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Australia news as it happened: RBA governor says raising rates was the right thing to do; Starmer apologises to Epstein victims over Mandelson scandal

Emily Kaine and Isabel McMillan
Updated ,first published

What we covered today

By Isabel McMillan

Thanks for reading the national news blog. This is where we’ll end today’s coverage. We will be back next week with the latest news in the national live blog, a dedicated coverage of Israeli President Isaac Herzog’s visit to Sydney and dedicated coverage of Super Bowl LX.

To conclude, here’s a look back at some of the day’s major stories:

  • Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the relationship between Australia and Indonesia is “stronger than it’s ever been” after signing a security treaty in Jakarta with Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto.
  • The grandparents of Gus Lamont, a four-year-old boy missing from his family’s sheep station in South Australia’s mid-north region since September, said they are “absolutely devastated” his disappearance and suspected death has been declared a major crime.
  • Police warned they will arrest pro-Palestinian protesters who breach restrictions while demonstrating against Israeli President Isaac Herzog’s visit to Australia next week.
  • The 20-year-old man who allegedly coward-punched influential business and Labor figure Tim Picton during a night out in Northbridge last year had his charge officially upgraded to manslaughter.
  • West Australia’s top cop slammed comments made in federal parliament regarding the alleged terror attack at an Invasion Day rally in Perth’s CBD, and claims by senator Lidia Thorpe that there was an ASIO report detailing the “probable likelihood of an attack”.
  • And overseas, A Colorado funeral home owner who stashed 189 decomposing bodies in a building over four years and gave grieving families fake ashes will be sentenced on Friday on corpse abuse charges.

Thanks again for joining us. This is Isabel McMillan signing off.

Author Craig Silvey argues right to delete social media profiles after arrest

By Sarah Smith and Hannah Murphy

Acclaimed Australian author Craig Silvey has appeared in court in Perth, with his lawyer arguing he should be allowed access to his phone to delete his social media accounts after they attracted dozens of negative comments following his arrest.

The Fremantle-based writer, 43, was arrested at his home last month after he was allegedly caught “actively engaging” with other child exploitation offenders online.

Author Craig Silvey.Tony McDonough

Silvey, best known for his 2009 novel Jasper Jones, was banned from accessing the internet as part of his bail because police alleged he had engaged in online conversations over several days in January, during which he expressed a sexual interest in children and distributed child exploitation material.

He was eventually released on a $100,000 surety, but his lawyers were back in court on Friday asking to vary his conditions so he could access his phone and delete his social media accounts.

Silvey’s Instagram account in particular has attracted a number of negative comments since his arrest and has not been locked or deleted since.

Read the full story here.

Colorado funeral home owner to be sentencing for abusing 189 bodies

By

A Colorado funeral home owner who stashed 189 decomposing bodies in a building over four years and gave grieving families fake ashes will be sentenced on Friday on corpse abuse charges.

Jon Hallford owned Return to Nature Funeral Home in Colorado Springs with his then-wife, Carie. They pleaded guilty in December to nearly 200 counts of corpse abuse under an agreement with prosecutors. Jon Hallford faces between 30 and 50 years in prison. Carie Hallford faces 25 to 35 years in prison at sentencing on April 24.

The Hallfords stored the bodies in a building in the small town of Penrose, south of Colorado Springs, from 2019 until 2023, when investigators responding to reports of a stench from the building discovered the corpses.

Jon and Carie Hallford, the owners of the Colorado funeral home where 189 decaying bodies were found.AP

Bodies were found throughout the building, some stacked on top of each other, with swarms of bugs and decomposition fluid covering the floors, investigators said. The remains – including adults, infants and fetuses – were stored at room temperature. Investigators believe the Hallfords gave families dry concrete that mimicked ashes.

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Second MP discovers he is accidentally Canadian after law changes

By James Massola

A second federal MP has been caught out by Canada’s changes to its citizenship laws, in a potential breach of section 44 of the Constitution.

Section 44 forbids a federal MP from holding the citizenship of another country and, during the so-called constitutional crisis of 2017, 15 MPs and senators were disqualified for either holding a second nationality or being eligible to hold one.

Queensland LNP MP Llew O’Brien.Alex Ellinghausen

This masthead revealed on Tuesday that Industry and Science Minister Tim Ayres had become eligible for Canadian citizenship on December 15 last year, after a law change in that country that made it easier for the grandchildren of Canadians to claim dual citizenship.

Queensland Liberal National Party MP Llew O’Brien has now been caught out by the same legal change as Ayres.

Read the full story here. 

