Goldman cuts India’s HPCL to neutral

July 15 (Reuters) – Goldman Sachs said on Thursday it had downgraded Indian refiner Hindustan Petroleum Corp (HPCL.BO) to “neutral” from “buy”.

“Following a sharp rally in the state-owned oil stocks after commencement of fuel pricing reforms, we find the risk-reward for our conviction ideas less compelling than before,” it said in a note.

Goldman also removed Bharat Petroleum Corp (BPCL.BO), and Oil & Natural Gas Corp (ONGC.BO) from its conviction list, but retained a “buy” on these stocks. (Reporting by Ami Shah)

Most Greeks mistrust government to fight corruption: poll

(Reuters) – Most Greeks believe the country’s political system cannot tackle chronic graft and think most politicians are corrupt, an opinion poll published on Sunday showed.

Greece has been rocked by a series of major protests against austerity measures to deal with the debt crisis and a central demand of the protesters has been to crack down on corrupt politicians they blame for mismanaging the economy.

According to the poll by Public Issue, conducted from June 8 to 10 for Kathimerini newspaper, 61 percent of those asked believed the political system could not tackle corruption, with 52 percent saying they never or almost never trusted governments.

“The current crisis of trust in governance can be characterized as structural. It confirms a crisis in representation that has not been seen before, post World War-2,” pollster Yannis Mavris said in the newspaper.

“The conviction that governments serve big interests is universal (89 percent), while regards the management of public money, eight out of 10 citizens think it is wasted.”

Based on the poll, 78 percent of people accept the view that many or all in government are corrupt.

(Reporting by George Georgiopoulos)

High court defers hearing in Rathore’s case till Tuesday

Chandigarh, May 31 (IANS) The Punjab and Haryana High Court Monday deferred till Tuesday the hearing on the bail petition of former Haryana police chief S.P.S. Rathore, who has been sentenced to 18 months imprisonment for molesting teenager Ruchika Girhotra in 1990.

After hearing the arguments, the vacation bench of Justice Ajay Tiwari deferred the case and directed the lawyers of the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) to submit their reply in connection with Rathore’s appeal.

Rathore’s wife and counsel Abha Rathore was also accompanied by daughter Priyanjali, a lawyer, in the court Monday. Abha had moved a bail petition in the high court May 26, a day after a court convicted him and sent him to the Burail Jail.

‘We are filing our reply in the high court and we will strongly oppose the bail petition,’ CBI lawyer Ajay Kaushik told IANS Monday.

Abha said during arguments Monday: ‘I am ready for the arguments any time. But they (CBI lawyers) are unnecessarily delaying it. It was just the media hype that had affected the court’s verdict in the past.’

Abha also showed a map to the judge displaying the positions of Rathore, Aradhna (lone witness in the case) and Ruchika in Rathore’s office Aug 12, 1990 whe he allegedly molester her.

‘Rathore and Ruchika were sitting across the table. How can he embrace somebody who is sitting so far? Moreover, Aradhna left the room for only a few seconds. There were gunmen outside and glass windows in the room. All previous courts have ignored this map,’ Abha told the judge.

Rathore has sought bail on medical grounds, saying he had undergone a heart surgery and required medical attention.

The former Haryana director general of police was sent to jail Tuesday by the district and sessions court which upheld his conviction in the molestation case by a CBI special court in December last year and enhanced his jail term to 18 months.

Rathore was sentenced to six months’ rigorous imprisonment and fined Rs.1,000 by the CBI special court. He was immediately granted bail then. Rathore filed a plea in January challenging his conviction.

Ruchika case verdict on May 25

Chandigarh, May 20 (ANI): The Chandigarh Sessions Court on Thursday postponed the announcement of the verdict on the much awaited the Ruchika Girhotra molestation case to May 25 (Tuesday).

Additional District and Sessions Judge Gurbir Singh, who has completed the hearing on former Haryana Director General of Police SPS Rathore’s appeal against his conviction in the case, was scheduled to pronounce the verdict on Thursday.

On May 25, besides passing the verdict on Rathore’s plea, the court would also pass an order on the Central Bureau of Investigation’s (CBI) appeal seeking enhancement of sentence from six months to two years for Rathore.

A complaint made by Rathore against Ruchika’s family friend Anand Prakash for forging documents pertaining to the case is also expected to deliberated upon.

On December 21, 2009, Rathore was convicted for molesting Ruchika, a budding 14- year-old tennis player in 1990.

