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Indigenous Law Bulletin |
By Thalia Anthony.
Almost thirty years ago in the case of R v Neal
(1982),[1] members of the High Court
recognised that an Indigenous defendant’s assault (swearing and spitting)
on a reserve officer in
Yarrabah, Queensland, needed to be understood in its
paternalistic and racist context. Two of the four High Court judges acknowledged
that racist tensions on reserves that provoke ‘violent’ crimes
against non-Indigenous officers can be factors that reduce
the offender’s
criminal sentence, because they reduce the culpability of the Indigenous
offender.
A spate of ensuing cases cemented Indigenous mitigating
factors. Most notable was R v
Fernando,[2] which recognised
colonial dispossession and neo-colonial socio-economic disadvantage as factors
relevant to the offender’s
conduct. Justice Wood cautioned against
imprisonment as a sentence for Indigenous offenders due to the deleterious
effects of incarceration
on Indigenous communities.
This article
considers the shift away from judicial appreciation of context in sentencing Lex
Patrick Wotton, a 37 year old Palm Islander
man. Wotton was sentenced by the
Townsville District Court on 11 November 2008 for his involvement in a protest
against the police
responsible for the death in policy custody of Mulrunji
Doomadgee[3] and the subsequent
mishandling of its investigation. Wotton was convicted under s65 Criminal
Code for partaking in a riot in which a building was destroyed. The maximum
penalty for this offence is life
imprisonment.[4]
The
sentencing remarks made by Shanahan J focus heavily on issues of deterrence,
protection of property and especially redemption
for the police victims. His
Honour relied on the reasoning of the Queensland Court of Appeal, which had
heard a sentence appeal made
by other protesters who had been convicted of
lesser charges. In devising appropriate sentences, both courts disregarded
Mulrunji’s
death in custody, and the mishandled police investigation that
followed.
On 19 November 2004, 36 year old Mulrunji was arrested for offensive
language. With no significant criminal record, he was known for
his
happy-go-lucky character. Forty minutes after his arrest, Mulrunji was dead in
the Palm Island police station. While in custody,
he had suffered a black eye,
four broken ribs, a ruptured liver – cloven in two – and a ruptured
portal vein.
Gravely affected, the Palm Island community held public
meetings expressing ‘extreme concern’ not only about
Mulrunji’s
death, but also about the ‘lack of any police action to
bring anybody to heel concerning that
death.’[5] After a history of
adverse police-Indigenous relations, particularly in relation to Indigenous
deaths in custody,[6] tensions were
already simmering. This friction only escalated as the facts surrounding
Mulrunji’s death came to light.
The investigation into the death
in custody was mishandled profoundly. Addressing a community meeting, Mayor
Erica Kyle indicated
that the pathology report from Mulrunji’s autopsy,
which had been sent to the Coroner, suggested that his death had been an
accident, that is, that Mulrunji had slipped on a
step.[7] Andrew Boe, counsel for Palm
Island in the coronial inquiry into Mulrunji’s death, criticised this as
inappropriate given that
the community had known the victim and was aware of a
long history of police injustice on the island. He describes it as tantamount
to
saying
please don’t speculate, it’s all OK, it was just
an accident. … Go back to your lives, wear this one, because it
was just
an accident.[8]
For the
community, this was one more ‘example of how another grave injustice in
their community was not going to be
examined’.[9]
It was not
disclosed sufficiently to the community that the Crime and Misconduct Commission
was conducting an investigation into Mulrunji’s
death in custody. Once
they learned of the nature of the investigation, specifically the relationship
between the investigators and
the police officer under investigation, community
members became alarmed.[10] The
investigation was conducted by close friends of the responsible police officer,
Senior Sergeant Hurley; during the period of
investigation, Hurley wined and
dined the investigating officers at his home and engaged in off- record
discussions about the matter.
Further, the investigating officers had already
been attached to the Palm Island police station for two
years.[11] The partiality in the
investigation was an affront to several key recommendations of the Royal
Commission into Aboriginal Deaths
in Custody, specifically that assistants to a
coronial inquiry ought to be independent (Recommendation 27), as should
investigations
into deaths in custody (Recommendation 33).
The response
to these background circumstances culminated in a public protest outside the
police station. On 26 November 2004, approximately
300 people (one-eighth of the
Palm Island population)[12]
assembled at the station demanding that the police leave. The group threw stones
and mangoes at the police building and yelled abuse
at the police. Some officers
sustained minor injuries but no officer was seriously injured. The officers were
armed and prepared
to fire on the protesters to preserve their own
lives;[13] a number pointed rifles
at protesters. Ultimately, the officers retreated to the hospital and police
barracks. Over the next three
hours, the police station and court house were
burnt down.[14]
For Wotton,
this protest set the stage for four years of criminal proceedings, eventually
resulting in a criminal sentence of six
years’ imprisonment. He would be
condemned for his role in the protest while the officers behind the barracks
would be valorised
for their bravery.
Sentencing: Enforcing
Wotton’s Culpability and Indemnifying the Palm Island Police
Wotton was sentenced in the aftermath of extensive media coverage and
adverse police union publicity, after judicial remarks on his
culpability
throughout his proceedings[15] and
after the acquittal of Senior Sergeant Hurley for manslaughter. Justice Shanahan
sentenced Wotton to six years’ imprisonment,
with a two-year non-parole
period.[16] The sentencing remarks
sidelined the death in custody from the offence, focusing instead on deterrence
of similar activity. The comments
emphasised the seriousness of the offence,
especially as police had been victimised, and sought to vindicate the police
officers.
Disavowal of Context
Justice Shanahan depicted the
Palm Island community as divided between the ‘law-abiding good’
against the ‘rioting
bad’, stating ‘I have had the advantage
of meeting a number of the citizens of Palm Island, particularly the elders and
the members of the Community Justice Group’. His Honour considered that
many ‘are working towards improving that community’
and should be
given ‘recognition and
support.’[17] His Honour
contrasted this with the response by the ‘rioters’ to problems
facing their community:[18]
I have faith the substantial balance of the Palm Island community,
which did not participate in this riot, would not agree this was
a legitimate
way of expressing community
concern.[19]
Certainly
Shanahan J recognised community anger arising from the flawed investigation into
Mulrunji’s death. His Honour pointed
out that appointing to the
investigation a sergeant ‘attached to the Palm Island Police
Station’ and ‘a friend
of the arresting officer’ could
‘hardly have given the perception of objectivity and
independence’.[20] The judge
also admonished the communication of Mulrunji’s post-mortem results to the
community as an
‘accident’.[21] However,
Shanahan J unequivocally ruled out this context as relevant to Wotton’s
sentence; that is, ‘rioting’ is
so ‘intrinsically
dangerous’[22] that no
circumstances would warrant consideration. His Honour cited the Court of
Criminal Appeal’s position that:
the background to this matter
is not particularly relevant for the purpose of the sentence. The reason for
that, in my view, is the
serious nature of the offence itself, rioting with
destruction.[23]
The only relevant
context for Shanahan J, again citing the Court of Criminal Appeal, was
‘recent and not so recent world history’ that
‘illustrates the immense damage wrought by
riots’.[24] His Honour further
remarked that ‘mob conduct’ is not ‘tolerated in a civilised
community’.[25] Protest,
therefore, is inherently at odds with a civilised community, which requires a
reasoned response. With these uncivilised
miscreants in mind, Shanahan J
emphatically defended deterrence as central to the sentence; concerned to
‘ensure that [the
riot] does not occur
again,’[26] his Honour cited
McCormack:
Their participation in the riot seems to have sprung
… from a view … that the police had earlier acted harshly or beyond
their powers. Even if the police had so acted the mob conduct at the police
station was a reaction which could not be tolerated in
a civilised
community.[27]
Seriousness
of Offence
Wotton’s sentence was based primarily on the
seriousness of the offence. Shanahan J considered the number of offenders, the
damage to public property and the nature of the police victims. His Honour
referred to the fact that 300 people participated in the
‘riot’ but
found that this figure ‘may well be an exaggeration’ because
‘the video does not disclose
that many active participants. There seemed
to have been a number who were simply
spectators’.[28] Second, his
Honour assessed the economic loss caused by the ‘riot’, noting that
‘millions of dollars damage was
occasioned to the infrastructure of Palm
Island and the damage to the community can easily be
seen.’[29] Third, his Honour
stressed that it was police who were the ‘target of this
riot’;[30] that is, police
were the object of the protests because they ‘were simply performing their
duties as police
officers’.[31]
Vindicating the Police
For both Shanahan J, and the Court of
Criminal Appeal, it was the ‘identity of the targets’ – Palm
Island police
– that makes this offence ‘distinctly
grave’.[32] Justice Shanahan
repeatedly noted the ‘relatively minor’ injuries sustained by
police, referring to a bruised hip as
the most serious example of harm
suffered.[33] His Honour considered
it ‘surprising’ that no officer was seriously wounded, but noted
this as a ‘simple
fact’.[34] Instead, Shanahan J
stressed the emotional toll on police, who were ‘subject to vile
abuse, threats of death and taunts for being police officers [and] many
perceived
that they were about to
die’.[35] His Honour
continued,
It appears that many have suffered emotionally, many have
suffered financially and many feel that their careers in the police service
have
been irrevocably damaged. There has also been much suffering caused to their
families, their partners and their children and
other families. It should be
noted in that regard that one of those officers was in fact Indigenous and he
particularly feels put
upon by what
occurred.[36]
As evidence
of their ‘horror and
terror’,[37] Shanahan J noted
that some officers ‘had decided to shoot at the crowd if it came to
that’. Two in particular identified
Wotton ‘as the person that they
would shoot first’.[38] The
judge considered this police response not only justified, but as evidence of
Wotton’s wrong-doing. This reaction was cast
as a reasoned response to an
uncivilised act.
By denying context, the Court could not properly
recognise that the community anger was a reaction not only to the death of an
Indigenous
man in police custody, but was also the product of much deeper,
long-running, tension in Indigenous-police relations. Indeed, by
abstracting the
protests from their historical circumstances, Shanahan J commented that:
To add the obvious, that one police officer is perceived –
whether or not with justification – to have done a terribly
bad thing,
does not justify the wholesale, violent, condemnation of the contingent of which
he forms part.[39]
Reinstating
Culpability: Wotton as Leader
Justice Shanahan regarded Wotton as a
‘major player’ and ‘leader’ in the riot. There was
evidence that Wotton
had given a speech at the public meeting, indicating that
‘things were going to
burn’.[40] However, the judge
offset this leadership role with Wotton’s conflicting role in assisting
the police to escape injury, noting
In my view the only thing in your
favour in your involvement in this was that at stages you made some efforts to
lessen the chances
of the police officers being
injured.[41]
Justice
Shanahan concluded by referring to Wotton’s good character and
contribution to the Palm Island community. Wotton had
been actively involved in
the Palm Island Men’s Group, in an alcohol and drug rehabilitation
program, and also in a program
aimed at assisting young people and addressing
suicide problems in the
community.[42] His Honour referred
to some alcohol-related offences in his youth, but noted that Wotton
‘overcame those problems and has endeavoured
to assist others’ in
doing the same. In this way, Shanahan J appeared to characterise Wotton as one
of the ‘good’
members of the community – those people
idealised at the outset of the remarks – but only for the purposes of a
mild
reduction to the head sentence. The mitigating factor that Wotton had tried
to ‘minimise the chances of serious injury done
to the police’ was
key in this regard. This conduct, combined with the adverse impact of bail
conditions and imprisonment,
and glowing references from community members and
prominent people across Australia, led to a reduction in Wotton’s sentence
from seven to six years.[43] The
earliest date for Wotton’s release is 18 July
2010.
Conclusion
Justice Shanahan’s sentencing remarks
sought to vindicate the police response to community anger, and to deter similar
responses
to police injustice. In so doing, the judge downgraded the
significance of Mulrunji’s death in custody, police responsibility
for
that death, and the patently biased police investigation that ensued. Clearly,
this provides no deterrence for similar conduct
for Palm Island police. As
Andrew Boe argues, it is ‘terribly naïve’ to conceive
Wotton’s offence within a
framework of deterrence:
as a justice
system, we didn’t have the maturity to examine the context within which
this death in custody occurred, and the
context within which there were
reactions to it. And I think unfortunately the reality for black and white
relations in this country
is such that we won’t examine these things in
the fashion that is necessary to create true
reconciliation.[44]
By
disavowing context in this way, Shanahan J reconstructed the Palm Island
protests as a spontaneous and random uprising. The judge
effectively absolved
those officers involved in Mulrunji’s death from any sense of remorse or
culpability; his Honour did little
to encourage a more sensitive police culture
towards Palm Island residents. Instead, his Honour cast the police officers as
innocent
victims, and reinforced the notion that their actions are not properly
open to public scrutiny or accountability.
Dr Thalia Anthony is a
Lecturer in the Faculty of Law, University of Sydney. Her research is focused on
criminal procedure, public
interest litigation and legal claims of Indigenous
peoples. Thalia has published and edited a number of books and articles,
including
the Critical Criminology Companion (with Chris Cunneen, 2008
Hawkins Press), Connecting with Law (with Michelle Sanson and David
Worswick 2009 OUP) and Indigenous Legal Issues (with Garth Nettheim et al
2009 Thomson, forthcoming). Her research relating to Indigenous stolen wages
claims is the subject of
a potential test case and Government inquiry.
[1] [1982] HCA 55; 149 CLR
305.
[2] (1992) 76 A Crim R
58.
[3] Out of respect to the
family, the deceased will hereafter be referred to by his assigned honorific
title, Mulrunji.
[4] Andrew
Boe further noted that ‘there's no prospect of that sort of penalty [of
life imprisonment] being meted on anybody convicted
of this sort of offence,
even though that is the maximum’, cited on Damien Carrick, ‘The
Sentencing of Lex Wotton’,
The Law Report (2008),
<http://www.abc.net.au/rn/lawreport/stories/2008/2416076.htm>
26 February
2009.
[5] Stewart Levitt,
Wotton’s lawyer, on Law Report
Ibid.
[6] Mulrunji was
approximately the 240th Indigenous death in custody in the previous
fifteen years (Australian Bureau of Statistics, cited by Levitt on Law
Report 2008). The Palm Islanders encounter with the criminal justice system
is markedly disproportionate. Judge Nase in R v Wotton [2007] QDC 181at
[3] cited statistics that Torres Strait Islander peoples make up 3.5% of the
population, but constitute nearly 25% of the adult state
prison population and
55% of children in detention.
[7]
It was only after an independent review of the coronial evidence and a
prosecution outside the office of the Director of Public Prosecutions
that the
responsible officer, Senior Sergeant Hurley, was prosecuted.
[8] Boe above n
4.
[9]
Ibid.
[10] Citing Coronial
Inquiry, R v Wotton [2007] QDC
181,[4].
[11] The Queen v Lex
Patrick Wotton, 07/11/2008,
2-3.
[12] R v Poynter, Norman
& Parker; ex parte A-G (Qld) [2006] QCA 51,[32] (‘Poynter &
Ors’).
[13] R v
Wotton [2007] QDC 181, [6]-[7] (Nase
DCJ).
[14] Levitt, above n
5.
[15] See also Wotton v
DPP [2006] QDC 202 (14/07/2006); Wotton v DPP [2007] QDC 181
(16/03/2007).
[16] 110 days,
which had already been served, were deducted from the two year period: The
Queen v Lex Patrick Wotton, above n
11.
[17]
Ibid.
[18] Ibid,
3.
[19] Ibid, 6, citing
Poynter & Ors, [39] (de Jersey
CJ).
[20]
Ibid.
[21]
Ibid.
[22] Ibid,
5.
[23] Ibid, 4 citing Poynter
& Ors, [31]. .
[24] Ibid,
6, citing Poynter & Ors, [37] (de Jersey CJ) (emphasis
added).
[25] Ibid, 6, citing
Poynter & Ors, [37] (de Jersey
CJ).
[26] Ibid,
5.
[27] Ibid, 6 (emphasis
added).
[28] Ibid,
10.
[29]
Ibid.
[30] Ibid,
4.
[31] Ibid,
4.
[32] Ibid, 5 citing Poynter
& Ors.
[33] Ibid,
9.
[34] Ibid,
10.
[35] Ibid,
11.
[36]
Ibid.
[37] Ibid.
[38] Ibid.
[39] Ibid, citing Poynter
& Ors, [35] (de Jersey
CJ).
[40] The Queen v Lex
Patrick Wotton, above n 18,
6.
[41] Ibid,
8.
[42] Ibid,
14.
[43] Ibid.
[44] Law Report, above
n4.
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/IndigLawB/2009/6.html