HIV positive Oz circus acrobat may have had ”hundreds of partners”

Melbourne, May 26 (ANI): An Australian circus acrobat, who is HIV positive and who has been accused of knowingly spreading the disease, may have had hundreds of sexual partners.

The case has sparked a national health alert, with authorities urging anyone who had unprotected sex with 32-year-old Godfrey Zaburoni to contact them and undergo an HIV test.

Gold Coast police said the Zimbabwean-born Australian citizen, who has admitted to being HIV positive since 1997, may have had hundreds of sexual partners.

“There could well be many others,” News.com.au quoted Detective Superintendent Dave Hutchinson, who urged anyone with concerns to get tested, as saying.

Asked if there could be hundreds of victims, Det Supt Hutchinson replied: “True.”

“We”re well aware of the fact that Mr Zaburoni has probably had unprotected sex with other people, we would like to identify those people.

“He has had a number of relationships since he”s been in Australia.

“From our investigations it”s only females … some of the women identified have been very short-term relationships.

“The health and welfare issues are the greatest consideration. We would want to speak to those ladies,” he said.

Det Supt Hutchinson said Zaburoni could face life in prison if he was convicted.

Queensland Health said Zaburoni had provided the names of 12 women with whom he”d had unprotected sex in Queensland, NSW and Victoria.

But it warned there may be other cases, including elsewhere in Australia.

Queensland police have set up a task force to track down at-risk women.

To date, Zaburoni is facing only two charges, both relating to the infection of a Gold Coast woman.

He faced Southport Magistrates Court on May 26 on one charge of causing grievous bodily harm and one charge of intending to cause grievous bodily harm. He has been remanded in custody until June 9.

Queensland”s chief health officer Dr Jeannette Young said Zaburoni had spent a lot of time in Queensland since 2000, particularly the Gold Coast and Sunshine Coast.

She said authorities were alerted to the case last year, when a woman came forward and had been forced to make a public appeal.

“Unfortunately we”ve not been able to get enough details about the women he”s had sex with to go to those women directly,” Dr Young explained.

“He”s given us 12 names, we”re starting with that. It”s really about letting women know if they have had unprotected sex with him, they really should go and get tested,” she stated. (ANI)

Brit in court over ”pornographic” sex squid snap

London, May 13 (ANI): A Brit has been charged for possessing pornographic pictures, including one in which a man is seen having sexual intercourse with a squid.

Cops busted Andrew Dymond, 46, after they allegedly discovered pornographic materials on his home computer.

He has been accused of possessing “an extreme pornographic image which portrayed in an explicit and realistic way a person performing an act of intercourse with a dead animal, namely a squid, which was grossly offensive, disgusting or of obscene character”.

Prosecutors amended the charge when it was admitted it could have been an octopus in the picture.

Swansea magistrates court said the sea animal was dead when the man was pictured having sexual intercourse with it.

Also, he faces 14 charges of making indecent images of children, reports the Sun.

Dymond, of Mumbles, Swansea, owned photographs of people having sex with dogs and horses too.

Prosecutor Anwen Evans said he has total of 24 charges against him.

However, he has been granted bail but is prohibited from using the internet or getting in contact with any child under the age of 16. (ANI)

KFC restaurant fined £19K for harbouring cockroaches, flies!

London, May 11 (ANI): Fast food chain KFC has been fined 19,000 pounds after one of its busy restaurants was found to be harbouring cockroaches and flies.

An environmental health officer at the Leicester Square branch in London saw the insects, reports the Daily Star.

City of Westminster Magistrates’ Court also heard there was no soap in the food preparation area.

KFC admitted breaching five hygiene rules following the inspection in August 2008. (ANI)

Man pleads guilty to punching police officer

A man has pleaded guilty to punching a police officer in a Katherine nightclub in an incident which led to the death of another policeman.

Aaron James Vale, 28, pleaded guilty to aggravated assault for punching Constable Kevin Carr at a Katherine nightclub in the early hours of New Years Day.

The Katherine Magistrates Court heard Constable Carr and Sergeant Brett Meredith were off-duty when they intervened in an argument between some men.

Constable Carr tried to move one man away from the bar area, but Vale punched him, and he fell unconcious to the ground.

The court heard Vale then tripped over Sergeant Meredith, who was also lying unconcious on the floor.

Sergeant Meredith later died from his injuries.

Another man, Michael Martyn, is facing a committal hearing next week over Sergeant Merediths death.

Vale will be sentenced later this month.

Police recruit facing assault charge

A police recruit has been arrested and charged with assault.

The man, 38, is due to face Elizabeth Magistrates Court.

Court officer’s identity theft jail term reduced

A former court officer who was found guilty of stealing a colleague’s identity has had her jail sentence reduced.

In February, 21-year-old Taylie Jade Sweeney was sentenced in the Darwin Magistrates Court to serve two months behind bars for stealing the colleague’s identity to obtain money.

Today, she won an appeal in the Northern Territory Supreme Court, arguing that part of her sentence was manifestly excessive.

