Man sentenced over random violent attack on mother in Adelaide CBD

Scott Michael Antrobus, 38, has been sentenced to eight months in jail for the random assault of a mother in Adelaide's CBD.(Supplied)

Scott Michael Antrobus, 38, has been sentenced to eight months in jail for various offences including one count of assault causing harm over a random attack in Rundle Mall in March 2025.

Antrobus had been released from the Royal Adelaide Hospital the day before the offending where he sought treatment for "drug-induced psychosis" before being released.

The sentence was backdated to when Antrobus was taken into custody, which means he will be released in November.

A man who attacked a mother in the Adelaide CBD only a day after being released from hospital for the treatment of drug-induced psychosis has been sentenced to eight months in jail.

Scott Michael Antrobus, 38, was sentenced today for various offences including one count of assault causing harm over the attack in Rundle Mall on March 2 this year.

In sentencing, Magistrate John Clover said Antrobus attacked the "complete stranger", who was walking through Rundle Mall with her nine-year-old child, just after midday.

The random attack happened in March 2025 at Adelaide's Rundle Mall.(ABC News: Lincoln Rothall)

Magistrate Clover said members of the public intervened and restrained the 38-year-old until police arrived.

He said he then refused to provide his name and was found in possession of an ice pipe.

He said Antrobus had been released from the Royal Adelaide Hospital the day before the offending where he sought treatment for "drug-induced psychosis" before being released.

"In [the apology letter provided to the court] you described hearing voices on the day of the assault that told you to hurt people," Magistrate Clover said.

"However, that claim was abandoned in submissions [and] as is conceded by your guilty plea, you were mentally competent at the time of each offence."

Magistrate Clover said Antrobus's legal counsel previously told the court his "mental capacity to understand the nature and quality of [his] actions was not diminished", and that although his mental health conditions are relevant, they do not reduce his "moral culpability".

Antrobus was sentenced in Adelaide's Magistrates Court on Friday.(ABC News: Che Chorley)

Magistrate Clover said he took the 38-year-old's criminal history and "traumatic childhood" into consideration, but said imprisonment was the only appropriate sentence.

"Your assault caused the victim physical and psychological pain.

"She suffered pain and a lump to the back of her head."

Magistrate Clover said the attack has also had a "negative impact" on the victim's daughter.

"Unprovoked and random assaults of this nature tend to undermine public confidence in the safety of areas such as Rundle Mall," he said.

He ordered Antrobus to serve eight months behind bars before being released on a bond to be of good behaviour for 18 months.

The sentence was backdated to when he was taken into custody on March 2, which means he will be released in November.

Topic:Defence and National Security

Warning for boaties as strong winds forecast across Queensland coast

It will be windy at Moffat Beach in the Sunshine Coast.(ABC Capricornia: Aaron Kelly)

Forecasters are warning of strong winds in Queensland on Saturday from the K'gari Coast to the Torres Strait.

Light rain is expected in most coastal areas.

Conditions are expected to be similar until mid next week when a trough will work its way across inland Queensland to the coast.

Queenslanders can expect winds and light showers this weekend, with strong wind warnings likely to keep boaties off the water north of K'gari.

Bureau of Meteorology (BOM) community information officer Patch Clap said wind aside, it should be a "reasonably settled weekend" across the Sunshine State.

He said there would be light showers in the eastern parts of the state and to the far north later on Friday and continuing over the weekend.

Gloomy skies at the Rosslyn Bay Harbour in Yeppoon earlier this week.(ABC Capricornia: Katrina Beavan)

"The usual sort of spots [will] all pick up [rain] … around the Daintree Coast and the Cassowary Coast, possible around the Central Coast around Mackay and around the Sunshine Coast as well and other parts of south-east Queensland," Mr Clap said.

"Most parts of the Queensland coast might see some sort of light shower across the next few days."

Some parts of the state will experience cool winter nights.(ABC Rural: Maddelin McCosker)

Mr Clap said there would be a gradual increase in maximum and minimum temperatures across most of the state.

"We're talking about a couple of degrees here or there," he said.

The BOM has issued a strong wind warning for Saturday for Torres Strait, Peninsula coast, Cooktown coast, Cairns coast, Townsville coast, Mackay coast and Capricornia coast.

Parts of the North Gulf of Carpentaria could also see up to 25 knots offshore.

"The same winds that are driving those showers onto much of the Queensland coast at times are also driving fairly widespread strong wind warnings," Mr Clap said.

He said the south easterly winds were fresh along the whole Queensland coast for Saturday and Sunday.

"So not the greatest conditions for those looking to get out on the waters," he said.

Morning frost is expected to crunch the grass in Roma and Injune in the Maranoa and Warrego region tomorrow.

Cool overnight temperatures will create frost in some areas.(ABC Rural: Maddelin McCosker)

Saturday is forecast to drop to 2 degrees Celsius in Roma and 2C in Injune.

There will also be morning fog inland in south-eastern Queensland.

Topic:Defence and National Security

Israel is striking Iran’s nuclear sites — are there safety risks?

A satellite image shows the damaged Arak heavy-water reactor facilities in Iran.(Maxar Technologies via Reuters)

Israel has been targeting Iran from the air since last Friday in what it has described as an effort to prevent Tehran from developing nuclear weapons.

According to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), five nuclear facilities have been struck, sparking fears the air strikes could raise health risks across the region.

Here's what damage has been caused so far, and what the safety risks are of attacking nuclear sites.

Severalmilitary and nuclear sitesin Iran.

Israel says the attacks are toblock Iran from developing atomic weapons.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the operations were to "strike the head of Iran's nuclear weaponization program".

Iran denies ever having pursued a plan to build nuclear weapons and is a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

It says the nuclear sites it does have are for peaceful purposes.

If Israel continues attacking Iran in an effort to eliminate the country's nuclear capability, destroying the Fordow enrichment plant will be central to its plan.

While another important facility, Natanz, has been hit, the Fordow site would be much harder to target.

That's because it's located inside a mountain, 90 metres underground, and can only be reached by American"bunker-buster" bombs, which Israel does not possess.

Israel believes Iran is enriching uranium to levels that could allow it to build a nuclear weapon, despite the Islamic Republic's claims its nuclear work is for "peaceful purposes".

Enriched uranium, specificallyuranium-235, is an essentialcomponent in many nuclear weapons.

"When you dig uranium out of the ground, 99.3 per cent of it is uranium-238, and 0.7 per cent of it is uranium-235," Kaitlin Cook, a nuclear physicist at the Australian National University, said.

"The numbers 238 and 235 relate to its weight — uranium-235 is slightly lighter than uranium-238."

Missile strikes and fires have torn through Iran's nuclear and military facilities. These satellite images show the damage that has been inflicted by Israel's attacks.

To enrich uranium means increasing the proportion of uranium-235 while removing the uranium-238.

This is typically done with a centrifuge, a kind of "scientific salad spinner" that rotates uranium thousands of times a minute, separating the lighter uranium-235 from the base uranium.

For civilian nuclear power, Dr Cook says uranium-235 is usually enriched to about 3 to 5 per cent.

But onceuranium is enriched to 90 per cent, it isdeemed weapons-grade.

According to the IAEA,Iran's uranium has reached about 60 per centenrichment, well on its way to being concentrated enough for a nuclear weapon.

Dr Cook says the process for enriching uranium from 60 per cent to weapons-grade is significantly easier than enriching it to 60 per cent in the first place. That's because there's less uranium-238 to get rid of.

According to theUS Institute for Science and International Security, "Iran can convert its current stock of 60 per cent enriched uranium into 233kg of weapon-grade uranium in three weeks at the Fordow plant", which it said would be enough for nine nuclear weapons.

In the hours after Israel attacked Iran last Friday, Netanyahu said Iran was just days away from being able to build nuclear weapons.

In a White House briefing, press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Iran has all it needs to achieve a nuclear weapon.

"It would take a couple of weeks to complete the production of that weapon, which would, of course, pose an existential threat not just to Israel, but to the United States and to the entire world."

Netanyahu uses a red marker on a diagram of a bomb as he describes his concerns over Iran's nuclear ambitions in 2012.(AP: Seth Wenig)

But there has been some back and forth between US authorities on whether Iran was really that close to producing nuclear weapons.

In March, US Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard told members of Congress that Iran was not moving towards building nuclear weapons.

"The IC [intelligence community] continues to assess that Iran is not building a nuclear weapon and Supreme Leader Khamenei has not authorized the nuclear weapons programme he suspended in 2003," she said.

On Air Force One on Monday night, afterhastily leaving the G7 summit, President Donald Trump offered a direct contradiction to Ms Gabbard's claims.

"I don't care what she said," Mr Trump said.

"I think they were very close to having it."

The IAEA said Israel had directly hit the underground enrichment halls at the Natanz facility, leaving them "severely damaged, if not destroyed altogether".

According to the IAEA, the Natanz site was one of the facilities at which Iran was producing uranium enriched up to 60 per cent U-235.

After the attack, the IAEA found radioactive contamination at the site, but it said the levels of radioactivity outside remained unchanged and at normal levels.

Israel Defense Forces spokesperson Effie Defrin said: "We've struck deep, hitting Iran's nuclear, ballistic and command capabilities."

A nuclear complex at Isfahan and centrifuge production facilities in Karaj and Tehran were also damaged.

Israel said on Wednesday it had targeted Arak, also known as Khondab, the location of a partially built heavy-water research reactor.

The IAEA said it had information that the heavy-water reactor had been hit, but that it was not operating and reported no radiological effects.

Experts say attacks on enrichment facilities aremainly a "chemical problem", not radiological.

Darya Dolzikova, a senior research fellow at London think tank RUSI, says the main concern from destroying an enrichment plant is releasing the harmful uranium hexafluoride gas — highly corrosive and toxic — that's contained in centrifuges.

"When UF6 interacts with water vapour in the air, it produces harmful chemicals," Ms Dolzikova said.

