Six deaths on Victorian roads in one weekend, including a triple-fatal crash near Gisborne
It was one of three fatal incidents on Victorian roads across the weekend, in which six people died.
Police are investigating a crash on Bolinda-Darraweit Road in the small locale of Bolinda, 16 kilometres east of Gisborne, about 7.20am Sunday.
Three of the four occupants inside one car died at the scene. The fourth person from that vehicle was rushed to the hospital with life-threatening injuries.
The driver and sole occupant of the second car involved in the crash also sustained injuries and was taken to hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.
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Investigations into the exact cause of the collision are ongoing, but Detective Senior Sergeant Ben Morris of the Heavy Vehicle Unit said police believed the car in which the people died swerved into oncoming traffic.
'They've collided head on, which has caused the catastrophic scene we've seen today,' he said.
He said there was also a dead animal on the roadside where the accident occurred. Officers were investigating if it played a role in the crash.

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The Advertiser
an hour ago
- The Advertiser
Accused murderer claims drug altered his state of mind
A man with a neurological condition that limits his ability to move claims he was not in the right state of mind when he stabbed a woman to death. Mark Ludbrook, who uses a wheelchair due to his transverse myelitis, took the illicit drug PCE on the morning of August 3, 2023, before he allegedly murdered Autumn Baker. Ms Baker, one of Ludbrook's friends, had arrived at his Hoppers Crossing home in Melbourne's west about 1pm after he did not respond to her messages. Ludbrook's carer answered the door and the two women went inside to find the 53-year-old naked and standing in the doorway of his bedroom. The carer reported Ludbrook had been acting irrationally all morning and as they discussed what to do next, Ludbrook entered the kitchen and grabbed a steak knife. He walked back to his room and when the carer followed, she found him lying on his bed and sticking the knife into his abdomen. The carer yelled at him to stop and Ms Baker also came in, with the two women attempting to pull the knife off him. The carer left the room to grab her phone and call triple zero when she heard Ms Baker scream. The woman returned to find Ludbrook repeatedly stabbing Ms Baker, who was on her back on the floor. Ludbrook thrust the knife in the carer's direction as the woman tried to stop him, so she moved away to speak to the triple-zero call taker. Ludbrook then came out of the room naked and covered in blood so the woman ran from the house. When police arrived, Ludbrook - who was still naked - ran to the backyard but they managed to restrain him. More officers arrived to find Ms Baker's unresponsive body in the bedroom and despite attempts at resuscitation, she died at the scene. Ludbrook, who was hospitalised after the alleged murder, was found to have the drug PCE in his system. He does not deny he caused Ms Baker's death but his barrister told a Victorian Supreme Court jury her client was not in control of his actions at the time. Barrister Emily Clark said Ludbrook had taken PCE on the morning of Ms Baker's death to manage the pain from his neurological condition. But she argued his state of mind was so altered by the drug that he could not have consciously, deliberately or voluntarily carried out the killing. It was also disputed that Ludbrook held an intention to kill Ms Baker or cause her really serious injury, Ms Clark said. Intention and state of mind are two elements of murder the jury must consider before returning a verdict. Crown prosecutor Jim Shaw told jurors Ludbrook's actions were conscious and deliberate so they could find him guilty of murder. During his opening address, Mr Shaw played body-worn camera footage from the officer who discovered Ms Baker's body. He also tendered autopsy photos, which he said showed two fatal stab wounds to Ms Baker's chest, as well as several other wounds to her arms, hands and face. The trial before Justice John Champion continues. A man with a neurological condition that limits his ability to move claims he was not in the right state of mind when he stabbed a woman to death. Mark Ludbrook, who uses a wheelchair due to his transverse myelitis, took the illicit drug PCE on the morning of August 3, 2023, before he allegedly murdered Autumn Baker. Ms Baker, one of Ludbrook's friends, had arrived at his Hoppers Crossing home in Melbourne's west about 1pm after he did not respond to her messages. Ludbrook's carer answered the door and the two women went inside to find the 53-year-old naked and standing in the doorway of his bedroom. The carer reported Ludbrook had been acting irrationally all morning and as they discussed what to do next, Ludbrook entered the kitchen and grabbed a steak knife. He walked back to his room and when the carer followed, she found him lying on his bed and sticking the knife into his abdomen. The carer yelled at him to stop and Ms Baker also came in, with the two women attempting to pull the knife off him. The carer left the room to grab her phone and call triple zero when she heard Ms Baker scream. The woman returned to find Ludbrook repeatedly stabbing Ms Baker, who was on her back on the floor. Ludbrook thrust the knife in the carer's direction as the woman tried to stop him, so she moved away to speak to the triple-zero call taker. Ludbrook then came out of the room naked and covered in blood so the woman ran from the house. When police arrived, Ludbrook - who was still naked - ran to the backyard but they managed to restrain him. More officers arrived to find Ms Baker's unresponsive body in the bedroom and despite attempts at resuscitation, she died at the scene. Ludbrook, who was hospitalised after the alleged murder, was found to have the drug PCE in his system. He does not deny he caused Ms Baker's death but his barrister told a Victorian Supreme Court jury her client was not in control of his actions at the time. Barrister Emily Clark said Ludbrook had taken PCE on the morning of Ms Baker's death to manage the pain from his neurological condition. But she argued his state of mind was so altered by the drug that he could not have consciously, deliberately or voluntarily carried out the killing. It was also disputed that Ludbrook held an intention to kill Ms Baker or cause her really serious injury, Ms Clark said. Intention and state of mind are two elements of murder the jury must consider before returning a verdict. Crown prosecutor Jim Shaw told jurors Ludbrook's actions were conscious and deliberate so they could find him guilty of murder. During his opening address, Mr Shaw played body-worn camera footage from the officer who discovered Ms Baker's body. He also tendered autopsy photos, which he said showed two fatal stab wounds to Ms Baker's chest, as well as several other wounds to her arms, hands and face. The trial before Justice John Champion continues. A man with a neurological condition that limits his ability to move claims he was not in the right state of mind when he stabbed a woman to death. Mark Ludbrook, who uses a wheelchair due to his transverse myelitis, took the illicit drug PCE on the morning of August 3, 2023, before he allegedly murdered Autumn Baker. Ms Baker, one of Ludbrook's friends, had arrived at his Hoppers Crossing home in Melbourne's west about 1pm after he did not respond to her messages. Ludbrook's carer answered the door and the two women went inside to find the 53-year-old naked and standing in the doorway of his bedroom. The carer reported Ludbrook had been acting irrationally all morning and as they discussed what to do next, Ludbrook entered the kitchen and grabbed a steak knife. He walked back to his room and when the carer followed, she found him lying on his bed and sticking the knife into his abdomen. The carer yelled at him to stop and Ms Baker also came in, with the two women attempting to pull the knife off him. The carer left the room to grab her phone and call triple zero when she heard Ms Baker scream. The woman returned to find Ludbrook repeatedly stabbing Ms Baker, who was on her back on the floor. Ludbrook thrust the knife in the carer's direction as the woman tried to stop him, so she moved away to speak to the triple-zero call taker. Ludbrook then came out of the room naked and covered in blood so the woman ran from the house. When police arrived, Ludbrook - who was still naked - ran to the backyard but they managed to restrain him. More officers arrived to find Ms Baker's unresponsive body in the bedroom and despite attempts at resuscitation, she died at the scene. Ludbrook, who was hospitalised after the alleged murder, was found to have the drug PCE in his system. He does not deny he caused Ms Baker's death but his barrister told a Victorian Supreme Court jury her client was not in control of his actions at the time. Barrister Emily Clark said Ludbrook had taken PCE on the morning of Ms Baker's death to manage the pain from his neurological condition. But she argued his state of mind was so altered by the drug that he could not have consciously, deliberately or voluntarily carried out the killing. It was also disputed that Ludbrook held an intention to kill Ms Baker or cause her really serious injury, Ms Clark said. Intention and state of mind are two elements of murder the jury must consider before returning a verdict. Crown prosecutor Jim Shaw told jurors Ludbrook's actions were conscious and deliberate so they could find him guilty of murder. During his opening address, Mr Shaw played body-worn camera footage from the officer who discovered Ms Baker's body. He also tendered autopsy photos, which he said showed two fatal stab wounds to Ms Baker's chest, as well as several other wounds to her arms, hands and face. The trial before Justice John Champion continues. A man with a neurological condition that limits his ability to move claims he was not in the right state of mind when he stabbed a woman to death. Mark Ludbrook, who uses a wheelchair due to his transverse myelitis, took the illicit drug PCE on the morning of August 3, 2023, before he allegedly murdered Autumn Baker. Ms Baker, one of Ludbrook's friends, had arrived at his Hoppers Crossing home in Melbourne's west about 1pm after he did not respond to her messages. Ludbrook's carer answered the door and the two women went inside to find the 53-year-old naked and standing in the doorway of his bedroom. The carer reported Ludbrook had been acting irrationally all morning and as they discussed what to do next, Ludbrook entered the kitchen and grabbed a steak knife. He walked back to his room and when the carer followed, she found him lying on his bed and sticking the knife into his abdomen. The carer yelled at him to stop and Ms Baker also came in, with the two women attempting to pull the knife off him. The carer left the room to grab her phone and call triple zero when she heard Ms Baker scream. The woman returned to find Ludbrook repeatedly stabbing Ms Baker, who was on her back on the floor. Ludbrook thrust the knife in the carer's direction as the woman tried to stop him, so she moved away to speak to the triple-zero call taker. Ludbrook then came out of the room naked and covered in blood so the woman ran from the house. When police arrived, Ludbrook - who was still naked - ran to the backyard but they managed to restrain him. More officers arrived to find Ms Baker's unresponsive body in the bedroom and despite attempts at resuscitation, she died at the scene. Ludbrook, who was hospitalised after the alleged murder, was found to have the drug PCE in his system. He does not deny he caused Ms Baker's death but his barrister told a Victorian Supreme Court jury her client was not in control of his actions at the time. Barrister Emily Clark said Ludbrook had taken PCE on the morning of Ms Baker's death to manage the pain from his neurological condition. But she argued his state of mind was so altered by the drug that he could not have consciously, deliberately or voluntarily carried out the killing. It was also disputed that Ludbrook held an intention to kill Ms Baker or cause her really serious injury, Ms Clark said. Intention and state of mind are two elements of murder the jury must consider before returning a verdict. Crown prosecutor Jim Shaw told jurors Ludbrook's actions were conscious and deliberate so they could find him guilty of murder. During his opening address, Mr Shaw played body-worn camera footage from the officer who discovered Ms Baker's body. He also tendered autopsy photos, which he said showed two fatal stab wounds to Ms Baker's chest, as well as several other wounds to her arms, hands and face. The trial before Justice John Champion continues.


Perth Now
2 hours ago
- Perth Now
Accused murderer claims drug altered his state of mind
A man with a neurological condition that limits his ability to move claims he was not in the right state of mind when he stabbed a woman to death. Mark Ludbrook, who uses a wheelchair due to his transverse myelitis, took the illicit drug PCE on the morning of August 3, 2023, before he allegedly murdered Autumn Baker. Ms Baker, one of Ludbrook's friends, had arrived at his Hoppers Crossing home in Melbourne's west about 1pm after he did not respond to her messages. Ludbrook's carer answered the door and the two women went inside to find the 53-year-old naked and standing in the doorway of his bedroom. The carer reported Ludbrook had been acting irrationally all morning and as they discussed what to do next, Ludbrook entered the kitchen and grabbed a steak knife. He walked back to his room and when the carer followed, she found him lying on his bed and sticking the knife into his abdomen. The carer yelled at him to stop and Ms Baker also came in, with the two women attempting to pull the knife off him. The carer left the room to grab her phone and call triple zero when she heard Ms Baker scream. The woman returned to find Ludbrook repeatedly stabbing Ms Baker, who was on her back on the floor. Ludbrook thrust the knife in the carer's direction as the woman tried to stop him, so she moved away to speak to the triple-zero call taker. Ludbrook then came out of the room naked and covered in blood so the woman ran from the house. When police arrived, Ludbrook - who was still naked - ran to the backyard but they managed to restrain him. More officers arrived to find Ms Baker's unresponsive body in the bedroom and despite attempts at resuscitation, she died at the scene. Ludbrook, who was hospitalised after the alleged murder, was found to have the drug PCE in his system. He does not deny he caused Ms Baker's death but his barrister told a Victorian Supreme Court jury her client was not in control of his actions at the time. Barrister Emily Clark said Ludbrook had taken PCE on the morning of Ms Baker's death to manage the pain from his neurological condition. But she argued his state of mind was so altered by the drug that he could not have consciously, deliberately or voluntarily carried out the killing. It was also disputed that Ludbrook held an intention to kill Ms Baker or cause her really serious injury, Ms Clark said. Intention and state of mind are two elements of murder the jury must consider before returning a verdict. Crown prosecutor Jim Shaw told jurors Ludbrook's actions were conscious and deliberate so they could find him guilty of murder. During his opening address, Mr Shaw played body-worn camera footage from the officer who discovered Ms Baker's body. He also tendered autopsy photos, which he said showed two fatal stab wounds to Ms Baker's chest, as well as several other wounds to her arms, hands and face. The trial before Justice John Champion continues.

Sky News AU
5 hours ago
- Sky News AU
American influencer blasted by furious Aussies after mocking Victoria's controversial machete disposal bins
A conservative American social media commentator has outraged Australians by tearing apart Victoria's machete disposal bins. A total of 40 machete disposal bins have been placed across Victoria as part of a statewide amnesty project with citizens encouraged by authorities to hand in their knives. The program comes ahead of an imminent ban that will outlaw carrying or purchasing a machete without a valid permit after an increase in knife crime related incidents throughout Victoria. The amnesty period will run from September 1 to November 30, with people permitted to hand in a machete without facing penalties. An American political influencer known as 'Republican Reads Comments' took to TikTok to criticise the plan, saying the Victorian machete bins were too 'ridiculous' not to cover. 'Now I normally don't make videos about other countries' politics because it doesn't affect me, but this is so ridiculous this video had to be made,' the man said. He tore apart the idea and said that criminals would raid the bins and steal the knives to commit further crime. 'That's right my friends starting September 1st there is a machete ban in Australia, so now when a criminal sees one of these boxes, they will get ready to do what a criminal does which is commit crime,' the US resident said. 'Gee, I better just drop my knife off in the machete bin, because I wouldn't want anyone to get hurt,' the man said in a sarcastic tone mimicking a criminal. 'Now I've seen a lot of ridiculous stuff over the years here in the US, but this is pretty silly, instead of spending thousands of dollars on these wasteful bins that no one is ever going to use why don't you just hire some more cops to protect your citizens? I know common sense is hard." Hundreds of outraged Australians flocked to the video to tear apart his argument and defend Victoria's machete bin move. One said 'I don't think anyone from the USA is in any place to criticise any other country' while another stated, 'oh no, a country that cares about their people." Others referenced the success of then-Prime Minister John Howard's gun buyback scheme, which involved the government purchasing privately owned firearms. 'Because laws work dude, We had a gun buyback that was highly successful and as a result have very few shootings. Aas an American immigrant to Australia I appreciate a government that solves problems rather than creating a militarised police state,' one commentor wrote. Not all Aussies were encouraging of the policy, with one woman writing 'I'm an Aussie… trust me when I say we are all embarrassed!!!' Another man said the Allan Labor government was 'the most embarrassing government in the world.' The maximum penalty for those found guilty of carrying a machete after September 1 is two years imprisonment or a fine of more than $47,000.