The judge reduced her actual jail term to two weeks.

The court heard Sweeney is seven months pregnant and she has 14 days to surrender herself to the court.

Science used in attempted jail break

A Queensland prisoner has apparently used a science trick in an attempt to escape from his cell at the Lotus Glen prison, west of Cairns.

The 29-year-old inmate, serving a life sentence for murder, successfully breached the bars of his cell window about 1.30 am (AEST) yesterday.

But the man, who has been in jail for seven years, was caught attempting to escape a second meshed cage.

It is understood he corroded his cell bars over several months by putting salt water on them and conducting an electric current to them by inserting a one-metre length of wire into a power point and attaching it to the bars with electrical tape.

He was caught after a guard saw a light coming from the cell and went to check on him.

A Corrective Services spokesman said an investigation has been launched into how the man breached the bars.

The prisoner has been charged with attempting to escape custody and will appear in Brisbane Magistrates Court on May 10.

Policeman admits illegal steroid importation

A Northern Territory police officer has escaped criminal conviction for importing a prohibited drug into Australia.

Constable Sandor Bolgar, 33, pleaded guilty in the Darwin Magistrates Court to importing 15 satchets that contained testosterone last October.

The court heard Customs officers intercepted the drugs in the mail, and he initially lied to police about the drugs.

His lawyer told the court the constable bought the steroids over the internet because he was feeling run down at work.

The magistrate said the police officer had since been prescribed similar steroids by a doctor, and she ordered him to serve a 12-month good behaviour bond.

Fishermen not respecting sacred sites, court told

A court has heard commercial barramundi fishermen are not respecting sacred Aboriginal sites in the Northern Territory.

Commercial barramundi fisherman Darren Murray was this morning fined $5,000 after pleading guilty to setting up a gill net on a sacred site in the Blyth River in northern Arnhem Land.

The Darwin Magistrates Court heard Murray deliberately entered the river mouth, which has been a registered sacred site since 1985.

In a submission to the court, traditional owners said they have had problems with commercial fishermen for a long time, as “they sneak in and out of the estuary at night”.

They said fisherman did not respect Aboriginal law or culture.

They said when fishermen entered the sacred site, “it’s like a curse. We get sick and our children get sick” and their “dreamings will be chased away”.

Murray’s lawyer, Peter Maley, told the court that the fisherman has had trouble selling his wild barramundi catch because of the flood of “cheap imports coming in from Indonesia” and “restaurants preferring to buy that at a significantly reduced price.”

Mr Maley said the Territory’s wild barramundi industry was “under siege” from imports.

He said Murray was going to get out of the fishing industry because of this pressure.

The court heard Murray has been to court for two similar offences in the past decade.

Demolition firm faces asbestos prosecution

A Geraldton demolition company is facing charges of failing to handle asbestos material properly .

Earlier this year, the City of Geraldton Greenough confirmed rubble dumped behind the Geraldton Grammar School contained asbestos.

Yesterday in the Geraldton Magistrates Court, the city began prosecution action against Softail Proprietary Limited.

Lawyers representing the company yesterday requested a 21-day adjournment.

The company is due back in court on May 6.

Sailors bailed for bulk carrier detour

Three foreign sailors who were arrested in connection with a bulk carrier that entered a restricted area of the Great Barrier Reef have been granted bail in a north Queensland court.

The Australian Federal Police (AFP) allege that the Japanese-owned MV Mimosa entered the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park near Bowen, off the North Queensland coast, on April 4.

It is alleged the ship entered the area without registering with the Reef Vessel Tracking System and failed to provide a pre-entry report.

The 63-year-old South Korean ship master and two Vietnamese officers aged 26 and 32 years, were arrested by the AFP on Saturday and face a number of charges including conduct in a zone that is prohibited.

The men have been granted bail to reappear in the Townsville Magistrates Court for mention on Friday.

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.

Langer escapes recorded conviction

Rugby league great Allan Langer has dodged a recorded conviction for drink-driving after a Brisbane court accepted it would hurt his coaching career.

But Langer has been fined $1,000 and disqualified from driving for eight months.

Langer had been suspended by the Brisbane Broncos, where he was employed as a skills coach, however the club announced the suspension had been lifted following the court’s ruling.

The Broncos released a statement saying Langer could resume his role with the club as early as tomorrow, as they felt the penalties imposed by the court were sufficient.

The 43-year-old faced the Brisbane Magistrates Court on Monday where he pleaded guilty to a charge of drink-driving following the Broncos’ heavy loss to the Warriors last month.

He did not talk to waiting media and was whisked from the court in a car. His lawyer Peter Shields was left to deliver a statement on his behalf.

The court was told on Monday that Langer blew 0.156 – three times the legal limit – when he was pulled over at Everton Park in north Brisbane early on March 29.

The former Broncos half-back was on his way home to the Sunshine Coast after a drinking session at the Normanby Hotel, where he famously danced on the bar in his underpants.

The court was told Langer consumed eight to 10 XXXX Gold beers and some vodka and Red Bulls before getting into his car, intending to drive home to the Sunshine Coast.

