2012年3月4日星期日

Police link tourist's death to illegal buttock enhancer - TheChronicleHerald.ca

PHILADELPHIA — A woman who calls herself the "Black Madam" could face charges in the death of a London tourist who received illegal buttocks-enhancement injections last year in a Philadelphia hotel, police said Thursday.

Padge Victoria Windslowe, 42, was arrested Wednesday night as she prepared to host a "pumping party" where she was to illegally inject clients, according to police. She faces charges including aggravated assault and deceptive practices after one of her clients, an exotic dancer, suffered serious lung problems after an injection, Philadelphia police Lt. John Walker said. Windslowe was arraigned Thursday and was being held on bail of $10 million, prosecutors said.

Windslowe is a "person of interest" in the death of the 20-year-old London woman who last year received injections at a hotel near Philadelphia International Airport, Walker said.

He said she will likely be charged with murder in that case if the medical examiner rules Windslowe’s injection caused the death of Claudia Aderotimi, who complained of chest pain and difficulty breathing following the procedure. No charges have been filed.

"We knew she was the injector back in the 2011 (Aderotimi) case," Walker said, adding that the investigation has lingered as police awaited a ruling on the cause of Aderotimi’s death.

A message left for an attorney who has represented Windslowe was not returned Thursday. She declined to comment as police escorted her to a waiting police car Wednesday night.

In Windslowe’s case, investigators describe an operation in which she had "recruiters" who went out in search of people who wanted buttocks enhancement, reaching out to potential clients via email, blogs and conversations, Walker said.

Then, they would set up a time and place to meet, usually at a hotel or private residence, Walker said. The procedures cost anywhere from $700 to $1,800 in cash. Windslowe allegedly moved her operation around to avoid detection. Overall, police believe Windslowe has injected about 14 people, mostly advertising through word of mouth, Walker said, with the operation moving all around the Philadelphia area.

As part of the procedures, authorities said, Windslowe would clean the site and then inject a substance she described as silicone into the client’s buttocks. When the procedure was done, she would cover the wound with glue, Walker said.

During the arrest, police seized vials of superglue, needles, gloves, bottles and other items. Walker said police are conducting tests on the material that Windslowe was allegedly injecting into her clients, trying to determine what it is.

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Study backs a north Queensland abattoir - Brisbane Times

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2012年3月2日星期五

Opposition critical of Government future fund - ABC Online

Posted February 22, 2012 20:54:23

The State Opposition has criticised the Government's plans for a future fund.

The Premier Colin Barnett says the fund, made up largely of mining royalty earnings, will be set up as part of the next State Budget.

Mr Barnett says a small portion of the royalties will be stored to pay for long-term services, while part of the Royalties for Regions funding will be saved for future regional projects

The Shadow Treasurer Ben Wyatt has described the proposal as a 'thought bubble'.

He told State Parliament there is no point to it if WA's debt level continues to grow.

"What is your rate of return? What do you expect?" Mr Wyatt asked.

"Because at the end of the day Madam Acting Speaker, when you have a huge debt component on the balance sheet, which this state does, and it's growing, what is the point if you can't generate a rate of return greater than the cost of that debt?"

Mr Barnett rejected Mr Wyatt's claims.

"Peter Costello set up a future fund at the time there was still net debt of the Commonwealth government," he said.

"I mean they are unrelated.

"One is a big picture view; one is a small and miserly, selfish, this-generation view."

Topics: government-and-politics, state-parliament, perth-6000

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Wayne Swan pulls no punches after Kevin Rudd quits as Foreign Minister - The Australian

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2012年3月1日星期四

Membrey dad tells his story after 17 years - Ninemsn

Roger Membrey left a message on his daughter's answering machine that was never returned.

He found her Ringwood flat dark when he arrived on a hot December 1994 night to search for her.

But inside Elisabeth Membrey's flat he saw a pool of blood on the hallway carpet.

Mr Membrey has not heard from his daughter since.

Finally, on Wednesday, Mr Membrey got to tell his story to a Victorian Supreme Court murder trial.

He told jurors how his daughter, a recent arts graduate from La Trobe University majoring in politics, was a "very fine woman".

Mr Membrey described how his daughter wanted to become a broadcast journalist and how she had been in discussion with a network, but was killed before it could be finalised.

"People were drawn to her because she was a happy person. She had the personality that people liked, they enjoyed talking with her," Mr Membrey said.

As Mr Membrey gave his evidence the man accused of killing his daughter - 45-year-old Shane Andrew Bond - sat just a few metres away at the back of the court.

He has pleaded not guilty and his barrister has told the jury that key witnesses in the case had an axe to grind with Bond and their accounts could not be believed.

Mr Membrey can't remember the last time he saw his daughter. She would call in often, he told the trial.

On December 7, 1994, he called his daughter about lunchtime. Elisabeth Membrey had an appointment with a medical specialist and he was surprised he hadn't heard from her.

Mr Membrey left a message on her answering machine asking her to give him a call.

