1. Corby parole to be signed today
A media contingent outside Schapelle Corby’s Bali prison is waiting anxiously for 5.30pm (AEST) to see if her parole application has been successful. Indonesian Justice Minister Amir Syamsuddin has more than 1700 applications for parole before him. He told media during the week that Corby would be treated the same as all the others.
He is expected to give a press conference at 1.30pm local time. Meanwhile the Prime Minister has weighed into the debate on whether she should make a profit on selling her story telling Fairfax Radio ‘‘the old principle is crime should not pay.” The Australian report that her sister, Mercedes Corby is “running the auction” with the media.
The frontrunner to secure the rights to her story is the Seven network. The report states that the Seven Network has 17 crews from Australia and seven locals in Bali. Channel Nine has eight crews and the Ten Network has six.
2. Police officer face court over rape
Two QLD police officers will appear in Mackay Magistrates Court today charged with five counts of raping a woman on Sunday morning. The 29-year-old and 28-year-old constables are also accused of deprivation of liberty and assault with intent to commit rape. Both men have been suspended. Police will not say whether the officers are denying the charge.
3. Simon Gittany
The Crown Prosecutor has called for Simon Gittany – who was found guilty of killing his fiancé by throwing her off a balcony – to receive 20 years jail when he is sentenced next Tuesday. But his Barrister has asked for a sentence significantly below that with over 40 character references tendered to the court. However Justice Lucy McCallum said that the Gittany family and friends who continually profess his innocence may be “harming his chances of rehabilitation.”
4. Lack of insurance leads to homebirthing
A call today for indemnity insurance to be made available to midwives who perform birthing services in women’s homes, after the $6.6 million payout ordered by a judge to a Sydney couple by a midwife who botched the birth of their son. The SMH report that the lack of insurance, since the collapse of HIH, is leading to the practice of free-birthing – where a woman gives birth unattended by a medical practitioner. It is estimated free-birthing has now overtaken home birthing as a birth choice.