Australia news live: ABC reporter caught in LAPD tear gas during protests; supply bills pass Tasmanian parliament | Australia news

Second Australian reporter impacted by police action at LA protests

Amanda Meade

The ABC’s North America correspondent Lauren Day has become the second Australian journalist to allegedly be impacted by police action against the protesters in LA.

Day and her crew were caught in the middle of a teargassing by LAPD as they tried to disperse the crowd around Little Tokyo in LA, the ABC has reported.

Day’s incident came after Anthony Albanese said footage of the Nine correspondent Lauren Tomasi being shot by a rubber bullet live on air is “horrific” and he has expressed his concern to the US government. Day said:

In a sign of just how quickly things can escalate, after a long standoff with protesters, all of a sudden we heard large bangs and the crowd started running.

I then felt the unmistakable burn of teargas – first in my eyes, then in my nose, lips and throat.

It really stings your entire face and makes it difficult to breathe, until the point you almost want to throw up.

You can see why this is such a popular crowd dispersal method because it’s extremely unpleasant.

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Christopher Knaus

Christopher Knaus

A third Australian jurisdiction will consider reforms to fix an “accountability gap” allowing institutions like the church to avoid liability for the actions of child abusers.

Last year, the high court delivered a landmark judgment ruling the Catholic church could not be held vicariously liable for the actions of a parish priest who abused children, because he was not a formal employee.

The standing council of attorneys-general – a body consisting of attorneys-general from the Commonwealth and every state and territory – is currently considering whether legislative reform is required. But crossbenchers in three states – Victoria, New South Wales, and now the Australian Capital Territory – have introduced legislation seeking to address the issue.

ACT Greens leader Shane Rattenbury said on Tuesday:

Institutions like churches, sporting groups and scout groups have an obligation to protect the children in their care. And that obligation must extend to those acting on their behalf. The bill I’m introducing will remedy this in the ACT so that children who were abused by those people can receive justice. It will mean that institutions can be found vicariously liable for crimes committed by volunteers, those carrying out a role within the organisation and those who are carrying out activities for the benefit of that organisation.

The move is supported by legal experts and the Grace Tame Foundation, which said institutions were continuing to “exploit every legal loophole they can find to evade their corporate responsibility for the decades of harm inflicted on children in their pastoral care”.

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