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Was David Eastman, acquitted of murdering the ACT's top cop, Australia's most expensive prisoner?

It's impossible to count the millions spent on Australia's biggest police hunt, two trials, two High Court challenges, a judicial inquiry and 19 years of imprisonment.




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Woman dies after fire truck and car collide in 'horrific' Canberra crash

A female driver dies in hospital after a collision between her car and a fire truck in an inner suburb of Canberra.





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Adelaide tops world for methamphetamine or 'ice' use in massive wastewater drug study

South Australia's capital records the highest methamphetamine use of all the cities in the world compared in a paper based on wastewater samples, but a researcher says initiatives to tackle this problem have had an effect.




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Baseball Australia to launch world's second dedicated national women's league

Australia is set to become only the second country in the world to have a dedicated national women's baseball competition.




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Canberra woman awarded $150,000 after suing brother-in-law who raped her when she was 14

The sexual assault, and her future brother-in-law's warning that she not tell anyone, left her with an eating disorder and post traumatic stress disorder.



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Murray-Darling Basin boss paints grim picture for more fish deaths, algal blooms

The Murray-Darling Basin Authority warns it will be another ugly summer, telling politicians that unless it rains soon, water conditions will get worse.




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Education survey finds 12pc of children with a disability kept from class by school 'gate keeping'

A week ahead of the first hearings of the Disability Royal Commission in Townsville, a new survey of families of children with disability finds nearly no progress has been made on improving access to inclusive education.




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Greenland ice cap melt measured by satellites and it's enough to cover Tasmania in almost 5m of water

Australian scientists have weighed Greenland's ice cap melt using satellite technology and their findings are not good.




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Australia's maternity care at 'crisis point' with birth trauma rates increasing

Up to one in three Australian women have experienced birth trauma and one in 10 women emerge from childbirth with post-traumatic stress disorder, prompting calls for a major shake-up of the maternity system.




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Del Kathryn Barton: that's when i was another tree 2 (2007)



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Family of Irma Palasics, brutally killed 20 years ago, call for new DNA testing in search for killer

Irma Palasics was killed during a brutal home invasion in 1999, but her killers were never identified. Twenty years later, her family believe new forensic procedures could find the people responsible.




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AFP assessing whether to suspend officer charged with act of indecency after allegedly starting fight

The Australian Federal Police is assessing whether to suspend officer Ivan Kovacic after he allegedly committed an act of indecency on a woman he had invited to his apartment with her two friends to try some craft beer.




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Disability royal commission chair's remarks attacked as 'provocative, intemperate and inappropriate'

Disability royal commission chair Ronald Sackville said commentators were discouraging people from telling their stories to the commission, but critics say the real discouragement is the absence of appropriate supports.




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Hunt for 'random' gunman ends in arrest after woman shot in the head as she sat in her car

A man is arrested in Canberra's south, after a woman was shot in the head this morning as she sat in her parked car in a "random" and "untargeted" attack.




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Former orchestra violinist injured in 1987 crash wins right to further Comcare-funded massages

Comcare covered 973 massages for a former Sydney Symphony Orchestra violinist before deciding to cut support. But their decision to cease funding has been overturned, with the Administration Appeals Tribunal ruling that massage is a "reasonable" medical treatment.




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Hundreds of Canberra teachers and nurses work as casuals a number 'far beyond what is acceptable'

Lea Powell had to leave teaching after years working as a casual became too hard to manage but she was just one of more than 600 workers in the ACT's health and education systems who have been constant casual for more than five years.





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Bushfire season starts early across northern Australia due to ongoing hot, dry conditions

A decade of dry conditions and lower rainfall has left parts of northern Australia facing an early and "above normal" bushfire risk in parts of northern Queensland and the Northern Territory.




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Cairns is hot on the heels of the Gold Coast for its trendsetting hipster culture

A hipster's heaven in regional Queensland is putting the sword to counterculture capitals such as Sydney and Melbourne by embracing its man buns, skinny jeans and coffee shops.



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Carbon price 'useful' as sugar industry struggles to diversify and value-add

Stagnant domestic production and a slump in global raw sugar prices require serious action to combat future declines in the $2 billion sugar industry, a report finds.




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Cheap migrant worker cut-off slips as regional push brings further discounts for employers

To encourage more migrants to work in regions, the Government is relaxing long-held restrictions on temporary workers.




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'Ghost nets' no more as Queensland moves to legislate against the illegal fishing practice

The Queensland Government plans to crackdown on the illegal dumping of commercial fishing nets, known as ghost nets.




