Raptor Squad detectives charge man with drugs, weapon offences – Hunter Valley

Raptor Squad North detectives have charged a man with drug offences in the state’s Hunter Valley region.

About 6.30am yesterday (Tuesday 30 December 2025), officers attached to Raptor Squad North attended a house on Comfort Avenue, Cessnock, to conducting a Firearms Prohibition Order search.

A crime scene was subsequently established and a search warrant was executed.

During the search, police allegedly located and seized $20,000 cash, 650g methylamphetamine, 50g heroin, 1 litre of GHB, two tasers, mobile phones and an allegedly stolen vehicle.

A 32-year-old man was arrested at the house and taken to Cessnock Police Station.

He has been charged with seven offences:
Supply prohibited drug more than indictable and less than commercial quantity
Supply prohibited drug more than small less than or equal to indictable quantity
Possess prohibited drug
Deal with property proceeds of crime
Possess or use a prohibited weapon without permit (two counts)
Breach of bail

He was refused bail to appear before Bail Division Court 2 yesterday (Tuesday 30 December 2025).

Three injured in dog attack – Raymond Terrace

Three people have been injured in a dog attack at Raymond Terrace overnight.

Emergency services were called to Scott Close shortly before 11pm yesterday (Monday 29 December 2025), responding to multiple reports that a large dog was on the loose attacking people.

Officers attached to Port Stephens-Hunter Police District arrived on scene and found the dog – described as a Staffordshire Bull Terrier-Mastiff cross – had bitten a 36-year-old woman, a 35-year-old man and a 14-year-old boy.

Police were told the couple had been walking along the street when the dog attacked them; the dog then ran into a house and attacked the teenage boy inside his home.

All three were treated at the scene before being taken to John Hunter Hospital. Their injuries are not believed to be life-threatening.

Police were forced to euthanise the dog at the scene. They are now working with local council rangers to identify the dog’s owner.

Inquiries are continuing.

Appeal to identify man allegedly carrying meat cleaver- Newcastle

Police are appealing for assistance to identify a man wanted in relation to alleged threatening conduct in Newcastle.

About 7pm on Wednesday 10 December 2025, a 20-year-old man was driving a vehicle in Railway Street, Newcastle.

While stopped at traffic lights at the intersection of Hunter Street, an unknown man allegedly entered the vehicle and threatened the driver with a meat cleaver before exiting the vehicle.

The driver was uninjured.

As inquiries continue, police have released CCTV footage of a man who may be able to assist with inquiries.

The man is described as being aged in his 20s with a fair complexion and wearing a black t-shirt, grey shorts, white shoes and a black cap. He was also carrying a small dark backpack.

Appeal to locate elderly woman missing from Swansea

Police are appealing for public assistance to locate an elderly woman missing from Swansea.

Marika Muller, aged 79, was last seen on Pelican Street, Swansea, about 4pm today (Tuesday 30 December 2025).

Officers attached to Lake Macquarie Police District were notified and commenced inquiries into her whereabouts.

Family and police hold concerns for Marika’s welfare as she lives with dementia.

Marika is described as being of Caucasian appearance, about 150cm tall, of thin build, with grey hair.

She was last seen wearing a floral dress.

Marika is believed to be on foot and likely still in the Swansea area.

Anyone who see her is urged to contact Lake Macquarie Police or Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

Man charged after allegedly displaying hate symbol tattoos – Operation Shelter

A man has been charged after allegedly displaying hate symbol tattoos at a Newcastle beach.

Officers attached to Newcastle City Police District and Operation Shelter commenced an investigation after receiving a report of a man at a Newcastle beach on Wednesday 24 December 2025, whose tattoos allegedly depicted designated hate symbols.

Following inquiries, Coffs Harbour detectives arrested a 36-year-old man at a home in Urunga, south of Coffs Harbour, about 6.30pm yesterday (Saturday 27 December 2025).

He was taken to Coffs Harbour Police Station and charged with knowingly display by public act Nazi symbol without excuse and cause prohibited Nazi symbol to be displayed in public place.

The man was granted strict conditional bail to appear at Newcastle Local Court on Thursday 22 January 2026.

Police issue reminder about unauthorised gatherings

Police are reminding the community that unauthorised public assemblies are currently restricted following a declaration made by the NSW Police Commissioner.

On Wednesday (24 December 2025), Commissioner Mal Lanyon made a Public Assembly Restriction Declaration (a declaration) under new laws following the Bondi terror attack.

The declaration restricts public assemblies across the entire Sydney metropolitan region for 14 days.

