The WA Supreme Court’s verdict this week brings an unsatisfying end for all parties to a long-running mining royalties battle that has blown apart the country’s wealthiest family.
In an exclusive interview with The Saturday Paper, the prime minister defends his government’s delayed action on gambling advertising, and rejects accusations that the measures are too weak.
Following the biggest manhunt in Victoria’s history, police are now seeking Dezi Freeman’s possible allies, as sovereign citizens canonise the murderer.
Despite denials across the NT government, the Country Liberal Party has effectively choked funding to its legal aid agency, leaving countless defendants to face court alone.
The families of men allegedly shot by Australian soldiers in Afghanistan have recounted how their relatives were killed, making the case for further prosecutions against the SASR.
As retailers employ more surveillance and technology to curb shoplifting in a cost-of-living crisis, the burden is increasingly falling on young workers to stop the theft.
Services across all states and territories report ballooning wait times for gendered, family and sexual violence support, with the well-funded national helpline unable to connect victim-survivors to actual care.
For the mother of a robodebt victim, the royal commission brought hopes of accountability and justice. The NACC’s final findings have left her devastated.
Former prime minister Scott Morrison has been named in a NACC report alongside five public servants referred by the Royal Commission into the Robodebt Scheme.
Several fatalities stemming from supposedly ‘less-lethal’ police weapons are now the subject of coronial inquests, adding to pressure for tougher constraints on their use.