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Volume 14, Wednesday, March 29, 2017
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Barbarians are go!
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WRITTEN BY EMMA ZIRKEL
A
fter a highly successful inaugural season last year there’s really only one way the Olympic Dam Barbarians Rugby League Club (ODBRLC) can improve, and that is to expand.
And expand they have, with the club welcoming a women’s team to the fold this year. According to club president Jason Starkey, the timing is perfect for a local women’s side to get on the field. “Women’s sport is exploding at the minute and if we could get a bit of that market to encourage more women to play rugby league that would be brilliant,” he said. Both Barbarians sides will take to the field for the first round of the Spencer Gulf TEC Cup this Saturday, with Roxby Downs hosting round one matches at the town’s small oval. Olympic Dam Barbarians Rugby League Club Players getting ready for a big season ahead (from left) Jessica Coles, Anthony Hordacre, Zara Daniel, Jonacani Tamaliso, Junior Fereti, Brandon Ablett, Jason Starkey, Duane Parker and Lena Barrett.
MORE DETAILS PAGE 14
Man jailed over cricket, tavern thefts
F
ormer Roxby Downs man Peter Ross will serve three months of a nine-month prison term after being convicted of multiple counts of criminal conduct at the Port Augusta Magistrates Court last Friday.
The offences relate to thefts of money from the Roxby Districts Cricket Association and the Roxby Tavern between November 15, 2014 and April 10, 2015. Mr Ross admitted to eight counts of theft, two counts of creating a false document, one count of falsifying a document, two counts of producing a false document, one count of engaging in dishonest conduct as an employee, and one count of false representation to police. At the time of the offending, Mr Ross was the president of the Andamooka Cricket
Club and worked behind the bar at Roxby Districts Cricket Association matches held at the town oval. On three occasions between 15 November and 13 December 2014 he took the bar’s proceeds and float home with him, removing sums of $700, $800 and $800 for himself before returning the balance to Roxbylink, who dealt with the money on behalf of the association. Between 16 January and 21 March 2015 he stole further sums of $700, $500, $400 and $800 from the takings, as well as $2500 after grand final night on March 21. In total, his actions resulted in a loss of $7,200 to the cricket club. Mr Ross also visited the Roxby Downs National Australian Bank on 19 December 2014 and, after presenting a document he had prepared authorising himself as a signa-
tory to his cricket club’s account, received an authority card which he signed, also signing on behalf of one of the other two signatories without their knowledge. Between 30 March and 8 April 2015 he created a cheque for $2,200 on behalf of the cricket club which was presented to Roxbylink, and also made a report to Roxby Police during the same period, claiming that his car had been broken into and $4,500 had been stolen in cash. “You later changed your story to $2,500,” Magistrate Clive Kitchin noted last week. “It appears that your car had been broken into but no money had been stolen. Your actions with regard to the cheque and false report to police appear to be an attempt to cover up your thefts.” The magistrate’s court also heard that Mr Ross stole $2,210.98 from the Roxby Tavern,
where he worked as an employee. On 29 March 2015 he was working at the venue’s gaming area and made bets with a value of $5,550 from which he lost $2,210.98, and did not pay any money into the register. Magistrate Kitchen said that all of the stolen money had been used to play poker machines, purchase alcohol or pay fines. He described Mr Ross’ offending as serious and that it “represents a significant breach of trust not only toward the cricket club but the Roxby Tavern where you were employed.” “Your offending was not a one off event but went over a period of almost six months. It involved brazen and deliberate act of theft and deception,” he said. CONTINUED ON PAGE 2