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Policing Australia: The Official Podcast of the Australian Police Journal
In 2002 three men died in grizzly circumstances in Melbourne, after a series of gang related incidents. One young man was hacked to death by offenders wielding samurai swords. Three of his friends were then chased into the cold Yarra River - two of them drowned.Recently retired Detective Sergeant Brett Smith wrote the article ‘Asian Gangs Blood the Yarra' in the June 2009 issue of the APJ. In the podcast Brett, and his then Senior Sergeant Jeff Maher, talk about the challenges facing them at the crime scene and during the investigation and subsequent court case.The article can be read at the website: www.apjl.com.au. Host:Jason Byrnes APMGuests: Brett Smith and Jeff Maher
Luke, Chuck, and Jerry begin Season 3 discussing AFFI legislative and initiatives for 2023 with AFFI legislative reps Steve Shetsky and Jeff Maher.
Ukraine President Zelensky says Ukraine can win the war against Russia if the World stands behind them. Zelensky was Times Magazine Person of the Year. Jeff Maher, Weather Channel forecast for the tristate area.
On this episode of the AFFI podcast, Luke, Chuck + Jerry sit down with AFFI legislative reps Steve Shetsky and Jeff Maher to discuss the current legislative efforts of the AFFI.
Jeff Maher worked on almost 200 murder investigations in 15 years at the Victoria Police Homicide Squad. Now he trains detectives at the police academy. Maher tells Real Crime's Adam Shand how serial killer Peter Dupas was brought to justice for the murders of Nicole Patterson and Mersina Halvagis. Dupas was brought undone by his modus operandi. Maher says investigators continue to pursue Dupas for other murders with that unique signature. For more episodes download the LiSTNR app now and listen for free See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In the inaugural edition of Green Room Theatre, the crew shares a "dramatic" reading of "Prometheus the God(father)" by Eric Coble. Players: Jonathan Berry, Jeff Maher, Wade Thompson, Stacey Park, Neil Compton, & Stacy Oosterink Hosted by Stacy Oosterink Produced by Kenny Faison & Stacey Park Recorded by Chris Maulden Edited by Timothy Joyce Music by Hunter Martin
When Jeff Maher started running, like many of us, started from zero and now has a PR of 3:19 for a full marathon and has run Boston with a GoPro to film Kathrine Switzer. He's run the B2B (Boston to Big Sur) the year of the bombing. That year those races were 13 days apart. He's also run our favorite relay, the Hood To Coast, but with only 9 runners instead of 12. In Sept 2020 he was diagnosed with MS and since exercise is more important than ever has decided to go after the 6 World Marathon Majors. His message is that if you commit to getting better, and stay disciplined you can achieve crazy goals! You can see his Boston Marathon video on YouTube here. Also in this Episode learn who is featured in the Old Crazy Run Club on Strava. We discuss why new runners shouldn't be afraid to join a run club or be on Strava. And do you agree with Fundy on what the most important thing is. Get Fundy's review on the Garmin Fenix. We discuss heart rate zone training with the Garmin vs. the Stride. And always, be sure to sign your team up for the OCR Beer Run. It helps fund our efforts to keep bringing you awesome guests. Need some more science behind training? Check this blog post.
Luke and Jerry chat with AFFI's Legislative representatives Steve Shetsky and Jeff Maher about the AFFI's legislative program
Former homicide detective Jeff Maher talks to us about the case that finally exposed Australian serial killer Peter Dupas.Show notes:Your hosts are Meshel Laurie and Emily WebbWith thanks to Jeff MaherLike us on the Facebook Follow us on Instagram or TwitterSupport us on PatreonListen to episode 183: Amazing Grace found in loss to a serial killerIf you have any information on the cases covered by this podcast, please contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.Thank you for listening! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Peter Norris Dupas is the worst type of serial killer - a man who stalked women for decades and, police suspect, randomly killed six strangers. Convicted of the murders of Nicole Patterson and Margaret Maher he was the prime suspect in the murder of Mersina Halvagis, stabbed to death in 1997 in the Fawkner Cemetery tending her grandmother’s grave. It would take homicide investigators Jeff Maher and Paul Scarlett 13 years, two trials and a shock witness to get their man. This is the inside story on the pursuit of Peter Dupas and the fight for justice for Mersina Halvagis. Andrew Fraser, a lawyer police loved to hate, would become the star witness. We hear from Fraser, the police and the prosecutors on the 