He was sentenced to serve six months’ rigorous imprisonment by the court.

Thereafter, Rathore had appealed against the sentence, the hearing of which started in February.

The hearings were adjourned following an attack on Rathore on February 8 by a Banaras-based youth.

Day-to-day proceedings of the case, which were held in-camera, resumed on May 3 and concluded on May 11.

Ruchika was allegedly molested by Rathore on August 12, 1990 at the Haryana Lawn Tennis Association office in Panchkula.

Unable to bear the harassment, Ruchika committed suicide three years later. (ANI)

Pakistani woman allowed to marry prisoner on death row

Lahore, May 13 (IANS) The High Court in Pakistan’s eastern city of Lahore has allowed a woman to marry a prisoner, who has been awarded death sentence but challenged his conviction in the Supreme Court.

Laiba Sehar had moved the court seeking permission to marry her fiance Atiq-ur-Rahman, who was sentenced to death in a case of kidnapping for ransom in 2002.

The High Court Wednesday asked the jail authorities to make arrangements for the wedding and said that the ceremony must be held in the office of the prison chief, Xinhua reported.

Laiba Sehar in her application had complained that her request for the marriage with her 28-year-old fiance was turned down by the prison officials.

Jail authorities told the court that there is no section in prison regulations to allow a prisoner to get married.

Syed Mazhar Hussain, the applicant’s lawyer, argued that marriage is a fundamental right of everyone and no citizen could be deprived of the right.

He informed the court that the convict has moved the Supreme Court against his conviction and his application was pending in the apex court.

Earlier this week, government of southern Sindh province allowed wives of prisoners to stay overnight with their spouses in jails once in a month.

Brit woman jailed for kissing a man publicly slams Dubai ‘hypocrisy’

London, May 10 (ANI): A British woman, who was jailed for kissing a man in public in Dubai, has dubbed its strict decency laws as being full of “hypocrisy”.

Charlotte Adams was arrested with Ayman Najafi last November after a local woman complained they had been seen kissing on the mouth in a restaurant.

Adams, 26, from Mersea Island, Essex, and Najafi insisted they had given each other only a peck on the cheek but were sentenced to a month in prison by a Dubai court last month.

The estate agent served 23 days and was freed on May 7 and deported.

She spoke of her relief at being reunited with her family, including twin brother Christopher and sister Emma, 20.

“It is such a relief. I’ve thought of nothing else for the last few months,” the Scotsman quoted her as saying.

“I love Dubai and it makes me sad that I’ll never come back, although I think I’d struggle to ever feel free here again.

“The laws need to evolve to match the culture here. At the moment, it’s all just hypocrisy,” she stated.

She went on to say that hotels in Dubai regularly offer free alcohol, particularly to women, even though drinking in public is still officially illegal in the Gulf state.

“Everyone gets so drunk they forget where they are, particularly the Westerners, which is when their behaviour can become dangerous legally,” she added.

Najafi, a management consultant from north London who has lived in Dubai for 18 months, is said to be continuing his fight against the conviction after being backed by his employers. (ANI)

Brit woman jailed for kissing a man publicly slams Dubai ‘hypocrisy’

London, May 10 (ANI): A British woman, who was jailed for kissing a man in public in Dubai, has dubbed its strict decency laws as being full of “hypocrisy”.

Charlotte Adams was arrested with Ayman Najafi last November after a local woman complained they had been seen kissing on the mouth in a restaurant.

Adams, 26, from Mersea Island, Essex, and Najafi insisted they had given each other only a peck on the cheek but were sentenced to a month in prison by a Dubai court last month.

The estate agent served 23 days and was freed on May 7 and deported.

She spoke of her relief at being reunited with her family, including twin brother Christopher and sister Emma, 20.

“It is such a relief. I’ve thought of nothing else for the last few months,” the Scotsman quoted her as saying.

“I love Dubai and it makes me sad that I’ll never come back, although I think I’d struggle to ever feel free here again.

“The laws need to evolve to match the culture here. At the moment, it’s all just hypocrisy,” she stated.

She went on to say that hotels in Dubai regularly offer free alcohol, particularly to women, even though drinking in public is still officially illegal in the Gulf state.

“Everyone gets so drunk they forget where they are, particularly the Westerners, which is when their behaviour can become dangerous legally,” she added.