The extent to which any material is dispersed would depend on factors including weather conditions, she added.

"In low winds, much of the material can be expected to settle in the vicinity of the facility; in high winds, the material will travel farther, but is also likely to disperse more widely."

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei visits the Iranian centrifuges in Tehran in 2023.(WANA via Reuters)

Peter Bryant, a professor at the University of Liverpool who specialises in radiation protection science and nuclear energy policy, says nuclear facilities are designed to prevent the release of radioactive materials into the environment.

"Uranium is only dangerous if it gets physically inhaled or ingested or gets into the body at low enrichments," Professor Bryant said.

While there so far have been no major radiological incidents as a result of the attacks, IAEA director-general Rafael Mariano Grossi stressed the possible nuclear safety and security risks.

"There is a lot of nuclear material in Iran in different places, which means that the potential for a radiological accident with the dispersion in the atmosphere of radioactive materials and particles does exist," he said.

In a post on X, World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus also voiced his concern about the potential "immediate and long-term impacts on the environment and health of people in Iran and across the region".

Well, that's a different story.

A strike on Iran's nuclear reactor at Bushehr couldcause an "absolute radiological catastrophe", says James Acton, co-director of the Nuclear Policy Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

While most reactor vessels are protected by steel and concrete containment structures, Dr Cook says the surrounding infrastructure, like spent fuel pools and cooling equipment, would "definitely be a concern" if targeted.

A satellite image shows the Natanz nuclear facility in Iran after an air strike.(Maxar Technologies via Reuters)

For Gulf states, the impact of any strike on Bushehr would be worsened by the potential contamination of Gulf waters, jeopardising a critical source of desalinated potable water.

In the UAE, desalinated water accounts for more than 80 per cent of drinking water.

While Bahrain and Qatar are fully reliant on desalinated water.

"If a natural disaster, oil spill, or even a targeted attack were to disrupt a desalination plant, hundreds of thousands could lose access to freshwater almost instantly," said Nidal Hilal, professor of engineering and director of New York University Abu Dhabi's Water Research Center.

"Coastal desalination plants are especially vulnerable to regional hazards like oil spills and potential nuclear contamination," he said.

On Thursday, an Israeli military spokesperson said the military had struck the Bushehr nuclear site in Iran.

However, an Israeli military official later said that comment "was a mistake".

The official would only confirm that Israel had hit the Natanz, Isfahan, and Arak nuclear sites in Iran.

The Bushehr nuclear power lant in Iran has not been targeted by Israel at this stage.(Planet Labs via Reuters)

Pressed further on Bushehr, the official said he could neither confirm nor deny that Israel had struck the location.

Bushehr is Iran's only operating nuclear power plant, which sits on the Gulf coast and uses Russian fuel that Russia then takes back when it is spent to reduce proliferation risk.

Heavy water isH20 made up of hydrogen-2instead of hydrogen-1.

Dr Cook says it's a little heavier than normal water.

"When you use heavy water, you can run your reactor on non-enriched uranium, avoiding the expense of enriching it in the first place, though the water does cost more.

"But the problem is that heavy-water reactors can also be used to produce plutonium, which can be used in nuclear weapons."

Iran has built a network of allies around the Middle East. But none of those proxies nor its most powerful backers, China and Russia, have intervened since Israel began bombing Tehran.

Israel's military said its fighter jets targeted the Arak facility and its reactor core seal to stop it from being used to produce plutonium.

"The strike targeted the component intended for plutonium production, in order to prevent the reactor from being restored and used for nuclear weapons development."

India and Pakistan, both nuclear-armed states, have heavy-water reactors.

So does Israel, but it has never acknowledged having atomic weapons but is widely believed to have them.

Topic:Defence and National Security

South Australian GPs to diagnose ADHD in bid to cut patient wait times

Health Minister Chris Picton and Member for Adelaide Lucy Hood speaking with Vaia Allen, mother of a child with ADHD, about changes to ADHD diagnosis and prescription.(ABC News)

The South Australian government will allow GPs with specialist training to diagnose patients with ADHD.

Currently, psychiatrists and paediatricians are the only specialists allowed to diagnose the disorder, which critics say leads to higher costs and longer wait times for patients.

The rule changes will come into effect in 2026.

Some general practitioners in South Australia will from next year be able to diagnose patients with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), in a move the state government says will cut wait times and costs for those seeking a diagnosis.

Currently, adults in South Australia seeking an ADHD diagnosis must be assessed by a psychiatrist, while children must see a paediatrician.

The state government argues the existing regulations have made it "extremely difficult" to get an ADHD diagnosis due to long wait times and high costs to see a specialist.

Rule changes announced by the government on Friday will allow specially trained GPs to diagnose the disorder.

It will also allow GPs to prescribe ADHD medication without having to provide evidence to SA Health of a diagnosis from a psychiatrist or paediatrician.

The reforms will come into effect in 2026.

Health Minister Chris Picton said some patients have spent more than $2,000 for a diagnosis.

Under reforms to be announced by the state government, general practitioners will be able to diagnose and treat both children and adults with ADHD.

"That's a huge expense for South Australians and it means that people are missing out on important healthcare that can make a difference for them," he said.

Mr Picton also argued the reforms would free up "significant capacity" for psychiatrists and paediatricians to undertake other mental health work.

"We know that there's significant need in the community for a whole range of other afflictions people have," he said.

The reforms followa similar move by New South Wales earlier this year. The Western Australian governmenthas also committed to the reform.

Specialist training for GPs who want to be involved in ADHD diagnoses will be made available from next year.

This is on top of online training modules that are already available through the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP).

RACGP chair Siân Goodson said not all GPs will take up the additional training.

But she added that many GPs already have experience dealing with ADHD patients.

"GPs are often co-managing these patients already, so we often prescribe once we've got the diagnosis confirmed," she said.

"So, we're already getting experience in managing medication and managing these people."

Dr Siân Goodson says many GPs are already co-managing ADHD patients.(ABC News)

Dr Goodson, who is also a GP in Adelaide's northern suburbs, said patients are regularly reporting ADHD symptoms to their doctor.

She said early ADHD diagnosis was "really important" for children.

"We see people waiting a long time for that diagnosis falling behind at school and the outcomes are less good," she said.

"But also for adults, sometimes they've struggled for a long time, they've lost their job or they're not functioning at home.

Mother Vaia Allen said she spent around $3,000 on getting an ADHD diagnosis for her 12-year-old daughter Pippa.

Vaia Allen says getting an ADHD diagnosis for her 12-year-old daughter Pippa was a lengthy process.(ABC News)

The cost, Ms Allen said, did not include ongoing medication and regular GP appointments.

Ms Allen said her daughter has been on ADHD medication for around four months and it has greatly helped her learning in school.

"When we got Pip on ADHD medication, it was so helpful … in her classroom for her teacher, the students around her, and obviously for herself," she said.

"It's really obvious to me that the education outcomes are so important in terms of their focus and changing their life trajectory.

"She can sit there, listen and understand now."

Deborah McLean, president of the South Australian Psychologists Association (SAPA), welcomed the state government's rule changes.

She also expressed confidence that the training offered to GPs will be sufficient to correctly diagnose ADHD.

SAPA president Deborah McLean says the change will make an essential service more accessible for patients.(ABC News: Ashlin Blieschke)

But she cautioned that some ADHD patients will still need access to "holistic diagnosis assessment and then treatment" for concurrent conditions like depression and anxiety.

"It means that we may only be treating part of the problem.

"I think for a lot of people, though, this is a really positive step forward and a way to be able to access the essential services they need."

The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists (RANZCP) SA Branch also welcomed the rule changes.

But the college cautioned that the government "must prioritise patient safety and quality outcomes through greater training and support for doctors treating ADHD".

RANZCP SA chair Patrick Clarke, a North Adelaide psychiatrist, said he currently treats around 150 ADHD patients.

"That's all I can manage, and I can't take on any more," Dr Clarke said in a statement.

"So, we're glad to see the SA government doing more to expand access to ADHD care in the state for people who are missing out on help.

"Giving trainee specialists more ADHD exposure will greatly increase the pool of doctors with appropriate exposure to see these patients."

Topic:Defence and National Security

‘Jelly wobbles’: Man jailed for selling cannabis gummies to children

The court heard Phuc Tran was arrested when a Canberra school child became ill after eating cannabis gummies Tran had sold to another student.(Supplied: ACT Policing)

A 24-year-old former Vietnamese student is jailed for selling cannabis gummies to Canberra schoolchildren and trading in illegal vapes.

The court heard Phuc Tran, who pleaded guilty to 12 charges, had sold vapes, cannabis, and gummies over Snapchat on a handle known as "no names".

Tran is the first person to be charged in the ACT under commonwealth laws banning the sale of vapes outside pharmacies.

A former Vietnamese student has been sentenced to a year in jail for peddling cannabis gummies and vapes to Canberra school children, some of whom paid by bank transfers listed as "drugs", "green", "jelly wobbles", and "thanks".

Phuc Tran, 24, was arrested after police were told a 15-year-old student at a Canberra high school had become ill after eating cannabis-laced gummies.

It emerged the gummies had been originally sold to a 12-year-old, who said she bought them from Tran in person.

She said she had paid $40 for two marijuana cookies, and $60 for a packet containing 15 to 20 gummies, which were green and purple and in the shape of a marijuana leaf.

The girl told police she ate some of the gummies and cookies, and stated they did not taste very nice and they made her fall asleep.

The 12-year-old denied giving any to the student who fell ill.

Police found more than 600 vapes in various flavours at a home connected to the crimes in September 2024.(Supplied: ACT Policing)

Tran had already been in the police sights, being caught with 250 illegal vapes in a car during a police stop in 2023.

Then last year, before police knew about the school incident, he was stopped again and officers reported a smell of cannabis emerged from the car he was in.

A search revealed 149 vapes, cannabis in bags in the centre console and glove box, suboxone strips, and $4,000 in cash.

