Political Paedophile Murder Mystery in South Australia

It’s very disturbing. Apparently a small number of men have made allegations that someone who is possibly a serving South Australian politician is a paedophile to the Speaker of the South Australian Parliament, and now three of them have been murdered. The Speaker, Peter Lewis, was gathering evidence on the systematic abuse of wards of the state when he came across this information.

Read this ABC news story and then this story and then browse Google News’s related links.

Entire Lawyer Firm Ordered to Take Ethics Class

Here’s a refreshing story, courtesy of Groklaw, a US Federal judge in California has ordered an 80 strong firm of lawyers to take 6 hours of ethics training for "repeated misstatements of the record, frivolous objections to plaintiff’s statement of facts, and repeated mischaracterizations of the law.". It would appear that Elaine M. Yama, the lead on the case (whom the judge singled out for 20 hours of training) is no longer with the firm, see the Google Cache for the old page about her.

The full court judgement is available here as PDF.

I wonder if we could get the same for politicians too ?

A Memory of Childhood – Cefn Onn Railway Halt

When I was young, my parents used to take myself and my brother out to Cefn Onn Park to the north of Cardiff. Back then it was a drive over the old bailey bridge over the River Taff between Llandaff and Llandaff North, through Whitchurch, past the tax offices and the (now gone) Monico cinema and out into the countryside.

I remember playing in the snow there, walking around, playing hide and seek in the bushes and walking around the ponds and playing in the summer house.

But one of the most mysterious parts was the railway halt right in the middle of the park. I remember seeing trains stop there and people getting out and walking through the park, even though there wasn’t a house in sight. I guess at the weekend some of them were out to walk in the park, but some of them would have lived nearby and used it regularly to get to and from the city. There were also the tunnels that went through the mountain to Caerphilly/Caerfilli (with its wonderful castle), and very occasionally you’d hear this rumble before a train appeared from nowhere. I remember the footbridge that you could walk across to get to the other platform, high above the tracks, and the long, bramble bounded paths that ran down to the quiet platforms. There were white picket fences and gates, green tinged with moss, and a feeling of better times that had passed. I guess this is one of the things that stirred my (still passionate) interest in history.

Now all this has come flooding back through stumbling onto a tribute page by Mike Slocombe about Cefn Onn Halt with some lovely photos of the station at various times, including the two I’ll link to below; one showing it in its hayday and another as I remember it as a child. Mike also has a wonderful 360ยบ panorama shot of the station (Java required), including the footbridge as I remember it, before the walkway was removed.

Cefn Onn Halt in its hayday
Cefn Onn Halt in its hayday – Photo (c) S. Rickard

Cefn Onn Halt as I remember it from childhood
Cefn Onn Halt as I remember it from childhood – Photo (c) Mike Slocombe

Earthquake in Iran

The news sites are now reporting a mag 6.4 earthquake in Central Iran has killed over 400 and injured thousands of others. This comes less than 2 months after the deadly Asian tsunami which in turn was exactly one year on from another massive earthquake, again in Iran, at Bam which killed over 30,000.

The strange thing for me this time is that I’d seen an email report (read on for it, or follow this link to a web version) of the quake 5 hours before I wrote this, and I’ve been keeping an eye on the news to see what the impact was going to be..
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The French Tourists Story, in his own words, and a Third Case of Mistaken Detention!

The ABC News Investigative Unit have published the transcript of their background story and interview with Mahamadou Sacko, the French tourist who was wrongly detained after immigration services thought (wrongly) that he was travelling on a forged passport and didn’t bother to check with the French embassy. Some of it reads like a Monty Python sketch, the quote in the previous story mentions that they told him they wouldn’t call the French Embassy, that it was his job to phone them. But it then gets worse..

ANDREW FOWLER: Did you have money to do that?

MAHAMADOU SACKO: No, because they keep all my money.

It gets even more surreal when, rather than contact the French embassy..

ANDREW FOWLER: In their attempts to establish Sacko’s nationality, immigration officials resorted to unusual tactics. They asked him to name the French president, the tallest mountain in France and to sing the French national anthem.

With questions like that I’m suprised they didn’t go on to ask him why he wasn’t wearing a stripy shirt and riding a bicycle with a string of onions around his neck..

To round things off Kerry Nettle, a Greens Senator for NSW, has said that her office was told of a South Korean woman who was wrongly locked up in Baxter detention center for one or two weeks in the mistaken belief she was an illegal immigrant caught in an immigration raid.

Aussie Govt Locks up French Tourist by Mistake

Not content with locking up its own citizens as illegal immigrants the Australian Government has now managed to win friends and influence people by locking up a French tourist who they (mistakenly) thought had a false passport in a detention centre and then forgetting to tell the French embassy about him.


It took Mr Sacko two days to get in touch with the French embassy and he remained locked up in Villawood for four days.



“They’re asking me if I want they call French embassy, I say ‘ok, yes’ [but] they didn’t do,” Mr Sacko told the ABC’s Investigative Unit.


“Why not? They say is not their job for do that, if I want I must do by myself.”

The Australian government has paid AU$25,000 in compensation and the French Government has sent an official protest through their consul in Australia to DFAT.

Monotremes Diverged from Marsupials Earlier than Thought

An interesting piece of news from the ABC if you’re into Australia’s wierd wildlife, apparently marsupials (kangaroos, wallabies, koalas, etc) and monotremes (egg laying mammals, the platypus and the echidna) diverged much earlier than previously thought. This is based on a fossil of a 115-million-year-old relative of the platypus found in Victoria.

There’s more at Google News.