Najafi, a management consultant from north London who has lived in Dubai for 18 months, is said to be continuing his fight against the conviction after being backed by his employers. (ANI)

26/11 trial verdict is a message to Pakistan: Chidambaram

New Delhi, May 3 (ANI): Union Home Minister P Chidambaram on Monday said the 26/11 Mumbai terror case judgement should seen as a clear message to Pakistan.

Interacting with media here after a Mumbai Special Court had convicted lone surviving Pakistani terrorist of 26/11 attack Ajmal Amir Kasab of all 86 charges, including waging war against India, Chidambaram said that at least now, Pakistan should stop exporting terror to India.

“If they do(exporting terrorism) and we apprehend terrorists, then we will bring them to justice,” Chidambaram said.

For the first time in Indian judicial history, it was established in a court of law that Pakistan was involved in an act of terrorism and of waging war against India.

Judge M L Tahiliyani said the way the ten terrorists countered the elite National Security Guards (NSG) had clearly established that they were trained to fight a war.

Though no direct evidences were mentioned against Lashkar-e Taiba leader Hafiz Saeed and Zakir –ur –Rehman, the court found them guilty based on Kasab’s confessional statement.

Chidambaram expressed satisfaction over the outcome of the trial and complimented the concerned agencies for “marshalling evidence and proving guilt beyond doubt”.

He added that Kasab was given all rights of an open trial and the case had ended in a conviction.

“Kasab’s trial reiterated that India is governed by a Rule of Law, “ he said.

Pronouncing the verdict in a courtroom at the Arthur Road Jail here, Judge M L Tahiliyani described the 26/11 attacks as clear act of war against India. (ANI)

Tamil journalist pardoned in Sri Lanka

Colombo, May 3 (DPA) A Sri Lankan journalist sentenced to 20 years for ‘inciting communal disharmony’ is to receive a presidential pardon, External Affairs Minister G.L. Peiris said Monday.

J.S. Tissainayagam, a member of Sri Lanka’s Tamil minority, was sentenced in August last year under the Prevention of Terrorism Act.

He was charged with printing a monthly magazine in which he allegedly published material inciting communal disharmony. He was also found guilty of collecting funds through the magazine and promoting terrorism.

Tissainayagam denied the allegations. His conviction triggered protests by media rights activists and international media organisations.

Tissainayagam has filed an appeal against his conviction and was earlier released on bail.

Ruchika case: Chandigarh court to take up Rathore bail plea

Chandigarh, May 3 (ANI): The bail plea of former Haryana Police chief SPS Rathore, will come up before sessions court in Chandigarh on Monday.

Rathore was sentenced to six months in jail for molesting 16-year-old Ruchika Girhotra.

He had moved the plea against the sentence and his conviction.

Sixty-eight -year-old Rathore, a 1965 batch IPS officer, who retired in 2002, was awarded the sentence by a Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) court on December 22, 2009, for molesting Ruchika, a budding tennis player, in 1990.

Ruchika committed suicide three years later on December 28, 1993, and died the following day.

Subsequently Rathore was booked in two other criminal cases after Ruchika”s father Subhash Chander Girhotra and his son Ashu filed two fresh complaints against Rathore accusing him of attempt to murder, wrongful confinement and forging of the post-mortem report of the victim.

In April, Rathore returned his Police Medal, almost three weeks after he was ordered by the Centre to do so. (ANI)

Inglis avoids conviction over assault

Melbourne Storm and representative centre Greg Inglis has avoided a conviction for assault against his girlfriend.

A Victorian court has ordered the matter be dealt by a diversion program.

Inglis, 23, appeared in the Sunshine Magistrates Court, supported by his girlfriend, Sally Robinson, whom he was accused of pushing in the face at a Maribyrnong home last year.

He was charged with assault, but police have agreed to drop the more serious charge of recklessly causing serious injury.

The court heard the couple had argued, and Inglis pushed his girlfriend back onto the bed with an open hand.

Robert Richter QC told the court that in a statement to police, Ms Robinson said her boyfriend has never hurt her before and she had got in his face.

Previously, the court heard self-defence was an issue, not because Inglis was defending himself, but because he was trying to stop his girlfriend from hurting herself.

The magistrate agreed the assault was born out of frustration and a diversion program was suitable to deal with the matter.

Inglis was ordered to attend a men’s behavioural change program and to pay $3,000 to Women’s Health West.

He issued a statement via the Storm saying that he accepts the court’s ruling.

