60 Minutes case in Lebanon: Adam Whittington to be released anytime now


July 16, 2016

Source: heraldsun.com.au

THE disastrous 60 Minutes child-snatch operation that has laid waste to families, reputations and budgets is almost over after a Beirut court ordered former Australian soldier Adam Whittington be freed on bail.

Adam-Whittington-Lebanon

 

Mr Whittington, whom 60 Minutes paid $115,000 to mastermind a failed plot to seize two Australian children off the streets of Beirut on behalf of their mother, Brisbane woman Sally Faulkner, will be released any time now.

His lawyer, Joe Karam, lodged his US$20,000 bail, raised through an online support network, and yesterday took release papers to Lebanon’s Aley Prison.

“What happened is that the court decided on bail for everybody,” Mr Karam said, referring to Mr Whittington and three others who have been remanded with him since April.

“Bail will be provided, everyone will have a process with Immigration and they will be released.”

Channel Nine’s 60 Minutes remains accused of abandonment after it paid to rescue its own reporting team, headed by Tara Brown, but left Mr Whittington behind in prison along with his British-Cypriot accomplice, Craig Michael.

Mr Michael, and Lebanese men Khaled Barbour and Mohammed Hamza, will be released when and if they raise bail.

Mr Michael is accused of pushing the grandmother and grabbing the kids along with another member of the team, Scorto Boghdan, who fled and has not been arrested.

Mr Barbour was the driver employed by Mr Whittington, and Mr Hamza set up a safe house to hide the children.

60 Minutes’ plans for a ratings winner turned to debacle when, in shocking scenes captured on street TV, Mr Whittington’s men bowled over the children’s grandmother on a busy roadside and bundled the kids into a van.

Mr Whittington’s Child Abduction Recovery International Group moved into action at 60 Minutes’ behest after Ms Faulkner went to the program hoping they could help pick up the tab to recover her children, Lahela, 5, and Noah, 3.

Sally-Faulkner-Lebanon.png

Ms Faulkner’s estranged husband Ali Elamine failed to return the children after she sent them to Beirut to visit him.

Mr Whittington, who holds dual British-Australian citizenship and would still face kidnapping charges if he returns to Lebanon, is expected to depart for Sweden to reunite with his wife Karin and two sons.

“We can now advise that Adam has finally been granted bail and is now able to return home to Karin and the boys. This is great news,” stated his Facebook supporter group.

60 Minutes has paid up to $2m to untangle themselves from the mess, including a reported $500,000 to Mr Elamine to drop charges against its crew.

Most damaging, Ms Faulkner won her freedom by permanently surrendering all custody rights to her children to her ex-husband.

Mr Whittington, who may never enter Singapore again after a similarly bungled child-snatch operation in 2014, is unlikely to work as a recovery expert again.

Ms Brown, sound recordist David Ballment, cameraman Ben Williamson and producer Stephen Rice all spent a short spell in prison until they were released, but Rice took the fall and was dismissed.

In a letter from prison, Mr Whittington accused Channel Nine of minimising its role in events.

“I honestly don’t know what is more disgusting, the inhumane conditions in the dungeon I have been in for 40 days, with no sunlight and rats running around me at night, or hearing all the statements Channel 9 have made to the media,” he wrote.

Mr Whittington’s mother Georgina said the first time she had heard from Nine was after her son’s bail news came through — they rang her asking for an interview. It was denied.

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Sally Faulkner signs book deal after doomed bid to kidnap own children


July 11, 2016

Source: theguardian.com

Hachette Australia says memoir will be ‘testament to a mother’s love’ after disastrous snatch attempt in Lebanon organised with help of Channel Nine.

Brisbane woman Sally Faulkner, who has been charged with kidnapping her own children in Beirut, has signed an international book deal for a tell-all memoir.

Sally-Faulkner-Australia.png

All for My Children, “the heartbreaking true story of how one Australian mother’s life fractured in the instant she kissed her kids goodbye”, will be published in November 2016 by Hachette Australia.

A disastrous recovery operation, which Faulkner collaborated on with Channel Nine’s 60 Minutes, was captured on CCTV and saw her, the TV crew, the recovery agents and Faulkner all thrown into a Lebanese jail.

Faulkner and the 60 Minutes team are all back in Australia but the child recovery crew led by Adam Whittington remain in jail in Lebanon.

“Sally Faulkner doesn’t know when she will see her children again,” Hachette Australia publisher Vanessa Radnidge said.

“For that reason, this is one of the most important books I have ever published.

“It is testament to a mother’s love for her absent children. Sally is telling her story so that when Lahela and Noah are older they will know who she is, how happy they were with both parents in their lives and, most importantly, that their mother tried everything to bring them home.”

