Why Judge Bradley was right

The voice on the other end of the phone yesterday was nervous and furtive. I was talking to an officer at the District Court in Cairns, trying to get a copy of the sentencing remarks of Judge Sarah Bradley in the case involving the s-xual assault of a 10 year old Aboriginal girl. Normally, this wouldn’t be a problem, but the official was clearly fearful of providing me with any information. I got a copy of the judgement but it was obvious that the impact of the media and political witchunt on Judge Bradley is adversely affecting the hard-working staff at the Cairns District Court.

So was Judge Bradley’s sentence so outrageous as to warrant the fevered reaction of the past few days? The short answer is no.

Firstly, it has to be remembered that six of the nine defendants were under the age of 16 and jail is rightly regarded as undesirably and grossly inappropriate as a punishment for them. Secondly, custodial sentences are not the way to rehabilitate people, particularly Aboriginal Australians. They simply lead to increased recidivism and an exacerbation of existing behavioural difficulties.

Let’s explode one of the great myths of this case. That because in her sentencing remarks Judge Bradley said that the victim “was not forced and that she probably agreed to have s-x with all of you,” she was implying that the victim consented to s-x with the defendants. This is not the case at all.

All that Judge Bradley was doing was stating the facts of the matter – that this was not a case where the accused physically struggled. That’s all. Judge Bradley is in no way implying that there was legitimate consent on the part of the victim. In short, to compare Judge Bradley with former South Australian judge Derek Bollen, who a decade ago infamously dismissed a complaint about a marital rape as nothing more than “rougher than usual handling”, is grossly unfair and simply wrong.

The aspect of this case that is perhaps the most sickening is the way in which politicians have thrown up their hands in horror and jumped all over Judge Bradley and the Crown prosecutor in the case. These politicians – Liberal, Labor and National, federal and state — are the very same people who have allowed the rate of Indigenous offenders in prison to remain outrageously high year in and year out.

As at 30 June 2006, Indigenous prisoners represented 24% of the total prisoner population. And in Queensland, Indigenous offenders are 11 times more likely to be imprisoned than non-Indigenous offenders. Speaking in March 2006, Queensland Judge Michael Forde set out this scandalous picture of how politicians and the community have failed Aboriginal people in the justice system.

The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander minority form around 3.2% of the Queensland population. Unfortunately, they make up 23.1% the prison population. In fact, some 55% of youths in detention centres were of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander descent.”

So where are the screaming headlines, the fulminating editorials, the politicians scrambling over each other to take action about these disgraceful statistics? Nowhere to be seen, heard or found. That’s because there are no votes, or increases in readership, in campaigning to prevent courts from sending Aboriginal offenders to jail in droves.

What those in our community who are stamping their feet in rage at Judge Bradley’s decision are just not getting is this – in some communities, particularly indigenous communities, if you want to ensure that offenders are rehabilitated and therefore the community is safer in the long term, then DON’T USE JAIL.

As Rockhampton Magistrate Annette Hennessy and Queensland Community Corrections officer Carolyn Willie noted in a 2006 paper:

It is only through real rehabilitation that offenders can move from recidivism to worthwhile members of the community. Whilst prisons were created for punishment, they are not efficient or effective rehabilitators. Re-involvement of indigenous offenders in their community through the care and leadership of Elders and responsible members of the community rather than removing them from the community would seem to have countless more beneficial effects for all concerned. The involvement of the indigenous community in the solutions to the tragedy that is domestic and family violence is essential. Culturally appropriate and effective counselling and treatment for offenders whilst they are suitably punished for their wrongs is the only path to reinstating them in society.

Finally, calls for Judge Bradley to stand down, pending an appeal by the State against her decision, are completely misguided. She has carried out her duties honestly and with integrity – some people may not like the decision but that is no reason to persecute this judge.


21 Comments

  1. Robert
    Posted Wednesday, 12 December 2007 at 7:45 pm | Permalink

    We need to work together and support Ab. ppl to use their own legal systems to regulate their own society. I’ve seen many examples of Ab. ppl breaking free only to be defeated by white indifference, ignorance or outright hostility.

  2. Gary Stowe
    Posted Wednesday, 12 December 2007 at 6:18 pm | Permalink

    Greg, there are statistics and then there is experience. I know country courts & I have seen that they avoid gaoling aboriginal offenders where they gaol whites readily for the same offences. Your view that there is some impetus the other way is wrong.

  3. Beth Maloney
    Posted Tuesday, 25 December 2007 at 2:47 pm | Permalink

    I wonder, if Mark (below) has asked what reaction he might have if his child was one of the offenders? i wonder if it’s fair to insist on a custodial sentence for the juvenile offenders in the case.

  4. Rod
    Posted Wednesday, 12 December 2007 at 10:54 pm | Permalink

    Well and bravely said, Greg. The tragedy surrounding this little girl’s life needs a lot more thought and a lot more honest reflection than we have seen from any of the media so far if the chances of similar events are to be reduced in future.

  5. Patricia
    Posted Thursday, 13 December 2007 at 1:56 am | Permalink

    What a relief to read a sane comment on this case which Judge Bradley grappled with to the best of her ability and her understanding of the environment in which these events occurred.

  6. Tony Papafilis
    Posted Thursday, 13 December 2007 at 12:59 pm | Permalink

    Greg Barnes, anotehr deranged lawyer & paedophile defender. Like so many in legal fraternity, you seem more determined to challenge mainstream mores than to protect society from criminals. Old enough to rape, old enough for jail.

  7. James
    Posted Thursday, 13 December 2007 at 11:38 pm | Permalink

    Probable media misrepresentation doesn’t make it unrealistic to punish such serious offences and keep the offenders away from potential victims for a long time. Rehab being a vain hope the US way of keeping the most likely crims in prison sadly worksbest

  8. john james
    Posted Wednesday, 12 December 2007 at 7:29 pm | Permalink

    This is the same rationale that led to NT Chief Minister Martin doing absolutely nothing when confronted with overwhelming evidence about the plight of indigenous Australians in her jurisdiction
    and the abuse ocurring.

  9. Marilyn
    Posted Wednesday, 12 December 2007 at 3:23 pm | Permalink

    Greg you have lost the plot. The victim is a mildly retarded child of 10. Even boys of 15 and 16 should know better and so should you.

    This is a piece that shows you are losing your grip on reality.

  10. Mark Wallace
    Posted Wednesday, 12 December 2007 at 2:25 pm | Permalink

    Greg, you’ve conveniently ignored the fact that one of these low-lifes was 26.

    One thing you just don’t get, Greg. Having sex with 10-year-old girls is not naughty, it’s despicable.

    One question, you moron: what if the 10-year-old was your daughter?

  11. Andrew Smart
    Posted Wednesday, 12 December 2007 at 5:10 pm | Permalink

    Greg. After 8 yrs of working with Aboriginal ppl I am sick of hearing such useless hollow rhetoric. Punishment is mandatory for such a crime. If no jail, then must be customary law with spearing / clubbing by family members. One or other - not nothing.

  12. Colin Lynch
    Posted Wednesday, 12 December 2007 at 2:21 pm | Permalink

    Custodial sentences are not for rehabilitation, but for punishment. Who cares if rapists are rehabilitated? Longer custodial sentences = longer periods without recidivism. Aboriginal victims deserve action, or are they lower priority than white victims?

  13. Mark Hanna
    Posted Friday, 14 December 2007 at 12:58 am | Permalink

    I wonder what Greg’s reaction would be if three adults raped his 7 or 10 yr old daughter (can he imagine this?). I think I’d expect they might receive *some* punishment. Maybe Greg could respond. The nation stands appalled!

  14. Iain Hall
    Posted Wednesday, 12 December 2007 at 3:50 pm | Permalink

    If ANY one rapes achild they should do time even if they are juveniles. The leftist mindset that values the rigts of the ofender above the victim has a lot to answer for .see my blog- http://iainhall.wordpress.com/ what if it were your child Greg?

  15. Cameron
    Posted Wednesday, 12 December 2007 at 9:15 pm | Permalink

    the objective is for the best outcome; victim, perpetrator and society. If evidence suggests that imprisonment fails in this objective, then alternatives must be sought. many judges, no facts, typical ignorant australians.

  16. NA FNQ
    Posted Thursday, 13 December 2007 at 2:42 pm | Permalink

    I agree with Greg. It’s good to see that there are people who do their research. People who believe everything the media says and take what they say as the full story are DERANGED. I’d like to see these people critisising Judge Bradley do her job

  17. Marilyn
    Posted Wednesday, 12 December 2007 at 4:25 pm | Permalink

    Ian, why the hell are you blaming the so-called leftist mindset instead of the right wing lunacy of the prosecutor who thought this child had less value than a dog?

  18. gary
    Posted Thursday, 13 December 2007 at 11:32 am | Permalink

    Where I live Aboriginals do 10 times as many Crimes as “others” you want everyone else to do 10 times the time as a reward for being better citizens? This ruling will not help aboriginal girls, they need they need them to be “Punished”. Even if 16, 15

  19. The Bloggadder
    Posted Thursday, 13 December 2007 at 3:13 am | Permalink

    These politicians are the very same people who have allowed the rate of
    Indigenous offenders in prison to remain outrageously high year in and year out.” Well Greg, actually it was the offenders who caused this to happen, not the politicians.

  20. Robert
    Posted Wednesday, 12 December 2007 at 3:46 pm | Permalink

    Greg - I agree in large part. Disempowering Ab. ppl and attacking customary law is exactly the wrong way to fix things - in fact is a huge cause of the ‘dysfunction’ evident in some communities. White & black legal systems should work in unity as equals.

  21. Robert
    Posted Wednesday, 12 December 2007 at 7:47 pm | Permalink

    Why are there no Aboriginal voices in this debate, in particular voices of those intimately involved? How can we pontificate without knowing the views of the people themselves, what they think, want, feel, etc.?