Chủ Nhật, 7 tháng 4, 2013

Just two minutes to graffiti a wall

Graffiti

Graffiti artists Saphire and Danny. Source: The Sunday Times

IT took just two minutes. Armed with spray cans and wearing hoodies to conceal their faces, six members of a tagging "crew" covered the wall of an old bank building in graffiti.

Young, brazen, reckless and utterly without fear of the law, these teenagers worked methodically to cover the entire wall in their tagging nicknames and crew names just 100m from the carpark of the Westfield Carousel shopping centre in Cannington last week.

Motorists drove past, some flashed their high beam, but when the spray cans ran out and the damage was done, there was still no sign of police.

The Sunday Times has chosen to run the pictures to highlight how quickly and easily graffiti vandals can trash public property and why they feel compelled to do so.

"It's not hundreds, it's more like thousands of our tags all over Perth," one 15-year-old boy said.

"Trains, cars, buses, taxis, entire walls, toilets, buildings ... we tag everywhere and anywhere, day or night. You want us to go tag a police station? We'll do it."

With a used spray can in her hand, a 17-year-old girl said: "I tag because it lets all the anger out. I got schizophrenia and bipolar. Other people go for a run to let the anger out, but I go tagging."

Another crew member, a 16-year-old boy, said his crew was on a mission to do as much graffiti as possible to convince authorities to set aside places where tagging was legal.

"We need an area. An old building or a space where we can do it legally. It's a form of art. We're doing this to express ourselves," he said.

Many of the teens, aged from 14-17, said they smoked cigarettes and cannabis. They admitted running from police was part of the thrill.

Members of other crews said they formed organised gangs because they wanted to be accepted and to feel safe.

In Armadale, the True Brotherz, made up of Maori teens, said they didn't commit crimes and weren't violent.

"But if anyone starts on us, look out. It's over. We've got each others' backs," one member said.

The Central Crew hold sway around Central Park in the city with about 40 street kids led by homeless woman and former prostitute "Storm".

She said she recently slashed herself with a broken bottle, inflicting serious wounds, when the Centrals were confronted by a large group of African youths who wanted their "turf".

"They were going to mess me up pretty bad so I smashed a bottle I was holding and started cutting myself to get in first. It freaked them out and they left us alone," Storm said.

Another Armadale crew known as the Armadilians mainly hang out at the local skate park, though some said they did graffiti and smoked cannabis.

Richard, a former member of a Fremantle crew, said he had seen organised fights between crews where "people were smashing the s--- out of everyone left, right and centre".

"We used to get into street fights, break into cars, houses. We never robbed or assaulted old people we didn't believe in that," he said.

"The main reason people join a gang is kinship, being part of something together with the people who protect your back."

Drew, a former member of the Kids on Smack crew, said boredom meant teenagers turned to illegal thrills.


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Naked man braves crocs for booze

Naked man on log on Daly River

This man stripepd off, jumped ona log and braved the crocodile-infested waters of the Daly River so he could win a bet. Source: Northern Territory News

A FISHERMAN has risked his life for what he considered a good cause - booze.

He won two cases of bourbon for jumping on to a log racing down a flooded, crocodile-infested river - in the nude, The Northern Territory News reports.

The tiler, who didn't want to be named, rode the makeshift raft for about three minutes before clambering back into a boat.

"I'd enjoyed a few beers and it seemed a good idea at the time," he said.

Witness Billy Innes said his mate thought nothing of the dangers of drowning or being eaten by a saltwater crocodile, which inhabit the river in large numbers.

"It was hilarious," he said.

The daredevil was camping at the Daly River on Sunday when he accepted the bet.

"Huge trees were hammering down the river," Mr Innes said.

"It was quite a sight. Someone dared him to get on to one of the logs and row across the river."

Keith Parry, 20, was killed while swimming across the Daly River in April 2009. He was crossing the river because he wanted more beer.

Read more on the naked man braving the crocodile-infested Daly River at The NT News


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Viral mugshot woman's wedding offers

Meagan Simmons, Facebook

This mugshot portrait of Meagan Mccullough nee Simmons has led to marriage proposals and declarations of love. Picture: Hillsborough County Source: Supplied

A MUGSHOT of a woman has gone viral, prompting declarations of love from across the world and even marriage proposals.

Yet the mugshot of the "attractive convict", arrested for allegedly drink driving, is not a model or actress as people presumed. It's a mother-of-four, who is a medical assistant, from Florida, US.

Meagan Mccullough, 27, of Zephyrhills, as she was then known, was arrested for DUI in July 2010 leading to her mugshot being taken in an orange jumpsuit. Her natural good looks meant yesterday, three years on, it caught the attention of the sharing website Reddit and soon spread around the internet like wildfire, MailOnline reported.

Men fashioned memes adding captions to the mugshot such as 'GUILTY - of taking my breath away', 'Arrested for breaking and entering - YOUR HEART' and 'Tell me what she did so I can end up in the same jail'.