Faulkner’s children Lahela, five, and Noah, three, were snatched from a Beirut street by child recovery agents paid by 60 Minutes in April and taken to their mother for a brief reunion before the police intervened and they were returned to their father.

The book will tell the story 60 Minutes will never be able to.

The publisher promises a fairytale-gone-wrong story in which a 21-year-old Emirates flight attendant married to “the charming, sophisticated” Ali al-Amin “was living her dream of having a family. But it was all shattered when they separated and Ali said: ‘The kids aren’t coming back’.

“It was every parent’s nightmare … and it was only going to get worse. When, 12 months later, her husband still refused to return their children, and all efforts through the Australian government and Lebanese justice system were exhausted, Sally Faulkner flew across the world to try and bring them home herself,” the book release said.

“Ali hadn’t allowed her to see or speak to Lahela and Noah since June 2015. It was too long. She needed to hold them close. The results of that mission played out on news broadcasts across Australia, and everyone had an opinion about it. To a devastated Sally, the only thing that ever mattered was being with her children and seeing them truly happy again.”

After Faulkner’s release Amin said she would be allowed to “come and go as she wants” to and from Lebanon to see the children.

In May an internal investigation at Nine said “inexcusable errors” were made in pursuing the story.

Gerald Stone, the founding 60 Minutes producer who led the review, said it was the “gravest misadventure in the program’s history”.

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60 Minutes Beirut snatch: Elamine shuts off Faulkner kids


July 11, 2016

Source: theaustralian.com.au

Sally Faulkner’s estranged Lebanese husband has blocked the Brisbane mother’s internet and phone access to their children, deepening her anguish after she was charged over a bungled bid to snatch them.

Sally-Faulkner-Lebanon-Snatch.png

Ali Elamine also turned away Australian embassy staff when they tried recently to check on Lahela, 6, and Noah, 4, in Beirut.

“He basically slammed the door when the people from the embassy went to see him,” Ms Faulkner’s mother Karen Buckley said. “He won’t allow anyone to have contact with the children.”

Ms Buckley said Mr Elamine had shut down the children’s Facebook access and blocked their mother’s attempts to reach them through Skype, WhatsApp or by phone.

He had also refused to share updated photographs of them.

To compound Ms Faulkner’s distress, she has been notified she will face criminal prosecution in Lebanon for kidnap, along with the team led by Australian “child recovery” agent Adam Whittington that seized the children on April 7 in an ­operation funded by the Nine Network’s 60 Minutes.

Ms Buckley said her daughter had not decided whether she would voluntarily return to Lebanon to face court, though this was unlikely.

Ms Faulkner has told The Australian she hoped the charge would be downgraded from kidnap, which carries a maximum penalty of seven years’ jail in Lebanon. “I know what I did and I know why I did it, because I ­literally had no choice legally,” she said last week. “So you can’t live your life with regrets.”

Ms Buckley said the family was holding up, but the situation was trying when there was no news of the children.

She said the family was dismayed by recent photographs of Mr Elamine partying in Dubai.

Ms Faulkner, 29, was re­united with her children briefly ­before the Lebanese authorities swooped, arresting her as well as Mr Whittington and his team and the 60 Minutes crew, who filmed the grab on a south ­Beirut street.

Mr Elamine dropped civil charges against the program after the Nine Network stumped up a cash settlement, reportedly of $500,000.

Under the deal, Ms Faulkner relinquished custody rights to the children in Lebanon, even though she had a ruling in her favour from the Family Court in Australia.

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Sally Faulkner charged with kidnap


June 30, 2016

Source: skynews.com.au

Australian woman Sally Faulkner has been charged with kidnapping after the botched child recovery operation to take back her two children from their Lebanese father.

Adam Whittington, the dual Australian-British national who planned the bungled Beirut operation, and two of his colleagues have also been charged with kidnapping.

Judge Rami Abdullah’s decision to recommend charges against Ms Faulkner was unexpected, the judge having previously stated that he did not believe a mother could be found to have kidnapped her own children.

Sally-Faulkner

It is understood the charge of kidnapping has a maximum penalty of three years in prison.

The Nine Network journalists and crew involved in the case have avoided criminal charges, but will face a court-imposed fine after a trial, most likely for a misdemeanour.

Nine said its legal team in Lebanon had confirmed charges against the crew had been downgraded.

‘There will still be a trial on a date to be determined and out of respect for the Lebanese legal process we will not be making any further comment while the matter is still before the court,’ the network said in a statement.

Ms Faulkner’s lawyer, Ghassan Moughabghab, told AAP he would not comment on the judge’s decision until he had seen the charges.

Judge Abdullah conducted a three-month investigation into the actions of 60 Minutes reporter Tara Brown, her crew, Ms Faulkner and Whittington’s child recovery team.

