Tag Archives: oceania

New scam draining entire bank accounts

There's a new Australian Tax Office scam sweeping Australia, draining victims of their entire bank accounts.

The ATO has issued a warning following a spike in automated scam calls impersonating the tax office, claiming they've suspended their target's tax file number following suspected fraudulent activity.

Assistant Commissioner Trent Jakubowski has condemned the fraudsters saying "while the number of people paying these scammers is low, the large amounts being lost per person is alarming".

READ MORE: Tax office currently investigating 14 attempts to fraudulently claim JobKeeper payments.

Since the start of 2021, the ATO has received 638 reports of this scam, with 7 victims paying out nearly $118,000.

Young adults between 18-24 have been targeted heavily in the scam, an unusual change in tactics from focusing on the elderly. One victim last week lost $36,000 after transferring scammers their entire bank balance.

"We're seeing that instead of scammers asking for a specific amount of money, they're requesting victims transfer every last dollar in their bank account."

"What's most malicious, is that in some cases, these scammers are stealing money under the guise of saving it from other fraudsters trying to access their account," Mr Jakubowski said.

The ATO has warned there are two main scripts the scammers are using;

–          Your TFN has been suspended as scammers have your TFN details. You need to transfer all your money to the ATO in order to protect it while we sort it out

–          Your TFN has been used illegally and you need to move all the money in your bank account to a holding account pending the outcome of legal action

READ MORE: JobKeeper payments slashed: How much employees will receive in 2021.

"This is a reminder for everyone to keep their guard up when answering an unexpected call. While we more often hear stories of older Australians being targeted by scammers, these devastating losses show that anyone can be a target," Mr Jakubowski said.

Brittany Higgins takes rape allegations to federal police

Brittany Higgins will make a formal complaint with the Australian Federal Police over the night in which she alleges she was raped by a colleague within Parliament House.

In a statement today, Ms Higgins said she took her story public to achieve change for how the Australian Parliament handles incidents of sexual assault and for her alleged perpetrator to face the full force of the law.

"The Australian Federal Police have made assurances to me that they will handle this matter thoroughly and transparently. I would also ask that they handle it in a timely manner as to date, I have waited a long time for justice," Ms Higgins said in the statement.

READ MORE: Morrison denies knowing about alleged rape two years ago

Brittany Higgins.

"Secondly, given my experience, I am determined to drive significant reform in the way the Australian Parliament handles issues of this nature and treats ministerial and parliamentary staff more generally."

A full copy of Ms Higgins' statement can be read below.

She said she was "failed repeatedly" by leaders within the parliament and will now use her voice to ensure it will never happen again to another member of staff.

READ MORE: Peter Dutton says Brittany Higgins 'had a lot of support'

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has said he was told of the alleged rape of Brittany Higgins on Monday.

Ms Higgins referred to Prime Minister Scott Morrison's comments within parliament that she should be given "agency".

"I don't believe that agency was provided to me over the past two years but I seize it now and have advised the Prime Minister's Office that I expect a voice in framing the scope and terms of reference for a new and significant review into the conditions for all ministerial and parliamentary staff," Ms Higgins wrote.

"It is important that the reform is real and drives change beyond dealing with just what happened to me, and how the system let me down."

READ MORE: Ministerial office steam-cleaned just hours after alleged rape of staffer

Brittany Higgins on her first day working at Parliament House in Canberra.

The handling of Ms Higgins' case has been a flashpoint for the Morrison government, who have been accused of mishandling her complaint due to its volatility prior to an election.

Mr Morrison has denied being aware of Ms Higgins' complaint until it made major news networks earlier this week.

Ms Higgins said she does not intend to make further comment as she deals with the processes involved in making a formal complaint.

"This has been a very difficult and trying week for me, my partner and my family," Ms Higgins wrote.

"I would ask please that my privacy is respected as I now deal with the processes I have outlined in this statement. I do not intend to make any further public comment at this time."

READ MORE: Lambie calls for defence minister 'to step down' after alleged rape of staffer

Hyperlink here https://www.9news.com.au/national/how-to-follow-9news-digital/29855bb1-ad3d-4c38-bc25-3cb52af1216f

Brittany Higgins' statement in full:

Today I have reengaged with Australian Federal Police and will proceed with a formal complaint regarding the crime committed against me in what should be the safest building in Australia.

By publicly coming forward with my experience in Parliament House, I've sought to achieve two things.

Firstly, I want a comprehensive police investigation into what happened to me on 22/23 March 2019 and for my perpetrator to face the full force of the law.

The Australian Federal Police have made assurances to me that they will handle this matter thoroughly and transparently. I would also ask that they handle it in a timely manner as to date, I have waited a long time for justice.

Secondly, given my experience, I am determined to drive significant reform in the way the Australian Parliament handles issues of this nature and treats ministerial and parliamentary staff more generally.

I expect a truly independent investigation into how my matter was handled inside the government including offices where I worked, and other offices and parties that had knowledge of my circumstances.

I believe that getting to the bottom of what happened to me and how the system failed me is critical to creating a new framework for political staff that ensures genuine cultural change and restores the trust of staff.

In addition to an independent investigation into what happened to me, I demand a significant review into the conditions under which ministerial and parliamentary staff are employed and how we can do better.

Political advisers have very few protections, resources and confidential reporting mechanisms to address any workplace issues. They are not public servants and work in an extremely high-pressure environment. Too often, a toxic workplace culture can emerge that enables inappropriate conduct and this is exacerbated by the disparity in the power dynamics.

How ministerial and parliamentary staff are treated is a bipartisan issue that impacts staff from across the political spectrum and must be treated as such.

The Prime Minister has repeatedly told the Parliament that I should be given 'agency' going forward. I don't believe that agency was provided to me over the past two years but I seize it now and have advised the Prime Minister's Office that I expect a voice in framing the scope and terms of reference for a new and significant review into the conditions for all ministerial and parliamentary staff. It is important that the reform is real and drives change beyond dealing with just what happened to me, and how the system let me down.

From the outset, I have driven by my desire to ensure that no other person would have to go through the trauma that I experienced during my time in Parliament House.

I was failed repeatedly, but I now have my voice, and I am determined to use to ensure that this is never allowed to happen to another member of staff again.

This has been a very difficult and trying week for me, my partner and my family. I would ask please that my privacy is respected as I now deal with the processes I have outlined in this statement. I do not intend to make any further public comment at this time.

US lets in asylum-seekers stuck in Mexico, ends Trump policy

After waiting months and sometimes years in Mexico, people seeking asylum in the United States are being allowed into the country starting Friday as they wait for courts to decide on their cases, unwinding one of the Trump administration’s signature immigration policies that President Joe Biden vowed to end.

The number of asylum-seekers coming in initially will be very limited, beginning Friday at a border crossing in San Diego and expanding to Brownsville, Texas, on Monday and El Paso, Texas, next Friday.

US officials are warning people not to come to the U.S.-Mexico border, saying an estimated 25,000 people with active cases in the “Remain in Mexico" program and several hundred who are appealing decisions should register on a website that the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees is launching early next week.

READ MORE: NY district attorney adds veteran prosecutor in bid to take down Trump

The International Organisation for Migration, the U.N. migration agency, plans to test asylum-seekers for COVID-19 and will quarantine anyone who tests positive for 10 days before they enter the United States.

A Customs and Border Control agent patrols on the US side of a razor-wire-covered border wall along the Mexico east of Nogales, Arizona.

Friday marks a key milestone in unraveling one of former President Donald Trump's cornerstone policies to deter people from seeking protection from persecution and returns the US asylum system to the way it worked for decades. But there are unanswered questions, including how Central Americans who returned home will get back to the US-Mexico border.

It's also unclear how long it will take to work through more than 25,000 active Remain in Mexico cases, with the oldest going first. US officials say two of the border crossings can each handle up to 300 people a day and a smaller crossing can take fewer, but they will start well below those numbers. The officials didn't specify the crossings.

Biden is quickly making good on a campaign promise to end the policy known officially as “Migrant Protection Protocols,” which Trump said was critical to reversing a surge of asylum-seekers that peaked in 2019.

READ MORE: Guns, knives, bombs and bear spray among weapons confiscated in US Capitol riot

The program exposed people to violence in Mexican border cities and made it extremely difficult for them to find lawyers and communicate with courts about their cases.

About 70,000 asylum-seekers were part of the program since it started in January 2019. Asylum-seekers whose cases were dismissed or denied are not eligible to return to the country, but US officials have not ruled out some form of relief later.

A Cuban migrant family is detained by National Guard soldiers along the Rio Grande in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, on  February 16, 2021.

The Biden administration, which stopped enrolling new arrivals on its first day, said last week that asylum-seekers with active cases would be released in the United States with notices to appear in immigration courts closest to their final destinations. It brought huge relief to those who are eligible, while US and UN officials urged against a rush to the border.

Nearly 100 people waited for hours Wednesday in Tijuana, Mexico, at a border crossing with San Diego before a Mexican immigration official took questions about the policy change.

Edwin Gomez, who said his wife and 14-year-old son were killed by gangs in El Salvador after he couldn't pay extortion fees from his auto repair shop, was eager to join his 15-year-old daughter in Austin, Texas. She already won asylum and is living with family.

“Who thought this day would come?” Gomez, 36, said with a smile. “I never thought it would happen.”

READ MORE: Trump labels America's election like a 'third world country'

Across the border from Texas' Rio Grande Valley, Enda Marisol Rivera of El Salvador and her 10-year-old son have been braving below-freezing temperatures this week, snuggling under piles of donated blankets in their makeshift tent of tarps. Their propane gas stove froze, she said. Despite the added hardship from the Arctic blast that hit Texas and northern Mexico, Rivera was in good spirits and closely watching the news.

Migrants walk on train tracks on their journey from Central America to the US border in Palenque, Chiapas state, Mexico, Wednesday, Febuary 10, 2021.

Rivera and her son are among about 1,000 migrants living in the tent camp in a sprawling park just south of the Rio Grande in the Mexican city of Matamoros. About 850 of them have applied for asylum and were told to wait in Mexico for their court dates.