His wife Joy called Ms Membrey about 6pm to invite her out to dinner. There was no answer and she too left a message.

After dinner they received a call from Ms Membrey's boyfriend Jason Lee saying he hadn't been able to catch up with her and wondering if she was with her parents.

The Membreys began searching.

They checked the car park of the Manhattan Hotel where Ms Membrey worked, but her car was not there.

So they drove to her flat in Bedford Rd, Ringwood.

Ms Membrey's car was parked in her usual spot.

They rang the doorbell and no one answered. The house was dark inside.

Later, Mr Lee arrived and was able to get into the flat through a slightly ajar window.

Inside they found blood on the hallway carpet.

By now Mr Membrey was beginning to think his daughter may be injured.

Police were called.

Prosecutor Geoffrey Horgan, SC, asked Mr Membrey if since that time he had had any contact with his daughter.

"Absolutely none," he replied.

He also asked whether anyone that he knew had had contact with her.

"No, no one that we know has contacted her, there's been no contact whatsoever," Mr Membrey said.

Ms Membrey was last seen leaving the Manhattan Hotel late on December 6, 1994.

Bond's barrister Michael O'Connell, SC, denies his client killed Ms Membrey or that he is the man allegedly seen arguing with Ms Membrey three times on the day she disappeared.

He also said the $1 million reward for information about the crime may have influenced what witnesses have said.

He told jurors they would not be able to exclude the possibility that someone else may have committed the crime.

The trial before Justice Terry Forrest continues on Thursday.

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Lindy wishes she had slept in the car - Ninemsn

More than 30 years after her daughter Azaria disappeared in the desert, Lindy Chamberlain still cries when she recalls the tragic circumstances.

Speaking on Nine Network's A Current Affair on Wednesday, she said she wished she had slept in the car with her three children in central Australia the night Azaria was believed to have been taken by a dingo.

A new inquest is being held to finally try to discover what happened to nine-weeks-old Azaria on August 17, 1980.

Mrs Chamberlain, now Lindy Chamberlain-Creighton after remarrying, said that on a previous visit she had slept in the car because of the dingoes in the area.

She said after Azaria was put to sleep in the tent with her brother Reagan, four, her other son Aidan, six, was hungry so she went with him to the nearby BBQ.

That's when it's alleged the dingo struck.

"If he had not wanted something to eat he would have been in the tent and awake and they say if you say something it could scare (dingoes) and they could attack.

"I could have lost three children that night - it could have been worse," she said fighting back tears.

Mrs Chamberlain-Creighton has always maintained that she saw a dingo leaving her tent on the night Azaria went missing.

She was convicted over Azaria's death in Australia's most famous murder trial but the verdict was overturned three years later when the baby's matinee jacket was found 4km from the campsite near Ayers Rock (Uluru).

An emotional Mrs Chamberlain-Creighton said she had been told that if she pleaded guilty "I could go home".

She said she refused because she didn't want her children to go through life thinking their mother was a murderer.

Azaria's father, Michael, said the family was made the "patsy" because if it was proved dingoes would attack children, tourism would suffer.

"There were four hotels out there and money had been loaned to the Northern Territory government," Dr Chamberlain said.

"I think someone said to them `fix this up - it might affect tourism, you have to get a conviction because you can't have dingoes, or the fear of them, running around killing kids'."

Coroner Elizabeth Morris will conduct the new inquest, which will start on Friday and represents the final legal chapter in the case.

The NT Coroner's office said it was reopening the inquest into Azaria's death after information provided by the girl's parents in relation to dingo attacks on infants and young children.

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Navy stops two new asylum-seeker boats carrying 200 passengers and crew - The Australian

Cookies must be enabled. | The Australian Skip to:Main ContentSite NavigationSite FooterSite SearchSite MapNetwork Navigation (other sites)news.com.auFox SportsCareerOneCarsguideRealEstateNews NetworkThe Australian NewsOpinionNational AffairsBusinessAus ITHigher EdMediaSportArtsJOBSLatest Jobscareerone.com.auJob SearchEmployment NewsSalary CalculatorAdvertise your JobMagazinesCareersSEARCH5 Minutes10 MinutesList StandardList ViewVideoNationalThe Australiannews.com.auThe PunchFOXSPORTSSportingPulseState and TerritoryThe TelegraphCourier MailHerald SunAdelaideNowPerth NowNT NewsThe MercuryRegional and CommunityTownsville BulletinCairns.com.auGoldcoast.com.auGeelong AdvertiserWeekly Times NowCommunity NewspapersClassifiedsClassifiedsPlace my adCareerOneCarsguideRealestate.com.auTrueLocalLifestyleVogueTasteKidspotbody+soulhomelifeMarketplaceMoshtixFoxtixGetpriceShopferretOurDealWeGo TravelLearning Seat LoginSign UpUser LoginUsername *Password *Forgot your password?Subscribe now to access The AustralianSubscribe Search for:

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