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The Daily Aus

Headlines: Alleged Bondi gunman faces new charges

06 May 2026

Transcription

Transcript generated automatically by AI and may contain errors.

Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?

0.284 - 3.25 Rosa Bowden

Today's podcast was made possible by our friends over at Odoo.

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8.722 - 15.998 Emma Gillespie

From The Daily Oz, I'm Emma Gillespie. I'm Billie Fitzsimons. It's Wednesday the 6th of May. Here's what's making headlines this evening.

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17.834 - 36.318 Billi FitzSimons

The 24-year-old man accused of carrying out the deadly Bondi Beach attack is facing new charges, in addition to existing terrorism, murder and attempted murder charges. 15 people were killed and dozens more were injured when father-son gunmen opened fire at a Hanukkah celebration on the 14th of December last year.

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36.358 - 57.342 Billi FitzSimons

The older man was shot dead by police, while his son was charged with 59 offences and is currently being held at Goulburn's Supermax prison. Court records show the surviving gunman is expected to be hit with 19 additional charges, including 10 counts of shooting with intent to murder and six counts of discharging a firearm to resist arrest.

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58.992 - 74.317 Emma Gillespie

Three child protection workers in the Northern Territory have been stood down over their handling of a welfare case involving Kumunjai Little Baby. The five-year-old girl was reported missing near Alice Springs on the 25th of April. Her body was found five days later following a wide-scale search.

74.858 - 94.585 Emma Gillespie

NT Child Protection Minister Robin Cahill confirmed three department staffers are being investigated over, quote, actions taken or not taken before Kumunjai Little Baby's disappearance. Cahill said she recently learned of multiple reports relating to the little girl's living circumstances, alleging dangerous living conditions and neglect.

95.066 - 110.802 Emma Gillespie

She said, quote, The workers have been stood down as inquiries continue.

112.385 - 129.454 Billi FitzSimons

A group of women and children connected to ISIS will arrive in Australia tomorrow after years in a Syrian refugee camp following the fall of Islamic State. The federal government said the safety of the Australian community is its priority, with officials warning members of the group could be arrested upon their arrival.

Chapter 2: What new charges is the Bondi Beach gunman facing?

129.854 - 142.171 Billi FitzSimons

The four women and nine children are due to land on separate flights into Melbourne and Sydney on Thursday. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said anyone in the cohort who has committed crimes can expect to face the full force of the law.

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142.592 - 162.135 Billi FitzSimons

Australian Federal Police Commissioner Chrissy Barrett confirmed some individuals will be arrested and charged without saying how many, while others will be subject to further investigations. Barrett explained the children will be asked to undergo community integration programs, therapeutic support and countering violent extremist programs.

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163.735 - 180.63 Emma Gillespie

And today's good news, researchers from Trinity College Dublin have located a long-lost manuscript of the earliest known poem written in the English language. The lost copy of Cadman's Hymn, which was written by a British farmer over 1,300 years ago, was found hidden in a library in Rome.

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180.65 - 203.597 Emma Gillespie

Dating from between 800 to 830, it's the third oldest surviving copy of the poem and the only version where Old English, the form of English used in the early Middle Ages, appears in the main body of the text. Trinity College medievalist Dr Mark Faulkner said, quote, as the oldest known poem in Old English, the work is today celebrated as the beginning of English literature.

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204.097 - 214.012 Billi FitzSimons

That's the latest from the Daily Oz Newsroom. If you're looking for something else, you can catch up on this morning's Deep Dive, where we explain the deadly virus outbreak on board a stranded cruise ship.

214.413 - 218.198 Emma Gillespie

We'll be back tomorrow with another Deep Dive, but until then, have a great night.

218.519 - 218.839 Billi FitzSimons

Bye.

218.879 - 219.24 Emma Gillespie

Bye.

223.22 - 244.011 Rosa Bowden

Alrighty, let's do a little bit of maths together. The average SaaS subscription for a small business, let's say it's $50 a month. Now, how many of those are you running? CRM, project management, invoicing, email marketing, scheduling, analytics. If you're like most growing businesses, you're at about six to eight platforms. So let's be conservative and say six, that's $300 a month.

Chapter 3: What are the implications of the Bondi Beach attack on community safety?

276.589 - 295.178 Rosa Bowden

It's modular, flexible, and actually sensible. The ROI is pretty straightforward. It's lower subscription costs, it's less time context switching, and your data flows automatically between departments because everything's connected. For Australian businesses, it also handles GST and BAS requirements, which is not nothing.

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295.158 - 313.96 Rosa Bowden

You can automate repetitive tasks, manage everything mobile, and your team isn't learning six different interfaces. They just need to master one. Odoo's offering a 15-day free trial at odoo.com. No credit card required. Run your actual workflows through it, do the math for your specific business, and see if the numbers make sense.

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