Dump search fails to uncover murder clues

A police search of three Sydney rubbish dumps is yet to uncover any clues to help investigators hunting for the killer of nurse Michelle Beets.

Ms Beets, 57, was stabbed to death on the front verandah of her Chatswood home last Tuesday night.

Police received information on Tuesday suggesting the killer may have dumped evidence in a Chatswood bin the day after the attack.

More than 50 police officers spent yesterday sifting through garbage at tips in Artarmon, Lucas Heights and Eastern Creek.

Detective Acting Superintendent Mick Sheehy says there is about 300 tonnes of rubbish to comb through.

“At this stage I can say there has been no items located which we can suggest are connected to this crime,” he said.

“I’m not going to speculate or comment on what items it is we are searching for.”

Detective Sheehy said the search will continue throughout the night.

Police have described Ms Beets’s murder as callous and vicious.

A funeral for the Royal North Shore Hospital emergency nurse is expected to be held later this week.

Detectives have been looking for a man seen running from the scene with a green hooded top and a backpack. So far nobody has been arrested.

Anyone with information can contact police via CrimeStoppers on 1800 333 000.

‘Out of box’ approach helped doctors remove leech from Oz woman’s eyeball

Melbourne, Apr 20 (ANI): Just by thinking ‘out of box’, doctors successfully removed a leech, which was attached to an Australian woman’s eyeball.

The leech made its way to the 66-year-old woman’s eye while she was gardening in the backyard of her suburban Sydney home in March last year and accidentally flicked some moist soil and the blood-sucking organism into her left eye.

Her husband saw the leech wriggling its way over her cornea, as it headed for safety and feed via the eye’s mass of delicate blood vessels.

“It was tucked up underneath her upper eyelid,” News.com.au quoted emergency doctor Toby Fogg, who helped to remove the blood-sucking critter, as saying.

He added: “Our little fellow started off at about half a centimetre and by the time we removed it it was about 2cm long – it had quite a good lunch.”

Knowing that pulling the leech out with tweezers could leave its head lodged in the eyeball, the doctors considered two other suggestions-using an anaesthetic on the eye to put the leech to sleep, or salted water.

While numbing the eyeball had no effect on the leech, salt crystals could be “abrasive to the eyeball.”

And finally, doctors turned to a hospital staple – saline solution, which has many uses, including being used in intravenous drips for people who lack enough salt in their blood.

Fogg said: “We thought `well why don’t we try this`, it’s just thinking outside the box.

“It is available, cheap, and safe as far as using it on the eye is concerned and it worked beautifully, with just a few drops.

“The leech rolled straight off, it just fell on to her cheek so we put it in a pot and gave it to her.”

And now, Fogg and his colleagues at Sydney’s Royal North Shore Hospital have recommended saline solution for the treatment of people with leeches on their eyeballs.

The unusual case report is published in Emergency Medicine Australasia, the journal of the Australasian College for Emergency Medicine. (ANI)