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Queensland University of Technology Law and Justice Journal |
THE LEGISLATION CHANGED, WHAT ABOUT THE
REALITY?
JUDITH
OLIVER[1]
Following the disclosure of sexual abuse it should be the right of every
child to ‘have their day’ in court and to assume
that the court
process will be, within the constraints of the legal justice system, as child
focused as possible. This paper will
show that while steps have been undertaken
within the criminal justice system in Queensland, Australia, to ameliorate the
trauma
caused to young children when they are required by law to appear as a
witness in court, the reality is that many of these children
still face the old,
and sadly devastating, fact that the process remains unchanged and decidedly
‘unchild’ focused. What
this reality means for young children who
are exposed to the adult-centric world of the criminal justice system is that
they are
often re-abused by the very system that has been developed to assist
them; a system that ultimately leaves the child, and their families,
believing
that if the court brings down a not-guilty verdict then what the court is in
fact saying is that they, the child, must
be guilty of lying. While recent
legislation in Queensland, Australia, has passed legislation for the giving of
testimony by closed
circuit television, the reality is that very few courts in
Queensland have this technology available for use and of those that do
it is
sometimes the case that the technology is out of working order.
I INTRODUCTION
Plato stated that ‘justice is but the rule of the
stronger’.[2] The truth
underlying this claim is that there is in reality an intrinsic connection
between power and justice. Power cannot be real
power unless it uses the
instruments of justice to promote the common good (Thompson, 1993). Justice
without power is empty and
useless and detached from the structures and dynamics
of actual being. ‘Power without justice is ultimately self-defeating,
for, even the tyrant’s power depends upon evidence that his rule benefits
others beside
himself’.[3]
Traditional
doctrines of natural law and natural rights are grounded in an ontology of
power, in the structures and dynamics of being,
and seek to spell out the
necessary and sufficient conditions for human beings to fulfil their potential
humanity, both individually
and collectively. The notion of ‘power’
is also explained by Organski’s research, part of which addresses
‘middle
powers’ that have difficulty challenging the dominant state
or the system structure.[4] Formally
the concept of moral and political authority rests on the premise that the
exercise of power by the state and individuals
gains its legitimacy only through
the promotion of the good of the individual and the common good, by empowering
individuals to achieve
their maximum potential.
This paper will address
the notion of justice as it affects children in Australia with specific
examination of the Queensland Evidence Act 1977. To place the issue of
justice under criminal law in context we will take the journey of children under
12 years who have arrived
at the court system following disclosures of child
sexual abuse.
In Britain towards the end of the 19th century, the Society for
the Prevention of Cruelty to children had succeeded in altering the
Law of
Evidence as it affected young children who were injured by ‘immoral
men’[5] whose testimony was
generally the principal evidence in the case. Prior to this change, no evidence
could be heard by the court
unless it was given under oath and as the majority
of cases involved children considered at the time too young to understand the
nature of the oath, these cases were excluded from the court system. The effect
of this situation was that alleged offenders were
‘beyond the reach of
punishment, and they generally know
it’.[6]
After much legal
debate, it was allowed that a child of ‘tender years’, who did not
appear to understand the nature of
an oath, would be permitted to give evidence
as long as the child ‘is possessed of sufficient intelligence’ to
understand
the duty of speaking the
truth.[7] The test for intelligence
remains in use today in all Australian jurisdictions.
Prior to the Bill
of 1888 early canon law excluded children from giving evidence because they were
deemed incompetent. Children could
be judged incompetent for a wide variety of
reasons, one of which was, simply being a
child.[8]
I suppose there never
was a more slapdash, disjointed and inconsequent body of rules than that which
we call the Law of Evidence.
Founded apparently on the propositions that all
jurymen are deaf to reason, that all witnesses are presumptively liars and that
all documents are presumptively forgeries, it has been added to, subtracted from
and tinkered with for two centuries until it has
become less of a structure than
a pile of builders’
debris.[9]
The adversarial legal system used in Australia, derived from English law, is
based on the notion of the accused being held to be innocent
until proven
guilty. Under this system, the prosecution must prove the defendant’s
guilt beyond reasonable doubt and it is
a jury of peers who make the final
judgement regarding guilt or innocence. In western countries this system
applies equally to children
as it does to adults with few exceptions made
regarding the youth of the witness.
