unknown men. One allegedly said 'You're that cunt from the video.' Another is alleged to have added 'You're a bit of a fucking dog.' The report notes that the CFMEU had recently posted what it describes as an inflammatory video about that inspector on its Facebook page. It also used violence and threats against the Australian Workers' Union to further industrial aims, he alleged. 'I fear this investigation only scratched the surface of the violence in the Queensland CFMEU. There are many other potential witnesses and many other stories which could have been told,' report says. Watson said the union was also regularly fined through the courts, but was able to 'defeat the sting' of personal payment orders against individual union leaders by having the union pay fines. The union was convicted of offences about 55 times more than the next-placed union, he said. Committing offences was part of the union's business model with fines 'the cost of doing business', he alleged. 'It seems more likely that breaching the laws and suffering fines was an integral part of the CFMEU business model. Its reputation as an aggressive outlaw created a fear and reticence among those dealing with the CFMEU,' he said. Irving said he would use his power to expel members involved in wrongdoing from the union, potentially banning them from future elections. He said the culture that prevailed under the old leadership 'was violent, cruel and misogynist and betrayed the core values of unionism. It will be replaced by a new culture based on union values of justice, equality and solidarity.' The deputy Queensland premier, Jarrod Bleijie, said the report had been immediately forwarded to the Queensland police service on Wednesday night. Sign up to Breaking News Australia Get the most important news as it breaks after newsletter promotion He ruled out deregistering or dissolving the union at a press conference on Thursday. 'I can commit to Queenslanders, and I've spoken directly with premier David Crisafulli this morning,' Bleijie said. 'We're going to get to the bottom of this. This says it scratches the surface. We will find out more. We'll investigate more, and we, if need be, [will] legislate to make sure workers are safe on construction sites'. The Queensland Council of Unions general secretary, Jacqueline King, and president, Kate Ruttiman, apologised for the actions of the former union leadership. The union had disaffiliated from the peak body in 2018. King said the former CFMEU leadership had 'deeply let down Queensland workers and members of our community. You have let down the Queensland trade union movement.' The Queensland Labor leader, Steven Miles, said he was 'shocked and appalled' at the allegations revealed in the report. 'I'm a proud trade unionist, and there is no place in the trade union movement [for] this kind of the behaviour,' he said. 'It is not the trade union movement that I know and I am a member of.' The first report is partly redacted to obscure some names and personal details to 'prevent repercussions against those who have provided assistance', the report says. Watson also completed a second, confidential report, which has yet to be released to government. Bleijie said the government would be seeking a copy of this to further their own investigations.

Officers who confronted Southport killer reveal how they disarmed him - as they are nominated for police bravery award
Officers who confronted Southport killer reveal how they disarmed him - as they are nominated for police bravery award

Sky News

time37 minutes ago

  • Sky News

Officers who confronted Southport killer reveal how they disarmed him - as they are nominated for police bravery award

Why you can trust Sky News The officers who confronted the Southport killer have described, for the first time publicly, how they disarmed him - as they joined a list of 70 officers nominated for a police bravery award. Sergeant Greg Gillespie, 42, PC Luke Holden, 31, and PCSO Tim Parry, 32, were the first to arrive as Axel Rudakubana rampaged with a knife through a holiday dance school last summer. Speaking to Sky News about what they saw when arriving at the scene, Sgt Gillespie said: "There was maybe 20 or 25 adults and all of them were looking at me, all of them have this look of terror and fear, panic on their faces and I knew whatever it was we were turning up to was really, really bad." His colleagues drove fast from Southport police station and were thirty seconds or so behind Sgt Gillespie. PC Holden said he saw "a large puddle of blood on the floor outside the door" and said Sgt Gillespie "just looked at me" and asked if he was ready. "That was it, there was no conversation. There was nothing else going on. He said, 'Are you ready?' and I said, 'Yeah, let's go'." PCSO Parry, who doesn't carry a baton or pepper spray like his colleagues, went to the back of the building to stop people from entering, help anyone who needed it, and get information on the number of suspects inside. He said: "It was a horrific scene to really go into because I was so unprepared with the equipment I had." Sgt Gillespie and PC Holden identified the suspect at the top of the stairs, a bloodied knife in his hand, and walked towards him shoulder to shoulder. "I saw him, made eye contact with him, saw his facial expression, saw his body language and the way he moved himself into a position at the top of the stairs, showing us he had a knife," Sgt Gillespie said. "He was fronting us, like he was saying, 'I've got a knife, what are you going to do about it?' "And I think the second he realised he was looking at two people who weren't scared of him, who were going to attack him, all that bravery that he must have summoned up to attack defenceless children, he lost that straightaway, and he threw down the knife." In January, Rudakubana, who was 17 at the time of the attack, admitted the murders of seven-year-old Elsie Dot Stancombe, Bebe King, aged six and Alice da Silva Aguiar, who was nine, as well 10 charges of attempted murder, as well as possessing terrorist material and production of the biological toxin, ricin. He was jailed for life with a minimum of 52 years - with the sentencing judge saying it was "highly likely" he would never be released. Dozens nominated for bravery awards The Merseyside trio are among 70 officers from around England and Wales who have been nominated for tonight's Police Federation national bravery awards. They include two sergeants from Sussex who swam to the rescue of a vulnerable teenager struggling to stay afloat at night off Brighton beach. Police with torches had located her in the sea fifty metres from the shore, but a lifeline they threw to her didn't reach. Sergeant Craig Lees said: "We could see that she was starting to struggle with the cold and tide, and she began to dip under the water. We knew we needed to do something, and that was that we needed to get into the water and swim out to her." His colleague and friend Sergeant Matthew Seekings said: "I don't think it's in the blood of any police officer to watch somebody at risk or somebody needing help and not do something. "When you're in the sea, it's pitch black, you don't even know where the bottom is, it's terrifying, and I can only imagine how the female was feeling." Battling their own fatigue, the two officers managed to get the girl to shore, where colleagues and paramedics were waiting to take over. In Devizes, Wiltshire, PC Nicola Crabbe was called to a town centre fight between two men, one of whom had a knife. 'Just saturated in blood' "They were grappling, and they were just saturated in blood," said PC Crabbe, who confronted the man she thought was the knifeman. "I was in the middle of the road when I grabbed hold of him, and there was a member of the public just there, and that's when he explained to me that I had the wrong person." Armed only with a baton and Pava pepper spray, she grappled with the suspect, trying to find his knife. She said: "At one point he grabbed my hair and kind of dragged me around a bit, so I Pava'd him which just had no effect at all." PC Crabbe managed to restrain the knifeman until colleagues arrived and arrested him. The full list of award winners will be announced on Thursday night during a dinner at a West London hotel.

Albanese condemns antisemitism after receiving special envoy Jillian Segal's report
Albanese condemns antisemitism after receiving special envoy Jillian Segal's report

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Albanese condemns antisemitism after receiving special envoy Jillian Segal's report

The prime minister, Anthony Albanese, appeared alongside the special envoy to combat antisemitism, Jillian Segal, who delivered her report to the government. 'There is no place in Australia for antisemitism. The kind of hatred and violence that we have seen on our streets recently is despicable and it won't be tolerated and I want those responsible to face the full force of the law,' Albanese said

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