Police said while they were searching the car Tran received a text message asking "What budz you got", and another message about the vapes.

Tran was initially arrested but then freed while police searched his phone.

The search revealed dozens of transactions of between $45 and $55, which the court heard is the street price for vapes.

When police began to check the account holders they discovered many were children.

Phuc Tran pleaded guilty to 12 charges including supplying drugs to a child, drug trafficking, and possessing drugs.(Supplied: ACT Policing)

A total of 14 statements were obtained from young people, many of whom had contacted Tran over Snapchat on a handle known as "no names" to buy vapes, cannabis and gummies.

Police later gave the phone back to Tran and began following him, tracking his movements before his final arrest in the wake of the school incident.

Police then searched a house linked to the crimes, finding cannabis plants in grow tents, racks of gummies, cookies and brownies, gummy-bear-shaped silicone cooking moulds, and more than 600 vapes.

Eventually, he pleaded guilty to 12 charges, including supplying drugs to a child, drug trafficking and possessing both drugs and vapes.

He is the first person in the ACT to be prosecuted under new commonwealth laws banning the sale of vapes, except through pharmacies.

Tran said his motive was to address a cash flow problem.

His student visa has now run out.

Topic:Defence and National Security

Topic:Defence and National Security

Councils plead for relief as drought-fuelled rural debt mountain grows

Ninety per cent of Andrew Zanker's crops failed last year.(Supplied: Andrew Zanker)

Farmers are burying themselves under mountains of debt to cover ongoing operating costs.

Three years of drought have put immense pressure on local councils and farms.

The SA government says it is open to exploring different ways to use its support package.

Crippling debt is growing by the day for drought-stricken South Australian farms with local councils pleading for state government intervention in the form of rate relief.

Despite recent rains, the past three years of poor rain have seen farmers continue to borrow to cover their overheads.

After 90 per cent of his crops failed last year, Appila farmer Andrew Zanker, in South Australia's Mid North, said he was reliant on loans to pay bills.

"Everything that we pay [for bills] at the moment increases our debt month by month," he said.

By the end of the year, Mr Zanker expects he will be overdrawn by hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Dean Johnson, Kimba mayor and president of the Eyre Peninsula Local Government Association (EPLGA), said providing council hardship relief was difficult because local governments were already "battling" sustainability issues.

"We want to support our primary producers as much as we can, but we've still got to provide the services that they need to keep their communities growing," he said.

Eyre Peninsula Local Government Association president Dean Johnson.(ABC News: Che Chorley)

According to the Essential Services Commission of South Australia, the District Council of Tumby Bay and the Flinders Ranges Council are unsustainable or projected to remain unsustainable.

Despite the findings, Flinders Ranges Council Mayor Ken Anderson said it was trying to alleviate as much financial pressure as possible.

"Our focus is on trying to make savings in these hard times, across the board for everybody," he said.

Flinders Ranges Council Mayor Ken Anderson.(ABC News: Angelique Donnellan)

Mr Anderson said that, although the budget had not been finalised, his council was hoping to limit its rate rise to below 4 per cent.

Both the EPLGA and Flinders Alliance of Councils have called on the state government to provide further and more targeted support to assist councils and primary producers.

In a letter to Premier Peter Malinauskas, the Flinders Alliance called for a 12-month waiver of state government-imposed levies and taxes, such as the landscape levy and emergency services levy.

The alliance has also requested that the state government subsidise rates for affected local governments.

"For those councils with primary producers that can demonstrate financial hardship resulting in the inability to pay rates, the state government [should] 'spot' councils for the rates that cannot be paid," the letter read.

The request echoed similar calls from the EPLGA that said in a letter to the government that councils were "bearing the cost" of certain hardship measures, such as deferring rate obligations.

"These additional financial pressures further strain council resources, which are limited," it said.

Streaky Bay farmer Dion Trezona said deferred or delayed payments still represented a bill for landholders and impacted councils' cash flow.

"Especially for your prime production land holders, those rates should just be picked up by the state government just to give us a hand … and not have another bill come through your household," he said.

Streaky Bay farmer Dion Trezona.(Supplied: Dion Trezona)

Minister for Primary Industries Clare Scriven said the government was open to the idea, but it would mean one of the 20 different streams of grant funding available under the $73-million support package would have to be cut.

"We developed that with primary producers, with peak bodies and with regional stakeholders," Ms Scriven said.

"It was based on the feedback that we were hearing about what was needed by farmers and by regional communities.

"It's not clear to me where anyone thinks that should be cut to be able to fund this, so I guess that's something that would need to be clarified."

Topic:Defence and National Security

Metro drivers told to hide money when within Glenorchy bus mall

Two youths have been charged over several incidents in the Glenorchy bus mall in Hobart's northern suburbs.(ABC News: Ebony ten Broeke)

Tasmania Police alleges youths have stolen coins and damaged a window with an emergency hammer in multiple incidents aboard Hobart buses.

Bus operator Metro has instructed its drivers to hide coin trays and refuse all fares at the Glenorchy bus mall during specific times.

The Rail, Tram and Bus Union says the Tasmanian government has reneged on a promise to introduce transit officers on buses, and wants driver safety to be a top priority.

Tasmania's government-owned bus company has instructed drivers to hide their coin trays when within a major bus mall in Hobart after a series of thefts.

Police this week laid charges as a result of investigations into multiple incidents.

Police allege two youths stole coins from the money trays of Metro buses on multiple occasions.

They also allege after getting off the bus, the youths removed an emergency hammer and damaged a bus window. No one was injured during the incidents.

A 13-year-old from Risdon Vale and a 14-year-old from Lutana have been charged over several incidents.

It had just passed 10pm on Friday night when Bronny Walsh took a call from her son who said he had been assaulted while working as a bus driver in Launceston. She is now calling for change.

In a safety alert issued to Hobart drivers on Wednesday seen by the ABC, Metro addressed "ongoing incidents in the Glenorchy bus mall", instructing drivers between 4-8pm to "pull over at a stop prior to entering the mall" and "remove their cash trays and store them out of sight" while within the mall.

Metro drivers have been instructed to hide their coin trays when within the Glenorchy bus mall.(ABC News: Ebony ten Broeke)

The notice also said fares including cash or GreenCards should not be collected while in the bus mall during the given times, and fares could be reversed if customers tap on by mistake.

The notice is valid until Sunday.

In a statement, Metro Tasmania said it took a risk-based approach when deciding to implement safety controls.

"Metro believes that this temporary safety measure is appropriate given the recent incidents in the Glenorchy mall."

Metro Tasmania says it takes a risk-based approach when deciding to implement safety controls.(ABC News: Ebony ten Broeke)

Rail Tram and Bus Union (RTBU) state secretary Byron Cubit said not enough was being done to improve driver safety.

In 2023, the Rockliff government started a pilot program to introduce transit officers on buses, but Mr Cubit said they were never delivered permanently.

Mr Cubit said the government's planned implementation of transit officers needed improvement.

"When the Liberal government committed to transit officers, they would be privately employed and they would not have that power to detain.

The union is also worried about a half-price fare scheme which is soon to come to an end.

"If adult fares double on July 1st, the bus drivers are going to cop the brunt of frustration from passengers," Mr Cubit said.

Half-price bus fares are due to come to an end next month.(ABC News: Ebony ten Broeke)

Transport Minister Eric Abetz said the RTBU was "central to the security screen trials, being heavily involved in consultation, and is aware that they are being rolled out as quickly as possible".

"Screens are being installed as we speak, and have already protected drivers on the job," Mr Abetz said.

The bus drivers' union says not enough is being done to improve driver safety.(ABC News: Ebony ten Broeke)

In a statement, Labor's transport spokesperson, Meg Brown, said "affordable, accessible public transport is vital to keeping communities connected — especially when services have already been cut under the Liberals".

"Nobody should have to fear for their safety simply for doing their job. The situation is a direct result of a government that has failed to act when it comes to driver safety," Ms Brown said.

"The Liberals promised to introduce the transit safety officers more than two years ago. Two ministers and too many attacks later, there's still a gap in frontline driver safety. These aren't optional extras — they're essential protections for drivers and passengers.

In May, Tasmania Police unveiled Taskforce Respect, a community campaign involving high-visibility patrols in Glenorchy and surrounds.

The task force was established in the wake of a string of incidents involving large groups of youths causing disturbances in the area.

Glenorchy Police Inspector Jason Klug said businesses had reported a significant drop in anti-social behaviour while the task force has been active.

"Whilst at the moment, its focus is on anti-social behaviour and retail crime, the task force is there and able to adapt to any crime trends or any community concerns that we see.

Topic:Defence and National Security

Developers lodge plans for Australia’s tallest building on Gold Coast

Topic:Urban Development and Planning

An artist's impression of the two-tower development, which would include the southern hemisphere's tallest building.(Supplied)

A consortium has lodged plans to build Australia's tallest tower on the Gold Coast.

One Park Lane would include a razor-thin 101-storey tower with 198 residential apartments and a 60-storey office building.

If the project is approved by council the developer says work could start before Christmas.

A consortium has submitted plans for a two-tower development on the Gold Coast that would include the tallest building in the southern hemisphere.

Melbourne developer Anthony Goss first proposed One Park Lane in 2022.

The group has spent the past two and a half years negotiating with the Queensland government to amalgamate a small parcel of state-owned land adjacent to the site, and obtain approval to build underneath a state-controlled road.

The project will include a razor-thin 101-storey tower with 198 residential apartments and a 60-storey office building.

The towers will be connected by a sky bridge on the 22nd floor and a three-storey sculptural canopy at their base.

If built, the development will rise 393 metres above the Southport broadwater, towering over the spire of the nearby Q1 (322m) and Melbourne's Australia 108 (316m).

However, it will not come close to the world's tallest building, the Burj Khalifa in Dubai (830m).

One Park Lane would transform the Gold Coast skyline and tower over the nearby Q1.(Supplied)

Baracon development manager Brett Rogers said if the project was approved quickly, early works could start before Christmas, but would not say how much the apartments would cost.

"This development will help address the desperate need for more housing on the Gold Coast and stimulate broader economic activity," Mr Rogers said.

There is no height limit in that part of Southport, which is zoned as a priority development area.

The 1,500 square metre site is next to a light rail station and close to a public park where Gold Coast mayor Tom Tate hopes to build a $480 million indoor arena before the 2032 Olympics.

The city wants to build an indoor arena a few hundred metres away.(Supplied: City of Gold Coast)

He said it was a "vote of confidence" for his vision to transform the suburb into the growing city's business district.

"It's great to see an application of this magnitude in Southport, which has the potential to be a great boost to the city's housing stock," Cr Tate said.

It would neighbour a 200-unit social housing apartment complex that broke ground this week.

An urban planner said the tower contained a relatively small number of apartments for its size and appeared to include 40 levels of full-floor penthouses.

A render of the sky bridge included in the development application.(Supplied)

Sustainability and urban planning lecturer at RMIT, Liam Davies, said it was healthy to have a mix of people of varying income levels within a single community.

"There are two ways of looking at it. The first is that it feels weirdly unjust," Dr Davies said.

"A luxury building where people live in apartments that span multiple levels, and then next to it is social housing that has much higher density.

"But we can also look at it and see what we want is a distribution of dwellings across an urban area of dwellings to accommodate a variety of households."

He said the Gold Coast was likely able to attract these developments because it was a permissive planning environment where people wanted to live, compared to Neom's The Line project in Saudi Arabia.

"They're trying to deliver mega permissive things but no-one wants to live there so they never get the capital whereas the Gold Coast has both," he said.

Local councillor Brooke Patterson supported the ambitious development and said there was a lot of demand for office space in the suburb.

"I don't think they're going to have any issue filling it," she said.

Proponents hope the project will help to revitalise the Gold Coast CBD.(Supplied)

Ms Patterson's predecessor, long-serving Southport councillor Dawn Crichlow, said because the site was so small — boxed in by the light rail line on one side and local bowls club on the other — construction would cause traffic chaos.

"The whole thing won't work, it's as simple as that," she said.

"You will have to change all of Scarborough Street, nobody would be able to get in and out.

"They're not looking at the area, they are not talking to the people, they are just looking at pretty pictures. It's a mess."

Topic:Regional Development and Planning

Construction and Real Estate Industry

Regional Development and Planning

Topic:Defence and National Security

Former Wagga Wagga MP found guilty of giving misleading evidence at ICAC

Former Liberal Party member for Wagga Wagga Daryl Maguire has denied any wrongdoing.(ABC News: Ethan Rix)

Former Wagga Wagga MP Daryl Maguire has been found guilty of giving false or misleading evidence at an ICAC inquiry in 2018.

Maguire appeared as a witness at the inquiry looking into claims of corruption against councillors at Canterbury City Council.

A non-publication order was rejected by the magistrate.

Former Liberal MP Daryl Maguire has been found guilty of giving false or misleading evidence to the NSW corruption watchdog at a hearing in 2018, as it investigated the former Canterbury City Council.

Maguire had denied wrongdoing, but prosecutors argued the former member for Wagga Wagga engaged in a "money making exercise" when he allegedly discussed a commission with a local councillor over a multimillion-dollar property deal.

He appeared as a witness in Operation Dasha, the Independent Commission Against Corruption's (ICAC) investigation into allegations of corruption against councillors and whether they dishonestly exercised their official functions in relation to planning proposals.

During his appearance at the public hearing, Maguire initially denied ever doing business with former councillor Michael Hawatt, or seeking payment for brokering a deal on behalf of a Chinese property developer.

Magistrate Clare Farnan on Friday found him guilty of the single charge, following a hearing in the Local Court earlier this year.

That outcome was delivered after apparent confusion about listing locations caused the parties to appear before a registrar in a different courtroom, who adjourned the case until September.

The Downing Centre's lower level suffered flood damage due to a burst water main on Tuesday, and will remain shut for four weeks on the latest estimates.

As a result, dozens of cases have had to be relocated to the nearby John Maddison Tower, including Mr Maguire's matter.

When Magistrate Farnan delivered her decision, no media were in the courtroom, and Maguire's barrister Rebecca Gall applied for a non-publication order.

Flooding earlier in the week at Downing Centre caused the relocation of Maguire's case.(ABC News: Ethan Rix)

Later in the afternoon, the magistrate put on the record that she had come into court in the morning expecting to deliver judgment.

The magistrate said there was nothing "deliberate" about what occurred, and she had gone to "all the trouble I could" to have parties notified on Thursday of the impending decision.

She denied the application for a non-publication order, after hearing submissions from barrister Dauid Sibtain SC, representing the ABC and Fairfax.

Magistrate Farnan said the case had already been the subject of media attention, and the interest of the community in open justice outweighed Mr Maguire's interests in the circumstances.