Gatherings are permitted but police may issue move on directions for people causing obstructions or behaving in an intimidatory or harassing manner, or people who might cause or be likely to cause fear in another person.

Police will also have authority to require removal of any face coverings worn by people suspected of committing offences for identification purposes.

Police are aware of social media posts regarding an alleged violent call to action at a beach in Sydney’s south tomorrow (Saturday 27 December 2025).

Operation Shelter Commander, Acting Assistant Commissioner Brendan Gorman, is reminding the public that there is no place for hatred or violence in our community.

The NSW Police Force has zero tolerance for any behaviour that threatens social cohesion in our state,” Acting Assistant Commissioner Gorman said.

Everyone in NSW deserves to be safe and feel safe.

Now is not the time for any behaviour that will cause division in our community.

Police officers are out in force to ensure the safety of the community and will be ready to respond to anyone who incites violence or hatred, commits violent offences, or participates in anti-social behaviour, harassment or intimidation.

Action will be taken against anyone who engages in criminal activity that is motivated by hate.”

We encourage anyone who is the victim of a hate crime or witnesses a hate crime to report the matter to police via Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000. In an emergency, dial Triple Zero.

Merry Christmas to our Defence personnel

As 2025 comes to a close, on behalf of all our Parliamentary colleagues and the people of Australia, we extend our deep gratitude and warm wishes to the serving members of the Australian Defence Force (ADF) and their families for another year of exemplary service. 

This Christmas we thank all of those serving both at home and abroad. Your hard work, service and sacrifice is deeply valued.

From the high seas of the Indo-Pacific to the deserts of the Middle East, the skies of Europe to our country’s most remote regions – across the domains of land, sea, air, space and cyber – our ADF personnel have worked every day to keep Australians safe and secure. 

This year, as we saw the global rules‑based order come under increased pressure, the ADF has stepped up.

  • Over 3,100 Ukrainian personnel have now graduated from ADF-delivered training in the United Kingdom; and ADF personnel deployed to Europe to protect humanitarian and military corridors into Ukraine as they battle Russian invasion under Operation Kudu.
  • ADF personnel supported evacuation efforts in the Middle East to airlift Australians and their families to safety.  
  • More than 40,000 personnel from 19 countries and two observer nations took part in our biggest ever Exercise Talisman Sabre – demonstrating how we integrate closely with international partners and respond to a rapidly evolving strategic environment.
  • The ADF built closer ties with our Pacific neighbours and ASEAN partners, patrolled the waters of our shared region, helped build naval capability and supported the peace and prosperity of the Indo-Pacific. 

In 2025 our ADF personnel also served at home during some of the most challenging times for Australians. During natural disasters – including this year in the Northern Rivers, across Queensland and beyond – the ADF supported communities, helped search for missing persons, and supported emergency services in their vital work. 

From our outback towns, our northern borders and our garrison towns and cities, the ADF are an invaluable part of many Australian communities and part of the very fabric of our nation. They embody the best of Australia and Australians.

We acknowledge the selfless sacrifice and the separation from family and loved ones while on deployment, especially at Christmas. Service is experienced by the entire family, and our ADF families are an integral part of defending our nation. Thank you for your support for your loved one to serve, and your sacrifice.

At this time of year in particular, we encourage everyone to check in with their friends and families. Support services are available, including through Open Arms.  

People are the ADF’s most important capability. It is an honour to be the ministerial team who have the privilege of overseeing the work of the Australian Defence Force, to be the ministers responsible for facilitating this mission of great service, and whose leadership and courage we hope to emulate.

We thank you and we wish you a safe and peaceful holiday season.

Merry Christmas.

Exercise Christmas Hop supports far north Queensland communities

Exercise Christmas Hop 2025 has brought Christmas cheer to some of Queensland’s most remote communities, helping children and families celebrate the festive season.

The annual initiative reflects Defence’s commitment to supporting Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities and sharing goodwill during the holidays.

Australian Defence Force personnel visited communities including Mornington Island, Doomadgee, Weipa, Normanton, Kowanyama, Cloncurry, Badu Island, Horn Island, Masig Island, Pormpuraaw, Aurukun, Longreach and Burketown.

A Royal Australian Air ForceC-27J Spartan and C-130J Hercules aircraft played a key role in delivering toys, sporting equipment, education resources and apparel, generously donated by organisations across the country. The exercise was supported by the Australian Army’s 51st Battalion, Far North Queensland Regiment, working alongside Air Force crews to make the deliveries possible.

These donations were coordinated in partnership with the Australian Olympic Committee (AOC), which has worked with Defence since 2021 to bring joy to children in regional and remote areas. 

