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Women behaving badly: 10 times Bundy women fronted court

Kylah-Raw Rose Foster pleaded guilty to a number of offences including three armed robbery in company, deprivation of liberty and unlawful use of a vehicle to facilitate the commission on an indictable offence. The court heard Foster lured a man to her house where she promised him sexual interaction but when he arrived, three other men in hoods armed with baseball bats appeared. The man was threatened and robbed. Foster received immediate parole and convictions were recorded. Ashley Moras.

Women behaving badly: 10 times Bundy women fronted court

Women behaving badly: 10 times Bundy women fronted court
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LURED ONLINE: The Bundy men tricked by women on internet

A Bundaberg mother avoided time in jail after pleading guilty to a string of offences including luring a man to her home and promising sexual interaction . But there was to be no sexual interaction for the victim, instead, he was met with three men wearing hoods and wielding baseball bats and pieces of timber. The man was robbed and Kylah-Rae Rose Foster, 23, was sentenced to a head sentence of two and a half years imprisonment with an immediate parole release.     A man hoping to get lucky found himself robbed and threatened on the side of the road. Catherine Maria Drury pleaded guilty to counts of theft, extortion and demanding money with threats to injure in the Bundaberg District Court.

EXPOSED: 8 times people s social media use ended in court

Premium Content Subscriber only WHETHER it be Facebook, Instagram, Twitter or Tinder - social media has become an increasing part of our lives. While most use social media for keeping in touch with friends and/or family or business, some have used it to commit or instigate the commission of a crime. Senior Constable Brittany Duncan from Bundaberg Police said one of the most common things police see in relation to social media, was people communicating with people they didn t know. Most online games involve some sort of instant messaging system where people can communicate with each other. This is a large focus when Queensland Police officers deliver cyber safety presentations at local schools, she said.

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