Seven News Spotlight

What was the point of the story? Why bring his name and the awful tragedy up again years later if you weren’t going to use it bring awareness to the issue of suicide?

This could have been a powerful story, presented by a well known and respected journalist but it just wasn’t.

It just comes across as a tease to the people. For his wife to actually say “I’m not going to tell you how he died” just seems like a child saying na na na na na I know something you don’t know.

I know and appreciate it’s really not anyone else’s business. I get that. I really do. Then don’t go TV talking about it?

Of course I’m assuming it was suicide, I probably shouldn’t assume, but let’s be honest, we’re all thinking it.

If you weren’t going to use this platform as an opportunity to bring awareness I just don’t understand the point of it.

Sorry. Just my personal opinion.

Hasnt she written a book? So the interview is part of publicity for the book?

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That’s fair — raising awareness can absolutely be powerful, and maybe that opportunity felt missed here. But at the same time, not everyone grieving in public wants to become an advocate, and that’s okay too.

If it was suicide, it’s an incredibly complex and sensitive topic to explore on national TV. There’s also a difference between sharing your experience and feeling pressured to explain or educate.

Maybe it wasn’t about delivering a message — maybe it was just her way of speaking on her own terms, even if that left people wanting more.

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It was still a compelling interview.

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Apparently she is a guest correspondent

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7NEWS Spotlight: Australia’s ‘Iced Coffee Killer’

Tell-all interview with murderer following her release from prison

Almost a decade ago, Australian resident and former NSW Ambulance worker Jessica Wongso was convicted of brazenly and fatally poisoning her former best friend’s iced coffee with cyanide in a busy Jakarta café.

It was January 6, 2016, and Wongso was catching up with Mirna Salihin at one of the city’s classiest cafes for the first time in four years.

She’d taken the liberty of pre-ordering Salihin a drink. But seconds after she took her first sip, she began convulsing and foaming at the mouth. Just over an hour later, Salihin was dead.

Described as the most compelling murder mystery in Indonesian history, the case shocked Australia and sparked international headlines.

Now out of prison and granted a Judicial Review in the Indonesian Supreme Court having served only eight of a 20-year sentence, Wongso has bizarrely become a successful social influencer and is desperate to rewrite history.

In this major 7NEWS Spotlight exclusive, Wongso – who has always maintained her innocence – comes face-to-face with award-winning correspondent Liam Bartlett in her first ever tell-all interview.

Bartlett presses Wongso in the confronting sit-down on every aspect of the case, including accusations she was motivated by jealousy, her suspicious behaviour in the hours before the murder, her bizarre tendency to smile throughout the trial, and her thoughts on likelihood of acquittal.

“They still can’t prove anything,” Wongso tells 7NEWS Spotlight in the at times uncomfortable interview.

We also hear for the first time from the Australian woman who helped seal Wongso’s fate. Former boss Kristie Carter sits down exclusively with Bartlett to reveal for the first and last time the ‘erratic’ behaviours she witnessed in the lead up to the killing, and the trauma she and others endured from Wongso.

Liam Bartlett said: “There’s something you just can’t pin down about convicted murderer Jessica Wongso. Is she innocent as half the Indonesian population seem to think? Or is she – as those who are convinced of her guilt like to put it – completely mad?

“Either I’m sitting in front of a cold, calculated killer who murdered her best friend on the basis of simple jealousy, or a young woman who is a terrible victim of circumstance.

“It’s a plot worthy of a soap opera. But now, nearly a decade on, a family still grieves the incomprehensible killing of a beautiful young woman by her one-time best friend, who continues to protest her innocence.”

7NEWS Spotlight: Australia’s ‘Iced Coffee Killer’

This Sunday at 8:00pm on Seven and 7plus

7NEWS Spotlight: Love Mules

Romance scammers turning Aussie grandmothers into international drug mules

It starts with a message. A charming stranger. A promise of love. And it ends in a foreign prison cell.

This Sunday at 8.00pm on Seven and 7plus, 7NEWS Spotlight exposes the heartbreaking crime wave targeting some of Australia’s most vulnerable – women looking for love, who are being manipulated into smuggling drugs across international borders.