The AOC plays a central role in sourcing and coordinating donations from organisations nationwide, ensuring communities receive high-quality goods that promote education, sport and wellbeing. This partnership demonstrates a shared commitment to supporting Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities and making Christmas special for families in remote locations.

Deputy Prime Minister, Richard Marles:

“Exercise Christmas Hop is about spreading joy and supporting communities in Far North Queensland during the festive season.

“This initiative reflects the strong connection between our Defence Force and remote communities, and highlights the generosity of Australians who help make Christmas special for every child.”

Minister for Defence Personnel, Matt Keogh: 

“ADF personnel are driven by a desire to serve our nation. For some ADF service means being away from their families and loved ones at Christmas, so they understand the importance of bringing some Christmas cheer to our remote communities.

“Well done to all the Defence members who took part in this year’s Operation Christmas Hop, and thank you everyone who donated so generously or helped behind the scenes.”

Commander Air Mobility Group, Air Commodore Benjamin Poxon:

“Exercise Christmas Hop delivers real outcomes for remote communities, while ensuring our aircrew and support personnel are trained to operate in remote areas.

“Exercise Christmas Hop balances meaningful community engagement with airlift training opportunities for the Royal Australian Air Force.”

Australian Greens welcome NSW gun law reform but warn new protest powers threaten free speech

The NSW Parliament is the first state Parliament to pass essential gun control laws following the anti-Semitic mass shooting at Bondi Beach and it now needs to be followed by legislative action across the country. 

These laws were made stronger by a Greens amendment that will keep firearms out of the hands of people investigated for terrorism related offenses and are a much needed gun safety win for the community.

In a deeply political act, the NSW Labor Party also attached a broad ranging attack on the right to protest to the gun laws, in a move that many informed commentators described as unconstitutional. 

The attack on protest will not not make Australia safer, and is part of a broader false political narrative linking the actions of the appalling two terrorist shooters to a global movement to end violence, oppose a genocide and demand justice. The Greens and millions of Australians who join us in the peace movement, reject these attacks on protest, humanity and global justice.

Greens Justice Spokesperson and Senator for NSW, David Shoebridge:

The Greens welcome the passage of tougher firearm laws in NSW to stop hoarding of high-powered weapons in our suburbs and acknowledge the hard work of gun safety advocates for decades that has helped achieve this.

“The Greens unanimous amendment strengthens the laws by making it clear no one investigated for terrorism, or living with or linked to proscribed people, should be granted a firearms permit. Guns are a privilege, never a right in our society.

“What we now need is concerted national action so that all states and territories meet, or better, NSW gun safety changes and the Federal government to show leadership with a generous gun buyback and an urgent national firearms register.

“The attacks on free speech and protest that NSW also passed are divisive and dangerous politics from Labor, with most informed observers saying they are likely unconstitutional.

“Peaceful rallies against a genocide, to protect children and call for a just peace have been an essential safety valve in our society for decades, giving dissent and humanity a legitimate and powerful political outlet. These blatantly political attempts by Labor and the Coalition to stop peaceful protest are dangerous, ill-considered and likely to fail in the High Court.”

Greens Deputy Leader and Senator for NSW, Senator Mehreen Faruqi:

“While these are welcome and necessary steps on gun reform following the horrific violence in Bondi, these important advances are being overshadowed by the Minns’ Labor government’s deeply troubling move to restrict peaceful protest. 

“The Palestine justice movement and anti-genocide protests, made up of hundreds of thousands people and including many Jewish community members, have consistently and loudly opposed antisemitism and all forms of racism. Smearing it is a distortion of reality and it is reckless and dangerous. 

“This is a time when unity, solidarity and meaningful leadership are needed, not authoritarianism nor the undermining of democracy, which depends on our right to assemble, to speak out, and to protest.”

Leader of the Australian Greens, Senator Larissa Waters:

“NSW’s firearm reforms should be the impetus for state and federal action on gun control. As a nation we can  build on the last gun buy-back, strengthen our gun laws to keep communities safer, and at the same time tackle antisemitism, racism and radicalisation.

“We need to take action to stop antisemitism, racism, radicalisation and gun violence, to stamp out both the hateful ideologies and dangerous weapons used to commit the horrific Bondi attack. 

“The Greens will work across parliaments to ensure communities are safe from gun violence with fewer dangerous weapons, a national firearms register and strict limits on gun numbers, and we will always defend the right to peaceful protest. 

“Falsely conflating those legions of Australians who peacefully marched against violence in Gaza with the criminal actions of radicalised individuals is a dangerous path. Australians want peace and justice at home and abroad, and the NSW restrictions on democratic rights to peacefully protest take the wrong lesson from this horrific  terror attack. Community and political unity is what is needed right now.

