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When the proof is in the pudding – culinary mysteries through the ages

When the proof is in the pudding – culinary mysteries through the ages

Since Shakespeare's Hamlet we have been a little fascinated by poisonings.
Victims include Cleopatra, Hitler, Socrates, Rasputin and Phar Lap. Russian dissidents have been killed with the prod of a poisoned umbrella. Spies carry decoding devices and cyanide pills.
Even Winston Churchill purportedly dabbled in the field. When Lady Astor remarked, 'If I were married to you, I'd put poison in your coffee,' Churchill responded, 'If I were married to you, I'd drink it.'
In Japan, the deadly fugu fish is a delicacy that can only be prepared by licensed chefs. I'll stick to the tinned tuna.
In Australia, no one has died consuming our local delicacy – the dim sim. Although it didn't do Normie Lee much good. Normie was a member of the Great Bookie Robbery Gang and he also owned a dim sim factory. He was shot dead by the Special Operations Group in 1992 when he was pulling a million dollar stick-up at Melbourne Airport.
Lee's co-offender Stephen Asling, who would later become a hitman, once became upset when a Chinatown restaurant refused to open when he wanted a post-nightclub snack. When he kicked in the door the chef presented not with fortune cookies but a meat cleaver, chopping at Asling's foot as if it were an errant Peking duck. When they presented at the same hospital they jumped from their trolleys to resume hostilities. MSG will do that.
So why are we so fascinated by poisoning cases?
The black comedy Arsenic and Old Lace, the story of two elderly women who poisoned 11 lonely old men to 'end their suffering,' was a hit play turned into a hit movie.
There was one case that took 17 years to resolve. John Moss, a Bendigo meat worker, first became ill in 1978. Five times he was hospitalised, making partial recoveries, before relapsing. It took him six years to die and by the time doctors found the cause it was too late.
His wife, Lorraine, cared for him when he was released from hospital, feeding him home-cooked meals and taking him to the local pub in a wheelchair when he was too weak to walk.
In August 1983, doctors took nail and hair samples to test for lead and arsenic poisoning. The results were lost for a time with Austin Hospital staff finally receiving them on January 12, 1984. Moss, 38, died the next day. The tests showed he had 80 times the normal level of arsenic.
Believing there was a 15-year statute of limitations for murder, Lorraine made a half-baked confession to her daughter. Seventeen years after Moss' death, Lorraine was charged with murder and eventually sentenced to 18 years' jail. The homicide detective who charged her, Jack Jacobs, said, 'It was a case of cold-blooded torture.
'She always offered us a cup of tea. I always made sure I never took it,' Jacobs said.
There has long been an interest with infamous last meals, with websites dedicated to what American serial killers order before their executions.
John Wayne Gacy was executed by lethal injection for committing 33 murders. His last feed was a dozen fried shrimp, a bucket of original recipe KFC, fries and strawberries.
Just before triple murderer Allen Lee Davis was sent to the electric chair in Florida he ordered lobster tails, fried potatoes, fried shrimp, fried clams, half a loaf of garlic bread, and nearly a litre of root beer. Clearly cholesterol was no longer an issue.
Ever since Eve tempted Adam with an apple, food and mysteries have been partners in crime, particularly in Melbourne's fruit and vegetable industry.
Our introduction to organised crime was the 1963-64 market murders – a power struggle for control over industry kickbacks. Four men were shot, including Honoured Society leader Vincenzo Muratore, blasted with a double-barrelled shotgun as he left his Hampton home for Victoria Market.
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More than 20 years later the syndicate was demanding a payment of 50 cents per case of produce even from the biggest retailers, with Coles paying $6 million a year.
In 1992 Vincenzo Muratore's son Alphonso met with Coles Myer representatives in the hotel Parkroyal in Little Collins Street to explain the system and offer an alternative.
Two weeks later Muratore was murdered – outside his Hampton home on his way to the market – a replica of his father's 1964 murder.
In prison where hard men have too much time on their hands, grudges can be deadly.
In 1975 standover man Mark Brandon 'Chopper' Read was entrusted with the job of collecting 60 cooked sausages to be distributed – two to each inmate as a Christmas treat.
Sadly, Read arrived empty-handed with suggestions he had eaten the lot, an allegation he dismissed as 'foul gossip and rumour'.
It sparked the H-Division 'Great Sausage War' that lasted five years and resulted in 60 attacks and 11 attempted murders.
According to Chopper, the most deadly food in H Division was a vegetable curry made by Russell Cox who spent 11 years on the run after escaping from NSW. According to Read the curry was so hot it could blow a hole in a bluestone wall.
Melbourne's underbelly war was often linked to the culinary arts. Alphonse Gangitano (killed in 1998) was known as The Black Prince of Lygon Street; Michael Marshall (2003) was killed outside his hot dog van; Willie Thompson (2003) was a lollipop salesman; Lewis Moran (2004) was killed at the Brunswick Club near bar snacks; Flower Drum regular Graham Kinniburgh was shot outside his Kew home in 2003; and Des Tuppence Moran (2009) was killed at his favourite café.
And hitman Andrew Veniamin was killed (in self-defence) by Melbourne identity Mick Gatto in a Carlton restaurant in 2004.
When it comes to underbelly and food in your belly, no one topped former suburban pizza shop owner turned drug boss Tony Mokbel.
At his Boronia pizza shop the favourite was Number 15, Tony's Special – tomato, cheese, ham, bacon, onions and egg.
Once his favourite meal from Sopranos Restaurant (naturally) was an upmarket version of surf and turf – a medium-rare eye fillet steak topped with fresh shrimp and smoked salmon.
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Soprano's manager Frank Sarkis said, 'He came for breakfast, lunch and dinner.'
He also ordered in. Sarkis said, 'Money was no object. He'd regularly spend $200 a night on pizza and pasta. The staff cried (when Tony jumped bail). He was a big tipper [in] $100 bills.'
Visiting a mate in the Melbourne Custody Centre he peeled off $350, persuading a guard to nip up to a North Melbourne Italian restaurant to pick-up 40 gourmet pizzas and soft drinks (anchovies make you thirsty) for inmates and staff.
His love of fast food went as far as looking after a mate, Paul Howden, who took the fall when police discovered a $78 million lab owned by the Mokbels.
While Howden was doing time in a country prison Tony would drive there to shout Paul a big feed of McDonald's.
Howden passed away from a heart attack at the age 36. Perhaps the Filet-O-Fish would have been a better option.
When Greg Lynn was arrested in the bush by the Special Operations Group in November 2021 for the murders of high-country campers Russell Hill and Carol Clay (he was convicted of Clay and acquitted of Hill) he was cooking a meal on his open fire.
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Australian soldier who lost leg in battle returns to Ukraine
Australian soldier who lost leg in battle returns to Ukraine

Perth Now

timean hour ago

  • Perth Now

Australian soldier who lost leg in battle returns to Ukraine

EXCLUSIVE An Australian volunteer soldier who lost his leg in the Ukraine war last year has packed his bags and a new prosthetic leg to return to the frontline again. Casey Gadaleta, 39, left from Brisbane Airport on Sunday afternoon and is expected to cross into Ukraine on Tuesday. The Caboolture-based former steel worker spoke with 7NEWS exclusively before his departure. 'They're good people, it's a good country and they need help,' Gadaleta said. Gadaleta denied he'd lost his mind as well as his leg. 'Obviously, I'm not naive. I understand it's very dangerous. I don't want to die. But it's possible, very possible.' Gadaleta had his leg ripped apart and suffered severe hand and facial injuries when he stepped on a landmine in December while on a mission with the Ukrainian Army into Kursk, deep inside Russia. His unit was assaulting a position defended by both Russian and North Korean troops. It's believed he's the first Australian injured inside Russian territory since the Second World War and the first Australian to have fought North Korean troops since the Korean War. After his extraction from the war zone, he returned to Australia and has since had a state-of the-art titanium and Kevlar prosthetic leg fitted. Casey Gadaleta, 39, left from Brisbane Airport on Sunday afternoon and is expected to cross into Ukraine on Tuesday. Credit: Supplied Casey Gadaleta had his leg ripped apart and suffered severe hand and facial injuries when he stepped on a landmine while on a mission with the Ukrainian Army. Credit: Supplied 'I've been training, done physio, I feel I'm ready to go back,' he said. He jokes that he's one foot shorter but one year wiser. Gadaleta also says he is more than prepared to be injured again. 'Of course ... that's number one,' he said. 'You can't go to combat in the worst conflict of its time since World War II and not think you're going to get injured. 'Of course you're going to get injured. It just depends on how severe it is. 'It's not if, it's when.' He denied his motivation was revenge for the loss of his leg. 'I don't think it's about revenge. I'm not a vengeful person,' he said. 'It's about combat.' Gadaleta decided to volunteer for Ukraine early last year after reading reports of what he called 'Russia's war crimes on innocent civilians'. He had no previous military experience and was given intensive training by the Ukrainian Armed Forces before spending six months on the battlefield. He says that time in combat will make him an asset for the battered country. He is confident they will take him back into a frontline role. 'Training people takes time, resources and money,' he said. 'I'm valuable based on my training and experience. 'Good people are hard to come by. 'Knowing the terrain, knowing how battle formations exist, how they operate on the battlefield and how to position men when you're in contact. 'They've told me they'll take me back.' Gadaleta insists he is breaking no laws. Under Australian foreign incursion laws, it is an offence to enter a foreign country with an intention to engage in hostile activity, unless serving with the armed forces of the government of that country. Gadaleta expects to spend his first weeks in Ukraine at the world-famous 'Centre for Superhumans'. The specialist rehab facility treats and trains military personnel who have been injured in war – especially amputees. 'They're amazing, world leaders in prosthetics,' he said. 'They obviously have a lot of experience.' Gadaleta was fighting in Kursk, Russia, when his unit came across a position manned by both Russian and North Korean troops. Credit: Unknown / 7NEWS The centre has been visited by Prince Harry and received significant donations from Virgin group founder Sir Richard Branson and the son of billionaire investor Warren Buffett, Howard G. Buffett. Gadaleta says he wants to ensure he doesn't become a liability for any unit he's assigned to. 'Of course I'm not gonna be in a role where I get people hurt,' he said. He doesn't know where he will be deployed once his treatment is complete, saying it could be in logistics, transport, training, drone aviation or communications. But he wants to go back to the trenches. 'I would prefer to be in an assault role,' he said. 'A combat role, that's what I like.' 7NEWS asked Gadaleta if he'd bought a return ticket. 'No. One way, a one-way ticket.' Ukraine is believed to have lost at least 46,000 members of the armed forces since Russia invaded in February 2022. Thousands more are missing in action. A further 400,000 military personnel are estimated to have been injured. Authorities estimate that around 60 per cent of them return to service. The war-torn nation is constantly struggling to recruit and retain personnel. Amputee soldiers are now a regular sight on the battlefield. Gadaleta is travelling lite into the warzone – he's taking one bag, his new leg and a large jar of Vegemite. The Ukraine veteran is also taking a new tattoo. Inked on to his right calf are the words 'Lucky Ducky' with a picture of a gun-toting cartoon duck. Below that, in Ukrainian, is written: 'One leg is here - and one leg is in Kursk. Gadaleta had been serving with Ukraine's 80th Brigade when he was injured. His call sign was 'Dundee' — after Crocodile Dundee. He remembers December 8, 2024, as the day that changed his life. His six-man unit was on a mission in Kursk and approaching a target through deep snow when he triggered the anti-personnel mine. 'Literally like one step and there's this bright light and I thought our guys accidentally dropped a grenade on me,' he said. 'I thought these guys just hit me by accident. 'At first, I didn't feel anything. 'Someone yelled out are you alright? and I said 'bro my leg's gone. He said what? I said bro it's gone'.' Casey Gadaleta after stepping on the landmine in Kursk, Russia Credit: Unknown / 7NEWS A firefight began and the Russians advanced on his position. When he tried to grab his weapon, he realised his hand was in pieces. But Gadaleta's calls for help went unanswered. He was told he had to use his medical training and fend for himself, using tourniquets to stem the bleeding. 'I'm begging them, I'm breaking down. I shouted, 'I'm gonna die, I'm gonna freeze to death. I'm bleeding so much'.' He said he went 20 hours without first aid, or pain relief, sitting in minus 4 degrees and soaked in blood. 'I honestly thought, yeah, I'm gonna die.' He was finally taken back into Ukraine and hospitalised in Kyiv. But he claims a three-week wait for surgery cost him his lower leg. 'My leg died, it basically turned to a black colour. They had to amputate,' he said. He also has shrapnel in his arm and his face. Gadaleta has a Bachelor of Science and two diplomas but made the decision to volunteer for the Ukraine Armed Forces after friends sent him photos and details of Russian war crimes. 'I was disgusted with it and I thought, how can a human being do that to another human being?' 'And I just thought, 'I want to give my life to this cause'.' 'I paid my own way here. I paid for my rent and food. I sold my investment property to cover it all.' 'I wasn't naive about it. I knew that with all the casualties it wasn't a matter of if, but when I was injured.' He calls Russian President Vladimir Putin 'a modern-day Hitler'. He says he was horrified when he saw the news reports from Alaska on the weekend of President Donald Trump giving Putin a red-carpet welcome. The landmine left him an amputee after it ripped apart his foot and hand. Credit: Unknown / 7NEWS He called it an insult to Ukraine. 'I didn't think it was real. I thought it was A.I,' he said. 'That's how crazy I thought it was.' His dedication and sacrifice for Ukraine has already been recognised by the nation's Ambassador to Australia, Vasyl Myroshnychenko. Myroshnychenko rang Gadaleta to offer thanks. 'For me personally, and all Ukrainian people, you're a hero,' he told him this year. 'Thank you very much.' Seven Australians are believed to have been killed in Ukraine and the Russians have captured and imprisoned Melbourne man Oscar Jenkins. Gadaleta knows he has put life and limb on the line already for Ukraine. He lost the latter but has no fear of losing it all.

