Ultra Tune bossâ bikini model ex âspreadâ secret tapes The ex-girlfriend of Ultra Tune tycoon Sean Buckley allegedly shared secret tapes that portray a âviolent attackâ, despite a court order.
News by Ash Argoon
Premium Content
Subscriber only The ex-girlfriend of Ultra Tune tycoon Sean Buckley has been accused of disseminating secret recordings in breach of a court order. Bikini model Jennifer Cruz Cole and the millionaire car repair magnate are locked in a Supreme Court fight over the recordings that portray a violent attack against her, earlier hearings have been told. The court slapped an injunction on Ms Cole in February, preventing her from releasing some 100 tapes of their private conversations.
Adam Margolis was found guilty of murdering girlfriend Mai Yia Vang last month
He met her on Omegle a month before he murdered her on February 24, 2018
Margolis had messaged her sisters after killing Ms Vang pretending to be her
He said she goaded him into attacking her by triggering childhood flashbacks
After killing her he sent a chilling email to his friends confessing to the killing
Advertisement
Lawyers suing security companies that worked in Victoria’s bungled hotel quarantine program need to work out which hotel the COVID-19 strain that killed their client’s father came from before the class action can proceed.
Law firm Arnold Thomas & Becker is pursuing Unified Security Group and MSS Security on behalf of lead plaintiff Dragan Markovic, whose father contracted COVID-19 in a nursing home and died at the end of August in hospital.
The last photo of Dragan Markovic with his father Nenad Markovic before the elderly man s death from COVID-19.
He was among the 800 people who died in Victoria’s second wave, with 99.8 per cent of cases traced to outbreaks in the quarantine program at two of the hotels: the Rydges on Swanston and the Stamford Plaza.
Media editors used Pell reports to pressure judge, court told
Weâre sorry, this service is currently unavailable. Please try again later.
Dismiss
Save
Normal text size
Advertisement
A âcalculated riskâ in early reports about George Pellâs sex assault conviction was, prosecutors argue, an attempt by media companies to pressure a judge into revoking a suppression order.
Fourteen news outlets, including
The Age and
The Sydney Morning Herald, have pleaded guilty to a combined 21 charges of contempt of court for breaching a suppression order over reports published or broadcast in December 2018, in the days after Cardinal Pell was found guilty.