Tighter gun laws, reforms to bolster community safety pass NSW Parliament

Important reforms tightening gun laws, cracking down on hateful symbols, restricting public assemblies following a terrorist attack and giving police more tools to protect the community have passed NSW Parliament.

The Terrorism and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2025 passed Parliament today following the horrific antisemitic terror attack at Bondi which killed 15 innocent people earlier this month.

Toughest gun law reforms in a generation

The bill ensures that NSW has the toughest gun laws in the country, imposing a cap meaning that an individual can have no more than 4 firearms, with exemptions for primary producers who can have up to 10.

It limits straight-pull/pump action and button/lever release firearms to primary producers, reduces magazine capacity for category A and B firearms and prohibits firearms using belt-fed magazines.

Gun club membership will be mandatory for all firearms licence holders and people will no longer be able to seek to overturn a licence decision through the NSW Civil and Administrative Tribunal.

Other significant gun reforms include requiring all gun clubs to use the GunSafe online platform, and a mandate of safe storage inspections before the issue of a permit.

This legislation will be accompanied by a comprehensive audit of existing firearms licences, as well as a gun buyback scheme, in partnership with the Federal Government.

Prohibiting hateful symbols

There is no excuse for hateful symbols which divide and inflame community tensions.

The legislation makes it an offence under NSW law to display publicly and without reasonable excuse a prohibited terrorist organisation’s symbol such as an ISIS, Hamas or Hezbollah flag.

This will carry a maximum penalty of two years’ imprisonment or a $22,000 fine or $110,000 for organisations.

A reasonable excuse includes for an academic purpose or another purpose in the public interest.

Restricting the authorisation of public assemblies

The bill also allows the Police Commissioner or Deputy Commissioner with the Minister for Police to restrict authorised assemblies in specific areas for 14 days following a terrorism declaration.

This is designed to deter divisive, inflammatory public assemblies which put community safety and cohesion at risk in the immediate aftermath of an attack.

Once a declaration is made, no public assemblies can be authorised in designated areas including by a court and police will be able to move people on if their behaviour or presence obstructs traffic or causes fear, harassment or intimidation.

The declaration can be extended by 14-day periods for up to three months. It will not stop quiet reflection, prayer or peaceful gatherings, which are not likely to cause fear or safety concerns.

The legislation also gives police greater powers to require someone suspected of committing an offence during a public assembly to remove their face covering.

Anyone at a public assembly who is suspected of committing an offence can be required to remove their face covering. Previously, this requirement only applied to someone suspected of committing an indictable offence.

Further measures to combat hate speech

Horrific recent events also show chants and slogans can shatter community cohesion and encourage violence.

Serious concerns have been raised over chants like “globalise the intifada” and hateful statements used to vilify and intimidate our community must be banned. 

The Attorney General has asked the Legislative Assembly Committee on Law and Safety to conduct an inquiry into hateful statements.

It will recommend what laws should be introduced to tackle this abhorrent conduct with a view to introducing them when parliament returns in the new year.

These measures build on previous legislation to combat hate including new offences for inciting racial hatred and displaying Nazi symbols at Jewish places and additional protections for people seeking to attend their place of worship.

Premier Chris Minns said:

“None of these measures alone will end antisemitism and violence but together these reforms are the single best thing we can do to keep the people of New South Wales safe and prevent further harm.

“I acknowledge that these are very significant changes that not everyone will agree with, but our state has changed following the horrific antisemitic attack on Bondi Beach and our laws must change too.

“These laws get the balance right by providing police with the tools they need to calm a combustible situation in our state and keep people safe, while restricting access to dangerous weapons on our streets to reduce the risk of this happening again.”

Minister for Police Yasmin Catley said:

“The antisemitic terror attack at Bondi Beach has changed us forever and the Government is responding to try to prevent future harm.

“These reforms strengthen oversight, improve enforcement and reduce the risk when it comes to firearm ownership.

“We’re giving police the powers they need to best ensure the community is safe.”

Attorney General Michael Daley said:

“These measures form a strong regime to protect the community from those who would seek to do us harm and tear us apart.

“There is no place for conduct which espouses hate, threatens or intimidates others and we are giving police the tools they need to hold perpetrators to account.

“We are ensuring those who publicly display terrorist symbols are met with the full force of the law.

“I know there is more work to do and have asked the Committee on Law and Safety to provide recommendations about further reforms to curb hate speech.

“The Government will take whatever measures needed to keep the community safe.”