logo
#

Latest news with #AdelaideDistrictCourt

Australian tradie dies after winning $22 million Lotto in NZ and descending into drug underworld
Australian tradie dies after winning $22 million Lotto in NZ and descending into drug underworld

RNZ News

time4 days ago

  • RNZ News

Australian tradie dies after winning $22 million Lotto in NZ and descending into drug underworld

First published on Australian Josh Winslet was in NZ when he won big. Photo: Facebook/NZME An Australian man who descended into a world of drugs after winning $22 million in Lotto Powerball while living in New Zealand has died. Josh Winslet became an instant multi-millionaire after striking it rich with a winning Lotto ticket while living in the South Island in 2018. However, his winnings soon attracted the wrong crowd and he slid into drug crime. It culminated in a 2020 police raid in Australia and charges of supplying MDMA and possession of an unlicensed firearm and ammunition. On Tuesday morning, the Daily Mail Australia reported Winslet died of health complications from excessive drug use. In 2022, the Adelaide District Court heard how, after bagging his epic windfall, Winslet's parents managed his winnings through a trust fund. However, he was still able to access enough of his fortune to allow him to quit working as a plumber and bankroll a "hopeless" drug addiction. Winslet, who also purchased property in New Zealand with his winnings, was treated as a "free ride" by other drug users, the court heard. Police raided his home in the Adelaide suburb of New Port on August 30, 2020 after they reportedly received information that drugs were being manufactured on the property. Cops found 2.27g of cocaine and nearly 30g of MDMA. In a compartment in the bathroom was a mauser handgun and ammunition. Winslet pleaded guilty to supplying MDMA and possessing a firearm without a licence, the advertiser newspaper reported. During sentencing in September 2022, Judge Heath Barklay stated that his conviction had robbed him of the drive for a productive life and brought him into contact with the wrong crowd. The judge also detailed how Winslet had battled two rare conditions since birth. The conditions led to physical abnormalities which saw Winslet bullied at school and unable to take part in contact sports. He left school early before doing his plumbing apprenticeship and then shifted to New Zealand to look for further work. Evidence of drug use was everywhere when police raided Winslet's house. Photo: Supplied/NZ Herald Photos released by the court show the Adelaide house littered with drugs and drug paraphernalia, with empty beer bottles and nitrous oxide canisters sharing space with cannabis bongs and lighters. A fridge photographed by police was empty save for alcohol, Red Bull - and a bowl of white powder. The house was dirty, with rubbish and clothes lying around, floors marked and stained, and a framed photo of his winning online ticket a cruel reminder of what could have been. This story originally appeared in the New Zealand Herald .

‘Like being naked in public': Killer driver blames lack of turban for failure to help dying woman
‘Like being naked in public': Killer driver blames lack of turban for failure to help dying woman

7NEWS

time30-04-2025

  • 7NEWS

‘Like being naked in public': Killer driver blames lack of turban for failure to help dying woman

A driver who has pleaded guilty to killing a woman in Adelaide's north-east when his Mustang crashed into her Commodore at high speed has given his reason as to why he didn't help her. Bhupinder Singh, 25, blamed his turban for not helping Christine Sandford,40, after his car hit hers about 10pm on North East Rd, Windsor Gardens in March 2023. Singh's lawyer told the Adelaide District Court on Wednesday that he didn't help Sandford as his turban came off in the crash, which as a Sikh man was likened to being 'naked in public'. The lawyer told the court that his client may have been in shock after losing his turban. 'My client's turban had flown off his head,' his lawyer said. 'He was in a state of shock, as a Sikh, where it's almost like being naked in public; that exacerbated the situation.' Sandford died only minutes from her home while out on a simple errand to buy oil to cook dinner. Her car was T-boned at high speed by Singh's Mustang when she was leaving a nearby petrol station. Victim impact statements were also heard on Wednesday. Sandford's daughter, Taniesha, described the loss of her mother. 'The weight of her absence is something I struggle to carry every day,' she said. 'I used to feel safe, I am constantly filled with anxiety now that I live with the deep awareness that the people you love can be taken from you in an instant. Judge Paul Muscat said Singh had been driving at speeds between 150 and 161km/h in the moments leading up to the crash. He also told Singh that lying to police after the crash, telling them that he wasn't speeding 'cannot be true, obviously', and that he will likely be remanded in custody next week. Singh has pleaded guilty to aggravated causing death by dangerous driving. He will return to court next week for further submissions ahead of sentencing.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store