Search continues for Melissa Caddick remains
Police are continuing to scour beaches on the NSW south coast for traces of remains of alleged Sydney fraudster
Melissa Caddick, reports the AAP.
Remains have been located at three separate beaches starting with Caddickâs decaying foot which washed ashore south of Tathra on 21 February.
People on popular Mollymook Beach then discovered a chunk of stomach flesh on Friday evening and called police.
Additional remains were found at Cunjurong Point on Saturday afternoon and Warrain Beach at Culburra on Sunday morning.
Police said on Monday evening they would forensically examine the findings to determine if they belonged to 49-year-old Caddick.
Victoria reports two new local Covid cases; missing businesswoman Melissa Caddick found dead; 85% of Australians likely to get vaccinated. Follow latest updates
In July 2018 Black was found guilty of two counts of assault occasioning bodily harm and one count of rape in Brisbane’s district court. He was sentenced to five years in jail, with the sentence to be suspended after 27 months.
When the Guardian contacted One Nation spokesman James Ashby about Black’s employment in January this year, he said he was “not working for us” before hanging up the phone. In a follow up text message, Ashby, who sits on the party’s national executive, said Black “no longer works for us”.
Ashby did not respond to follow up questions, including the extent of Hanson’s role in bringing him back into the One Nation fold or why it was deemed appropriate to rehire him.
Rebekha Sharkie voted with Labor and the Greens against it.
This morning we noted Sharkieâs speech calling on
Christian Porter to break up the bill â so the individual measures can be judged on their merits, an approach Porter has so far eschewed.
Whether that is sustainable will depend on deals with the Senate crossbench. Porter needs three of the five crossbench votes, but senators might be pulling in different directions.
Malcolm Roberts is seeking changes to unfair dismissal laws; Centre Alliance has concerns about flexibilities to change duties and location of work;
Jacqui Lambie has expressed concerns about casualisation.