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7 votes
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Accused mosque shooter now facing terrorism charge
4 votes -
House Intelligence Committee releases transcripts of Michael Cohen's closed-door testimony
12 votes -
Once defiant, all four white supremacists charged in Charlottesville violence plead guilty
13 votes -
Justine Damond Ruszczyk's family wins record $US20 million payment over wrongful death
6 votes -
Wikileaks co-founder Julian Assange has been sentenced to fifty weeks in jail for breaching his bail conditions, still faces possible extradition to US
8 votes -
Noor found guilty in Ruszczyk [a.k.a. Justine Damond] killing
6 votes -
Musk must face cave rescuer lawsuit over ‘pedo guy’ tweet
16 votes -
The man arrested in relation to the Christchurch terror attacks will face fifty murder charges and thirty-nine attempted murder charges
17 votes -
Alleged Christchurch mosque shooter makes formal complaint from prison
7 votes -
Meng Hongwei: China to prosecute former Interpol chief
4 votes -
US jury acquits White former police officer in fatal shooting of unarmed Black teen
8 votes -
Ukrainian kidnapped by FSB in Belarus, given six-year jail term
5 votes -
San Francisco to pay $13.1 million to man framed by police for murder
6 votes -
Paul Manafort sentenced to forty-seven months in US prison for tax and bank fraud
17 votes -
Former officer Mohamed Noor pleads not guilty to Justine Ruszczyk Damond’s death
3 votes -
Chagossians urge caution over UN legal win
6 votes -
Supreme Court orders new hearing for death row inmate with dementia
8 votes -
Stone posted a picture of the Federal judge on his case with crosshairs
10 votes -
Newly released bodycam footage from an excessive force lawsuit shows Glendale, AZ police officers tasing man eleven times
14 votes -
Jeff Bezos accuses National Enquirer of extortion and blackmail
30 votes -
Court upholds conviction of Michelle Carter in texting-suicide case
5 votes -
Uber loses appeal over driver employment rights
8 votes -
Child asylum seeker allegedly raped on Nauru sues Federal Government for damages
6 votes -
Australian Cardinal George Pell convicted of child sex abuse offences - but reporting of this is banned in Australia.
So... here's an article I read in my newspaper earlier this week: "Why the media is unable to report on a case that has generated huge interest online". As you might imagine, this left me quite...
So... here's an article I read in my newspaper earlier this week: "Why the media is unable to report on a case that has generated huge interest online". As you might imagine, this left me quite unenlightened. I had no way of knowing or guessing what this case was, or who was involved. It was only a few days later, in conversation with some people I work with, that I found out what had happened.
And this is the first chance I've had since then to sit down and research the story for myself.
In short, Cardinal George Pell, the most senior Catholic Church official to stand trial for sexual abuse, has been convicted of sexual abuse offences relating to his time as Archbishop of Melbourne in the late 1990s.
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From the National Catholic Reporter: "Cardinal Pell found guilty of sex abuse, expected to appeal, reports say"
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From the Washington Post: "Australian court convicts once-powerful Vatican official on sex-abuse-related charges"
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From the Daily Beast: https://www.thedailybeast.com/vatican-no-3-cardinal-george-pell-on-trial-for-historical-child-sex-charges (I can't confirm this one - it's reportedly geo-blocked for Australian readers)
However, the Victorian court hearing the case has imposed a suppression order on the case, which applies in every jurisdiction in Australia. We have seen no reporting of the case as it proceeded, and no reporting of the outcome.
Before some people start assuming that this is protecting the Church, it's related to the right of an accused person to a free trial. Cardinal Pell is facing another trial in a few months for further charges of sexual abuse on a minor (relating to his time as a priest in Ballarat in the 1970s), and the court feels that reporting the outcome of this trial will potentially influence any possible jurors for that trial. Those possible jurors should go into that trial without any preconceived ideas of the accused person's guilt - and reporting that he is guilty of similar charges will undermine his right to a fair trial.
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From the Washington Post: "A top cardinal’s sex-abuse conviction is huge news in Australia. But the media can’t report it there."
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From the New York Post: "Australian media barred from covering cardinal’s conviction for sex abuse
All that we in Australia are being told is "George Pell removed from Pope Francis's cardinal advisory body". It's obvious why he was removed... if you know about the conviction.
32 votes -
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Michael Cohen sentenced to three years in prison
28 votes -
Victorian Government calls royal commission into potentially tainted gangland convictions
4 votes -
Philippine court jails three police officers for drugs war murder
6 votes -
Turkey sentences seventy-four to life in prison in post-coup case: Anadolu
7 votes -
Last surviving Khmer Rouge leaders found guilty of genocide in landmark ruling
7 votes -
Julian Assange has been charged under seal, prosecutors reveal inadvertently in court filing
27 votes -
Irish protests after teenager's thong used to suggest consent in rape trial
19 votes -
Theresa May imposes new layer of secrecy on Brexit legal advice
6 votes -
Ruling ‘fundamentally changes power dynamics’ as communities win big in ConCourt
5 votes -
Separated refugee families launch legal action against Australian government at UN
7 votes -
White officer convicted of murder in the death of Black teenager in Chicago
13 votes -
In El Chapo’s trial, extraordinary steps to keep witnesses alive
10 votes -
'The sea is ours': Landlocked Bolivia hopes court will reopen path to Pacific
8 votes -
Longtime Trump Organization CFO Allen Weisselberg granted immunity in Michael Cohen probe
15 votes -
South Korean court raises ex-president Park's jail term to 25 years
5 votes -
Reality Winner, former NSA translator, gets more than five years in leak of Russian hacking report
12 votes -
Saudi Arabia seeks its first death penalty against a female human rights activist
10 votes -
World attention will today focus on Zimbabwe when the Constitutional Court hears the petition lodged by Nelson Chamisa in his bid to overturn President Mnangagwa’s victory in the July 30 elections
7 votes -
US President Donald Trump's former campaign chairman Paul Manafort found guilty on eight counts
49 votes -
In a precedent, the Saudi prosecution calls for the beheading of female human rights defender Israa Al-Ghomgham
19 votes -
US judge bars statements made by Guantánamo detainees during FBI interrogations
9 votes -
'Damoclean sword': Michaela Banerji is still fighting after five years. The former Immigration Department official said her sacking after a tweet "drove a stake" through her.
3 votes -
Alex Jones, pursued over falsehoods, faces a legal crossroads
10 votes -
US judge blocks attempt to post blueprints for 3D guns
15 votes -
Stanford sex attack: Brock Turner's lawyer launches appeal
5 votes