Many in the camp turned down offers this week to be transferred to city shelters, fearing they would lose their chance at being allowed into the United States if they didn't stay close to the border. The bitter cold was just another burden for those who fled violence in their homelands and are living in limbo. Some have been waiting for more than two years.

Rivera was hopeful she would be allowed to come to the United States, where she could live with her sister in Los Angeles as her case wound through immigration court.

“We have faith in God that we will be allowed in," she said Wednesday. “We have already spent enough time here.”

Migrants waiting to cross into the United States wait for news at the border crossing Wednesday, February 17, 2021, in Tijuana.

Nongovernmental organisations, including Jewish Family Service of San Diego and Global Response Management working in Matamoros and Brownsville, will play crucial roles in arranging temporary shelter and transportation once asylum-seekers enter the US.

“This problem was years in the making, and they’re trying to find solutions, but they are dealing with things coming up in real time,” said Andrea Leiner, spokeswoman for Global Response Management, which has been providing medical care at the camp in Matamoros.

“I do think we need to give a little patience and leeway to sort this out as the actors involved get the plans in place to start doing this in a safe and effective manner.”

But she said everyone is also on edge, especially asylum-seekers.

“People are incredibly hopeful that this is their chance to get across, but there also is a lot of anxiety and fear that somehow if they do the wrong thing and they’re not at the right place at the right time, they might miss out,” Leiner said.

Mystery caller provides information on missing mother's location

Police have urged a mystery caller who contacted authorities about the location of missing Melbourne mother Ju "Kelly" Zhang to call back again.

The anonymous caller phoned Crime Stoppers yesterday morning, providing details on the 33-year-old's whereabouts.

Detectives have appealed for the caller who provided the information to make contact again.

READ MORE: Drug kingpin Tony Mokbel hires George Pell's lawyer

"A person called Crime Stoppers anonymously … and provided details of Ju's location," a Victoria Police spokesperson said.

"Investigators are urging that person to call back and provide further information or to make contact with detectives."

The mother was last seen at her home on Winchester Avenue in Epping about 5.30pm on February 1.

She was believed to be wearing a pink nightgown and possibly pink slippers at the time.

Ms Zhang's partner, Joon Seong Tan, 35, has since been charged with her murder.

Mr Tan was arrested on February 10 after police found him at Melbourne Airport.

The investigation into the matter remains ongoing.

Anyone with information about Ju's disappearance is urged to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

Jury unable to reach verdict in Harry Little trial

Gai Vieira's husband has fought back tears after a jury was unable to reach a verdict in the trial of Senior Constable Harry Little, charged over the crash at Cronulla in 2018.

The jury took a little over a day before they told the court they were deadlocked despite deliberations which were "courteous, open and respectful".

Mr Little had been pursuing a driver who was spotted using a mobile phone along the Kingsway in September 2018.

READ MORE: Drug kingpin Tony Mokbel hires George Pell's lawyer for freedom bid

His fully marked police car hit 122.8 km/h in a 70 zone before he braked to get around an L plate driver.

The court heard he then accelerated again and hit 135.4 km/h one to two seconds before the collision.

He braked moments before impact but struck the driver's side door of Ms Vieira's Mercedes as she turned right onto the busy thoroughfare.

Ms Vieira was taken to hospital but suffered a "severe brain injury from which she will likely never recover".

The court heard the in-car video was activated but the eight seconds before the impact is missing.

"Inquiries determined that the footage was missing because the media cartridge for the in-car video ejected at the time of either the heavy braking right before the crash or at the time of the crash," Prosecutor Carl Young told the court.

READ MORE: The attack that made half of Darwin's residents leave for good

https://twitter.com/KellyFedor/status/1362610729493274627

On the way to Cronulla Police Station, Mr Little allegedly told an officer "I didn't have time to get my lights on.  She just came out in front of me". 

But when Mr Little gave evidence he told the court he had no memory of that conversation.

"At the time I believed that they were on, but I accept they weren't."

He claimed he had experienced occasions before when he thought he had pressed the button only to find it hadn't work and the car he was indicating to, hadn't pulled over.

"These panels or these buttons don't always respond in the manner that the operator expects and that evidence will go to this issue of whether it's possible for a police officer … to believe he activated his lights without actually doing so," Mr Little's barrister Hament Dhanji SC told the court.

The case will be mentioned next week to determine any plans for a re-trial.

Drug kingpin Tony Mokbel hires George Pell's lawyer for freedom bid

Convicted drug kingpin Tony Mokbel could have his bid for freedom heard by Victoria's highest court in July.

Mokbel has now hired the lawyer who helped Cardinal George Pell quash his conviction in the High Court.

READ MORE: Three family members in Victoria have coronavirus

READ MORE: Man allegedly shoots girlfriend's ex-partner in 'love triangle' incident

His defence hopes the betrayal he suffered at the hands of police informer Nicola Gobbo will overturn his 30-year drug trafficking sentence.

The Court of Appeal said Mokbel's case would be heard as a matter of priority.