ACTIVE SEARCH Australia. Man wanted after pouring hot coffee on baby in park, Brisbane, Queensland. 27th August 2024

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He could have flew to Honolulu in 9 hours, then on to San Fran. I am still hoping with my fingers crossed it’s US.

jmo

Yes, it will be good if it is an 'easy' country for us to have him sent back from.

I think in the Honolulu/San Fran situation, they still might have been able to nab him in San Fran. The customs and immigration lines take a while to get through, and disembarking from the plane takes a while.

It is possible, too, that he flew to one destination on one identity, and flew on to another destination under another identity. But it all seems like a lot for him to do. Lots of pre-planning - did he expect the baby to die?

I wouldn't be surprised if his destination was South Korea. Which we can extradite from. I have been looking at images of South Korean heritage males ... he could pass, judging by the CCTV.

imo
 
Is it common in Australia to refer to someone as a foreign national?
Very common.
It's a term used frequently, often in the beginnings of a news story when all the facts are either not yet known or the media isn't allowed to say.
The follow up stories usually soon give the exact country which can range to all the countries in the world.

So it's not a euphemism for China.
 
I guess the perp is from one of neighbouring countries.

I cannot imagine somebody from the USA or Canada (as some suggested) coming to work in Australia.
When there are lots of job opportunities in America.

JMO
 
Well,
for someone who wants to emigrate and settle down.
But for temporary work, it is not economical.
There are many opportunities in America.
No need to seek jobs in lands afar.

Well, this is my opinion :)
 
I guess the perp is from one of neighbouring countries.

I cannot imagine somebody from the USA or Canada (as some suggested) coming to work in Australia.
When there are lots of job opportunities in America.

JMO
Many US big tech companies have international offices. Amazon, Dropbox, Google, Microsoft, Oracle, LinkedIn all have offices in Australia. And they employ consultants that travel.
 
Well,
for someone who wants to emigrate and settle down.
But for temporary work, it is not economical.
There are many opportunities in America.
No need to seek jobs in lands afar.

Well, this is my opinion :)
Totally fair, but in the case of my friend who went to Australia for work, she was only there for a year or two on a temporary job contract.
 
Well,
for someone who wants to emigrate and settle down.
But for temporary work, it is not economical.
There are many opportunities in America.
No need to seek jobs in lands afar.

Well, this is my opinion :)
Bit off topic but people often come to Australia on working holiday visas - for anyone with reasonable economic means their trip is generally planned with more emphasis on the holiday part than the working part.

You can get a 2 year extension on the visa if you complete 88 days of agricultural work in approved remote areas - I worked at a pub in a town with a population of 70 in the early 2010s and met plenty of backpackers there -many a German, French, American, Irish or Canadian WHV holder who worked by day on local stations and at the pub by night.

You can only earn a certain amount on that visa so it’s essentially cheap labour for often menial kind of tasks, targeted to areas where there just isn’t a workforce - bad actors can absolutely take advantage but the bulk of employers I knew all participated in good faith and the travellers got to massively extend their stay for 3 months of work like fruit or veg picking, driving machinery during harvest on broadacre cropping farms, some working out on a station as a couple where the owners/managers would do the more technical work and the backpackers would assist, usually the female helping with the kids and house so the parents could both work on the property, and the male backpacker outside too - maybe rock picking in paddocks, mending fences and yards, completing “water runs” to check dams, bores, tanks water levels and cleaning troughs or when they were lucky, being able to assist in more exciting jobs like mustering on motorbikes. Obviously men and women can all do both but that is generally the arrangement - most I met really enjoyed getting to experience a lifestyle that even lots of Australians who grew up here never get to experience (or don’t even know exists). Check out some “outback ringer” on YouTube if it’s available to you, a docu-series about bull catching which shows some of the more extreme “excitement” one might witness on a station, then something like this from a backpacker which is a more day to day example of what it could be like.

Anyway point is there is quite a lot of appeal outside of just economic factors, most travel could be put down as being not economically advantageous, but life is for living right?
 

New article released today. Mainly rehashing old info however there is this little tidbit confirming that a warrant for his arrest has been issued and the process to bring him home is in underway ....

"Police know where the man flew to and have issued a warrant for his arrest, triggering a complex legal process to bring him back to Australia to face justice."
 
The Independent, a British online news site based in London is running the story, with a photo of the perp. Which is great, the more his face gets shown out there, the better the chance of catching him.

 

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