“It was in the best interests of all parties that I have today accepted the issuing of this diversion order,” he said.

“This was the right decision for Sally’s welfare and privacy.”

Acting Storm chief executive Matt Hanson says the club will continue to offer counselling to Inglis and Ms Robinson.

Carly Ryan killer back in court

A Victorian man found guilty of murdering South Australian teenager Carly Ryan has applied to appeal against his conviction.

Garry Francis Newman, 51, confessed after a jury had convicted him of murder over the teenager’s death at Port Elliot, south of Adelaide.

He was given a mandatory life jail sentence and a 29-year non-parole term.

Newman’s lawyer told the Court of Criminal Appeal he was getting advice from a senior lawyer and needed another six weeks before arguing for an appeal.

The matter was adjourned until next month.

Newman’s identity was only made public on the day the court set his non-parole period.

UPDATE 1-Court sets retrial of Egyptian tycoon for April 26

* Moustafa and security man sentenced to death in May 2009

Stocks

* Retrial ordered after “mistakes” found in verdict

* His lawyer confident new trial will clear him

(Adds comments from lawyers on both sides, background)

By Yasmine Saleh

CAIRO, April 11 (Reuters) – A retrial of Egyptian property tycoon and politician Hesham Talaat Moustafa will start on April 26, an appeal court said on Sunday, after his conviction for the murder of a Lebanese singer was found to be flawed.

A court in March ordered a retrial for Moustafa, a member of parliament for Egypt’s ruling party and former chairman of Talaat Moustafa Group (TMGH.CA). He had been sentenced to death along with security man Muhsen el-Sukkari, whom the tycoon allegedly paid to stab Suzanne Tamim in Dubai.

The case has gripped the Arab world and his conviction and death sentence last year surprised many in Egypt where members of the elite are usually regarded as above the law.

“Cairo Appeal Court … has set April 26 as the date for the retrial of Hesham Talaat Moustafa and (security man) Muhsen el-Sukkari in front of a criminal court,” the court said.

A court on March 4 ordered a retrial, saying the original verdict had “mistakes in implementing the law” and the original court failed to respond to core requests of the defence.

“Every judge has a point of view but no one can disagree on the conviction that is very obvious, and supported by all the evidence presented in the case,” said Reda Ghoneim, the lawyer acting for the husband of Tamim, who was 30 when she died.

Shawkat Ezz el-Din, one of a team of lawyers representing Moustafa and Sukkari, said he was confident his clients would be found not guilty. “We will secure an exoneration with God’s will in four to five sessions,” he said.

A retrial can run for many months in Egypt.

Moustafa was arrested in September 2008, after Tamim’s death in July that year. He was convicted and sentenced to death by a criminal court in May 2009.

Media reports described the murder as an act of revenge after Tamim ended a relationship with Moustafa, who was born in 1959 and is married with children.

If found guilty, Moustafa and Sukkari will again be allowed to appeal the new ruling court and could face a third and final trial if that appeal is accepted, judge Ahmed Mekky, who was involved in the initial appeal process, told Reuters.

Moustafa handed over the chairmanship of property firm Talaat Moustafa Group to his brother Tarek after he was charged, but the share price has often moved with each twist of the case.

There was no big move on Sunday. The company’s shares closed up 0.5 percent on Sunday, after the announcement. The benchmark index ended 2.8 percent higher.

Child welfare under scrutiny

How do two children end up being placed in the home of a convicted sex offender, namely the man who molested their mother?

This is the question it took the ABC weeks and a series of emails and phone calls to get the Department for Child Protection to answer, and still the details are sketchy.

The situation is this.

An eight-year-old boy and his three-year-old sister are unable to be cared for by their mother. So they are placed in their grandparents home.

In 2007, the grandfather is denied a Working with Children Check card because he has a conviction of sexually abusing his daughter.

The Department for Child Protection moves in and removes the children… but just two months later, the Children’s Court overrules the move and awards the grandparents a Parenting Order.

The opposition child protection spokeswoman Sue Ellery says it appears the Department was working against itself.

“It’s completely inconsistent to me that one part of the child protection system deems this man unfit to either work in a paid position or to volunteer with children and the other part of the child protection system deems it appropriate for these children to have daily access and supervision from this man,” Ms Ellery said.

The Department says the only avenue it had was to request a protection order from the court, so it could conduct regular visits to monitor their safety.

It maintains the children were never at any risk and that the grandfather was considered low risk.

But the National Chairwoman of Adults Surviving Child Abuse Cathy Kezelman says regular checks are not enough.

“As we know, the crime of child sexual abuse is a silent crime that occurs in secrecy and in private,” she said.

“So doing checks that come and go can not actually know what’s going on in that household from moment to moment.”

Ms Ellery says under no circumstances should the children have been placed in the home of a sex offender in the first place.

“A man who committed incest with his own daughter ought not be in a position where he has close household access to his grandchildren,” Ms Ellery said.

The Department

When the ABC first contacted the Department about the issue in late March, we were told that the children were safe and were being monitored.

After further questioning, the Department, in a statement, said it was “currently reviewing the case to determine whether it needs to return to the Children’s Court to seek care and protection orders for the children which would bring them under the guardianship of the Department”.

Ms Ellery says the process had taken far too long. She says she raised concerns about it when she was the minister in 2007.

“I certainly had concerns that I discussed with the director general of the department and with various staff including local staff that a man who had a conviction of child abuse against his own daughter was to be given close, domestic access to his own grandchildren, one of whom was a girl.”

The Department has refused to be interviewed over the matter and insisted on responding to questions via email.

The minister Robyn McSweeney declined twice to be interviewed, but after the story ran on ABC radio and television, she broke her silence.

“I won’t defend the indefensible. There is no way that I would condone any child being placed with a known sex offender,” Ms McSweeney said.

And she was quick to point the blame on the opposition.

“I am the first minister to take the children away from this situation.”

And the court also copped some of the blame.

“The department applied for a care and protection order and the courts decided to put the children back with the grandparents.”

“I’m not very impressed with a court system that puts children back in the home of a known sex offender.”

But, the Department won’t confirm it’s role in the court cases and whether its officers representing the children were supporting or opposing their placement into their grandparents home.

Ms Ellery says those questions must be answered.

The interim

Questions were asked as to what the government had been doing to rectify the situation since the children were returned to the home in 2007.

While the initial responses from the Department said the children were safe, the minister later said they’d been busy compiling evidence.

“I had to make damn sure that we had enough ironclad evidence that the department had enough ironclad evidence to go back to court,” Ms McSweeney said.

“And it’s ludicrous that you have to gather evidence to go back to court.”

But Ms Ellery claims the Department was handed evidence in November last year from a community member concerned about the treatment the children were receiving.

A letter from the community members dated November 17, 2009, states they were “horrified with the screaming and shouting from (the grandfather) directed at at the children… and constant crying from the girl.”

It also raised concerns that the children were often left alone in the home with their grandfather, a known paedophile.

The Department responded on November 26, advising them the grandfather “had been assessed as low risk by multiple qualified and experienced professionals, including clinical psychologists and forensic clinical psychologist.”

The letter goes on to say “that there is no further action required from DCP in regards to their concerns… and the DCP will continue to monitor the children…”

Movement

The children were removed from the home last week.

In a statement the Department said: “While in no immediate danger, it was clear that the placement was unsustainable due to the level of care being received by the children and the future risk as the children aged, evidenced by (the grandfather’s) previous convictions.”

The children are now in temporary foster care and the Department must go back to court to get permanent custody of them… but the minister can’t guarantee the court won’t return them to the home again.

Inquiry

Ms McSweeney told a news conference she would look into the circumstances, but the Opposition has called for something much tougher.

“There must be an external, independent inquiry into the circumstances that led the department to reach the conclusion, it now appears on numerous occasions, that this was a safe placement,” Ms Ellery said.

“The minister needs to satisfy the West Australian public that the Department argued strongly that this man should not have the kind of access that he had to his grandchildren and that the department has subsequently taken every every possible legal action to ensure that this man does not have ongoing, close household access to these children.”

Peruvian loses appeal against drug trafficking conviction

A Peruvian man jailed in Queensland over a conspiracy to import almost 90 kilograms of high-grade cocaine has lost an appeal against his conviction and 24-year jail term.

A Supreme Court jury in Brisbane last year convicted Jorge Velarde Silva of conspiring to bring 89 kilograms of cocaine into Australia from Mexico on board the yacht Sparkles Plenty.

The conspiracy, which involved two other men, ran into trouble when the yacht almost sank in Moreton Bay.

Velarde argued his trial judge made mistakes and his sentence was manifestly excessive.