Ms Faulkner, Brown, producer Stephen Rice, sound recordist David Ballment and cameraman Ben Williamson were arrested in Beirut on April 6, along with Whittington, Michaels, Barbour, and another Lebanese man, Mohammed Hamza.

They were taken into custody after Whittington’s team snatched Ms Faulkner’s two children, Lahela, 5 and Noah, 3 from a busy suburban street, injuring their Lebanese grandmother.

Ms Faulkner says she took the action after her estranged husband took the children on a two-week holiday in May 2015 and did not return them to Australia as promised.

After spending almost two weeks in prison, Ms Faulkner and the 60 Minutes team were released when the children’s father, Ali Elamine, agreed to drop personal charges of kidnap against them in return for a significant payout, reportedly up to $A500,000, from Nine.

Ms Faulkner agreed to give up custody of her children to obtain her freedom.

Documents provided to the Lebanese court show the network had already paid $A115,000 to Whittington for the recovery of the two children.

Adam_Whittington

 

Whittington, Michaels, Barbour have been refused bail and remain in Aley Prison on the outskirts of Beirut.

Lawyer Joe Karam said Thursday’s indictments followed a failed attempt to negotiate with the family of the children’s father to get the civil charges dropped against Whittington and his colleague.

‘There was no deal … They are closed to the idea of negotiation,’ he said.

‘The family are looking for compensation beyond the payment already made by Channel Nine.’

He confirmed that Faulkner, Whittington and Michaels, as well as the driver Khaled Barbour, had been indicted on the felony charge of kidnapping. Hamza had been indicted on a lesser charge.

The TV crew members, despite commissioning and filming the operation, were charged with failing to report a crime to authorities.

They will stand trial before a district judge in the criminal court and are expected to receive a fine and may be required to pay compensation to the Lebanese government.

The case is expected to go before the Appellate Court next week.

‘There are many precedents where a court has found a parent, even if they are helped by others, should not be charged with kidnapping,’ Karam said.

‘We are still hopeful of a fair outcome and pleased the case is moving through the courts.’

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Nine Network’s botched child abduction story in Lebanon


June 30, 2016

Source: The Australian

The costs of the Nine Network’s disastrous child abduction story in Lebanon continue to escalate, with the network transferring more than $500,000 to its Lebanese legal team last week.

Ali -Elamine-Sally Faulkner

With jailed child recovery agent Adam Whittington and his team of three fixers due back in court as early as today, The Australian has obtained fresh detail about the skyrocketing costs ­associated with the botched operation. It is understood Nine transferred $US400,000 to its Lebanese lawyers on June 24.

The transfer, coupled with earlier payments, put the network’s costs well over $US2 million in legal fees alone.

The payments, which Nine has been at pains to say have been to cover the network’s legal fees, and not to bribe officials, came as the Lebanese judge presiding over the case was expected to make a decision on whether to press ahead with criminal charges against the Nine crew, who were arrested over the failed ­abduction of Lahela and Noah Faulkner, children of Brisbane woman Sally Faulkner.

Faulkner-Tara-Lebanon

Nine’s reporter Tara Brown, cameraman Ben Williamson, sound recordist David Bailment and producer Stephen Rice, as well as Ms Faulkner, have been on bail since April 22 when the father of the children, Ali Elamine, dropped his personal charges after Nine paid $US500,000. Since then there has been great uncertainty about the fate of Mr Whittington and his crew who, unlike Ms Faulkner, a jilted mother, command no public sympathy in Lebanon.

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Tara Brown and 60 Minutes crew released on bail after paying compensation over botched child abduction


April 20, 2016

Source: dailymail.co.uk

Tara Brown and 60 Minutes crew released on bail after paying compensation over botched child abduction – as Sally Faulkner reaches a deal with her estranged husband to secure her freedom if she gives up custody of their two children

  • Tara Brown and 60 Minutes crew are set to be released from Lebanon jail
  • Charges have been dropped over the botched child abduction attempt 
  • Deal has been struck between Sally Faulkner and her ex Ali Elamine 
  • But this could mean Ms Faulkner has to give up custody of her children 

TV presenter Tara Brown and her 60 Minutes crew are now free to leave Lebanon after paying compensation over the botched child abduction.

Tara-Brown-Lebanon

The charges against the TV crew were dropped after Brisbane mother Sally Faulkner reached a deal with her estranged husband Ali Elamine in which she conceded full custody of their children.

Judge Rami Abdullah released the 60 Minutes team on bail, but warned them that they would have to return if prosecutors decided to proceed with criminal charges. 

Ms Faulkner, who spent two weeks inside a Lebanese jail along with the TV crew, is also expected to be set free following the hearing at the Baabda Palace of Justice on Wednesday.

