"This service may include material from Agence France-Presse (AFP), APTN, Reuters, AAP, CNN and the BBC World Service which is copyright and cannot be reproduced.Parachutists make emergency jump after plane's fuel tank runs dry, ATSB findsStudent pilot fell unconscious for 40 minutes mid-flight over AdelaideUK Government under pressure to dump 'misogynist' Abbott from trade roleAustralian prisoner says Chinese authorities 'can abuse' him, demands day in courtThe case for COVID-19 'zero': Former health chief says 'smarter, longer' restrictions needed Murderer won't be released without Australia's consent, Afghanistan saysCoronavirus update: New Zealand's Helen Clark to co-chair COVID-19 enquiryQueensland vet believed to be among two Australians missing after ship capsizedMt Isa community in shock 'outgoing and gifted' vet was on board missing ship'I've made that plain to the PM': WA snubs push to set border end date'They were terrible times': How Australians remember the 1990s recessionHotel guests about to check out had coronavirus, Victoria's hotel quarantine inquiry hearsAnalysis: 'Nothing else comes close': Six graphs that explain Australia's recessionRecords tumble as Panthers close in on NRL minor premiershipCassandra received a $26,000 Centrelink debt notice in October. I thought maybe it was a private jet, and there was someone important onboard. "Police have since reassured the public the plane was a police aircraft taking part in a photo shoot.
Is this normal?" "Did anyone in Adelaide just see a plane circling the city, being chased by a helicopter?" A refugee family has been left shaken by an alleged violent home invasion in Adelaide's north-western suburbs overnight.Pregnant mother-of-two Natasha Vaye said the alleged break-in of her Durham Terrace, Ferryden Park, home brought back memories of her past in the African country of Liberia.Police said the arrested man broke into the house about 2:00am and assaulted the occupants, before stealing a car at a home on nearby Malcolm Street.Several people reported seeing the grey Renault Koleos driving erratically into the CBD.The driver then allegedly approached a man on Franklin Street and demanded his keys, but left emptyhanded.The police helicopter chased the stolen car through the western suburbs, where it was involved in two separate crashes along Anzac Highway.The driver allegedly aimed the vehicle at several police vehicles in the Brompton area, but police spiked the car's tyres.The car eventually came to a stop on Port Road at Thebarton where the driver was arrested.The 36-year-old from Kilburn has been charged with engaging in a police pursuit, aggravated serious criminal trespass, illegal use, robbery, driving without due care and driving unlicensed.He has been refused bail and is expected to appear in the Port Adelaide Magistrates Court on Tuesday.Ms Vaye said she was asleep when she woke to the sound of her back door being smashed in. I'd never seen anything like this before. "It looked like the helicopter was chaperoning the plane. "The aircraft, owned by [SA Police] and used to convey police and prisoners across the state, was refurbished as a part of the scheduled maintenance," police said. "There's a helicopter chasing a small plane over the city. "The flight took place as part of normal operations and no additional costs were incurred. Additional helicopters were progressively added and in 1990 the first Bell 412 VH-NSC came into service. A police publicity exercise has inadvertently triggered fears of an unfolding mid-air emergency, after Adelaide locals spotted a plane and a helicopter flying close together over the city.The aircraft were seen circling Adelaide on Wednesday morning, apparently only dozens of metres apart, with many onlookers casting their eyes skywards.A flight tracking map posted online shows the two aircraft both left Adelaide Airport before doing several laps around the CBD and inner suburbs, but there were also sightings further afield. "I never expected this in Australia. "For me to go through this today is like taking me back to my past, it's very hard. POLICE have launched a new system which will allow residents to track what a new multi-million pound helicopter is up to.