Until recently in Australia, under
the adversarial system, although the court is closed for cases involving
children, the defendant
had the right to face his/her accuser. Under these
conditions the young child appeared in the same courtroom as the adult who
abused
them, although some judges allowed a screen to be used to obscure the
child’s view of the alleged offender. Although the common
law assumes
that the best form of evidence is that given by a witness on oath in open
court,[10] where the witness is a
child, however, that assumption is not justified.
it may be that what the
child said when the abuse was first disclosed is actually more persuasive
evidence of abuse than anything
the child might say at the time of the
trial...it may be that the child’s testimony can be improved if it is
taken in a different
form from that which is used for adult
witnesses.[11]
In Europe the
court is closed and the defendant is not permitted in the court whilst the child
victim is present. In 1990 two Australian
states, Queensland and Western
Australia, enacted legislation which gave the court the power to order that the
accused be removed
from the court and placed in a room to which the
child’s testimony is transmitted by closer-circuit television or
‘live-link’.[12] Whilst
this power has been adopted procedurally in Western Australia, the Queensland
situation remains difficult because, although
the legislation has been adopted,
there are only two courtrooms with the available technology. A child remains
vulnerable when it
comes to the courtroom in which she/he is to give
testimony.
Under the Israeli legal system there is no jury system and
only professional judges preside. The procedure is both accusatory and
adversarial. The Israeli ‘Law of Evidence Revision (Protection of
Children) Law’ allows for a ‘youth interrogator’
who is
empowered to protect the psychological welfare of the child victim throughout
the investigative and court
procedures.[13] The ‘youth
interrogator’ obtains the necessary evidence from the child and presents
this to the court. While it could
be argued that this evidence is second-hand,
or hearsay according to our adversarial system, it is provided to the court only
when
there is corroborating evidence, both of the crime itself and the identity
of the offender. This evidence, however, may be accepted
by the court without
corroboration on two grounds;
(1) the child’s mental state, this
is, that the child is suffering trauma, for example in the form of night
terrors, and
(2) the lies of the offender, if the offender is determined by
the court to have lied on a particular piece of evidence (Hamon,
1990).
In Queensland until very recently there was no legislation to
provide support to the child witness whilst the child is giving testimony
– even if the child is as young as 5-6 years and his/her feet do not reach
the floor whilst sitting in the witness box. In
2002, a Consultation
Draft[14] addressed some of the more
pressing and disenfranchising matters relating to the giving of evidence by
children under 12 years.
One of the points raised in the Bill was the necessity
to provide a support person for the child witness.
The Queensland
Evidence Act 1977, as amended in 1988, requires a court to receive the
evidence of a child ‘unless the court is satisfied that the child does not
have sufficient intelligence to give reliable
evidence’.[15] This makes the
test for competency turn on the child’s reliability as inferred from the
child’s mental development,
rather than the ability to understand the duty
of speaking the truth. For example, while a particular child may be considered
to
be mentally dull, it is possible that the same child could still be able to
comprehend the difference between telling the truth and
telling a lie.
(a) In determining the question of competency, the law of Queensland
expressly allows the court to receive evidence about the child’s
level of
intelligence, powers of perception, memory, expression and ‘any other
matter relevant to his ability to give reliable
evidence’.[16] This evidence
can be presented to the court by an ‘expert witness’. That the
knowledge of an ‘expert witness’
be admitted to the court in cases
of child sexual abuse was one of the recommendations incorporated in the
Sturgess Report.[17] This
recommendation now forms part of the legislation of the amended Evidence Act
1977 of Queensland.
One of the main concerns of the Queensland
court, under the rules of evidence is the concept of
intelligence.[18]
IV CHILDREN’S INTELLIGENCE AS DEFINED BY QUEENSLAND
LAW
In Queensland, one of the concerns regarding children’s competence in
law is that some of the revised forms of the competency
requirements still refer
to the child’s intelligence. This is a difficult term which different
judges are likely to interpret
in different ways. For this reason, the Law
Reform Commission of Australia proposed abolishing the existing competency rules
and
replacing them with a simpler two part test, under which the child is
permitted to give evidence provided:
• the child is capable of
understanding that in giving evidence there is an obligation to tell the truth,
and
• the child has the capacity to give a rational reply to the
questions that may be put to the
child.[19]
This approach has
since been endorsed in reports by the law reform bodies of New South Wales and
Victoria.[20] The traditional
common law test requires a belief in divine punishment for lying on oath, and
courts in Queensland, South Australia
and Western Australia have held that this
test be still applied despite the obvious objections which can be made to it in
a secular
age.[21]
V SPECIAL WITNESSES
The relatively new section of the Queensland Evidence Act 1977 s 21A
provides for the evidence of ‘special witnesses’ such as children
under 12 year of age, and lists several ways in which
the court may assist in
reducing the trauma of the court procedures for the young witness. Section 21A
(2) states that:
the person charged be excluded from the room, person
charged obscured, court to be cleared, that special witnesses give evidence in
a
room other than that in which the court is sitting and that room be cleared
also, that an approved person be present while the
special witness is giving
evidence.
While there are several important issues relevant to the
support of the young child witness in s 21A of the Evicence Act
1977, the discretionary powers of judges make these concessions a tenuous
gift. For example, at the time of research, this writer was
aware that one
Brisbane judge would not allow a screen to be placed between the child witness
and the accused under any circumstances.
Recently in Queensland hearsay
exception for documentary evidence of the statements of young children was
proclaimed. It provides
that in any proceedings where direct oral evidence of a
fact would be admissible, a statement made before proceedings that is contained
in a document is admissible if the maker of the statement is a child under the
age of 12 years, had personal knowledge of the matters
dealt with in the
statement and is available to give evidence in the
proceedings.[22] Similarly, the New
Zealand Geddis Committee has recommended that a special hearsay exception be
adopted that would allow the admission
in cases of child sexual abuse of certain
out-of-court statements that do not fall within the existing hearsay
exception.
The Australian Law Reform Commission has suggested sweeping
changes to the hearsay rule which although not specifically concerned
with
children’s evidence, would considerably relax the exclusionary operation
of the rule in cases of out-of-court statements
made by child complainants in
sexual abuse cases. The general rule excluding hearsay is affirmed but a
revised and simpler category
of exceptions is proposed. While acknowledging
that restrictions on admitting evidence of the out-of-court statements of child
complainants
should be revised, the Victorian Law Reform Commission has
recommended awaiting the outcome of the review of the Australian Law Reform
Commission Report on Evidence by the Standing Committee of Attorneys
General.
In 1998 the Queensland Law Reform Commission developed a
discussion paper which examined exclusively the evidence of children by
Queensland
courts.[23] The
Commission considered all aspects of the giving of evidence in a court of law by
children. While recognising the necessity
to ensure the consistency of a fair
trial, the Commission provided information which would allow that ‘every
possible opportunity
to communicate as effectively as it (the court) can with
the child witness, so that the case is decided on the best available
evidence’.[24]
While
the Commission acknowledges that there could possibly be a role for the support
person when young children are required to give
evidence, or ‘child
communicators,[25] it was the
Commission’s view that lawyers, magistrates and judges should bear the
responsibility of supporting the child witness,
thus leaving the young child at
the mercy of the court.
Magistrates and judges are meant to be
‘referees’ for a fair trial. It is reasonable then to assume that
judges therefore
have particular responsibility to ensure that child witnesses
understand the questions asked and are not harassed or intimidated
by tone of
voice, aggressive questioning, incomprehensible language and unfair or abusive
treatment. The Commission reached the
conclusion that ‘counsel,
magistrates and judges tolerate, or even perpetuate, child abuse by the legal
system’.[26]
VI THE NOTION OF RATIONALITY
Rationality is a concept that has been mentioned in the Rules of Evidence of
several Australian states and is a requirement in Queensland.
Hall and Clarke
believe that the only criterion necessary for presentation of testimony is that
it should be rational and that rational
testimony should be unfettered by an age
barrier.[27]
Perry and
Wrightsman state that the vast majority of children, even as young as four
years, meet the criteria for competence, that
is, they are able to relate
information in a ‘rational
manner’.[28] According to
Flin and Bull if children’s level of competence is compared with a
baseline of adult competence, which can be
very poor, then perhaps
children’s abilities ought to be viewed less
harshly.[29]
VII SUPPORT FOR THE CHILD WITNESS
A two year study by Morgan and Plontnikoff concluded that for young children
to give competent testimony, they require much
support.[30] Such support could be
provided by allowing either the child’s mother or other person close to
the child to be present with
the child on the witness stand, if indeed, the
child must take the stand at all. In the United States the National
Children’s
Advocacy Centre (hereafter known as NCAC) originated in 1985 in
order to review and manage cases involving child sexual abuse and
severe
physical abuse. The underlying philosophy of these centres was to provide
support for young children following disclosure
of abuse.
VIII CHILD ADVOCACY CENTRES
Teams at these centres are multidisciplinary and aim to collect evidence
through medical examination by medical practitioners and
to conduct
investigative interviews by professionals from child protection agencies and the
police service who are considered experts
in their field. The outcome of the
investigative process is to provide sufficient information for decision-making
regarding prosecutions
and child protective issues.
During a pilot study
NCAC found that there were a group of children (26%) who found it difficult to
disclose and therefore the initial
interview yielded unclear
results.[31] Researchers argued
that although these children had not made clear disclosures of abuse, it was
very likely that they had been abused.
What was proposed was that some children
require a series of interview processes in order to achieve results. Many
researchers
have identified that many young children require more than one
interview before the child feels comfortable enough to
disclose.[32]
The NCAC
provides the child with an on-going worker so that there is no need for the
child to repeat themselves to a number of different
workers. When the case goes
to trial the child is able to give their evidence and be cross-examined if
required, by closed-circuit
television. The child has their worker with them at
the time as well as a ‘carer’ who could be the non-offending parent,
foster parent or other relative with whom the child feels
comfortable.
NCAC have devised their own model for forensic evaluation
which provides for a series of coordinated contacts that spread a
‘good’
forensic interview over multiple sessions. The components of
the model are ‘a structure, but not a cookbook, for evaluating
children’.[33] In this model
the evaluators use their clinical judgement and discretion to tailor the
sessions to the emerging facts, the circumstances
of the case, and the unique
characteristics of the child. Components of the model comprise rapport
building, developmental assessment,
social and behavioural assessment, touching
and body-parts terminology, and finally the abusive act.
In relation to
the concept of memory, NCAC have found that ‘preschoolers need different
cues for retrieval than do school-age
children’.[34] This finding
serves to reinforce the fact that workers must be mindful of children’s
stages of development at the time of
interview. Full examination of the
procedures and processes undertaken at the NCAC show that from the time children
enter these
centres they are provided with on-going assistance and support in
order to produce the best possible outcomes thus adding further
weight to the
importance of a supportive approach to young child witness.
IX QUEENSLAND – SUPPORT, COMPETENCY AND
CORROBORATION
Under Queensland legislation there exists the provision for a child to be
accompanied in court by someone who can provide emotional
support whilst the
child is giving evidence.[35] Also
available to the child is the admission of an expert witness to present
social/psychological data to support the fact that
a young child has the
capabilities of delivering competent testimony. These concessions, however, are
granted on request of the
legal counsel and at the discretion of the presiding
magistrate or judge.
One of the arguments made by defence counsel in
relation to the giving of testimony by young children is that children under 12
years
are likely to be manipulated into providing false evidence; that they are
suggestible and often don’t understand the difference
between fact and
fantasy. A review of the literature concerning suggestibility was carried out
by Baxter who, like previous reviewers,
found little evidence to support the
view that young children were more suggestible than
adults.[36] Rather, Baxter states
that ‘it may be that the situations in which child witnesses are
interviewed are often particularly
suggestive, rather than that child witnesses
are particularly
suggestible’.[37] Therefore,
if Baxter’s analysis is correct, then the responsibility for
suggestibility passes from the child witness to the
adult interviewer.
It is important to keep in mind that very young children have
successfully proved to be ‘competent witnesses’ in a court
of law.
There are cited cases in which children aged two, three and four years were
deemed by the court to be competent witnesses.
There is also a well known
American case, documented by David P
Jones,[38] involving a three year
old child who was kidnapped, sexually abused, thrown down a well and left to die
by her abuser. Although
this child was quite naturally traumatised by her
ordeal, over a period of two years she was questioned many times, her recall
remained
constant, and she proved to be a competent witness in court. Perhaps
given this very young child’s traumatic experience and
subsequent recall
over time, it is possible to deduce that some young abused children do in fact
possess the ability to present as
competent witnesses.
Having established
that children must be seen to be competent and not suggestive in the giving of
evidence, it is often the case that
a child’s statement alone in matters
of sexual abuse is considered insufficient evidence. In fact, Dawson states
that ‘a
fundamental aspect of the criminal trial is entrenched scepticism
towards all
evidence’.[39] This leads
to the matter corroboration. The rule of corroboration, which states that a
person cannot be convicted on the uncorroborated
evidence of another person, is
comparatively new. The first edition of Archbold’s manual of criminal law
practice (1922) made
no mention of corroboration in the index but does contain
direction in cases of sexual assault.
Prior to the Criminal Justice
Act 1989 (Qld) corroboration was required in relation to the evidence of
children in Australia. The corroboration of evidence in cases involving
the
sexual abuse of young children caused particular difficulties as in most
instances these young victims were the only witnesses
to their abuse. In his
report, English Judge Pigot states that there is no evidence that false
allegations in sexual abuse cases
occur on such a scale that a special measure
is necessary to enhance the normal standard of
proof.[40] The report cites
developments in Canada, where the Criminal Code and Canada Evidence Act have
been amended to abolish the requirement for a corroboration warning in such
cases.[41]
While
corroboration requirements were meant to protect the right of accused persons to
a fair trial, they have been severely criticised
in recent years, and in several
jurisdictions they have been modified or abolished. It is no longer seen as
indisputable that the
groups covered (which include children) represent special
risks to the outcome of a just
trial.[42]
It has been
suggested that either the requirement for corroborative evidence be abolished,
or that no prosecution be commenced unless
there is clear and unequivocal
corroboration of the child’s
allegations.[43] This is to
counteract the cases where the accused is acquitted because of paucity of
corroborative evidence and as a result of this
acquittal, the child is left with
the belief that all the people involved in the court case consider that she or
he is a liar.
Summit states that the acquittal of an alleged offender
often leaves the child with ‘a monstrous apparition of guilt, self-blame
and rage. Acceptance and validation are crucial to the psychological survival
of the victim’.[44]
The
rules regarding corroboration changed in Queensland in the 1990s and there is
now not a specific requirement that a judge warn
a jury of the danger of
convicting on the uncorroborated evidence of a child (which was a previous
requirement), however, in Queensland
the common law rule still
applies,[45] where judges are
required to warn the jury on matters of corroboration in all cases of child or
adult sexual abuse. So it is unlikely
that the uncorroborated evidence of a
young child following a case of alleged sexual abuse would be accepted without
the judge using
their discretionary powers to warn the jury of the possible
danger of accepting such evidence. What this means, of course, is that
the jury
is left with a sense of enormous responsibility having been warned by the judge,
to weigh the matter up with utmost caution.
Although one of the main
justifications for abolishing the warning requirement is that it might result in
an increase in the rate
of convictions, there is no evidence that it has had any
such effect.[46]
X THE NEW LEGISLATION
In September, 2003, The Evidence (Protection of Children) Amendment Act
2003 was passed in the Queensland parliament. Whilst this Act undertook to
assist in the giving of testimony by young children, it is
the belief of this
author that there remains much left to be done. The new Act states that all
children under the age of 16 years
have the right to give their evidence in a
place other than the court room via closed circuit television. Section 21AQ(2)
states
that ‘If’ there is an audio visual link within the court
precincts, the judicial officer presiding at the proceeding
for the giving of
evidence by the affected child must direct that;
(a) the child give
evidence outside the courtroom and the evidence be transmitted to the courtroom
by means of the audio visual links:
or
(b) while the child is giving
evidence, the defendant be held in a room apart from the courtroom and the
evidence be transmitted to
that room by means of the audio visual
link.
While this section of the Act is quite clear, the harsh reality is
that unless there is a courtroom available for this means of communication
then
the child will still be required to give evidence in the same place as the
accused. In Brisbane there are only two courtrooms
with an available audio
visual link. If it is the case that more than two trials involving young
children are heard at the same
time, or if the technology breaks down, then the
outcome for the child again highlights the contradiction between the legislation
and the reality. Closed circuit television facilities are unavailable in many
Queensland rural courtrooms.
Section 9E of the 2003 Act appears to be a
valuable leap forward for young children caught up in the criminal court system
–
Principles for dealing with a child witness. Section 1 states that
because a child tends to be vulnerable in dealings with a person
in authority,
it is the Parliament’s intention that a child who is a witness in a
proceeding should be given the benefit of
special measures when giving evidence.
The following general principles apply;
(a) the child is to be treated
with dignity, respect and compassion;
(b) measures should be taken to limit,
to the greatest practical extent, the distress or trauma suffered by the child
when giving
evidence;
(c) the child should not be intimidated in
cross-examination; and
(d) the proceeding should be resolved as quickly as
possible.
While these principles are worthy, it is important to remember
that even though the state government has gone some way to addressing
the
disenfranchisement of young children in the criminal justice arena, individual
judges still maintain discretionary powers in
many aspects of the law. It
remains of concern that some judges hold the view that even if young children
are interviewed well, by
experienced interviewers, their videotaped evidence
still should not be presented to the court. Presumably the reasoning for this
is that by presenting evidence at trial that was obtained in ‘cloistered
surroundings’ (Brisbane District Court judge)
this would somehow prejudice
the court against the accused. This researcher would argue that young sexually
abused children, by
virtue of all that has been learnt about the nature of
sexual abuse, have a right to expect that society will grant them special
consideration.
Previous research by this writer has found that there
remains a divergence of opinion by Brisbane judges regarding the giving of
evidence
by young children. Whilst some judges indicated that young children
should be accepted as witnesses and granted special consideration,
there were
others who were of the opinion that any consideration made by the court could be
seen as prejudicial to the accused.
When this latter view is compounded by the
fact that many cases of child sexual abuse, by the very nature of the abuse, are
devoid
of corroborative evidence, it is not surprising that very few accused who
plead not guilty receive guilty verdicts.
XI CONCLUSION
It is not the intention of the writer to deny the accused the right to
justice. Under the adversarial system of jurisprudence it
is clear and right
that all those accused of committing a crime should always be considered
innocent until proven guilty in a court
of law. It is, however, my intention to
suggest that we advocate for the rights of all young children involved in the
criminal justice
system. If children are required to present as witnesses in a
court of law then we should advocate that such court should not be
intimidating
or frightening, nor should it inflict undue pressure upon vulnerable young
children, but rather, provide services to
aid young child witnesses on their
path to justice. We should also be ever vigilant of political systems and power
structures that
oppress the weakest members of society.
[1] Judith Oliver is a Lecturer and coordinator of the Professional Practice program in the School of Humanities and Human Services, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, having worked for many years in the area of child protection.
[2] W H D Rouse (Ed), Great
Dialogues of Plato (New American Library of World Literature Inc, 1956).
[3] Ibid.
[4] A F K Organski, Power Transition Theory (1958) Wikipedia <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_Transition_Theory> [5] Cardinal H E Waugh, ‘The Child of the English Savage’ (1888) 53 June The Contemporary Review, 687-700.
[9] J R Spencer and R Flin, The
Evidence of Children: The Law and the Psychology (Blackstone Press Ltd,
1990) 31 (CP Harvey, (QC)).
[10]
A Palmer, (1997) ‘Child Sexual Abuse Prosecutions and the Presentation of
the Child’s Story’ (1997) 1 (23) Monash University Law Review
171-99.
[11] Ibid 180.
[12] Ibid 171-99.
[13] Law of Evidence
Revision (Protection of Children) Law 1955 (Israel) s 9.
[14] Consultation Draft,
Explanatory Notes, Evidence (Protection of Children Amendment Bill 2002) (Qld).
[15] Evidence Act 1977
(Qld) s 9A insert Act 17 of 1989 s
62.
[16] Evidence Act
Amendment Act 1989 (Qld).