In a global investigation spanning Brazil, Japan and Hong Kong, 7NEWS Spotlight’s team of reporters Michael Usher, Mylee Hogan and Denham Hitchcock expose the cruel deception behind the so-called “Love Mules”, women like Veronica Watson and Donna Nelson who were lured into romance scams so convincing they risked everything.

Grandmother of nine Veronica was arrested in December, with 1.5 kilograms of cocaine in her luggage, leaving Sao Paulo Airport. She’s always maintained she was scammed by a man posing as a love interest.

“I trusted him,” Veronica said through tears. “He said he loved me. I thought we were going to get married.”

Donna’s story is just as devastating. A mother of five and former federal political candidate, she believed she was flying to Japan to meet her fiancé. Instead, she was arrested with two kilograms of methamphetamine in her suitcase and sentenced to six years in a Japanese prison.

These women aren’t just criminals. They’re victims of a sophisticated and deeply manipulative scam, one that plays out over years, with thousands of messages, video calls, and even detailed wedding plans.

In this exclusive investigation, 7NEWS Spotlight tracks down the scammers behind the heartbreak. Going undercover, Denham Hitchcock follows the trail of the man known only as “Kelly” through the backstreets of Hong Kong, uncovering the bars he frequents and speaking to those who’ve seen him.

Denham Hitchcock said: “These online relationships were real, in both cases they went on for two and a half years. Messages and video calls. This is a new type of scam, insidious, evil and cruel.

“We’re not just telling these women’s stories; we’re attempting to track down the people who destroyed their lives and show how it can happen to anyone.”

7NEWS Spotlight: Love Mules

This Sunday at 8.00pm on Seven and 7plus

TikTok Killer

Sunday 1 June 8:00 PM

In a global investigation, Spotlight exposes a killer on the run – an Indian rapper accused of murdering the father of a western Sydney woman after he met her on TikTok.

Is this a repeat?

Yep, the report first aired on December 1 last year.

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The episode was replaced with another story originally. But then later it was added back into the show to make a 2 hour episode. Currently not listed as a repeat by Seven.

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More repeats on Sunday

World’s Toughest Prison, The Truth About Amy

Gemma has been there over a year now, how do they have so little in the tank?

Appears 7 don’t budget for the show to run 40-50 weeks of the year like 60 Mins, they’ve typically always taken breaks and they run repeats or other programming in that slot.

I get that but it wasnt on for most of the last 6 months, a few eps and they’re already back to repeats?

I assume it is because there is sunday night AFL?

Slaves to AI: a 7NEWS Spotlight world exclusive

The Australian company using hidden workers to train AI

We ask artificial intelligence to write our resumes, plan our holidays, even help diagnose disease. But what if the intelligence behind it wasn’t artificial at all, and it all comes at a terrible human cost?

This Sunday at 8.45pm on Seven and 7plus, 7NEWS Spotlight travels to Kenya, the US and Colombia to uncover the human face of AI – and the major role an Australian company is playing in it.

In this exclusive investigation, reporter Michael Usher tracks down the people behind the algorithms – the so-called “ghost workers” of AI. These are the invisible people labelling data, moderating content and training the systems that now shape our everyday lives.

Many of the ghost workers are paid just cents per task. Some are exposed to disturbing material. Others are asked to submit hundreds of personal images of their children – all in the name of progress.

“If you say artificial intelligence, I’ll say you can please correct that and say ‘African intelligence’,” says Michael, a Kenyan father. “Because most of this work has been done here in Africa.”

“They asked me to describe what human flesh might taste like,” says worker Chychy. “You have to put yourself in the mindset of a cannibal to earn $12.”

“I was watching pornography eight hours a day. And I did that for eight good months,” says another worker. “The things I saw, I would never even want to talk about.”

These data labellers aren’t employed by the tech giants directly; they are hired through layers of outsourcing and a digital supply chain designed to keep them invisible. And one of the key players is an Australian company with global reach and serious questions to answer.

Michael Usher said: “AI is being built on the backs of people you’ve never heard of, doing work you were never meant to see. They’re not just training machines. They’re absorbing trauma, surrendering privacy, and being paid in cents – if they’re paid at all.

“What we’ve uncovered is a system that’s as exploitative as it is sophisticated. These tech giants, including an Australian company, are indirectly using thousands of workers, to the benefit of their great AI arms race.”

7NEWS Spotlight: Slaves to AI

This Sunday at 8.45pm on Seven and 7plus