He consumed his last drink 45 minutes to an hour before he was pulled over, the court was told.

Police prosecutor Sgt Robin Rochfort argued that Langer deserved to have a conviction recorded against him.

But Mr Shields, for Langer, said it would have a long-term, detrimental impact on the League great’s coaching career, which involved travel to New Zealand and other locations overseas.

The Magistrate Alan Taylor agreed, and thanked Langer for his early guilty plea which entitled him to “some discount”.

“There is enough of a basis … that some future detriment would be likely if a conviction were recorded,” the magistrate told Langer.

Outside the court, Mr Shields said Langer’s guilty plea was an apology for his behaviour.

“He has apologised by pleading guilty,” the lawyer told reporters.

“He’s accepted he did the wrong thing.”

Six people charged for allegedly assaulting police

Six people have been charged after allegedly assaulting two police officers at Mornington Island in Queensland’s Gulf country.

The officers were called to a disturbance on Saturday night and attempted to arrest a woman for illegally possessing alcohol.

The officers were not seriously injured but their police car was damaged.

The group of four men and two women have been charged with a range of offences including serious assault of police, wilful damage and riot.

They are expected to appear in the Mount Isa Magistrates Court this morning.

Sailors front court over entering Reef waters

Three foreign sailors will appear in the Townsville Magistrates Court in north Queensland this morning charged with entering restricted waters on the Great Barrier Reef.

Australian Federal Police (AFP) searched the Asian-owned MV Mimosa yesterday and seized navigational equipment and charts.

The three sailors from Korea and Vietnam were arrested and taken off the ship.

The MV Mimosa was allegedly 50 nautical miles off course and outside a designated shipping channel when it was picked up on its way to a coal terminal near Bowen last weekend.

The AFP also allege the crew ignored warnings and has not registered with the Reef Vessel Tracking System.

Queensland Transport Minister Rachel Nolan says an unauthorised shipping route allegedly used by the foreign bulk carrier was in a “complicated” and “highly sensitive” area of the Great Barrier Reef.

Ms Nolan says the master and two crewmen are due in the Townsville Magistrates Court this morning.

“The idea that a ship was totally out of place and not making contact with the authorities is a very serious matter,” she said.

“That’s why federal authorities are investigating, that’s why the ship’s crew have been arrested, and that’s why they’ll appear in court.

Langer’s court date brought forward

Suspended Brisbane Broncos assistant coach Allan Langer will appear in the Brisbane’s Magistrates Court on Monday on a drink-driving charge.

The NRL club stood down its former champion half-back late last month after he returned a blood alcohol reading allegedly three times the legal limit, several hours after the Broncos’ heavy loss to the Warriors.

Langer’s legal representatives succeeded in having his hearing brought forward from April 19 to settle the matter.

The Broncos suspended Langer the day he was breath-tested and officials said they would review his appointment once he had appeared in court.

Chief executive Bruno Cullen was unaware of the change in court dates for Langer.

Brisbane has lost to the Roosters and St George Illawarra since Langer was stood down for what the club described as “unacceptable” actions.

At the time, Cullen refused to be drawn on Langer’s future but made it clear he did not want the former great to be “punished more severely than any other normal citizen would be”.

“Whatever happens it won’t be a [ban] for life thing,” Cullen said.

“Alf’s a wonderful icon of our code and of our club and of the sport.

“We’d certainly look forward to him being around some time in the future anyway.”

Langer is hoping to be back at Lang Park next Sunday.

Man fronts Ipswich court charged with murder

A 36-year-old man has appeared in court charged with the murder of Amanda Quirk from Ipswich west of Brisbane.

Christopher James Swan from Lawnton north of Brisbane has been remanded in custody to appear in the Ipswich Magistrates Court again next month.

Ms Quirk who was 32 was reported missing on Tuesday.

Police say a woman’s body found in northern New South Wales yesterday is yet to be formally identified.

A 32-year-old woman from Ipswich has been charged with being an accessory after the fact.

Cricket selector denies sex charge

Tasmanian cricket selector Glenn Hughes has pleaded not guilty to charges of sexually assaulting a woman in Perth.

Mr Hughes is facing two charges of assaulting the woman, at a hotel the beachside suburb of Scarborough in October last year.

He appeared in the Perth Magistrates Court today via a video link from Hobart.

Mr Hughes bail was renewed and he is due to appear in the District Court in Perth in June.

He has been stood down by Cricket Tasmania.

Woman arrested for ‘sleeping’ while driving

A woman has been arrested after police found her asleep at the wheel of her car at an intersection in Alice Springs this morning.

Police found the 30-year-old woman asleep in her sedan at the intersection of Tietkins Avenue and the Stuart Highway just before 7am.

Police said the car’s engine was running and the lights were on.

The woman was arrested and was found to have a blood alcohol level of 0.226 per cent.

She was charged with high-range drink-driving and unlicensed driving.

She has been bailed to appear in the Alice Springs Magistrates Court on May 13.

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.