Bouncer jailed over fast-food restaurant attack

A Victorian County Court judge has jailed a bouncer for at least 12 months for an attack on two teenagers inside a fast-food restaurant last July.

Nathan Karazisis, 24, had been out all night when he and his friends, Mark Bogtstra, 22 and Kon Kontoklotsis, 33, went to Hungry Jack’s in Prahran at about 6:30am.

In the restaurant, the three men bashed James Mitchell. His friend 19-year-old Luke Adams was choked unconcious by Karazisis.

In sentencing Karazisis and Bogtstra, Judge Ross Howie said there was no justification whatsoever for their actions.

The two men pleaded guilty to charges including afray and intentionally causing injury.

Karazisis was sentened to two years and four months with an unparolled period of one year.

Bogtstra must serve a 9 month intensive corrections order.

Kontoklotsis will be sentenced at a later date.

Man jailed for road rage stabbing

A 22-year-old from Sandhurst, south-east of Melbourne, will spend at least two-and-a-half years in jail for stabbing a man in a road rage attack.

The court heard Lawson Odlum repeatedly blocked the path of Barry McKnight along a Sandhurst road in 2008.

When he was confronted over his aggressive driving, the two men fought and Odlum stabbed Mr McKnight with a knife he had strapped to his ankle.

The court heard the 22-year-old had been taking excessive amounts of drugs at the time.

He was found guilty of intentionally causing serious injury and pleaded guilty to recklessly causing injury.

The judge told the Victorian County Court that Odlum had totally over-reacted to a perceived slight.

She said it was an alarming and cowardly attack that scares other drivers.

In sentencing Odlum to five years jail, with a non-parole period of two-and-half years, the judge stressed the case should send a warning to all people who carry knives.

Rapist pleads guilty to three charges

A 47-year-old Melbourne man is facing up to 25 years’ jail after pleading guilty to drugging and raping three women over a 14-year period.

Harry Barkas from South Yarra has pleaded guilty in the Victorian County Court to three counts of rape.

The court heard he drugged his victims, rendering them unconscious and then raped them.

The court was told he was friendly with convicted serial rapist John Xydias and often met his victims through him.

The court heard he used rohypnol to render his victims unconscious before raping them.

Barkas was originally charged with sexually assaulting six women but agreed to plead guilty to three counts of rape on the eve of his trial.

Court jails drug trafficker

The Victorian County Court has sentenced a 46-year-old St Arnaud man to a jail term for drugs trafficking.

Andrew Harold Milton pleaded guilty to charges of trafficking, possessing and using cannabis, as well as dealing with the proceeds of crime.

Police say on January 5 last year they searched a bush block near St Arnaud and found almost eight kilograms of cannabis and sets of electronic scales.

They say when searching his parent’s St Arnaud home, where Milton lives, they found $82,000 in cash.

A psychological report found Milton has an “inadequate personality”.

It said Milton was not a career criminal but a “clueless criminal”.

Judge Murphy sentenced Milton to a total of three years in prison, to serve a minimum of 18 months.

No extra time in jail for teens who attacked Indians: Oz court

MELBOURNE: Two teenage brothers, who spent less than a year in youth detention for a brutal racial attack on a group of Indians which left one of the victims with permanent brain injuries, will not spend any further time in custody, an Australian court ruled on Wednesday.

Victorian county court judge Christine Thornton said the 12-month detention order for the brothers, now aged 17 and 18 respectively, by the Children’s Court last year over the 2008 incident, was lenient but should stand because of the delay in bringing an appeal against the sentence, AAP reported.

Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) had appealed against the sentence given by the children’s court, with chief crown prosecutor Gavin Silbert, SC, describing it as “manifestly inadequate”.

However, judge Thornton confirmed the pair’s original sentence, saying though the punishment was lenient, the brothers’ rehabilitation would be impeded if they were again detained.

“I consider the sentences imposed were lenient for what can only be regarded as serious offending,” Thornton said and re-sentenced the duo, who were not identified, to the same 12-month term, for which they got early parole.

The brothers had in December 2008 carried out an unprovoked attack in an Indian convenience store in Sunshine, where eight men were injured, including one who spent 15 days in coma and was left with permanent brain injuries.

Silbert told the court that the older youth smashed 27-year old Sukhraj Singh with a piece of wood, leaving him unconscious and bleeding with multiple skull and face fractures.

The younger brother is believed to have started the spat, asking the Indian men in the store if they were ‘Singh or Desi’, which the prosecution said was a racist remark.

Silbert said when the Indian men said they were “Singh boys”, he punched one of them without warning.

A group of four co-offenders, including his older brother, entered the store and caused mayhem, assaulting the victims and stealing a till containing several hundred dollars.

The assault was captured on CCTV and when the judge viewed it she said it was very serious attack.

The DPP had asked the county court to re-sentence the older brother to two and a half years and the younger to two years.

“There is a racial motive apparent in this,” Silbert had told the court, adding “the culpability is relatively high.”

He had also called the offence as “extraordinarily grave” and said “it was entirely unprovoked.”

“It was committed in company. It involved weapons,” Silbert had said.

The offenders had admitted to charges of intentionally and recklessly causing serious injury and theft.

Australian court favours release of teenage duo who attacked Indians

MELBOURNE: An Australian court today favoured release of two teenage brothers, who spent less than a year in youth detention for racially assaulting a group of Indians, even as it termed the attack which left one of the victims with permanent brain injuries as “extraordinarily grave”.

Victorian County Court judge Christine Thornton said that because the two, aged 17 and 18, were “children” she should indicate that they would not be locked up again for the December 2008 incident, according to AAP.

However, Thornton described the assault as “extraordinarily grave”.

The re-sentencing of the two boys, who served less than a year in youth detention, is set to take place shortly after Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) appealed against their sentences.

As per the appeal system, Thornton is required to re-sentence the duo, even if she does not increase their jail terms, the report said.

The two brothers carried out an unprovoked attack in an Indian convenience store in Sunshine, where eight men were injured, including one who spent 15 days in coma and was left with permanent brain injuries.

Chief Crown prosecutor Gavin Silbert SC told the court that the older youth smashed 27-year old Sukhraj Singh with a piece of wood, leaving him unconscious and bleeding with multiple skull and face fractures.

Singh had been told his injuries were permanent and there was a chance he would suffer from epilepsy.

Australian Fritzl’s victim ‘took out restraining order against him in 2007′

Melbourne, Sept 18 (ANI): An Australian woman whose father allegedly raped her every day for 30 years had taken out a restraining order against him in 2007 – two years before he was eventually charged.

She was also reportedly pursued by state authorities to pay for damage to a house she fled to escape her father. The revelations come amid claims that neighbours felt intimidated by the man, reports The Daily Telegraph.

“I was terrified of him,” a former neighbour who helped the woman flee in 2007 said.

“One of the other neighbours phoned police years ago. I don’t know what happened then. You have no idea what that family has been through, no idea. Something should have been done a lot sooner. A lot of people knew about this. There are people who should burn in hell,” the neighbour added.

The victim’s 60-year-old Victorian dad, dubbed Australian Fritzl, has been charged with sexually abusing his daughter for three decades and fathering her four children.

He is due to appear in the Victorian County Court in November for a pre-sentence hearing.

In a case echoing those of Austria’s Josef Fritzl and California’s Phillip Garrido, the rapes allegedly took place over a 30-year period, beginning when the girl was 11, Melbourne’s Herald Sun reports, and continued until 2007.

Cops reportedly believe the man threatened to harm the girl’s mother and siblings if they spoke out about the rapes.

One of the four children, a girl, died. Her cause of death was attributed to, among other things, respiratory failure and lung disease, according to the Herald Sun report. The three surviving children reportedly all suffer severe health problems.

The suspect’s wife, the mother of the victim – with whom the suspect, daughter and their children lived until 2005 – maintains she was ignorant of the sex abuse allegedly taking place almost daily.

Fritzl, a 73-year-old Austrian, was sentenced to life in a secure mental unit last March for locking up and raping his daughter in a cellar over 24 years. He fathered seven children with her. (ANI)