Labor figure’s alleged attacker has charge upgraded to manslaughter

By Rebecca Peppiatt and Hamish Hastie

The 20-year-old man who allegedly coward-punched influential business and Labor figure Tim Picton during a night out in Northbridge last year has had his charge officially upgraded to manslaughter.

WA Police had flagged they intended to upgrade Brodie Jake Dewar’s grievous bodily harm charge after the South Australian-born Picton died last month.

Tim Picton never regained consciousness after he was punched.

The alleged assault left Picton, 36, with a serious brain bleed, and he was placed in a coma from which he never woke.

Dewar, from the Perth suburb of Lesmurdie, has been in custody since January 16 after his bail was revoked when police laid separate charges over another alleged assault outside the Kalamunda Hotel just two days before the Picton incident.

Lawyers defend ‘good character’ evidence in sentencing

By Tom Wark

Preventing courts from considering an offender’s character in sentencing will not provide better outcomes for marginalised groups, top lawyers say.

After the NSW government announced it would scrap “good character” as a mitigating factor in criminal sentencing, the state’s barristers have said the move would weaken justice.

The laws introduced to parliament on Wednesday are designed to stop the trauma faced by victims and survivors when hearing the individual who offended against them described as a good person. But the NSW Bar Association has struck out against the changes, saying courts must reserve the right to assess all available evidence before making a decision.

“The proposed reforms would unreasonably limit the ability of the sentencing court to understand the offender as a whole person,” association president Dominic Toomey, SC, said.

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Australia-Indonesia’s relationship ‘stronger than ever’: Albanese

By Isabel McMillan

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says the relationship between Australia and Indonesia is “stronger than it’s ever been” after signing a security treaty in Jakarta with Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto.

“Today I was delighted to sign this treaty with Bapak [Mr] President, a historic moment in our nations’ relationship, and recognition that the best way to secure peace and stability in our region is by acting together,” Albanese said.

“This agreement signals that Australia and Indonesia’s relationship is stronger than it has ever been. The fact we are signing this treaty today is testament to President Prabowo’s strong leadership and his personal commitment to promoting security in our region and indeed around the world.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto in Merdeka Palace in Jakarta today.AP

Albanese said the treaty was a “significant extension of our existing security and defence co-operation”.

WA Police commissioner denies missing intelligence on Perth ‘terror’ plot

By Holly Thompson

West Australia’s top cop has slammed comments made in federal parliament regarding the alleged terror attack at an Invasion Day rally in Perth’s CBD, and claims by senator Lidia Thorpe that there was an ASIO report detailing the “probable likelihood of an attack”.

Thorpe, an independent senator, made the claim she had seen a three-page report and that it was a lie for police Commissioner Col Blanch to say there was no intelligence before the alleged incident.

The Invasion Day rally in Perth on January 26.Jesinta Burton.


At a press conference at WA’s police headquarters on Friday morning, Blanch was asked about Thorpe’s comments and said: “Could she release that document, could we all see it?

“I’ve seen intelligence products about the probable terrorist threat to Australia which I’ve already referenced … but if there is anyone, including senators, who have information that suggests there is a targeted attack at a particular place and time, produce the document immediately.

Gus Lamont’s grandparents ‘devastated’ his disappearance declared major crime

By Riley Walter

The grandparents of Gus Lamont, a four-year-old boy missing from his family’s sheep station in South Australia’s mid-north region since September, say they are “absolutely devastated” his disappearance and suspected death has been declared a major crime.

In a statement issued through their lawyers, Gus’ grandparents, Josie and Shannon Murray, said their family had “co-operated fully with the investigation and want nothing more than to find Gus and reunite him with his mum and dad”.

SA Police on Thursday declared the four-year-old’s disappearance and suspected death a major crime.

“We don’t believe now that Gus is alive,” said Detective Superintendent Darren Fielke, the officer in charge of SA Police’s Major Crime Investigation Branch.

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NSW Police deploys thousands of officers for Herzog’s visit, protesters put on notice

By Amber Schultz

Police have warned they will arrest pro-Palestinian protesters who breach restrictions while demonstrating against Israeli President Isaac Herzog’s visit to Australia next week.

The Palestine Action Group has announced a march from Town Hall to NSW Parliament House on Monday evening, in breach of public assembly restrictions put in place following the Bondi terror attack.

NSW Police officers in front of pro-Palestine protesters in November.Kate Geraghty

NSW Police officers will work an additional 3000 shifts during Herzog’s four-day visit, with 500 assigned to Monday’s protest. As of June 2025, there were just under 16,000 sworn officers in NSW.

Acting Assistant Commissioner Paul Dunstan said he had offered protesters an alternative route from Hyde Park to Belmore Park, which had so far been refused. He warned that police may be forced to arrest those who do not comply with move-on orders.

Read the full story here.

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