But a British ‘child recovery agent’ and two others implicated in the attempt to kidnap Ms Faulkner’s two children from her estranged husband’s family will remain in the country to face the charges.

Ms Faulkner, Ms Brown and her three colleagues were led into a judge’s office in handcuffs at the Beirut Court on Wednesday.

The crew, which includes 60 Minutes producer Stephen Rice, cameraman Ben Williamson and sound recordist David Ballment, were told they must pay compensation by 2pm Beirut time.

Nine says the crew could be on a flight back to Australia as early as tonight.

Prosecutors still have to decide whether to drop the state case against the detainees, so the nightmare may not yet be over, according to local lawyers.

Judge Abdullah told the court on Wednesday that if the TV crew do not return, they will be dealt with in ‘absentia’.

Mr Elamine’s lawyer Hussein Berjawi said the father dropped the charges against his ex-wife at the request of their two children.

Faulkner-Tara-Lebanon

‘It’s because she is the mum of his kids,’ Mr Berjawi said. ‘It’s based on the request of the children he will ask for her release.’

On Monday, Mr Elamine admitted that the young children ‘want their mum’.

The father also told the judge that he decided to drop the charges against the TV crew because they were ‘just doing their job’.

Ms Faulkner and the TV crew were arrested two weeks ago after a child recovery team seized her children from Mr Elamine’s family on a Beirut Street.

They have spent the past two weeks behind bars and were facing charges of kidnapping and being members of a criminal gang, which can attract maximum sentences of up to 10 years.

These charges against the TV crew have been dropped, but members of the child recovery agency hired for the operation are believed to still be facing charges.

This means the future is uncertain for Craig Michael and Adam Whittington, who are both part of a child recovery agency.

Ms Faulkner’s lawyer Ghassan Moghabghab told AAP that the warring couple negotiated an agreement which could mean the Brisbane mother’s ex-husband Ali Elamine gets full custody.

When Mr Moghabghab was asked whether the deal involved a payment to Mr Elamine, he replied: ‘For my part it does not involve money, I don’t know about the other party (the Nine Network).’

Speaking earlier on Wednesday, Mr Moghabghab claimed Mr Elamine was holding out for money as part of a deal to ensure Ms Faulkner isn’t formally charged with kidnapping

‘He is waiting for money. Everything Ali is doing leads to one conclusion, that he is aiming for money,’ Moghabghab told News Corp.

Mr Elamine has previously denied claims that he wants compensation, telling reporters that ‘money is not an issue’.

Ms Brown and Ms Faulkner made a brief appearance before a judge at the Baabda Palace of Justice on Monday before the hearing was postponed.

Judge Abdullah adjourned the matter so lawyers for Ms Faulkner and Mr Elamine could continue talks.

The lawyers have been discussing custody arrangements for the two young children who were allegedly taken on holiday to Lebanon by their father but not returned to Ms Faulkner as agreed.

The lawyer said that Mr Elamine took the two children on a three-week holiday to Lebanon and did not return them as agreed.

But an attempt to snatch them from a suburban Beirut street by a ‘child recovery team’, caught on CCTV, was ultimately unsuccessful.

Adam-Whittington-Lebanon

Also read: Agent at centre of 60 Minutes fiasco – who makes a living snatching other people’s children – is devastated he will miss his OWN son’s birthday as he’s locked in a Lebanon jail.

The children were returned to their father and the 60 Minutes team were arrested.

Craig Michael and Adam Whittington, believed to be members of the child recovery agency hired for the operation, were also arrested.

Whittington claims he has receipts showing that Nine made online payments totalling $115,000 to him for the planning of the operation and recovery of the children.

‘It was direct from Channel Nine, it was from their accounts department and they paid it in two instalments,’ he told The Australian.

Nine has refused to comment.

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60 Minutes: Nine paid me in two instalments, says Beirut snatch planner Adam Whittington


April 17, 2016

Source: The Australian

Adam Whittington, the chief planner of the failed abduction of Sally Faulkner’s children, is poised to present documentary evidence to a Beirut court today that directly links two payments from Channel Nine to himself.

Child-Abduction-Recovery-International-Adam-CARI

In an explosive revelation, Mr Whittington has told The Australian he has receipts of two payments coming straight from the Channel Nine accounts department. Mr Whittington said he received two internet transfers of funds from the Nine Network several months ago: the first for 40 per cent of the agreed fee of more than $115,000, and then a second for the remaining 60 per cent.

He said the money was for the planning and recovery of three-year-old Noah and five-year-old Lahela from their southern Beirut home so they could be returned to their mother Sally Faulkner.

“It was direct from Channel Nine, it was from their accounts department and they paid it in two instalments,’’ Mr Whittington said from behind a heavily meshed door at the Baabda detention centre in Beirut at the weekend.

“I have the receipts and internet payments; for them (Channel Nine) to claim they weren’t involved is a joke.’’ Ms Faulkner’s lawyer, Ghassan Moghabghab, told The Australian yesterday that “Sally has no money’’, when asked if she had been an intermediary between Channel Nine and Child Abduction Recovery International.

The distinction is critical ­because if the “recovery’’ payment came straight from Channel Nine it implicates the television station directly in the failed snatch.

However, if Channel Nine paid Faulkner for the story, the network could argue it had no control over how she used the money and were on the scene only to report the news.

Channel Nine last night ­declined to comment on the ­allegations.

Mr Whittington’s claims come as relationships between all of those involved in the botched operation at a southern Beirut bus stop on the morning of April 6 have begun to disintegrate, with lawyers for Channel Nine and Ms Faulkner appearing to distance themselves from Mr Whittington’s company Child Abduction Recovery International.

Weekend talks regarding the custody of the children also ended without resolution, with Ms Faulkner’s lawyer, Mr Moghabghab, suggesting that any new deal-making was not between his client and Channel Nine, but between the children’s father Ali Al-Amin and Channel Nine.

He said this might be happening “not between the lawyers but another level’’.

Mr Moghabghab said Ms Faulkner had agreed to relinquish custody, but was told by Mr Al-Amin’s lawyer: “We are not in a hurry to talk about this.’’

There are also new allegations that Ms Faulkner’s estranged husband Mr Al-Amin had been cognisant of the kidnapping plans after being tipped off by a confidante of Ms Faulkner.

In addition to Mr Whittington’s claims, the court has already received another witness statement from one of those arrested that the detailed operation was directly paid for by 60 Minutes.

Also read: 60 Minutes crew detained in Beirut paid $120,000 to a child recovery agency which ‘faked’ success stories on Facebook

At the moment three different accusations against those involved in the Beirut incident have been lodged with the prosecutors: from the police, from Mr Al-Amin and also from Ms Faulkner’s former mother-in-law Ibtissam Berri, who claimed she was hit in the head with a gun during the botched abduction. The recovery crew has disputed this.

Mr Moghabghab will today ask the court to release Ms Faulkner on bail and to consider the operation as a family custody matter rather than a kidnapping. But talks broke down over the weekend although Mr Moghabghab said Ms Faulkner had agreed to all of the custody requests demanded by Mr Al-Amin last week.

The claims against the 60 Minutes crew (Brown, producer Stephen Rice, sound man David Ballment and cameraman Ben Williamson), the CARI operatives (Whittington, his tattoo artist former client Craig Michael), and two Lebanese security personnel (Mohammed Hamza and Khaled Barbour) are problematic. Judge Rami Abdullah has already warned that he believes a crime has been committed and that he was keen to find out which Channel Nine official had signed off on the assignment.

Lebanese legal experts have warned that the accused may face many days in detention — even in the best-case scenario if the charges are eventually dropped — as Justice Abdullah would generally take up to a week and a half to come to a decision of this nature. The influx of 1.2 million Syrian refugees into Lebanon has placed severe strain on the judicial system leading to delays.

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Beirut kidnap plot: Australian mother Sally Faulkner could be freed on Monday


April 14, 2016

Source: theguardian.com

An Australian mother accused of attempting to kidnap her children in Beirut may be released on bail as early as Monday if a reconciliation agreement is reached with the children’s father, a judicial source with knowledge of the case has said.

Sally-Faulkner
The agreement, which sources say is likely to be reached in the coming days, would pave the way for Sally Faulkner to be released pending trial. She would not be barred from leaving Lebanon.

The judicial source told the Guardian that authorities in Lebanon believe Channel Nine, the TV station whose crew was arrested in Beirut last week in connection with the case, had funded the operation to the tune of A$115,000 (£62,000).

They suspect the funds went towards procuring the services of Adam Whittington, a former Scotland Yard detective turned “child recovery specialist”.

Faulkner, from Brisbane, allegedly hired a team to snatch her children – Lahela, six, and Noah, four – from their Lebanese father, Ali al-Amin, who had taken them to the country last May and not returned. The Channel Nine crew, including journalist Tara Brown, were in Lebanon to report the story.

The journalists are unlikely to benefit from an agreement between the parents, with judge Rami Abdullah reportedly saying: “There is no way the charges will dropped.”

The judicial source told the Guardian: “They must know that this is a violation of Lebanese laws and Lebanese sovereignty, it is vigilantism. If a Lebanese person had done this he would have been accused of terrorism.”

The source provided fresh details of the investigation that led to preliminary charges of armed abduction and other offences that carry sentences of between seven and 20 years in jail.

The source said Faulkner appeared debilitated by the ordeal, and said Channel Nine had approached Whittington to inquire about the possibility of his organising the abduction, suggesting that the operation had been initiated by the television station.