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Former Queensland treasurer denies Entsch's claim he pledged funds to boarding school forced to close

MP Warren Entsch says the Queensland Government failed to honour a deal to help fund a Cairns Indigenous boarding facility for girls following the state election.



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Cape York community's fight to save Iron Range rainforest devastated by Cyclone Trevor

A remote Cape York community is in the fight of its life to save a unique rainforest that was devastated by a cyclone.




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First nations passports_MANUS FLOTILLA



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Refugees on Manus to receive Australian First Nations 'passports' from activists aboard sail boat

Letters of solidarity and more than 400 Aboriginal 'passports' will be delivered to Manus Island refugees as a group of boats set sail for Papua New Guinea.




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The team at Neville's Garden Site: Phil Creaser, Karen Roberts, Liz Price, Sue Hand, Kenny Travouillon, Dr Mike Archer, Arthur White, and John Scan

The team at Neville's Garden Site: Phil Creaser, Karen Roberts, Liz Price, Sue Hand, Kenny Travouillon, Dr Mike Archer, Arthur White, and John Scan




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When David Glasheen lost everything, moving to a remote island saved him

David Glasheen was once a multi-millionaire living in Sydney. But that was a different life. For 22 years, the 76-year-old has been the sole resident of a remote Queensland island and he wouldn't have it any other way.




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HIV and hepatitis C risk to patients as Cairns dental clinic closed by health authorities

Health authorities urge more than 500 patients of a dental clinic in Far North Queensland to be tested for HIV and hepatitis as the clinic is investigated over its infection control practices.




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Pioneering migrants visit Australia's Basque heartland to trace family history

They travelled across the world in the 1950s and '60s to build a new life cutting cane in the steamy paddocks of north Queensland. Now Basques return to learn the story of their ancestors.




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Live export industry 'eroded' as summer ban extends, WA exporter faces animal cruelty charges

There are concerns, and equally hopes, that an extension to a ban on live sheep exports and cruelty charges against a live exporter are eroding the livestock exporting industry.




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Mapoon Beach in Cape York a vivid showcase of washed-up waste

On a remote stretch of beach on the west coast of Cape York, rangers were stunned to see the extent of the rubbish strewn across an area used by turtles during nesting season.




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Welcome to Australia's washed-up thong capital




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How Lego therapy can be a 'massive win' for kids with autism and their families

Lego is being used in both informal and clinical sessions to improve the communication and cooperation skills of children with autism.




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Native bees die three times faster from honey bee parasite, researchers find

Researchers find a common disease in honey bees can be transmitted to native bees through flowers, causing them to die about three times the rate of the normal mortality.




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Asian barramundi whole-fish imports spark biosecurity concern for local farms free of diseases

Australias largest barramundi farm is calling for a halt in whole-fish imports from Asia not because around 60 per cent is imported, but for biosecurity reasons.




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States and territories agree to ban plastic, paper, glass and tyre waste exports

State and territory leaders have agreed to establish a timetable to work towards a waste export ban.




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Out-of-control superyacht crashes into Cairns pier

The massive yacht crushed several smaller boats as it came to a juddering halt at the Cairns Marlin Marina in Queensland.



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Superyacht crash at Cairns marina




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Survival of fishermen stranded on FNQ coast helped by sandy 'graves' and lip balm

After staging an against-the-odds survival after a boat capsize in remote far north Queensland waters, one man is issuing a stern warning to fellow fishermen.




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Caneball, an ancient east Asian sport, helps refugees from Myanmar feel at home in Australia

Myanmar's national sport is similar to volleyball but players use their feet instead of their hands. The game is now being regularly played in Australia by Karen refugees.




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Drought slashes soybean production prompting fierce competition for the small crop, warnings of price hikes

Drought has collided with high demand for soybeans, lifting prices by around $500 a tonne, prompting warnings of a price hike for soymilk, tofu and tempeh.




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Giant crocodile, Howard, has 10yo Elroy on his side fighting for him to remain on creek bank

A 10-year-old boy writes to Queensland's Environment Minister pleading with authorities not to remove a giant crocodile that has been sunning itself on a creek bank.




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Rainforest more flammable than grass amid fears Iron Range will take decades to recover from fires

Scientists fear Cape York's Iron Range (Kutini-Payamu) National Park could take decades to recover after weekend fires.




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Unproven stem cell treatments provide expensive last resort in families' search for hope

What's driving Australian families overseas to gamble on "magical" stem cell treatments at sky-high prices?




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Scheme promising economic boom for northern Australia has not spent a cent in Queensland

Stakeholders call for an overhaul of the government's $5 billion fund that promised to turn northern Australia into an economic powerhouse.




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Rodney Hyman watched as the propeller stopped turning