13 year journey that led to Dupas’ conviction and life sentence. Thanks for listening. Please take the time to rate & review us on Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your pods. We love to hear your thoughts and it makes it easier for the rest of the podcast world to find us. Become a subscriber: our supporters power our newsrooms and are critical for the sustainability of news coverage. Becoming a subscriber also gets you exclusive behind-the-scenes content and invitations to special events. Click on the links to subscribe https://subscribe.theage.com.au/ or https://subscribe.smh.com.au/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Location, location, location. This week, the Grue-Crew travel to a "bed-side" establishment and an outdated campground to explore the horrors found within. The first film this week, THE DWELLING from director Jeff Maher, leads the crew to a room housing a haunted bed, previously known as Bed of the Dead. The second film, ANIMAL AMONG US from director John Woodruff, draws a horror writer to the infamous camp he centered his best selling novel upon only to find the frights may be real. Doc Rotten from Horror News Radio. Jeff Mohr from Decades of Horror: The Classic Era. And Crystal Cleveland, the Livin6Dead6irl from Decades of Horror: 1980s share their thoughts about this week's awesome collection of streaming horror films. Joining the crew this week is Horror News Radio co-host, Dave Dreher! Gruesome Magazine Podcast - Episode 92 THE DWELLING - ANIMAL AMONG US THE DWELLING Four twentysomethings find themselves stuck on a haunted antique bed where leaving means suffering a gruesome death. Plagued with frightening hallucinations, they must figure out the bed's secrets before they are ultimately picked off one by one. IMDb Director: Jeff Maher Cast: Colin Price, Alysa King, Gwenlyn Cumyn Release: A frightening futon rears its springs this November in Black Fawn Films’ The Dwelling, on Digital and DVD November 26 from Uncork’d Entertainment. ANIMAL AMONG US Fifteen years ago, two teenage girls were murdered at Merrymaker Campgrounds. The case was filed an animal attack, the camp was condemned and the killer never found - but something horrific still waits in those woods. IMDb Director: John Woodruff Cast: Larisa Oleynik, Erin Daniels, Heather Tom Release: Available on VOD and DVD November 19 from Uncork’d Entertainment. FEEDBACK: feedback@grueosmemagazine.com FOLLOW: Instagram https://www.instagram.com/gruesomemagazine/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/HorrorNewsRadioOfficial/ Events: https://gruesomemagazine.com/events/list/ Doc, Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DocRottenHNR Crystal, Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/living6dead6irl Crystal, Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/livin6dead6irl/ Jeff, Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jeffmohr9 Dave, Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/drehershouseofhorrors Rocky Gray, HNR Theme Song: https://www.facebook.com/OfficialRockyGray
We’ve got electricians, we’ve got plumbing and we’ve got mouse ears! That’s right, the Short Time Wrestling Podcast is heading to Orlando. My wife and kids and I will head to Disney World. We’ll be hitting a few different places, spending time by the pool, sweating, having breakfast with Cinderella and everyt hing else that goes with it. My seven-year-old has been writing about this on the dry erase board for months, while my three-year-old would rather watch PJ Masks, which isn’t a Disney thing. This, however, is the Short Time Wrestling Podcast and I’m still working without a proper studio, so I’m still doing the solo show topic episode. Last time, we had a lot of great feedback with the pro wrestling topic. Before we get to all that - a quick hit on the Yianni-Zain thing. While I wasn’t at the NWCA Convention, I did get word there were some ideas being tossed around about the NWCA All-Star Classic and the future of that event. This prompted me to ask you what your favorite All-Star Classic match of all-time was. So before we get to those answers, let’s give you a little bit of backstory on the event. The East-West All-Star Classic first started in 1967 and was held after the season in Stillwater, Oklahoma. The event continued to be an East-West dual meet through 1987 when the team scoring component was taken out of the event. In 1973, the event moved to an in-season event, taking place in late January or early February until 2004. The NWCA opted to put the event in November to avoid matchups being dumped amidst concern for seed protection and coaches citing injury concerns so close to the postseason. The late November date went for eight seasons before the NWCA moved the event to the opening weekend of the college wrestling season in order to make it a kickoff weekend for college wrestling. The last two events have featured a large presence of women’s college wrestlers, which the NAIA has already created women’s wrestling as an invitational sport, while the NCAA is close to granting women’s wrestling emerging sports status. One of the most recent complaints coming from fans is that the event hasn’t been a real “All-Star” event because there are so few No. 1 vs. No. 2 wrestlers. Statistically, only one dual in recent memory (Penn State vs. Ohio State in 2017-18) featured as many All-Americans and top-ten wrestlers than the All-Star Classic typically does. Denver in 2018-19 was a notable exception as the card was split between men and women. This will be the 54th edition of the NWCA All-Star Classic. No, I do not yet know where the next edition will be, but before I get to your responses on your favorite All-Star Classic match of all-time, let’s go back to Stillwater, Oklahoma and then-Gallagher Arena, they didn’t add the Iba until later. Of the 11 weight classes – yes 11 – we had eight individual NCAA champions, and 21 of the 22 wrestlers were All-Americans. In addition to the eight champions, we had three runners-up, three thirds, two fourths, three fifth-place wrestlers and two sixth-place finishers. How many 1 vs. 2 rematches did we have? NONE! That’s right. But we did have a number of weights that shifted. At 115 pounds, third-place Glenn McMinn of Arizona State beat runner-up Jim Anderson of Minnesota 3-2. The two didn’t meet during the tournament, with McMinn falling in the semifinals to eventual champion Rick Sanders of Portland State. Sanders pinned McMinn in the quarters and then beat Anderson 19-2, in the pre-technical fall era, in the finals. 115-pound champion Rick Sanders went up to 123 pounds where he tied Michigan’s Bob Fehrs, the runner-up at 123, 2-2. Fehrs had just finished second a third straight year, losing to Lehigh’s Mike Caruso in the finals. That’s not second just a third year in a row. Fehrs lost to Caruso all three years in the finals. At 130 pounds, it was Caruso, the aforementioned champion at 123, who went up to defeat Colorado’s Jim Hanson 6-3. Hanson was fourth, having fallen to Michigan State’s Don Behm 9-5 in the semifinals. Hanson fell to Caruso’s teammate, Joe Peritore, 11-5 in the consolation final. So is that what you get? You lose to the 130-pounder, so they feed you the 123-pound champion? At 137, Don Behm, who finished second at 130, fell to Oklahoma State’s Gene Davis, who was third at 137 just a few weeks earlier. Davis fell in the semifinals 1-1, 0-0 in a referee’s decision to Portland State’s Masaru Yatabe. Yatabe would then lose to Michigan State’s Dale Anderson. At 145 pounds, Oklahoma State’s Jim Rogers finished fourth at the weight and got the nod against 137-pound All-American Don New of Cornell. New was fifth, having lost to Yatabe on the top side and Gene Davis in the consolation semis. Rogers lost in the opening round to Mike Gluck of Wisconsin, the eventual finalist. Back in those days, we had something that’s pretty much the repechage back then. Seriously. The only difference is there’s no double bronze back in 1967, which proves, yes, even us Americans had systems that were completely “meh” at times. Rogers would win this one 8-5. At 152 pounds, UCLA’s Lee Ehrler, who was third at 160 pounds, came down to defeat Michigan NCAA champion Jim Kamman 8-7. Ehrler was one of three wrestlers who came down to new weights in the event. Kamman defeated Oklahoma’s Wayne Wells 6-5 in the 1967 finals, while Ehrler was bested by Vic Marcucci of Iowa State 10-8 in the semifinals. Marcucci would beat Cleo McGlory of Oklahoma in the finals. At 160, Joe Domko of Southern Illinois, known then as SIU-Carbondale, knocked off Marcucci 3-2. Domko, a three-time qualifier, came into the 1967 NCAA tournament as the fifth seed. He was pinned in the opening round by Adams State’s Don Apodaca. Apodaca was then beaten by No. 4 seed Jeff Smith of Oregon State, eliminating Domko. Domko was the only non-All-American in the meet. At 167 pounds, George Radman of Michigan State, a Granby High School alum from Virginia, beat Washington State’s Fred Fairbanks in a matchup of wrestlers who met at their postseason weights. Radman won the national championship, beating Mike Gallego of Fresno State in the finals. Gallego, who was the College Division champion, put Fairbanks into the consolation bracket in the second round with a 7-1 decision. At 177 pounds, Northern Iowa’s Don Parker came down from 191 pounds and topped Moravian’s Dave Mucka 5-3. Porter was sixth, falling to Syracuse’s Tom Schlendorf in the quarterfinals. Well, coming “down” isn’t exactly accurate. Parker wrestled the University Division at 191 after winning the College Division earlier at 177 pounds, where Mucka was fourth. So while