Adam_Whittington-Lebanon-CARI

Whittington himself, who was described by a UK court as a “former mercenary”, was asked during the examination if he thought he was “Superman or Spiderman” to attempt such a plan.

The source said Whittington had travelled from Cyprus to Lebanon on a yacht in preparation for taking the children out of Lebanon, and two Lebanese individuals also charged in the case were hired upon the team’s arrival in Beirut to seize the children.

Faulkner faced court for a second day on Wednesday. Ali al-Amin was reportedly also in court as the judge ordered the pair to reach an agreement that could lead to Faulkner’s release, according to the ABC.

Faulkner’s lawyer, Ghassan Moghabghab, reportedly said the children were likely to remain in their father’s custody in Lebanon under any deal.

Brown, who appeared in court with her crew – Benjamin Williamson, David Ballment and Stephen Rice – told News Corp the group were being treated well in pre-trial detention.

“Quite genuinely we are being treated well by the standards here,” she said. “It’s fine; it’s not crowded.”

A Nine Network spokeswoman said it was a relief to know its staff were receiving good treatment. “It is reassuring and comforting to know they are being treated well and are in good health,” she said.

60 Minutes crew detained in Beirut paid $120,000 to a child recovery agency which ‘faked’ success stories on Facebook

The network was working with a Lebanese legal team and the Australian embassy in Lebanon to “get the team home as soon as possible”, she said.

On Wednesday the Lebanese foreign minister, Gebran Bassil, met Australia’s ambassador to Lebanon, Glenn Miles, and said a joint committee was being formed to resolve the custody of the children.

“Australians should respect Lebanese laws and the Lebanese should respect Australian laws,” Bassil said after the meeting. He hoped the incident “would not have an impact on Lebanese-Australian relations”.

The case has been adjourned until Monday.

 

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Beirut police arrest Australian mother and TV crew on kidnapping suspicion


April 7, 2016

Source: theguardian.com

An Australian woman who allegedly orchestrated the abduction of her children from their Lebanese father, and an Australian TV crew who police believe were there to film the incident, have been arrested in Beirut.

Sally-Faulkner-Lebanon

A British man who was also detained by the Lebanese police is believed to be the captain of a yacht that was moored near Beirut’s Movenpick hotel, preparing to sail away with the children, police sources said.

The detained film crew, including Tara Brown of Nine Network’s 60 Minutes program, were in custody on Thursday and being interrogated by internal security forces investigators.

The children, identified as Lahela al-Amin, six, and her four-year-old brother, Noah, have been returned to the custody of their father, Ali al-Amin, the Lebanese police said.

Lebanese police sources said they believed the Nine Network team had planned to film the kidnapping of the children and their return to the mother, identified in Australian media as Sally Faulkner. The police source told the Guardian officers believed the TV crew was sympathetic to the Australian mother’s cause and had intended to film the kidnapping to publicise the case in Australia.

“They planned to show it in Australia as if it was an operation to save the children, as if they were doing a good thing,” a police source told the Guardian on condition of anonymity.

“The woman made an agreement with the 60 Minutes program from Channel Nine to come help her recover her children from Lebanon,” a security source told Agence France-Presse.

In a tearful interview before the incident, Faulkner told Channel Nine’s A Current Affair her husband had taken the children on a holiday to Lebanon before deciding that he would not bring them back to Australia. But Amin denied any wrongdoing in an interview with local TV.

“They are saying that they were trying to recover the children from their father, as if I’m a criminal or something,” Amin said. “What they are saying in their media over there is untrue. I left Australia with the knowledge of security agencies and I didn’t kidnap anyone.”

Earlier on Thursday, Lebanon’s police force said that three armed individuals aboard a silver Hyundai had snatched the two children while they were waiting with their grandmother for their school bus in the neighbourhood of St Therese in the southern suburbs of Beirut.

Australian consular officials had visited the reporter and TV crew, AAP reported. Channel Nine said officials had reported the 60 Minutes crew were in good physical health, but the team had not had access to a lawyer.

Earlier, the foreign affairs minister, Julie Bishop, said Australian authorities had been in contact with Channel Nine and had offered “all appropriate consular assistance”

Read more here: 60 Minutes crew detained in Beirut paid $120,000 to a child recovery agency which ‘faked’ success stories on Facebook

 

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60 Minutes crew detained in Beirut paid $120,000 to a child recovery agency which ‘faked’ success stories on Facebook


April 7, 2016

Source: dailymail.co.uk

60 Minutes crew detained in Beirut paid $120,000 to a child recovery agency which ‘faked’ success stories on Facebook and whose operators have been arrested around the world.

  • Channel 9 paid $120,000 to a ‘cut rate’ child recovery agency CARI
  • CARI operatives have been arrested in other child recover cases
  • One CARI commando is in Peru prison after ‘abducting’ selfie queen’s child
  • The agency makes a fake claim on Facebook about a 2013 operation
  • The Facebook photo is really a police rescue of a  lost family in Oregon

Channel 9 paid $120,000 to a child recovery agency whose operators were detained along with reporter Tara Brown and crew who were filming an operation in an international custody case in the Lebanese capital of Beirut.

Daily Mail Australia has learned that the man leading the operation to recover the six-year-old daughter and four-year-old son of Australian woman Sally Faulkner from the Beirut family of the children’s father Ali El Alamine was arrested two years ago in Singapore.

Former British police officer Adam Whittington, who runs Child Abduction Recovery International (CARI) and who is reportedly under police arrest in Beirut along with 60 Minutes’ Tara Brown and her crew, was jailed in Singapore 18 months ago over a child abduction case.

Whittington’s CARI agency also boasts on its Facebook page alongside a photograph of a woman and child in a helicopter which is claims to be a successful 2013 CARI child recovery operation in the Philippines.

The photograph is actually a 2006 Oregon, US police rescue of a mother who became lost with her daughters on a remote snowy mountain and had to be helicoptered out.

Cari-child-abduction-recovery-international

Parental-Kidnapping

Another CARI operative, Kevin Critchley, is currently in a Peruvian prison following the alleged kidnap of a five-year-old girl in Lima last month. The girl’s father was also arrested.

The CARI agency has also allegedly made exaggerated claims about the number of former SAS soldiers it has working for it.

Daily Mail Australia understands that the mother in the Beirut case, Sally Faulkner, who is also known as Sally Clafinger, is not in custody with the 60 Minutes crew or the CARI operatives including Mr Whittington.

Ms Faulkner is believed to be have been taken to a safe house with her children, Lahela, 6, and Noah El Amine, 3, although it is unclear how she will get the children out of Lebanon and home to Australia without their passports.

But there are fears for the welfare of Ms Brown and her crew if local reports that the operation involved violence and weapons proved to be true.

Lebanese television station An-Nahar has reported the ‘recovery’ operation of Ms Faulkner’s children as a ‘kidnap’ by ‘four gunman’ driving a silver Hyundai and ‘abducting’ the boy and girl from their grandmother as they waited for the school bus.

Channel 9 released footage of the rescue operation on Thursday in which no weapons are visible.

An-Nahar reported that the gunmen ‘struck the grandmother Ibtisam El Amine on the head with a gun’ before taking the children from the outer Beirut suburb of Hadath on Wednesday.

The video does not show this, although the operatives are seen shoving people out of the way to get the children.

The 60 Minutes crew was in a car filming the recovery of Ms Faulkner’s children who is now in hiding with her young son and daughter.

The children’s father Ali El Amine and Ms Faulkner separated more than a year ago and Mr El Alamine flew to Lebanon with the children for a ‘holiday’ but failed to return them, telling his ex-wife via Skype that she ‘would never see them again’.

The operatives snatched the El Amine children from their paternal grandmother at a bus stop in the outer Beirut suburb of Hadath (pictured) on Wednesday morning as they waited for the school bus

The operatives snatched the El Amine children from their paternal grandmother at a bus stop in the outer Beirut suburb of Hadath (pictured) on Wednesday morning as they waited for the school bus

CARI child recovery commando Kevin Critchley (pictured) was arrested in Peru last month after being detained over an 'international kidnap plot' to take the five-year-old daughter of Peruvian selfie queen Rose Chacón

CARI child recovery commando Kevin Critchley (pictured) was arrested in Peru last month after being detained over an ‘international kidnap plot’ to take the five-year-old daughter of Peruvian selfie queen Rose Chacón

Peruvian selfie queen Rose Chacón (pictured) took the girl Adrianna, 5, back to her native Peru from America claiming her husband had 'inappropriately touched' their daughter, but he reportedly hired a CARI commando for $280,00 to recover the girl

Peruvian selfie queen Rose Chacón (pictured) took the girl Adrianna, 5, back to her native Peru from America claiming her husband had ‘inappropriately touched’ their daughter, but he reportedly hired a CARI commando for $280,00 to recover the girl

Ms Faulkner flew to Beirut to meet up with the CARI team, with Channel Nine’s 60 Minutes paying the $120,000 bill for her children’s recovery.

After taking the children from their grandmother at the bus stop, the CARI team handed them over to Ms Faulkner and she allegedly telephoned Mr El Amine and informed him that the children were with her.

Mr El Amine is reported to have then informed police that his children had been abducted and he was concerned they would be taken out of the country and to Australia.

It is unclear as to who has made claims that there were weapons used in the operation and that Mr El Amine’s mother was pistol whipped.

