Police say a businessman who fled overseas is a high-level suspect in a spate of antisemitic attacks across Sydney, but ...
The Australian Federal Police said the caravan, filled with explosives, was "never going to cause a mass casualty event".
The timing matters because hate speech laws were rushed through, in part, because of the angst over antisemitic attacks.
The fake caravan plot involved several people with different levels of involvement, according to police. Between them, they ...
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and NSW Premier Chris Minns immediately described the event as terrorism. We now know that was never true.
The caravan laden with explosives that sparked fears of an anti-Semitic attack was a “fabricated plot” by a known criminal, ...
The timeline from the discovery to the exposure of the fake terrorist plot reveals how political exploitation served to stoke fears and erode public confidence.
The caravan full of explosives terrified many Jewish people in January, so why is it not considered terrorism?
The Daily Telegraph has named Sydney businessman and accused drug trafficker Sayet Erhan Akca as the individual who police believe was behind the caravan terror hoax as well as 14 antisemitic attacks ...
Meanwhile, police have arrested and charged 14 people with 65 offences following investigations into antisemitic incidents ...
Minister, this information is no longer confidential’ – but Yasmin Catley refuses to say when she first discovered the Dural ...
NSW police were given a tip-off in January about a caravan at a property in Dural, filled with explosives and a note ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results