Social media sites were overtaken by comments from men wanting to marry her, looking for her phone number and asking if she is a model.

Even on the arrest site men have written of instant love for her mugshot.

Meagan Simmons, Facebook

Love and marriage... Meagan Mccullough nee Simmons. Picture: Facebook

"The eyes of the sky. And hair like woven silk. I have taken photos of thousands of woman and never seen one with what you have in those eyes breath taking you are.

"I hope if you have a man he takes care of you and showers you with love and tenderness. If we were together you would need for nothing . I would go to the ends of the earth just to make you happy," a man posted.

Another asks her to move to Ireland.

"What's up with that surname, you must have Irish heritage? You got bar work experience?

"Come to Ireland, I'll put you up for a while and you can work in my friends pub while you find your feet, look up your family history and then move on to something better.

A driver's complaint about an inflated service quote and unnecessary repairs has gone viral on social media.

"Over here, we don't call you a criminal for driving drunk (unless repeatedly caught). I'm not joking by the way."

Meagan, now separated from her husband and going by her maiden name Simmons, is baffled by the sudden interest and bemused by the obsession with the mugshot picture she thinks "is terrible".

"I had just been crying when the photo was taken and I was drunk. I knew I'd caused a lot of trouble and my parents were really upset and I was really upset. I wasn't thinking about how I looked at all," she told Mail Online.

"I don't think it's that good a picture - there are other ones I would prefer."

Meagan said the interest was overwhelming and said had to block a lot of users.

Viral footage from Channel 7’s Highway Patrol of Clinton telling Victoria Police he's 'waiting for a mate'

She is single and dateless, although she says her two daughters and two sons, all of school age, are part of a package.

"Guys may find me attractive but they don't want a relationship and it's disappointing," she told Mail Online.

"I am single and I'm a hopeless romantic and I'm really picky. If it was just a nice normal guy who happened to come across the picture - but I'd have to do a background check because who would do that?'

"I think its weird, you can't be serious about someone if it's based off their mugshot and that mugshot is something I'm ashamed of - I'm not happy about it."

Meagan, who used to work at Hooters, is not unaware of her good looks.

Nick Bertke’s funky remix of a trip through central Australia on the Ghan.

"I never know what to wear to my kids school functions...dress like a mom or the sexy woman I am #hotmomproblems," she recently wrote on Twitter.


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Hopes fade for lobster fishermen

HOPES are fading for two lobster fishermen missing in wild weather on Tasmania's remote southwest coast.

No trace has been found of the two men, both aged about 30, since their upturned dinghy was discovered near Port Davey yesterday afternoon.

The pair are experienced professional fishermen and police believe they were probably wearing life jackets.

But a cold front and swells of four metres have police fearing the worst, while the conditions have also prevented divers from being deployed.

"As time goes on it is increasingly unlikely we'll find them alive," Inspector Stuart Scott said.

The two men had been in the dinghy picking up lobster pots, having left their larger boat moored at Port Davey on Sunday afternoon.

A helicopter, police vessel and two fishing boats were searching the area, while two officers were on the shore.

"It is theoretically possible that if you managed to get to the shore you could walk around and get back to the inner bay which is where the original boat was moored," Insp Scott said.

"Once you are on shore then a different set of calculations apply ... but there is no evidence that that is the case at this point."

The men, who have not yet been named by police, are from Launceston and the D'Entrecasteaux Channel south of Hobart.

They were working in a remote area which is adjoined by Tasmania's World Heritage Area wilderness and is accessible only by boat or on foot.

"The nearest permanent residence is Melaleuca which is still some distance away from this area and you wouldn't walk there in a week," Insp Scott said.

"It is very remote and in certain weather conditions it's pretty bleak and wild."

One of the men is from an established fishing family, reportedly of four generations.

"That always is an additional factor in considering people's chances but the reality is now that time is getting on," Insp Scott said.

More bad weather is expected for tomorrow, when the onshore search will be expanded.


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WA duo star at Moulin Rouge

perth moulin rouge dancers

Perth performers Ashley Swinbourne and Aaron Smeding who are both performing in the most famous cabaret in the world, Moulin Rouge. Picture: Sandie Bertrand Source: PerthNow

perth moulin rouge dancers

Perth performers Ashley Swinbourne and Aaron Smeding who are both performing in the most famous cabaret in the world, Moulin Rouge. Picture: Sandie Bertrand Source: PerthNow

AARON Smeding is getting a big kick out of his first job dancing at the famous Moulin Rouge in Paris.

Not only did the 21-year-old WAAPA graduate make the cut physically, male dancers have to be at least 1.98m, females 1.73m and professionally, he is also the youngest man in the 100-strong troupe.

"It's quite surreal to be honest," he told The Sunday Times. "I still have moments when I have to pinch myself while onstage and go, 'I'm actually dancing at the Moulin Rouge'. It's a crazy experience, but I love it."

Smeding first caught the eye of the company's ballet mistress two years ago when he auditioned in Perth, at the age of 19.

When a spot became available in October he moved to Paris and was joined by Ashley Swinbourne, of Ocean Reef.

The pair, who both went to Fremantle's John Curtin College of the Arts, are among a small group of Aussies who are helping to keep the French cancan alive. Smeding said the troupe, which consists of 14 different nationalities, performs two shows a night, six days a week.

And while he is happy to remain at the Moulin Rouge for the time being, he said he would one day like to join a contemporary European dance company.

"Plus there's always companies in Australia that I would love to dance for in the future, like the Sydney Dance Company or Expressions Dance Company," he said.


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$5.8m gold found in family car

Italian police found millions in hidden bullion - 12 ingots under the seats of this family car during a routine Swiss border stop. YouTube/Guardia Di Finanza (no audio).

Gold ingots bullion stock image

Italian police found $5.8 million of gold ingots hidden in a family car. Source: AFP

ITALIAN police say they found gold ingots worth 4.5 million euros ($A5.8 million) hidden in a car headed to Switzerland on what appeared "an ordinary Easter day out with the family''.

Police stopped the car on a routine check on Easter Sunday but became suspicious as the man driving it, his wife and three children became increasingly nervous.

Police then found two hidden compartments under the seats.

"It looked like an ordinary Easter day out with the family,'' the financial police said in a statement, adding that the couple had given "evasive answers'' and were therefore taken to a police station for a full-scale search.

A total of 12 ingots were found wrapped in old newspapers and tied together with cellotape, according to video images released by the financial police in Ponte Chiasso in northern Italy, close to Lugano in southern Switzerland.

The 53-year-old driver, an Italian man resident in Switzerland, has been charged with money laundering and the gold has been confiscated.

An investigation has been launched into where it could have come from.

The man, a legal representative of a Swiss company, "did not provide an explanation or demonstrate the legitimate provenance of the large quantity of precious metal,'' the police said, without giving further details.

The phenomenon of gold smuggling across the Alps from Italy into Switzerland has increased sharply in recent months as Italian authorities have multiplied investigations against tax evasion and money laundering
 


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Protesters swamp Hong Kong streets

Hong Kong protests

Thousands of protesters take to the streets chanting slogans against new Hong Kong Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying in Hong Kong. Source: AFP

Leung Chun-ying

Hong Kong's Chief Executive-elect Leung Chun-ying, right, and his wife Regina. Source: AP

HONG Kong's biggest protest for nearly a decade has packed the former British colony's streets in a defiant reception for its new leader and a show of popular anger after 15 years of Chinese rule.

The rally came after Leung Chun-ying, a millionaire property consultant seen as close to China's communist authorities, was sworn in as chief executive in front of Chinese President Hu Jintao - who had his speech interrupted on Sunday.

Hu's visit and Leung's inauguration have become focal points for growing discontent towards Beijing, which has surged to a new post-handover high amid soaring housing costs, limited democracy and perceived meddling by China.

"Hong Kong has become much worse off," Eric Lai of the Civil Human Rights Front told the marchers. "Our rights are under serious threat."

Organisers put the crowd at 400,000, their largest claimed turnout for eight years.

Hong Kong protests

A poster with a picture of Hong Kong chief executive Leung Chun-ying reading "Guard the values of Hong Kong, tell Hong Kong people to say no to communist authority" is burnt by protesters. Source: AFP

In sweltering heat the last of the marchers reached their destination almost six hours after the first set out, and along the way they blocked streets far across the city, stranding buses and trams as they surrounded them.

Hong Kong does not yet choose its leader by universal suffrage, and Leung was elected as chief executive in March by a committee stacked with pro-Beijing business elites.

A spokesman for the Hong Kong government said it "fully respected" freedom of expression and the right to "take part in processions", and would listen to the demonstrators' views "in a humble manner".

Earlier, as President Hu began his speech to around 2300 guests at Leung's inauguration, a protester inside the harbour-front venue repeatedly shouted "End one-party rule".

Hong Kong protests

A protester hits a cut-out picture of wolf which represents new Hong Kong Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying during a pro-democracy protest march in Hong Kong. Source: AFP

The man also referred to the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989 in Beijing, and was rapidly bundled away by security personnel, while the audience drowned him out with extended applause for Hu.

Beijing's support for "one country, two systems" and the right of Hong Kongers to rule the territory was "unwavering", said Hu.

"We will follow the Basic Law ... to continue to advance democratic development in Hong Kong," said the president, who will step down as part of a once-in-a-decade leadership transition in Beijing starting later this year.

Late on Sunday some 300 protesters held a demonstration outside the Beijing representative office in Hong Kong, burning copies of the city's mini-constitution before dispersing around midnight.


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