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Smashing police corruption in South Australia



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24.01.2022 Police should not investigate police!! No wonder SAPOL is full of corruption and misconduct.



22.01.2022 Circus clown at the wheel...

20.01.2022 In my opinion the South Australian Police force operates with agendas to protect the elite pedophiles and persecute many of their victims....its called CORRUPTION....

14.01.2022 SA Police Detective Eric Walsh



13.01.2022 Rachel Vaughan shared a link. 1 hr MISSING BEAUMONT CHILDREN DIG AT CASTALLOY A WASTE OF TIME! Just as expected the dig for the Beaumont children at the North P...lympton Castalloy site yesterday was a waste of time, money and media attention. Yet the major crime department are still not asking for more information from my brother Andrew McIntyre nor my sister Ruth Collins about their witness accounts of the events of Australia day 1966. This is in spite of the fact that Ruth and Andrew have provided the most promising leads in the case in the 52 years since Jane, Aarna and Grant went missing. I wonder how long the detectives on the Beaumont case at the Adelaide major crime department can keep up this farce. I would now like to call on the senate, the Federal police, all South Australian politicians, mass and alternative media to step in and FORCE SA police to exhume the Beaumont children from the sink hole at my father Allan Maxwell McIntyre’s former property in Stansbury. He is after all the most compelling person of interest in the Beaumont mystery thus far. Once the Stansbury property has been fully excavated, and Jane, Aarna and Grant’s remains have been given back to their parents Jim and Nancy for a proper burial, I demand that Tracey Louise Bell’s remains are exhumed from my father’s former Edwardstown property where I witnessed her murder and burial in 1983. The Yatina property of Arthur Stanley Hart must also be revisited, as well as other areas of interest in the Yatina area that are purported to have been utilised in abductions and murders of missing children. I am sorry to all of those good people in the community who so desperately wanted Jim and Nancy Beaumont to receive the answers they deserve through the dig at Castalloy yesterday. Please take that disappointment and put it to good use today. Sign our petition, lobby the major crime department, call Crimestoppers, call media outlets, and/or write to your local politician to force SAPOL to exhume Jane, Aarna and Grant from Stansbury. We are all so close to getting answers to so many missing person’s cases, many of which my father was involved in. Please don’t lose the momentum. Be a voice for these children. See more

07.01.2022 YATINA? The untold story ..

07.01.2022 SAPOL sex predator



05.01.2022 Corruption and paedophile cover up.

03.01.2022 Jumpy Jen and Jay

02.01.2022 13 October, 2014 Six South Australian police officers have been charged after a corruption probe into their alleged theft of liquor, tools and electronic goods.... Charges include: A 53-year-old man from Darlington - abuse of public office and aggravated theft A 43-year-old man from Aberfoyle Park - two counts of abuse of public office, two counts of theft, and property damage A 38-year-old man from Woodcroft - two counts of abuse of public office, two counts of aggravated theft and property damage A 33-year-old man from Camden Park - abuse of public office and aggravated theft A 31-year-old woman from Sellicks Beach - abuse of public office, aggravated theft and property damage A 27-year-old woman from Woodcroft - abuse of public office and aggravated theft. A joint investigation involving the Independent Commissioner Against Corruption (ICAC) and SA Police Anti-Corruption Branch led to the arrests of six of the seven officers in the Sturt local service area in Adelaide's southern suburbs. The six plain-clothes officers were bailed following charges of property-related theft and abuse of public office. Police Commissioner Gary Burns told reporters the Anti-Corruption Branch started investigating early this year and formally notified the ICAC Commissioner of the matter. The officers - a sergeant and five senior constables - were part of Operation Mantle, an investigation into drug-related crime, and all had been suspended from duty, Mr Burns said. Under Section 56 of ICAC legislation, ICAC Commissioner Bruce Lander authorised police to publish and discuss details of the arrests. Mr Burns said he was disappointed at the allegations against the six officers and worried about the impact for the wider force. "This is disappointing, the allegations are very disappointing," he said. "We work on reputation, we need public confidence and public support so that actions any police officers involved in any criminality or offending does have an impact." Confidence 'not undermined' Police Association of SA president Mark Carroll said the case would not undermine public confidence in the force. "It was uncovered by police, investigated by police, and that led to the joint operation with the ICAC," he said. "I think that people would understand that this is an isolated incident and is not reflective of the vast majority of the police ... that work here in South Australia." South Australia's ICAC formally started operating just over a year ago, with a range of strict and secretive legislative protocols. It prompted Mr Lander to recommend late last year that the SA Government ease some secrecy provisions of the legislation. The ICAC Commissioner said the act had been over-engineered regarding confidentiality. An 'awful' breach of public trust Premier Jay Weatherill said the corruption charges demonstrated the importance of the Commissioner. "Good governments have nothing to hide and we wanted to make sure that there was the highest public trust in our most important institutions," he said. "Of course, it's awful when we see these breaches of public trust, but I think that the public should have confidence that the ICAC is doing its work. "Where it finds these instances of breaches of public integrity, it's rooting them out and bringing people to justice." The officers are due to face court on December 19. www.abc.net.au//police-charged-theft-abuse-public-/5808750

01.01.2022 A FORMER SA Police officer has admitted repeatedly sexually abusing a girl, 16, while he was employed and now faces a maximum 10 years’ jail. Dale Knoote-Parke, 51, faced the Adelaide Magistrates Court today and pleaded guilty to four counts of having unlawful sexual intercourse with a person under the age of 17 years. Prosecutors subsequently tendered no evidence in a further two counts of that offence, as well as a single, aggravated count of indecent assault.... After court, an SA Police spokeswoman told The Advertiser that Knoote-Parke had resigned from the department prior to today’s hearing. As exclusively revealed by The Sunday Mail in August, Knoote-Parke was arrested and charged following inquiries by the Special Crimes Investigation Branch. It was reported, at the time, that Knoote-Parke worked in one of the most sensitive areas of the department. It can now be reported that he worked for the Commissioner’s Services Branch an arm of SA Police that works closely with Commissioner Gary Burns. Knoote-Parke was also involved with non-outlaw motorcycle clubs and charity toy runs for children. His arrest came on the heels of a series of child sex abuse allegations involving public servants and employees of the besieged Families SA. At the time of his arrest, Knoote-Parke was suspended with pay by SA Police. Today, Knoote-Parke admitted having had sex with the girl at Thebarton, Redwood Park and Salisbury East on four occasions between July and August last year. He was remanded on continuing bail to face the District Court next month, when a date for sentencing submissions will be set. Knoote-Parke declined to comment on his case outside court.

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