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Four Targa Tasmania rally race deaths due to 'driver error', coroner concludes

Four Targa Tasmania rally race deaths due to 'driver error', coroner concludes

A coroner has concluded "driver error" was the cause of four deaths in three separate rally accidents, which occurred during the Targa Tasmania races in 2021 and 2022.
Veteran driver Shane Navin was killed in the 2021 race when his 1979 Mazda RX-7 crashed at Double Barrel Creek on the Mount Arrowsmith stage of the race on the state's west coast.
His co-driver Glenn Evans survived.
The following day, driver Leigh Mundy, 68, of Hobart, and his co-driver Dennis Neagle, 59, of Withcott, Queensland, crashed on Wattle Grove Road near Cygnet.
The following year, on the first day of the competition, Anthony 'Tony' Seymour died in a crash on the Mt Roland stage in the state's north-west.
A coronial inquest was held in Hobart last year to examine the deaths of the Targa Tasmania competitors.
In his findings, released on Thursday, Tasmanian coroner Simon Cooper said the common factor for deaths of Mr Mundy, Mr Neagle and Mr Seymour was "excessive speed".
"I do not consider Mr Mundy and Mr Seymour took adequate precautions and care for their own safety (and the safety of their passengers) by driving at speeds that were, in all of the circumstances, excessive," Mr Cooper said.
"I consider Mr Navin's death was also due to driver error."
Mr Cooper also found that the driver's health was a "factor in each case".
"I do not consider people suffering from the medical conditions that Mr Mundy and Mr Seymour had, should have been competing in such an event," he said.
Mr Cooper said recommendations made from an internal review of the event "were comprehensive, and … adequately address many of the factors associated with the inquest".
That review made 94 recommendations in February 2023 to make future events safer.
The Motorsport Australia review, which made sweeping changes to Targa rules and safety requirements, came in the wake of four deaths within two years during Tasmanian events.
In February 2023, the Targa Review Panel released its report with 94 recommendations.
The popular events draw hundreds of competitors from around the country who race on public roads across a number of days.
Targa Tasmania is a six-day 1,900-kilometre rally.

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Aussie loses $320,000 to chilling threat and extortion scam
Aussie loses $320,000 to chilling threat and extortion scam

News.com.au

time18 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

Aussie loses $320,000 to chilling threat and extortion scam

It all began for Amelia* when she received a call from what she thought was her credit card company in June last year – unaware the number had been spoofed and she wasn't talking to the bank. The 30-year-old was initially told her credit card had been used in an attempt to buy drugs online and she would be transferred to the police to make a report. 'It got really ridiculously elaborate and awful from there,' she told 'I lost over $320,000 of my life savings because of this scam.' The scammers, posing as Chinese police, then accused Amelia of being part of a criminal syndicate responsible for a large scale money laundering operation. The Sydney woman was told she faced being arrested, deported and put in jail leaving her 'completely in fear'. 'They told me a criminal had told the police that I had sold my details to create a bank account for a cut of the stolen money and they had to investigate me,' she said. 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  • News.com.au

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time9 hours ago

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