The Gold Coast Bulletin

WHY CAN’T YOU PUT A BRACELET ON MY BIKIE HUSBAND

Terrified mother writes to Premier AGAIN as gang thugs stalk her on way to cop shop SO A BULLET WON’T FLY THROUGH MY FRONT DOOR

- PAUL WESTON

THIS is the heart-stopping moment when bikies stalking a terrified mother are caught on camera.

This is the same young woman who wrote to Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk warning “I don’t want to be the next Teresa Bradford” (right) in a desperate call for help.

She has had guns and power tools put to her head, been spat at, punched, “my head slammed into doors” and strangled.

On the way to a police station, she says she dangerousl­y pulled over before a roundabout to avoid being tailed. The photograph of bikie mates of her ex-partner becomes part of a growing file where she alleges up to 12 instances of bail breaches.

Instead her bikie ex-husband gets bail and is not required to wear a GPS tracker despite being committed for trial on charges including rape.

In a second letter to the Premier, the mother calls for GPS trackers for thugs, safety watches for victims and toughening of the Bail Act — and is backed by the Bradford family.

“Why can’t I have a bracelet put on my bikie husband so I know a bullet from him won’t fly through my front door?” she says.

A PUSH is on to re-create a police district at Coomera on the northern Gold Coast as morale on the ground dips during potential budget cuts.

The Bulletin last week revealed the Coast was down 88 officers and internal emails showed funding would be funnelled from the Glitter Strip to Logan.

Senior police had been sent an email asking them to prepare a draft budget for 2018-19 where there would be “a reduction in the overall budget allocated to SER (South-East Region)” .

“In addition to this reduction spending will be allocated from the Gold Coast District to the Logan District, to better align budgets with actual expenditur­e over the previous three years,” the email said.

The cuts are expected to affect officers who received penalty rates and those in the dog squad and water police working on weekends, adding to a morale problem worsened by former Chief Superinten­dent Marty Mickelson filling a senior role in Brisbane.

But both the Queensland Police Union and Bond University criminolog­ist Dr Terry Goldsworth­y believe a new inquiry gives hope for Coomera to regain its status as a police district.

Police Minister Mark Ryan reaffirmed on the weekend that the Government would honour a pre-election commitment to review the police restructur­e which occurred under the Newman Government in 2013.

“The restructur­e removed Coomera as a police district which includes it being a 24hour station,” Dr Goldsworth­y told the Bulletin.

“I think clearly the police needs up there are growing. It’s a rapidly growing area. They need to recreate the district.

“It is lunacy that they are now spending thousands investigat­ing what they got rid of. It’s like an episode of Yes Minister.”

Queensland Police Union president Ian Leavers said the return of the Coomera Police District had been high on the union’s wish list after the service was restructur­ed into five mega regions.

“The abolishing of the Coomera Police District in 2013 by the Police Commission­er and the former government is in our view one of the greatest managerial errors in recent policing history,” Mr Leavers said.

“We welcome the Police Minister’s announceme­nt of an independen­t review of the 2013 restructur­e where we the Police Union are equal partners in the review process in line with our election commitment we requested and received.”

Both the union and the Crime and Corruption Commission will sit on a committee to assess the findings by independen­t consultant­s.

“It did not make sense in 2013 to abolish the Coomera Police District in the fastestgro­wing corridor of the fastestgro­wing region in Queensland and it makes even less sense now,” Mr Leavers said.

“I have been calling for the reinstatem­ent of the Coomera Police District for five years and this is certainly at the top of my wishlist for outcomes out of this review and I am glad that many people now agree with me to bring back the Coomera Police District.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Police Union boss Ian Leavers.
Police Union boss Ian Leavers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia