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384 pages, Paperback
First published October 27, 2020
"... the notion that a person who is a victim of crime should be so thwarted by the slings and arrows of the criminal justice process that it simply isn't worth the hassle to come forward? Or that, at the end of it, they are left with little but more trauma?" (p.21)Unlike virtually all other areas of the law, the primary motivation behind the criminal law system is not to establish the "truth" or arrive at a "just" outcome in light of all the surrounding circumstances - it is to ensure that those accused of criminal offences receive a "fair" trial. That is why the higher burden of proof - "beyond reasonable doubt", rather than "on the balance of probabilities" - applies to decisions of guilt or non-guilt made by either a judicial officer (judge or magistrate) or jury. The rationale for this has its roots in English common law, and a concept known as "Blackstone's formulation" - "It is better that ten guilty persons escape than that one innocent suffer.". That is, the personal freedom of alleged perpetrators is viewed by the law as being a higher ideal than the expectations alleged victims might have that their alleged abusers be brought to justice and face legal consequences.
An analysis by The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald newspapers of sexual assault statistics published in September 2019 found that of the 52,396 sexual assaults reported to NSW Police between 2009 and 2018, charges were only laid in 12,894 cases.I’m one of the 39,502 whose report to the police resulted in no charges being laid. Because there were no witnesses. Because the detective who took my statement didn’t even know how to classify the crime that was committed. [I checked. Section 61I of the Crimes Act 1900 No 40 says it has a name. It’s called sexual assault.] Because the second detective I spoke to didn’t believe me. Because the entire police investigation consisted of the second detective asking my psychologist if I had a mental illness that would cause me to make something like this up.
Of the 12,894, 7629 went to court. Of those, 2308 were dropped at trial, 1494 found not guilty. The remaining 3827, or roughly 50 per cent of the total that went to court, were found guilty. That’s just 7 per cent of the cases that originally went to police.
complainants and witnesses are treated like they are the villains, in order to defend the accused.This book was an eye-opener in the most brutal way. I already knew the court system in Australia didn’t do any favours for people who have experienced violent crimes. I didn’t realise it was this bad.
And that’s where we come to that oft-repeated phrase from victims - that the cross-examination was as bad, if not worse, than the original abuse.My take-away from this book?
Psychologist Michelle Epstein says her patients who go through the court process generally say they would recommend others not to do it.
‘It’s like you are alive, and you’re having an autopsy done on you.’People who actually have the power to make a difference need to read this book immediately! Well written as it is, it made me feel so sad and angry, and utterly powerless. Now that I’m suitably dejected and disillusioned, I’m going to take a much needed mental health break. If you’d care to join me, I’ll be floating on a cloud made of cotton candy and hanging out with some unicorns.
Julie Stewart