Real Crime with Adam Shand

Frontline to Front Bench: The Officer Who Ran for Office | Stuart Grimley

49 min · 17. maj 2026
episode Frontline to Front Bench: The Officer Who Ran for Office | Stuart Grimley cover

Beskrivelse

Victorian police officer Stuart Grimley has seen it all — three years as a Kalgoorlie copper rubbing shoulders with the Gypsy Jokers, stints in Major Drugs and Crime Command and two years working sexual offences cases that left images he'll never unsee. Then, in 2018, he did something most cops never do: he got elected to State Parliament under Derryn Hinch's Justice Party banner. He lost his seat in 2022 and went back to Victoria Police, where he's now an operational safety and tactics instructor. But Stuart's not done with politics. He's launching the Frontline Workers Party — a new movement representing police, paramedics, nurses, firies, teachers and corrections officers ahead of the Victorian state election. Adam sits down with Stuart to talk about the psychological toll of child exploitation investigations, the frustration of watching offenders walk free after months of painstaking police work, the $30 million machete amnesty debacle, and why Stuart believes the only way to fix a broken system is to get back inside it. See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

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Alle episoder

89 episoder

episode Such Is Life: Luke Bona's Untold Australian Story | Luke Bona cover

Such Is Life: Luke Bona's Untold Australian Story | Luke Bona

What began as a conversation about Ned Kelly, Dezi Freeman and the myth-making around Australia's most notorious outlaws, suddenly took an unexpected turn, and became something far more powerful. Adam Shand was a guest on his mate Luke Bona's Bonafide podcast [https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/bonafide-with-luke-bona/id1801841940] to explore the parallels between Kelly's rebellion and Freeman's modern-day sympathisers, and the romanticised legacy of Australian bushranging. But when Luke's Indigenous identity came up, Adam did what he does best - he asked the question no one else had thought to ask. For the first time on any public platform, Luke Bona [https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/bonafide-with-luke-bona/id1801841940] reveals the story of how he came to be raised in a white family on Sydney's northern beaches, unaware of his Wiradjuri heritage. Born at Crown Street Women's Hospital to a 16-year-old Aboriginal woman from Bourke, Luke was left in a Bondi orphanage — and the circumstances under which his biological mother lost him are deeply troubling.  It's a story of identity, loss, and the long shadow of adoption — one that Luke has carried for years, including the devastating decision by his adoptive mother to write him out of her will after he went searching for his roots. Listen to Luke Bona's Bonafide Podcast HERE [https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/bonafide-with-luke-bona/id1801841940]   See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

7. juni 202637 min
episode The Fingerprint of the 21st Century - And Its Flaws | Jae Gerhard cover

The Fingerprint of the 21st Century - And Its Flaws | Jae Gerhard

DNA evidence has been called the gold standard of forensic science — but is the justice system placing too much faith in it? Adam Shand speaks with Jae Gerhard, one of Australia's leading independent forensic scientists, about the hidden limitations of DNA evidence and what they mean for criminal prosecutions. A former scientist with the Australian Federal Police and NSW Police Force, Jae now works as an expert witness advising defence lawyers on what the DNA in their cases actually tells us — and what it doesn't. From trace DNA that can travel on a handshake to gloves that become vectors for contamination, Jae reveals how easily evidence can be misread, mishandled, or misrepresented in court. She takes Adam through landmark cases including Farah Jama, who spent sixteen months in prison for a crime he didn't commit — convicted largely on DNA evidence that was never what it appeared to be. See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

2. juni 202634 min
episode The Lawyer Who Robbed a Bank | Graeme Alford cover

The Lawyer Who Robbed a Bank | Graeme Alford

Graeme Alford had it all mapped out: a criminal law practice in Melbourne, the trust of the underworld, and a fast-track to the top. Then the drinking and gambling caught up with him. He raided his client trust fund, did time in Pentridge and on release somehow managed to pull off one of the most inept armed robberies in Australian history - earning himself a second lagging. Inside, something shifted. Graeme bulldozed the wreckage of his old life and rebuilt from scratch. Brain training, biographies of successful people and a cast-iron decision to become the master of his own destiny. What followed was extraordinary. A clerkship led to a career bringing Norman Schwarzkopf, Nelson Mandela and Mikhail Gorbachev to Australian audiences. Then came a second reinvention: as an addiction counsellor, opening a rehab centre built on the belief that recovery happens in real life, not away from it. He's 77, 43 years sober, and still not done. See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

31. maj 202652 min
episode Equal Before the Law: The ISIS Brides Dilemma | Tanguy Mwilambwe cover

Equal Before the Law: The ISIS Brides Dilemma | Tanguy Mwilambwe

Four Australian women, known as the ISIS Brides, returned home from Syria in May this year. Two were charged with crimes against humanity and slavery offences allegedly committed overseas. A third faced terrorism-related charges. And yet another 20 or more remain stranded in Syrian refugee camps, unable to get home. The question isn't whether we like them. The question is whether the law applies equally to everyone. Adam Shand is joined by Brisbane-based immigration lawyer Tanguy Mwilambwe of Sambi Legal to unpack the legal reality behind the headlines. Why can't the government simply keep these women out? What's the difference between joining ISIS and fighting with the IDF? And what does it mean for all of us when politics starts overriding the rule of law? From temporary exclusion orders to mandatory visa cancellations, child brides to slavery charges, this is a story about what Australian citizenship actually means — and what we lose when we decide some citizens don't deserve its protections. See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

26. maj 202636 min
episode After Dark Bandits: Doug's Last Word | Doug Morgan cover

After Dark Bandits: Doug's Last Word | Doug Morgan

When Doug Morgan first sat down with Adam Shand, the plan was simple: get both twins on the record, tell the full story of Victoria's After Dark Bandits, and move on. Nearly a year later, Adam is back with Doug for one final conversation — and this time, it's personal. More than fifty years on from the bank and betting shop robberies that defined their notoriety, Doug Morgan is done looking back. He's running youth workshops, mentoring young people away from the path he took, and quietly tending to the memory of the father who shaped him. In this candid closing chapter, Doug reflects on the loyalty that drew him into a life of crime, the intimidation he witnessed and despised inside Pentridge, and the strange, volatile brotherhood that has defined his life far longer than any prison sentence. See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

24. maj 20261 h 3 min