[17] D G Sturgess, An Inquiry into Sexual Offences Involving Children and Related Matters (Qld Government Printer, 1985) 103 (recommendation 7.110).
[18] Evidence Act 1977 (Qld) s 9 sub-s(1) subst Act 17 of 1989 s 61.
[19] Law Reform Commission of
Australia, Evidence, Report No 38 (1987).
[20] K Warner, ‘Child
Witnesses in Sexual Assault Cases’ (1988) 12 Criminal Law Journal
286-302.
[21] Palmer, above n 10.
[22] Evidence Act 1977
(Qld) s 93A(1).
[23] Queensland Law Reform Commission Discussion Paper, The Receipt of Evidence by Queensland Courts: The Evidence of Children, WP No 53 (1998).
[24] Ibid 278.
[25] Ibid 75.
[26] Ibid.
[27] A Hall and A Clarke,
‘The Evidence of Children in Criminal Trials’ (1991) April Legal
Action 11-13.
[28] N W Perry
and L S Wrightsman, The Child Witness – Legal Issues and Dilemmas
(Sage Publications Inc, 1991).
[29] R Flin and R Bull,
‘Child Witnesses in Scottish Criminal Proceedings’ in J R Spencer, G
Nicholson, R Flin and R Bull
(eds) Children’s Evidence in Legal
Proceedings – An International Perspective (1990).
[30] J Morgan and J Plotnikoff,
‘Children as Victims of Crime: Procedure at Court’ (Paper on
unpublished research, The Centre
for Criminological Research, University of
Oxford, 1987).
[31] C N Carnes
and D Nelson-Gardell, ‘Extended Forensic Evaluation when Sexual Abuse is
Suspected: a Model and Preliminary data’
(1999) 3(4) August Child
Maltreatment (1999)
242-54.
[32] See eg DM Elliott
and J N Briere, ‘Forensic Sexual Abuse Evaluations of Older Children:
Disclosures and Symptomatology’
(1994) 12 Behavioural Sciences and the
Law 261-77; L Lawson and M Chafin, ‘False Negatives in Sexual Abuse
Disclosure Interviews’ (1992) 7 Journal of Interpersonal Violence
532-42; K Saywitz, G Goodman, E Nicholas and S Moan, ‘Children’s
Memories of a Physical Examination Involving Genital
Touch: Implications for
Reports of Child Sexual Abuse’ (1991) 59 Journal of Counselling and
Clinical Psychology 682-91.
[33] Carnes and Nelson-Gardell, above n 31.
[34] R Fivush, ‘Developmental Perspectives on Autobiographical Recall’ in G S Goodman and B L Bottoms (eds), Child Victims, Child Witnesses: Understanding and Improving Testimony (1993).
[35] Evidence Act 1977 (Qld) s 21A(2)(d).
[36] J Baxter, ‘The Suggestibility of Child Witnesses: A review’ (1990) 4 Applied Cognitive Psychology 393-408.
[37] Ibid 406.
[38] D P H Jones, ‘The
Evidence of a Three-Year-Old Child’ (1987) The Criminal Law Review
677-81.
[39] J Dawson,
‘Expert Evidence of Behaviour of Child Complainants of Sexual Abuse: Legal
Principles’ (1998) 2(2) Childrenz Issues 13,
15.
[40] Judge T Pigot,
‘Report of the Home Office Advisory Group on Video Evidence’ (Pigot
Committee Report, London: Home Office,
1989).
[41] Hall and Clarke, above n
27.
[42] B Naylor, ‘The
Child in the Witness Box’ (1992) 2(22) Australian and New Zealand
Journal of Criminology
82-94.
[43] A McMillan,
‘Children as Witnesses’ (1990) Summer Child Safety
35-58.
[44] R Summit, ‘The
Child Sexual Abuse Accommodation Syndrome’ (1983) 7 Child Abuse and
Neglect 177, 192.
[45] R v CBR [1992] 1 Qld 637.
[46] See eg J Cashmore, ‘The Prosecution of Child Sexual Assault: a Survey of NSW DPP Solicitors’ (1995) 28 Australian and New Zealand Journal of Criminology 32-49; M Dixon, ‘Child Witnesses in Court – the Legal Framework’ (1996) Summer The ISA Journal 17-29.
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