Historic plea as NZ soldier admits espionage attempt
Historic plea as NZ soldier admits espionage attempt

The Advertiser

time15 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Historic plea as NZ soldier admits espionage attempt

A New Zealand soldier who tried to spy for a foreign power has admitted to attempted espionage in a military court. Monday's conviction was the first for spying in New Zealand's history. The soldier's name was suppressed, as was what country to which he sought to pass secrets. Military court documents said the man believed he was engaged with a foreign agent in 2019 when he tried to communicate military information including base telephone directories and maps, assessments of security weaknesses, his own identity card and log-in details for a military network. The wording of the charge said his actions were "likely to prejudice the security or defence of New Zealand". He was not speaking to a foreign agent, but an undercover New Zealand police officer collecting intelligence on alleged right-wing extremist groups, documents supplied by the military court showed. The soldier came to law enforcement attention as part of an operation that was established after a March 2019 terrorist attack on two mosques in the city of Christchurch, when an Australian white supremacist opened fire on Muslim worshippers, killing 51. He was based at Linton Military Camp near the city of Palmerston North. Officers spoke to the man twice about his involvement in a group, court documents showed, and after the government became aware he had expressed a desire to defect he was contacted by the undercover officer. When the soldier's hard drive was searched, investigators found a copy of Christchurch gunman Brenton Tarrant's live-streamed video of his massacre and a manifesto document he published online before the killings. Possession of either without permission is a criminal offence in New Zealand and the soldier, who admitted that charge too, joins several others convicted in New Zealand of having or sharing the terrorist's banned material. In a statement read to the court by his lawyer, the man said the two nationalist groups with which the man was involved were "no more than groups of friends with similar points of view to my own", according to Radio New Zealand. The lawyer, Steve Winter, added that his client denied supporting the Christchurch shooter's ideology, RNZ reported. The soldier also pleaded guilty to accessing a military computer system for dishonest purposes. Each of the three charges carries a maximum prison term of either seven or 10 years in New Zealand. His sentence is expected to be delivered by a military panel within days of his conviction. His was the first charge in a New Zealand military court for espionage or attempted spying. The last time such a case reached the civilian courts before was in 1975, when a public servant was acquitted on charges alleging he had passed information to Russian agents. A New Zealand soldier who tried to spy for a foreign power has admitted to attempted espionage in a military court. Monday's conviction was the first for spying in New Zealand's history. The soldier's name was suppressed, as was what country to which he sought to pass secrets. Military court documents said the man believed he was engaged with a foreign agent in 2019 when he tried to communicate military information including base telephone directories and maps, assessments of security weaknesses, his own identity card and log-in details for a military network. The wording of the charge said his actions were "likely to prejudice the security or defence of New Zealand". He was not speaking to a foreign agent, but an undercover New Zealand police officer collecting intelligence on alleged right-wing extremist groups, documents supplied by the military court showed. The soldier came to law enforcement attention as part of an operation that was established after a March 2019 terrorist attack on two mosques in the city of Christchurch, when an Australian white supremacist opened fire on Muslim worshippers, killing 51. He was based at Linton Military Camp near the city of Palmerston North. Officers spoke to the man twice about his involvement in a group, court documents showed, and after the government became aware he had expressed a desire to defect he was contacted by the undercover officer. When the soldier's hard drive was searched, investigators found a copy of Christchurch gunman Brenton Tarrant's live-streamed video of his massacre and a manifesto document he published online before the killings. Possession of either without permission is a criminal offence in New Zealand and the soldier, who admitted that charge too, joins several others convicted in New Zealand of having or sharing the terrorist's banned material. In a statement read to the court by his lawyer, the man said the two nationalist groups with which the man was involved were "no more than groups of friends with similar points of view to my own", according to Radio New Zealand. The lawyer, Steve Winter, added that his client denied supporting the Christchurch shooter's ideology, RNZ reported. The soldier also pleaded guilty to accessing a military computer system for dishonest purposes. Each of the three charges carries a maximum prison term of either seven or 10 years in New Zealand. His sentence is expected to be delivered by a military panel within days of his conviction. His was the first charge in a New Zealand military court for espionage or attempted spying. The last time such a case reached the civilian courts before was in 1975, when a public servant was acquitted on charges alleging he had passed information to Russian agents. A New Zealand soldier who tried to spy for a foreign power has admitted to attempted espionage in a military court. Monday's conviction was the first for spying in New Zealand's history. The soldier's name was suppressed, as was what country to which he sought to pass secrets. Military court documents said the man believed he was engaged with a foreign agent in 2019 when he tried to communicate military information including base telephone directories and maps, assessments of security weaknesses, his own identity card and log-in details for a military network. The wording of the charge said his actions were "likely to prejudice the security or defence of New Zealand". He was not speaking to a foreign agent, but an undercover New Zealand police officer collecting intelligence on alleged right-wing extremist groups, documents supplied by the military court showed. The soldier came to law enforcement attention as part of an operation that was established after a March 2019 terrorist attack on two mosques in the city of Christchurch, when an Australian white supremacist opened fire on Muslim worshippers, killing 51. He was based at Linton Military Camp near the city of Palmerston North. Officers spoke to the man twice about his involvement in a group, court documents showed, and after the government became aware he had expressed a desire to defect he was contacted by the undercover officer. When the soldier's hard drive was searched, investigators found a copy of Christchurch gunman Brenton Tarrant's live-streamed video of his massacre and a manifesto document he published online before the killings. Possession of either without permission is a criminal offence in New Zealand and the soldier, who admitted that charge too, joins several others convicted in New Zealand of having or sharing the terrorist's banned material. In a statement read to the court by his lawyer, the man said the two nationalist groups with which the man was involved were "no more than groups of friends with similar points of view to my own", according to Radio New Zealand. The lawyer, Steve Winter, added that his client denied supporting the Christchurch shooter's ideology, RNZ reported. The soldier also pleaded guilty to accessing a military computer system for dishonest purposes. Each of the three charges carries a maximum prison term of either seven or 10 years in New Zealand. His sentence is expected to be delivered by a military panel within days of his conviction. His was the first charge in a New Zealand military court for espionage or attempted spying. The last time such a case reached the civilian courts before was in 1975, when a public servant was acquitted on charges alleging he had passed information to Russian agents. A New Zealand soldier who tried to spy for a foreign power has admitted to attempted espionage in a military court. Monday's conviction was the first for spying in New Zealand's history. The soldier's name was suppressed, as was what country to which he sought to pass secrets. Military court documents said the man believed he was engaged with a foreign agent in 2019 when he tried to communicate military information including base telephone directories and maps, assessments of security weaknesses, his own identity card and log-in details for a military network. The wording of the charge said his actions were "likely to prejudice the security or defence of New Zealand". He was not speaking to a foreign agent, but an undercover New Zealand police officer collecting intelligence on alleged right-wing extremist groups, documents supplied by the military court showed. The soldier came to law enforcement attention as part of an operation that was established after a March 2019 terrorist attack on two mosques in the city of Christchurch, when an Australian white supremacist opened fire on Muslim worshippers, killing 51. He was based at Linton Military Camp near the city of Palmerston North. Officers spoke to the man twice about his involvement in a group, court documents showed, and after the government became aware he had expressed a desire to defect he was contacted by the undercover officer. When the soldier's hard drive was searched, investigators found a copy of Christchurch gunman Brenton Tarrant's live-streamed video of his massacre and a manifesto document he published online before the killings. Possession of either without permission is a criminal offence in New Zealand and the soldier, who admitted that charge too, joins several others convicted in New Zealand of having or sharing the terrorist's banned material. In a statement read to the court by his lawyer, the man said the two nationalist groups with which the man was involved were "no more than groups of friends with similar points of view to my own", according to Radio New Zealand. The lawyer, Steve Winter, added that his client denied supporting the Christchurch shooter's ideology, RNZ reported. The soldier also pleaded guilty to accessing a military computer system for dishonest purposes. Each of the three charges carries a maximum prison term of either seven or 10 years in New Zealand. His sentence is expected to be delivered by a military panel within days of his conviction. His was the first charge in a New Zealand military court for espionage or attempted spying. The last time such a case reached the civilian courts before was in 1975, when a public servant was acquitted on charges alleging he had passed information to Russian agents.

Australian volunteer soldier Casey Gadaleta lost his leg in battle but is returning to Ukraine
Australian volunteer soldier Casey Gadaleta lost his leg in battle but is returning to Ukraine

7NEWS

time17 hours ago

  • 7NEWS

Australian volunteer soldier Casey Gadaleta lost his leg in battle but is returning to Ukraine

EXCLUSIVE An Australian volunteer soldier who lost his leg in the Ukraine war last year has packed his bags and a new prosthetic leg to return to the frontline again. Casey Gadaleta, 39, left from Brisbane Airport on Sunday afternoon and is expected to cross into Ukraine on Tuesday. The Caboolture-based former steel worker spoke with 7NEWS exclusively before his departure. 'They're good people, it's a good country and they need help,' Gadaleta said. Gadaleta denied he'd lost his mind as well as his leg. 'Obviously, I'm not naive. I understand it's very dangerous. I don't want to die. But it's possible, very possible.' Gadaleta had his leg ripped apart and suffered severe hand and facial injuries when he stepped on a landmine in December while on a mission with the Ukrainian Army into Kursk, deep inside Russia. His unit was assaulting a position defended by both Russian and North Korean troops. It's believed he's the first Australian injured inside Russian territory since the Second World War and the first Australian to have fought North Korean troops since the Korean War. After his extraction from the war zone, he returned to Australia and has since had a state-of the-art titanium and Kevlar prosthetic leg fitted. 'I've been training, done physio, I feel I'm ready to go back,' he said. He jokes that he's one foot shorter but one year wiser. Gadaleta also says he is more than prepared to be injured again. 'Of course ... that's number one,' he said. 'You can't go to combat in the worst conflict of its time since World War II and not think you're going to get injured. 'Of course you're going to get injured. It just depends on how severe it is. 'It's not if, it's when.' He denied his motivation was revenge for the loss of his leg. 'I don't think it's about revenge. I'm not a vengeful person,' he said. 'It's about combat.' Gadaleta decided to volunteer for Ukraine early last year after reading reports of what he called 'Russia's war crimes on innocent civilians'. Return to the trenches He had no previous military experience and was given intensive training by the Ukrainian Armed Forces before spending six months on the battlefield. He says that time in combat will make him an asset for the battered country. He is confident they will take him back into a frontline role. 'Training people takes time, resources and money,' he said. 'I'm valuable based on my training and experience. 'Good people are hard to come by. 'Knowing the terrain, knowing how battle formations exist, how they operate on the battlefield and how to position men when you're in contact. 'They've told me they'll take me back.' Gadaleta insists he is breaking no laws. Under Australian foreign incursion laws, it is an offence to enter a foreign country with an intention to engage in hostile activity, unless serving with the armed forces of the government of that country. Gadaleta expects to spend his first weeks in Ukraine at the world-famous 'Centre for Superhumans'. The specialist rehab facility treats and trains military personnel who have been injured in war – especially amputees. 'They're amazing, world leaders in prosthetics,' he said. 'They obviously have a lot of experience.' The centre has been visited by Prince Harry and received significant donations from Virgin group founder Sir Richard Branson and the son of billionaire investor Warren Buffett, Howard G. Buffett. Gadaleta says he wants to ensure he doesn't become a liability for any unit he's assigned to. 'Of course I'm not gonna be in a role where I get people hurt,' he said. He doesn't know where he will be deployed once his treatment is complete, saying it could be in logistics, transport, training, drone aviation or communications. But he wants to go back to the trenches. 