Throughout the week-long trial, it was reported that prosecutor District Attorney Tannaz Mokayef and her co-counsel had hammered at the idea that Leibel had orchestrated the murder to mirror certain elements from the plot of book - about a scientist who experiments on a psychopathic killer to find a cure for evil. The case made headlines in Canada, where his father, Lorne Leibel, a sailor on the country's 1976 Olympics team, built a fortune constructing homes in the Toronto area. Leibel moved to California and lived off an allowance of about $US18,000 ($AU24,500) a month over a seven-year period until inheriting the majority of his mother's estate. Visit more : https://www.tweeddailynews.com.au/news/canadian-graphic-novel-author-guilty-of-model-girl/3448532/
FIRST he sold the hotel and resort company he turned into a billion-dollar empire, now he’s selling his Gold Coast home. Outgoing Mantra Group CEO Bob East has listed his Sorrento mansion on the market for $3.995 million just weeks after announcing his departure from the business he floated. Mr East plans to stay on as Tourism Australia chairman and will take on a new board, chairing Wollongong-based Experience Co, a listed adventure tourism and leisure company with market capitalisation of $355 million. He is ranked number two on the latest Gold Coast Bulletin’s Power 100 list. Mr East is marketing is property through Kollosche Prestige Agents. Read Complete news : https://www.realestate.com.au/news/outgoing-mantra-group-ceo-bob-east-selling-gold-coast-mansion/
A Gold Coast author has been given a rare insight into the history of the Gold Coast's Indigenous population and documented his journey to North Stradbroke Island along an ancient trade route in hand-carved wooden canoes. Benjamin Allmon spent the past four years producing a documentary, book and exhibition which recorded his journey from crafting the wooden canoes in the forests of the Gold Coast to embarking on a three-day, 70-kilometre voyage across the sea to North Stradbroke Island. "The journey from Surfers Paradise to Dunwich was a trade route, established inter-tribal relationships and forged cultural ties on many different levels. "I feel I have a deeper appreciation of the place I walk, swim and live in. "I hope the audience sees that there are ways to reach across the cultural divide and hopefully they engage with their local Indigenous story in their own way." Read this news: https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/national/queensland/do...
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