But the Court of Appeal has ruled there were no grounds to overturn the conviction and the sentence emphasised the need for deterrence.

Conviction for 6 phony sick certificates

A former Darwin IT worker at the Defence Department has pleaded guilty to using forged documents for sick leave.

The Darwin Magistrates Court heard Michael Wise, 32, took a total of 10 days’ sick leave over a three-year period.

He provided his employer with six doctors certificates, but his boss became suspicious and realised the certificates were identical, except for the date.

She called the doctor on the certificate, who confirmed Wise had not visited the GP on those dates.

The court heard Wise was paid more than $2000 for his time off.

His lawyer said he was depressed and had done something “very stupid”.

He said Wise was extremely embarrassed and could no longer work in places requiring security clearance.

He was convicted and put on a 12-month good behaviour bond.

Barrister fined over false documents

A former Mildura barrister has avoided a conviction for forging his wife’s signature to make and use false documents.

Ballarat Magistrates Court, in central Victoria, heard Graeme Jackson, 56, set up a company in 1992 to act as a family trust.

He made his then wife Kerryn the director and secretary of the company but did not tell her.

Between 1994 and 2001 he received her tax returns, forged her signature and deposited them on the family home loan.

Jackson pleaded guilty to two counts of making a false document and five counts of using a false document.

The prosecution urged magistrate Peter Couzens to fine and convict Jackson, but his defence lawyer, Ian Hills QC, said his high profile client had already suffered enough through humiliation.

Mr Couzens fined Jackson $5,000 without conviction.

Sex offender concerns raised over children

The Child Protection Minister Robyn McSweeney says she will examine her department’s handling of a case in which serious concerns were raised about the safety of two young children placed in the home of a convicted sex offender.

The girl and boy, aged under 10, were removed from their grandparents’ home in 2007 after it was discovered that the grandfather had a conviction for sexually abusing their mother when she was a child.

The conviction came to light when the grandfather was denied a working with children card.

The Children’s Court later over ruled the move and they went back to the house.

Opposition child protection spokeswoman Sue Ellery says they stayed in that environment for two years.

“There needs to be some kind of investigation as to the circumstances of why that length of time occurred.”

Ms McSweeney says while she can’t defend the decision to leave the children in that situation, the department had to comply with the court’s ruling.

Alerted

Ms Ellery says community members told the department of serious concerns about the childrens’ safety in November last year.

“That department conducted an investigation and still took the view that the placement was safe albeit they were going to add some additional psychological services to the children and ultimately to the grandmother.”

Ms McSweeney has told the ABC she will investigate the claims.

“It certainly paints a not a very nice picture, I’ll say that and that’s all I can do.

“I can check on it and make sure that if that’s what happened then somebody needs to be made accountable in that office.”

‘Outrageous’

Cathy Kezelman from Adults Surviving Child Abuse says the children should never have been placed there.

“I find it outrageous that this has happened, I would really question the thinking here in the child protection system.”

Ms Kezelman says she has serious concerns about the system.

“I believe this needs immediate review. The protection of children is paramount and they need to be kept safe at all costs.”

The Department for Child Protection says the children were never at any risk and they regularly monitored their safety and wellbeing.

A week after enquiries from the ABC, the children were again removed from the house and are now at a foster home.

Priest jailed for altar boy assault

A paedophile Anglican priest has been sentenced to 20 months in jail for sexually abusing an altar boy in the mid-1970s.

Wilfred Edwin Dennis, 74, has been jailed before for similar offences against other altar boys.

The victim, about 15, was assaulted in the robing room of a northern suburbs church.

Adelaide District Court Judge Sydney Tilmouth said Dennis remained in self denial despite the previous conviction.

He said the offence was a gross breach of trust and a prison sentence was needed as a deterrent to others.

Dennis has been given a 12-month non-parole period.

Court allows soap star to chase American dream

A Sydney court has quashed a good behaviour bond imposed on former Home And Away star Todd Lasance who was caught with cocaine last year.

Lasance pleaded guilty to possessing 0.36 grams of cocaine at a Kings Cross nightclub and in January was placed on a 12-month good behaviour bond.

No conviction was recorded.

Lasance’s lawyer today appealed against the severity of the sentence, saying the actor could not go to the United States until his bond had expired.

The court heard Lasance has a good chance of winning roles in the US.

The magistrate agreed to let him off so he can pursue his ambitions overseas.

Earlier this week, Lasance was nominated for a Logie.