A non-publication order was rejected by the magistrate.(ABC News: Ethan Rix)

At a hearing in late May, the court was told of intercepted phone calls between Maguire and Mr Hawatt in which the pair discussed the sale of a property on Canterbury Road at Campsie, in Sydney's inner south west.

Maguire was recorded saying: "What have you got on your books? What is DA approved?".

The pair then discussed the sale of the site of the former Harrison's Hardware store on Canterbury Road, for which a 300 unit development was proposed.

Maguire and Mr Hawatt estimated the development to be worth up to $48 million, with Maguire asking: "What's the margin for you?".

The court heard Mr Hawatt suggested a margin of between 1.5 and 2 per cent was likely, to which Mr Maguire replied: "1.5 per cent isn't enough divided by two, if you know what I mean."

Deputy Senior Crown Prosecutor Phil Hogan argued the two were expecting to make money from the sale and that it would be divided equally between them.

"The story that he'd prepared [for the ICAC] was, 'I'd never asked for a dollar, they never offered a dollar, nor would I ask for a dollar,'" Mr Hogan told the court.

"The Crown says that statement is demonstrably misleading."

Mr Hogan argued the communications between Maguire and Mr Hawatt amounted to an attempt to do business with the expectation they would both make money from that business.

Topic:Defence and National Security

Topic:Defence and National Security

Federal MP drops safety order request against One Nation supporter

Anne Webster had interim personal safety orders in place against Dean Lampard leading up to May's federal election.(Supplied: Anne Webster and ABC News: Tyrone Dalton)

Federal Shadow Minister and Nationals MP Anne Webster and her husband Philip have dropped an application for personal safety orders against One Nation supporter Dean Lampard.

Mildura Magistrates Court has heard Mr Lampard accused Dr Webster and her husband of corruption and paedophilia.

The Victorian Solicitor General's Office has told the court there is not enough evidence to support a personal safety intervention order.

National Party MP Anne Webster and her husband Philip Webster have dropped a request for personal safety intervention orders against a One Nation supporter after an altercation at a Mildura car show.

The Mildura Magistrate's Court put interim orders in place in April barring One Nation supporter Dean Lampard from contacting or approaching the Websters until Mr Lampard could obtain a lawyer.

On Friday, the Victorian Solicitor General's Office dropped the application, saying it was unlikely to be approved.

Magistrate Patrick Southey told the court Mr Lampard had made "nonsense" allegations against the Websters of corruption and paedophilia.

"[They] were offensive, defamatory, crackpot, conspiracy theory allegations that hold no basis whatsoever," Magistrate Patrick Southey told the court.

"If there was any shred of truth, [Anne Webster] wouldn't be a Member of Parliament and [Philip Webster]wouldn't be a doctor."

Mr Lampard's lawyer Jamie Griffin said there was no evidence to suggest Mr Lampard's allegations against the Websters were "crackpot" or "conspiracy theory”.

Dean Lampard was barred from contacting or approaching Anne Webster and her husband, Philip.(ABC News: Tyrone Dalton)

The court heard Mr Lampard made the accusations against the Websters when he went to Anne Webster's Mildura office on March 1.

The court heard on that occasion, she did not like what was said by Mr Lampard and asked him to leave.

Six weeks later, on Good Friday, Dr Webster's husband approached Mr Lampard at a car show with two of her staff and a security guard.

Mr Griffinpreviously told the courtthere was "a conversation and pushing and shoving", with Mr Webster shoving Mr Lampard.

He said there were no allegations of assault or threats by his client at the car show, and that he left of his own accord.

"How can it be said that Mr Webster has any fear at all when he approaches my client, assaults my client, and my client leaves?" he asked the court.

The court heard Mr Griffin contested the legitimacy of the interim orders that he described as baseless and without proof of criminal conduct.

Mr Griffin told the court he found it questionable that a senior detective at Mildura Police Station brought the application to court in the first place.

"It's exceptional that a matter like this, first of all, is prosecuted by a senior detective where there is no crime alleged here," Mr Griffin told the court.

"The base of the claim is that there is a chance Mr Lampard may, in the future, make some other comment or approach Ms Webster."

The media was denied a copy of the affidavit supporting the allegations made by the Websters against Mr Lampard because "it was protected information".

The Victorian Solicitor General's Office dropped the applications for personal safety orders against One Nation supporter Dean Lampard.(ABC Mildura-Swan Hill: Tamara Clark)

Magistrate Southey told the court he believed the application for the interim orders had been made in good faith, despite them being withdrawn.

"Is that largely because it's unlikely you can prove there is an ongoing likelihood of misbehaviour, is that the reason?" Magistrate Patrick Southey asked the lawyer for the Websters.

Solicitor for the government, Nadia Deltondo, replied, "There are a number of reasons that unfortunately I can't answer."

An application to have the Websters pay Mr Lampard's court costs was refused.

Dr Webster retained the seat of Mallee in the May election with a slight swing toward her, in what is considered a safe seat.

She was elevated three weeks ago to shadow minister for regional development, local government and territories and shadow minister for regional communications.

The Websters were not in court for Friday's hearing.

Topic:Defence and National Security

Topic:Defence and National Security