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It's a $2.2 billion industry that's notoriously hard to quit but here's how to cancel your gym membership

Experts warn that gym memberships can be tricky to cancel, but there are ways to ensure you're treated fairly.
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woman working out in the gym

How a forgotten section of the US constitution could thwart Donald Trump's re-election hopes

America's top court weighs Donald Trump's presidential eligibility in a constitutional test legal experts describe as one of the most consequential cases the US has seen in decades. Here's what you need to know.
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Donald Trump looks stern with US flag behind him.

Two out of five adult prisoners in New South Wales waiting 'in limbo' on remand

Newly released figures highlight a record-number of people in New South Wales prisons are being held on remand as they wait for their cases to be heard in court.
Hands resting on prison cells bars.

New Zealand PM scraps target of reducing prison population by 30 per cent

The scrapping of the prison population reduction target is part of the coalition government's 100-day plan.
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Christopher Luxon in parliament, pointing and looking quite cross.

NSW government to rewrite ministerial code in wake of Berejiklian ICAC findings

MPs in NSW will be required to make more regular disclosures about their financial interests and those of their immediate family.
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Gladys Berejiklian.

Sri Lankan law regulating online content concerns rights groups

The Online Safety Act allows authorities to remove prohibited content and to punish those that posted it.
ABC News Current

Restaurant operators who allegedly punished staff with 'strikes' facing legal action for underpaying staff

The Fair Work Ombudsman says the operators of two Adelaide Vietnamese restaurants allegedly underpaid staff more than $400,000 and unlawfully punished them for incorrectly charging customers. 
A closed restaurant in a food court.

Since SA introduced voluntary assisted dying laws, more than 100 people have opted for 'a death of their choosing'

A year after voluntary assisted dying came into effect in South Australia, families of some of the 110 people who have opted to take that path describe their experiences.
Voluntary assisted dying recipient Lynne Wong.

Thailand's most popular political party faces dissolution after failed bid to change defamation laws

The Move Forward Party was attempting to change some of the world's strictest defamation laws and now faces the risk of dissolution and a ban on its leaders after losing the legal case.
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Man looks back at crowd of cameras watching him

Couple calls for changes to sunset clause laws after contract for dream unit terminated by developer

Julia and Matthew Mooney thought they'd be celebrating the new year in their new unit on Queensland's Sunshine Coast. Instead, they're back to square one in their property search.
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A man and woman standing in front of a unit construction site

As a court prepares to sentence Celeste Manno's obsessive killer, experts say there are many more just like him

As Victoria's Supreme Court prepares to sentence obsessed killer Luay Sako, experts say stalking remains an "epidemic" that authorities are struggling to contain.
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Celeste Manno.

Do religious ministers have to report historical child sex abuse?

Kezia Whitton was abused by her brother when she was five years old. Years later, her former church declined to report him to West Australian police — but in a different state, they may have had to.
A statue of Jesus.

Scout hall hired by person linked to 'neo-Nazi demonstration' under the guise of 'family-friendly event'

A booking enquiry stated the hall would be used for a "casual" party and would have "young children in attendance".
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Front shot of men wearing black at Artarmon in sydney's lower north shore 280124

NSW Police has been praised for its 'textbook' approach in shutting down a 'neo-Nazi demonstration'. This is why

Some of group members were from NSW, but at least 20 were from Victoria, with others from Queensland, South Australia and Tasmania.
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Dozens of men dressed in black leaving the train station in North Sydney.

Raelene Polymiadis's husband shoves media outside court following bail hearing

An Adelaide magistrate dismisses a prosecution application to revoke home detention bail for Raelene Polymiadis, who is accused of murdering her elderly parents by injecting them with her own insulin.
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A man pushes away a television camera.

Singer-songwriter helps female prisoners through 'life changing' music program

First Nations singer-songwriter Nancy Bates teaches inmates at the Adelaide Women's Prison how to write songs, sing and play the ukulele in what she hopes will prevent them from reoffending.
Nancy Bates looks.

Accused child sex offender faces court on separate indecent assault charge

Dylan Lloyd faces the Adelaide Magistrates Court charged with indecently assaulting a woman in Adelaide’s south in July, after being re-arrested earlier on Wednesday.  
A court build with a columned verandah and a blue coloured building behind

Adelaide mental health facility restricted from admitting new patients to 'prison-like' ward

South Australia's Chief Psychiatrist restricts James Nash House from admitting some patients to its Birdwood Ward over concerns that the facility "looks and feels like a prison".
A sign saying James Nash House

Scope of federal government inquiry into the judicial response to sexual violence revealed

The government has announced the parameters for an inquiry that could potentially overhaul judicial responses to sexual violence, with the report set to be released in a year's time.
Grace Tame wearing white shirt and looking at the camera

Convicted child sex offender denied home detention bail after alleged sexual assault on Adelaide train

Dylan Lloyd, 21, who is accused of sexually assaulting a child on a train in Adelaide's south, is denied home detention bail for the protection of the alleged victim, a court hears.
Marion Railway Station in Adelaide's south.

Families of jumping castle victims push for law reform

Georgie Burt, whose son died in a jumping castle tragedy in Tasmania in 2022, has joined calls for harsher penalties for workplace deaths.
ABC News Current
Duration: 2 minutes 19 seconds

Building Commissioner says development 'not at risk of failure'

Residents of a Sydney development have been assured by the NSW Building Commissioner that there is 'no threat to collapse' despite defects being found.
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ABC News Current
Duration: 1 minute 53 seconds

900 British postal workers were wrongly convicted due to an IT error. Now, those responsible are apologising

Some British Postal Service workers were jailed, others ostracised and some took their lives over theft convictions prompted by faulty software.
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A man in a suit speaks in front of a microphone

Extinction Rebellion bridge abseiler who halted Adelaide traffic sentenced over protest

Meme Caroline Thorne, whose peak-hour protest outside the Adelaide Convention Centre during an oil and gas conference triggered the SA government to introduce new anti-obstruction laws, is ordered to pay $750 in compensation to the emergency services who retrieved her.
An Extinction Rebellion protester hangs from a bridge.

Alice and Olivia were both conceived via surrogacy. Today, they have contrasting views on the controversial practice

The Pope's recent pronouncement against surrogacy has sparked heated global debate about the controversial issue. In Australia, surrogacy is complex: deplored by some but embraced by others whose lives have been transformed by remarkable acts of generosity and love.
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A woman with dyed red hair and glasses in a tie and suit vest and a woman with blonde hair and a green sweater