Parker went up and placed sixth, Mucka stayed at 177 for the University Division where he too would finish sixth. At 191 pounds, Syracuse national champion Tom Schlendorf beat Iowa State’s Don Buzzard in the NCAA finals 5-0. Schendorf would face off with 177-pound national champion and future world champion Fred Fozzard of Oklahoma State. Schlendorf would prevail 5-3 in the ONLY head-to-head matchup of NCAA champions. Fans waited with anticipation to talk about the results 14 days later when the results arrived via First Class Mail in Amateur Wrestling News. What if the message boards existed in that era? Man, the stories our predecessors would be able to tell us. At Unlimited, Dave Porter of Michigan got a little bit of redemption as he pinned NCAA champion and future Pro Football Hall of Famer Curley Culp of Arizona State at 3:38. Porter was the top seed in the NCAA tournament and the returning champion. Would-be messageboards would have melted down after he was upset 5-4 by NAIA champion Nick Carollo of Adams State in the quarterfinals. Porter fought back after Carollo made the finals. Culp dispatched with Carollo in the NCAA finals in just under a minute. So there’s your look back at the FIRST NWCA East-West All-Star Classic. So to your comments – what was YOUR favorite All-Star Classic match of All-Time? Kevin Claunch (Patron) @Claunchinator Heil v Brewer is underrated. Will Johnson @Will_J_157 Agrees - "I SEEN IT" Brad Bowles (a Patron!) @bbb4ut It was not the best match but the build-up to Dake-Taylor was intense! Has there been a more anticipated All-Star match? Mike Chick via MTO FB group (Contributor) you have seen way more of these than any of us...but 2012 Dake-Taylor definitely stands out for me -- Jim Brown @JimBrow31280302 Mark Ironside over Cary Kolat. Carver. Great comeback. Two of the all time greats. Jeff Maher @mrmcrib Ironside over (Jeremy) Ensrud - 1998 at 134 pounds 18-7 Ed @EdwardGalloMMA Recency bias but I'll go Brewer-Heil from 2015. Vintage Brewer, and a great pace from Heil, pretty rare. Lars Underbakke @LarsIAwrestle Ironside vs Kolat for sure Coach K Ironside vs. Kolat, the prototypical Iowa style vs. one of the most skilled and talented wrestlers of all time Ian @Rustygriswold34 It can’t be any match that isn’t this one. Kolat got Carvered and Ironside carvered people in every gym. Might be the best college match ever. McIlravy/Abas is the only one that competes in my eyes Jeff Johnson @coachjeff01 Kolat vs Ironside, next topic Marcos Aranda @MarcosAranda17 (also a Patron) Kolat-Ironside TELL KLINGMAN KOLAT STORY HERE 34Wrestle (Pat Kelly) @34Wrestle 1983 - Mark Rigatuso vs. Tab Thacker. Rigatuso weighed just over 200 lbs., Thacker over 400. Rigatuso, a 2X D2 champ and 2X D1 AA, won 5-3. @theopenmat @MaryvilleWrestl Jamie Canaday @tWaterwayduals 89 and 91 in Philly featured some great matches. Check out the results. Lots of PA power both years. Brands v. Fried. Or Martin v. Cross. Jeremy S. Lanthorn (Patron!) I always enjoy seeing a top D2, D3, NAIA, etc. Get a chance at a top D1 guy. Like Gutches vs Kokesh. Taylor Miller threw out that she was a fan of Valencia-Hall in the 2017-18 event. Mike Buckiso @MikeBuckiso 1990 Ty Moore v TJ Jaworski. Moore fall first period at Dapper Dan Wrestling Classic. Two 4 timers -- I only st
On 29 April 1996, 21-year-old Le Anh Tuan was abducted in broad daylight, from the front yard of the house he lived in with his mother and siblings. As his neighbours watched on in terror, he was forced into the boot of a car and driven away.Show notes:Your hosts are Meshel Laurie and Emily WebbWith thanks to Jeff MaherLike us on the Facebook Follow us on Instagram or TwitterSupport us on PatreonIf you have any information on the cases covered by this podcast, please contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.Thank you for listening! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Former homicide detective Jeff Maher talks to us about the case that finally exposed Australian serial killer Peter Dupas.Show notes:Your hosts are Meshel Laurie and Emily WebbWith thanks to Jeff MaherLike us on the Facebook Follow us on Instagram or TwitterSupport us on PatreonIf you have any information on the cases covered by this podcast, please contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.Thank you for listening! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
9to5.cc Podcasts: Including Go Plug Yourself (GPYS) & 9to5 Entertainment System (9ES)
If ever there was a movie worthy of screening at midnight it would be a film about a murderous bed preying on the lives of the guilty crossed with a police procedural. Former Montrealer Jeff Maher brought his film “Bed[…]↓ Read the rest of this entry... The post Go Plug Your Fantasia Film: Jeff Maher and Colin Price (Bed of the Dead) appeared first on 9to5 (dot cc).