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Brisbane Family’s Death Was Murder: Police

Rape Crisis Centers on Budget Cut: ‘We’re Used to Being Poor’

LOS ANGELES⁠—Under Gov. Gavin Newsom’s draft budget for fiscal year 2020–21, rape crisis centers (RCCs) across California will see a major decrease in funding. The state’s annual general fund is set to contribute $45,000, all of which will go to the Alameda Health System. An additional $1.7 million will come from the State Penalty Fund. That’s a significant drop from fiscal year 2018–19, when the state contributed $5 million. The $5 million was a one-time contribution, but even so the regular state funding has been dropping in recent years. From 2013 to 2017, the State Penalty Fund contributed $3.67 million annually. That dropped to $2.31 million in the 2017–18 budget, and now it’s at $1.7 million. Much of the RCCs’ funding comes from the federal government. But the centers are…

Brisbane Family’s Death Was Murder: Police

The Brisbane mother killed when her estranged partner set fire to her car didn’t believe she had been a victim of domestic violence because he didn’t hit her.

A Brisbane mother and her three children who died when her estranged husband set fire to her car were murdered, police say.

Two days after the tragedy, Queensland Police Commissioner Katarina Carroll confirmed police are treating their deaths as murder.

“This is a shocking tragedy which has affected the whole community,” Carroll said.

“Our thoughts are particularly with the family and loved ones.”

The death shortly after of their killer, Rowan Baxter, is not being treated as suspicious.

Hannah did not believe she was the victim of domestic violence, a friend says, despite a domestic violence order in place against her estranged husband.

The couple had been separated for months after Hannah left the family home and took daughters Aaliyah, 6, and Laianah, 4, and son Trey, 3, to her parent’s house in nearby Camp Hill.

“I work in domestic violence … so when she first confided in me we spoke about the violence and for such a long time she didn’t believe she was in a domestic violence relationship,” friend Manja Whaley told Nine’s Today show.

“It hadn’t crossed her mind, because as she said to me, her words, ‘he didn’t hit me.’

“I then started unpacking with her the emotional abuse, sexual abuse, financial abuse, and she had experienced all of those.”

Brisbane Family’s Death Was Murder: Police Hannah, Rowan Baxter and their three children Laianah, Aaliyah and Trey—the family were involved in a fatal vehicle fire at Camp Hill in Brisbane. Image obtained on Feb. 19, 2020. (AAP Image/Facebook)

Hannah, 31, died in hospital on Wednesday night.

While setting out on the school run, Baxter approached their SUV and sat in the passenger seat.

Exactly what happened next is still being investigated, but a witness reported Hannah jumped out of the car on fire in Raven Street, exclaiming “he’s poured petrol on me.”

The children, who were strapped into the back seat, perished in the flames.

Baxter is believed to have died from wounds self-inflicted with a knife.

Mourners continue to visit the street where the children died to lay floral tributes and pay their respects.

A Facebook fundraising page set up by Hannah’s sister-in-law Stacey Roberts has so far raised more than $143,000.

Queensland Police revealed the former couple had previously been referred to support services, and police had received reports of domestic violence within the family over several months.

A Brisbane court granted at least one domestic violence order against Baxter.

“There was the checking of her accounts on Facebook, the accusations of her cheating … she would get dressed and she would be picking up her clothes and he would say things to her ‘like look at your stomach, that’s just disgusting,’” Whaley said.

According to Whaley, who said she has worked in the domestic violence sector for 10 years, Hannah left Baxter on Dec. 5.

“My hope is that people are more aware of domestic violence … just because you haven’t been beaten doesn’t mean that there is no domestic violence,” she said.

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By Robyn Wuth

This article is from the Internet:Brisbane Family’s Death Was Murder: Police

Five Eyes Alliance ‘Could Have Been’ at Risk Due to Downer Issue, Says Former Australian Ambassador to the US

The “tip-off” from a former Australian High Commissioner that triggered the Russia investigation could have put the Five Eyes intelligence-sharing arrangement at risk, Joe Hockey has revealed. Hockey, the now-former Australian Ambassador to the United States told The Sydney Morning Herald that Alexander Downer’s role in the Russia investigation had the potential to threaten Australia’s position in the Five Eyes alliance—an intelligence alliance comprising the United States, Britain, Australia, Canada, and New Zealand. “Australia was under pressure on Five Eyes because of the whole Downer issue,” Hockey said. “Our role in Five Eyes is more valuable than ever because of the increasing importance of the Indo-Pacific. We are not under threat in Five Eyes, but we could have been.” Former Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer in Canberra on Nov. 12,…