'I would prefer to be in an assault role,' he said. 'A combat role, that's what I like.' One-way ticket to Ukraine 7NEWS asked Gadaleta if he'd bought a return ticket. 'No. One way, a one-way ticket.' Ukraine is believed to have lost at least 46,000 members of the armed forces since Russia invaded in February 2022. Thousands more are missing in action. A further 400,000 military personnel are estimated to have been injured. Authorities estimate that around 60 per cent of them return to service. The war-torn nation is constantly struggling to recruit and retain personnel. Amputee soldiers are now a regular sight on the battlefield. Gadaleta is travelling lite into the warzone – he's taking one bag, his new leg and a large jar of Vegemite. The Ukraine veteran is also taking a new tattoo. Inked on to his right calf are the words 'Lucky Ducky' with a picture of a gun-toting cartoon duck. Below that, in Ukrainian, is written: 'One leg is here - and one leg is in Kursk. Gadaleta had been serving with Ukraine's 80th Brigade when he was injured. His call sign was 'Dundee' — after Crocodile Dundee. He remembers December 8, 2024, as the day that changed his life. His six-man unit was on a mission in Kursk and approaching a target through deep snow when he triggered the anti-personnel mine. 'Literally like one step and there's this bright light and I thought our guys accidentally dropped a grenade on me,' he said. 'I thought these guys just hit me by accident. 'At first, I didn't feel anything. 'Someone yelled out are you alright? and I said 'bro my leg's gone. He said what? I said bro it's gone'.' Sustained severe injuries A firefight began and the Russians advanced on his position. When he tried to grab his weapon, he realised his hand was in pieces. But Gadaleta's calls for help went unanswered. He was told he had to use his medical training and fend for himself, using tourniquets to stem the bleeding. 'I'm begging them, I'm breaking down. I shouted, 'I'm gonna die, I'm gonna freeze to death. I'm bleeding so much'.' He said he went 20 hours without first aid, or pain relief, sitting in minus 4 degrees and soaked in blood. 'I honestly thought, yeah, I'm gonna die.' He was finally taken back into Ukraine and hospitalised in Kyiv. But he claims a three-week wait for surgery cost him his lower leg. 'My leg died, it basically turned to a black colour. They had to amputate,' he said. He also has shrapnel in his arm and his face. Gadaleta has a Bachelor of Science and two diplomas but made the decision to volunteer for the Ukraine Armed Forces after friends sent him photos and details of Russian war crimes. 'I was disgusted with it and I thought, how can a human being do that to another human being?' 'And I just thought, 'I want to give my life to this cause'.' 'I paid my own way here. I paid for my rent and food. I sold my investment property to cover it all.' 'I wasn't naive about it. I knew that with all the casualties it wasn't a matter of if, but when I was injured.' He calls Russian President Vladimir Putin 'a modern-day Hitler'. He says he was horrified when he saw the news reports from Alaska on the weekend of President Donald Trump giving Putin a red-carpet welcome. He called it an insult to Ukraine. 'I didn't think it was real. I thought it was A.I,' he said. 'That's how crazy I thought it was.' His dedication and sacrifice for Ukraine has already been recognised by the nation's Ambassador to Australia, Vasyl Myroshnychenko. Myroshnychenko rang Gadaleta to offer thanks. 'For me personally, and all Ukrainian people, you're a hero,' he told him this year. 'Thank you very much.' Seven Australians are believed to have been killed in Ukraine and the Russians have captured and imprisoned Melbourne man Oscar Jenkins. Gadaleta knows he has put life and limb on the line already for Ukraine. He lost the latter but has no fear of losing it all.

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