International child abduction recovery specialists CARI reportedly charged 60 Minutes $120,000 to recover the EL Amine children, but were arrested along with Tara Brown and her crew 

International child abduction recovery specialists CARI reportedly charged 60 Minutes $120,000 to recover the EL Amine children, but were arrested along with Tara Brown and her crew

All those detained were still in police custody on Thursday morning as Beirut officers investigated the validity of reports that weapons were used and an assault had taken place.

The Nine Network told Daily Mail Australia they were not commenting on the incident other than they were concerned for the welfare of Brown and her crew and were ‘working with authorities to get them released and back home as soon as possible’.

Adam Whittington and his firm CARI have made several controversial child recovery operations previously and the agency has made claims they had up to ten former SAS soldiers on their books.

Last month, Peruvian police arrested CARI operator Kevin Critchley after he was reportedly paid $280,000 to intervene in the custody battle between a Peruvian selfie queen and her American husband.

Sally Faulkner, pictured with her ex-husband Ali El Amine with their child in happier times, hired a child recovery agency to retrieve her children from Beirut and they are now in hiding with the operatives and 60 Minutes in police custody

Sally Faulkner, pictured with her ex-husband Ali El Amine with their child in happier times, hired a child recovery agency to retrieve her children from Beirut and they are now in hiding with the operatives and 60 Minutes in police custody

The boss of the child abduction recovery agency CARI Adam Whittignton (pictured) was also arrested in 2014 in Singapore following an elaborate plot to recover a British woman's son and served 16 weeks' prison

The boss of the child abduction recovery agency CARI Adam Whittignton (pictured) was also arrested in 2014 in Singapore following an elaborate plot to recover a British woman’s son and served 16 weeks’ prison

Sally Faulkner, pictured with her ex-husband Ali El Amine, now has to make her way out of Lebanon with her two children following the operation which led to Lebanese police arresting reporter Tara Brown

Sally Faulkner, pictured with her ex-husband Ali El Amine, now has to make her way out of Lebanon with her two children following the operation which led to Lebanese police arresting reporter Tara Brown

Critchley, 35, reportedly a former British commando, is in custody with Dustin Kent in a Lima prison after they allegedly plotted to snatch back Mr Kent’s five-year-old daughter Adrianna from the girl’s mother, Rose Chacón.

The men are being held for allegedly being part of an ‘international kidnap plot’ to take back Adrianna, after Ms Chacón took the girl to her native Peru from America claiming her husband had ‘inappropriately touched’ their daughter.

Mr Critchley, a self-employed ‘close protection operative and freelance surveillance operator’, was believed to have been working for CARI on the operation.

The two El Amine children (pictured) were living with their father and being cared for by their grandmother when they were grabbed of a Beirut street

The two El Amine children (pictured) were living with their father and being cared for by their grandmother when they were grabbed of a Beirut street

In September 2014, the London Telegraph reported that CARI’s chief operator Adam Whittington was jailed in Singapore after a foiled attempt to snatch a two-year-old boy back on behalf of his mother.

The boy’s London-based mother, 30, was also sent to prison. The mother had been in the process of divorcing her husband and had gained UK custody of the child, but her ex-partner took out a Singaporean order preventing his son’s removal from the country.

Whittington reportedly chartered a catamaran, then hired a taxi and went to the boy’s grandparents’ house where he allegedly put the grandfather in a headlock.

Whittington, the mother and another man involved in the elaborate plot were arrested the following day.

He was sentenced to 16 weeks prison for criminal assault, voluntarily causing hurt and illegal entry into Singapore.

CARI’s Facebook site features a photograph of a woman in a rescue helicopter clutching an infant on her lap

The caption written beside it says ‘Landed safely back home in Australia, 2 children abducted over 12 months ago into the Philippines. One VERY happy family waiting at Sydney airport after CARI recovered both children safely from horrible living and health conditions.

‘When the courts, lawyers and authorities could and would do nothing, CARI did.’

The photo is actually a picture of San Francisco mother Kati Kim, 30, who in December 2006, CBS News reported, was photographed with her seven-month old, Sabine Kim, after they were rescued by police in Oregon.

Ms Kim, husband James, Sabine, and daughter Penelope, 4, became lost during a family vacation to a remote Oregon mountain in winter.

James Kim set out to look for help when the family became stranded and was never found. Police airlifted a relieved Ms Kim and her daughters from the scene in a helicopter to the nearest hospital where they were reported to be in ‘good’ condition.

 On its Facebook post beside the photograph of Ms Kim and her daughter, CARI wrote ‘Welcome home kids from all the team at CARI. CARI – Second to None’.

Daily Mail Australia has contacted the CARI agency for a response.

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ABP World Group™ Risk Management

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Skype: abpworld

NOTE: We are always available 24/7

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