Create a free account, or log in

British millionaire cleared of murdering his wife; Payday lender repays nearly $480,000: Midday Roundup

British millionaire businessman Shrien Dewani has been cleared by a South African court for murdering his bride on their honeymoon, reports Fairfax. Judge Jeannette Traverso said prosecutors had failed to be convincing in a sensational trial where Dewaniโ€™s sexuality played a key role, saying the stateโ€™s evidence had “fallen far below” the level needed to […]
Administrator
British millionaire cleared of murdering his wife; Payday lender repays nearly $480,000: Midday Roundup

British millionaire businessman Shrien Dewani has been cleared by a South African court for murdering his bride on their honeymoon, reports Fairfax.

Judge Jeannette Traverso said prosecutors had failed to be convincing in a sensational trial where Dewaniโ€™s sexuality played a key role, saying the stateโ€™s evidence had “fallen far below” the level needed to secure a conviction.

Dewani was accused of hiring hitmen to hijack and murder his 28-year-old Swedish bride Anni in Cape Town in November 2010. Prosecutors alleged Dewani was motivated to order his wifeโ€™s murder because he is gay and felt pressure from his family to get married.

But Dewani denied the allegations and said he loved his wife.

Traverso admitted there were โ€œa number of unanswered questionsโ€ about the murder and โ€œstrong public opinionโ€ that Dewani should be tried, but said her decision was based on legal precedent.

Payday lender repays nearly $480,000

New South Wales payday lender Fast Easy Loans has been made to reimburse more than 2000 consumers a total of $477,900, after the consumer watchdog alleged it had charged customers a brokerage fee where it was prohibited from doing so.

Fast Easy acted as the broker for a related lender, Easy Finance Loans, from September 2010 to June 2013, allegedly charging customers a brokerage fee in excess of state and territory interest rate caps. In doing so, the Australian Securities and Investment Commission found the company had engaged in credit activities without a credit licence.

The federal government capped high-interest payday loans in July 2013 to make sure broker costs did not sit outside the small amount loan cap across various states and territories.

โ€œOur message to the industry and those who advise payday lenders is clear; if you set up business models to avoid the small amount loan cap, ASIC will take actionโ€, ASIC deputy chairman Peter Kell said in a statement.

Shares down on open

Local shares have opened down this morning following a weak overnight lead globally, despite a strong start to the week yesterday.

โ€œTwenty-four hours is a long time in markets,โ€ CMC Markets chief market strategist Michael McCarthy said.

โ€œIn overnight trading, shares and commodities sold off as investor focus shifted from US economic strength to a weaker outlook for Asia. Asia Pacific markets appear ready to give up yesterdayโ€™s gains, and more. A weak opening is expected, but potential for further Peoplesโ€™ Bank of China stimulus should limit the falls.โ€

The S&P/ASX200 benchmark was down 59.5 points to 5313.2 points at 11.56pm AEDT. On Monday, the Dow Jones closed 106.31 points lower, diving 0.59% to 17,852.5 points.

Follow SmartCompany on Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter.