Indigenous Deaths in Custody: Chapter 9 Juveniles
Part C - Profiles Analysis
1996 Interview with Elder Mr Bruce Yunkaporta, Chapter 9 JuvenilesSummary
IntroductionFifteen Aboriginal juveniles died in between May 1989 and May 1996. Five of these deaths were in institutional settings: four juveniles died in adult prisons and one died after escaping from a juvenile detention centre. 1This was a similar proportion to the Royal Commission. 2 Ten Aboriginal juveniles died during police pursuits. Nine died following police car chases and one Aboriginal youth was shot after threatening police with a replica pistol.3 This does not include a sixteen year old in circumstances which involved some element of police car pursuit.4 Chapter 3 showed that the average age of death in custody was younger for Indigenous prisoners than for non-Indigenous prisoners. As the Indigenous juvenile population grows proportionately larger than the non-Indigenous juvenile population, deaths of young Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people can only be expected to increase if significant measures are not taken to reduce the disproportionately high level of contact young Aboriginal people presently have with the criminal justice system. 5 The cases of six other adult Indigenous people who died in custody demonstrated very early and frequent contact with the criminal justice system. 6 The Royal Commission was not prescriptive in addressing issues relating to juvenile offenders. A conscious decision was made not to attempt to provide a blue-print for a 'perfect' system, but rather to recommend a co-operative, negotiated, community based approach to addressing problems (recommendation 62). The deaths examined in this Report therefore tend to indicate general problems rather than reveal specific breaches. The limited nature of coronial investigations also limits the ability of this study to assess progress on implementation, although some comment can be made. Recommendations which concern the interaction of the welfare system and criminal justice system (234-38) were never examined. 7 Recommendations 242-44 concern police practices after arrest, but only one case concerned a juvenile who died shortly after arrest. Table 9 shows the frequency of breaches of recommendations concerning juveniles, although the small number probably reflects the limits of this study rather than a high level of compliance. The failure to negotiate solutions with Aboriginal groups and the inappropriate exercise of the discretion to arrest (R240) were the most frequently breached recommendations. Most breaches were detected in Queensland. Table 9 Breaches of Recommendations -Juveniles
Recommendation 62 - Governments and Aboriginal Organisations Together Devise Juvenile Justice Strategies Only New South Wales and the Northern Territory claimed to have implemented this recommendation in full. The other jurisdictions acknowledged that the process had not been completed. The Royal Commission identified young Aboriginal people as facing a crisis unless government agencies, non-government organisations and others in the community acted to address the problems facing Indigenous youth. The relative youthfulness of those who had died in custody, particularly by taking their own lives, and the age at which most first came into contact with the welfare or criminal justice systems prompted this concern. Unfortunately, the findings in this Report tend to replicate the findings of the Royal Commission. If anything, they show that young Aboriginal people are more vulnerable today. Deaths resulting from police car chases, when police with advanced driving skills engage in high speed pursuits with inexperienced drivers is one area that needs urgent attention, especially in Western Australia. 8 Two deaths occurred since the period covered by this report when a 13 year old and a 14 year old died after a police pursuit in Western Australia on 20 August 1996. For more on police car chases, see text following recommendation 60 in chapter 6 (and following recommendation 95 in chapter 7). Things are not improving. They are getting worse. Of final court appearances by juveniles in Queensland, 33.7 per cent were Aboriginal in 1993/94.9 The proportion of Aboriginal children in juvenile detention centres in Queensland has risen from 39.4 per cent in 1992, to 46.8 per cent in 1993, and again to 51.6 per cent in 1996. 10 The number of Aboriginal kids who are brought before the Children's Court is disproportionately high in comparison with the number of non-Aboriginal kids. Incredibly, the rate at which they are imprisoned in comparison with non-Aboriginal kids is even worse. 11 In New South Wales the Children's Court only hears matters in metropolitan areas. In the country they are dealt with in Magistrates' Courts. The indications are that Local Court Magistrates in rural areas are more likely to incarcerate young Aboriginal people than specialist Children's Court magistrates. The statistical evidence has not prevented a member of the Queensland judiciary claiming that Aboriginal juveniles are treated comparatively leniently by the courts. 12 Police-Aboriginal relations in Queensland have also been strained by a number of well-publicised incidents. The death of an 18 year old in police custody in Brisbane (see profile 53QLD) provoked an outcry. It provides an insight into intrusive procedures adopted for the purposes of policing 'public spaces' and the Aboriginal people who are highly visible in that domain. The 'Pinkenba incident' was another example of police taking inappropriate action rather than negotiating solutions with the community. A group of Aboriginal youths aged twelve and upwards were taken from the city to the industrial outskirts of Brisbane, and left there in the middle of the night with no means of getting home. Six officers faced charges of deprivation of liberty. They were acquitted. An internal investigation recommended that the police officers involved be dismissed or demoted. The Commissioner of Police refused to do this. Instead, the officers were given 12 month good behaviour orders because they had 'suffered severe financial and personal hardship.' 13 Studies published since the Royal Commission released its findings identify problems in the dynamics of policing Indigenous youth. 14 They document the persistence of discriminatory attitudes in the police force, resulting in informal policies and practices based on stereotypes about young black people as a priori suspects and deserving closer surveillance.' 15 Over-policing is one of the factors which ensures that the incarceration rates of young Indigenous peoples in most States will steadily increase. This in turn will lead to an increasing number of young Aboriginal people dying in custody and a rising adult Aboriginal prison population. Recommendation 167 - Custodial Health and Safety in Juvenile Detention Queensland is the only State which does not claim to have fully implemented this recommendation. It is significant, however, that six deaths in custody raise issues concerning juvenile detention centres, although the juveniles in those cases died in an adult prison or after escaping from the juvenile centre in question. The juvenile who died on Papunya road in the Northern Territory (12NT) had escaped with another detainee from Giles House. They had been remanded for breaking and entering offences. The deceased subsequently died in a car accident on Papunya Road. Unfortunately the Coroner in that case only examined the circumstances of the accident, and not the treatment of the deceased in custody and whether there was a causal connection between that treatment and the escape. The necessity to examine conditions in juvenile detention is illustrated by events at the John Oxley Juvenile Detention Centre in Queensland, where an average of two detainees absconded each week in the second half of 1994. Disturbing allegations of staff mistreatment of children at the centre then surfaced, including the misuse of handcuffs, abuse of 'time-out rooms' and 'lock-down procedures,' children being placed in danger of sexual abuse, easy availability of illegal drugs, management of prescribed drugs by non-qualified persons, unacceptable emotional and physical disciplinary procedures including the denial of food, and the employment of inappropriate staff. 16 After the allegations were addressed, the rate of absconding dropped four-fold. The recommendation was breached in at least two deaths. In the case of a 17 year old juvenile who died at Maitland Gaol (6NSW), the deceased was also placed in a maximum security prison. The prison is now due for closure. The deceased had been transferred less than twenty-fours earlier from Endeavour House, a juvenile detention centre. The Coroner was critical of the standard of care at the juvenile detention centre which was reportedly to be closed. The Coroner was also critical of the decision of staff to allow the deceased's application to be transferred to an adult prison without counselling or consultation with the deceased's family. The Coroner made the following recommendations:
The man who died at Yatala Prison (68SA) was in a maximum security cell in an adult prison. He had been convicted in the Children's Court for offences committed as a juvenile. He was still eligible to be incarcerated in a juvenile institution. He had apparently requested a transfer to be near relatives. Three other juveniles died in adult prisons. In the death of two 17 year olds at David Longlands Prison on 22 December 1991 (34QLD) and the 8 December 1995 (88QLD) the deceased had both asked to be transferred from juvenile institutions. As with the case above, both deceased were mentally unstable, had not adjusted to prison life, and committed suicide. These cases raise questions as to the standard of care in the juvenile detention centres, the reasons for requests for transfer and the procedures for consideration of requests for transfer. It is unclear why the 17 year old who hanged himself in Townsville Prison (22QLD) was incarcerated at an adult prison. The gaoling of juveniles in adult prisons is prohibited by a number of international treaties. Article 10 of the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights states that:
Australia unfortunately has a reservation on Article 10 (2) and (3). The Commonwealth Government has stated that:
Judging from the criticism by the Coroner in the case above (6NSW), the responsible authorities are not making this decision in a considered manner or exercising their discretion on the basis of 'whether it is beneficial for a child.' Australia also has a reservation on Article 37(c) of the Declaration of the Rights of the Child, which would require Australia to ensure that:
Again if the reservation is defended on the basis that logistical difficulties sometimes make separation of adults and juveniles impractical, then the reservation should be restricted to this circumstance. Where alternative juvenile centres are available, juveniles should not be incarcerated in adult prisons. The use of individual, maximum security cells is an utterly inappropriate method of segregating juveniles from adult prisoners. Various other instruments contain similar requirements. Paragraph 8 of the Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners requires that the different categories of prisoners shall be kept in separate institutions or parts of institutions taking account of their sex, age, criminal record, the legal reason for their detention and the necessities of their treatment. Section 26.3 of the United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Administration of Juvenile Justice (The Beijing Rules) requires that juveniles in institutions shall be kept separate from adults and shall be detained in a separate institution or in a separate part of an institution also holding adults. Article 2(2) of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination requires Australia to take measures to redress imbalances. Aboriginal juveniles are over represented in detention centres in all states, and are 52 times as likely as non-Aboriginal juveniles to be incarcerated in Western Australia. Given this over-representation in the criminal justice system, this provision is especially pertinent to young Aboriginal people in Australia.
Recommendation 235 - Reliance by Government Agencies on the Advice of Aboriginal People and Organisations
All States except Tasmania indicated that they had fully implemented this recommendation. There was little information about this issue in the Coronial reports, apart from a coronial recommendation that Aboriginal organisations be involved in organising family contact in the case of the death by hanging of the 17 year old who was suffering from the AIDS virus in Lotus Glen Prison (22QLD). Discussions with Aboriginal organisations suggest that this recommendation is not being followed, contrary to government claims. Reasons for Aboriginal Community Involvement Institutionalising Aboriginal people has severed for many 'the cultural store of knowledge about being a parent.' For generations of Aboriginal children, traditional patterns of child rearing, which included obligations and responsibility toward all children by all members of a community, were replaced by the vagaries of institutional settings. The path back from the disruption caused will be a long one. Solutions will be found only by closely involving Aboriginal people. In the case of the three young people who died after a police chase in Western Australia (15WA, 16WA, 17WA) the Coroner noted that the three young people had committed many previous offences, and opportunities had been provided for their rehabilitation. He criticised Aboriginal organisations for not appearing at the inquest with suggestions for solutions to the problem of juvenile delinquency. He considered that 'the parents and guardians had failed to exercise effective control over the three young people who died [although] there is evidence that some at least tried.' Officers of the Department for Community Services were also criticised for 'failing to divert the young people into a constructive way of life.' The issue of family blame was one which talkback radio commentators in Western Australia seized upon with enthusiasm. While the frustrations of the coroner about the lack of Aboriginal involvement at the inquest are to some extent understandable, the talkback radio abuse of the families dealing with the death of their children in these and other cases (for example profiles A3WA and A4WA) created an environment which deterred the families from involvement in a public inquiry. It created a combative environment from which useful suggestions addressing juvenile delinquency were unlikely to arise. The issue of parental neglect can justifiably be raised in the appropriate way. On the other hand, stories of Western Australian Aboriginal children moving interstate and flourishing, because they no longer face daily police contact, indicate that there are other pressures which contribute to juvenile delinquency. The particularly high level of Aboriginal over-representation in Western Australian detention centres points to systemic problems particular to the juvenile justice practices within that state. The Coroner ultimately recommended:
Prompt dealings by the Courts may lead to some 'persons being dissuaded from committing offences in the first place'. However, evidence from the Royal Commission's investigations suggest that early contact with the Courts has little effect on the behaviour of Aboriginal young people, except to establish patterns of institutionalisation or imprisonment which are difficult to break. Diversionary programmes have greater prospects of long term success. Community involvement is essential in identifying problems and developing solutions. Street patrols which take people affected by alcohol or other substances to shelters or their homes, remove under age drinkers from licenced premises and patrol well known trouble spots have been a success in Western Australia in their initial stages. 18 For example, the Mullewa patrol was responsible for reducing the level of juvenile arrests from 6 per month to 1 per month in its first year of operation. While Aboriginal youth make up only 4 per cent of the youth population in Western Australia, 61.5 per cent of juveniles detained in lock-ups on 30 June 1993 were Aboriginal. Court outcomes for Aboriginal defendants are poor. 19 Legislative and Governmental Approaches Recommendation 235 stipulates legislative enactments to ensure Aboriginal organisations are the primary source of advice about the welfare of Aboriginal juveniles. The Aboriginal Legal Service of Western Australia revealed that there was no public submission process in the preparation of the Young Offenders Act 1995 (WA). The Bill was referred to the Legal Service by the Legislative Council Standing Committee on legislation, but this Committee's review was cut short by the government and there was no opportunity for proper input. 20 Successful New Zealand family youth conferencing legislation for offenders involved extensive negotiation with the Maori people. In Queensland, the juvenile justice system was reformed by the Juvenile Justice Act 1992 (Qld), which entrenched as a general principle the need to consult Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities and their families about incidents of offending by their children. Unfortunately, the legislation has not seen a decrease in juvenile detention rates. The situation is likely to worsen with the initiative to restore to Queensland police the power to issue care and control orders on children who are not offending, but are deemed to be at risk, 21 Since the Department of Juvenile Justice was created as a separate portfolio in New South Wales, the Aboriginal Child Care Agencies under the Department of Community Services have apparently become less involved in making submissions to courts about young Aboriginal offenders. This situation should be remedied. Appropriate Community Organisations There is a need in all jurisdictions for a regularly updated looseleaf juvenile justice sentencing service for magistrates. The service would give the necessary details of Aboriginal bodies involved in the rehabilitation of young people or juveniles and individuals willing (and considered fit and proper) to take part as a mentors, elders or guardians. They may include sympathetic school teachers or others able to assist in rehabilitation. Bodies exist to rehabilitate Aboriginal offenders, but solicitors and magistrates often do not know about them. For example, the programs available in New South Wales apparently include an Aboriginal Mentor Program; 22 the Ending Offending Program at Kempsey; an Interdepartmental and community support program planned for Purfleet community near Taree; the Safe Haven Program where selected Aboriginal carers provide alternative supportive placements for Aboriginal juvenile offenders (piloted in the Riverina and to be expanded to Dubbo, Nowra and Queanbeyan); the Nardoola program providing an accommodation for juvenile offenders from the Moree area; Childrens Court Assistance at Lidcombe Court, run by the Macquarie Legal Service and involving the Karingal Aboriginal Youth Service;23 and the Western Sydney Bail Hostel.
Recommendation 238 - Funding and Appropriate Staffing for Youth Strategies Only New South Wales, Victoria and Queensland claimed to have implemented this recommendation in full. The remaining jurisdictions claimed only to have 'supported' or 'partially implemented' the recommendation. Where this recommendation has been heeded, inroads have been made into juvenile justice problems. In Queensland Aboriginal Community Justice Groups on Palm Island, Pormpuraaw and Kowanyama are apparently succeeding in reducing offending rates. 24 The Pormpuraaw Community Justice Group is comprised of unpaid elders who meet every Monday to deal with local justice issues, from truancy to serious offences. The community has a detention centre at Baa's Yard Outstation, which has a good record of rehabilitation. Very few residents have absconded despite the hard conditions. It is for young offenders rather than juveniles, and is funded to accommodate ten residents by the Queensland Corrective Services Commission. Unfortunately, there are too many incidents of the withdrawal of funding in states while juveniles continue to die in Adult prisons. In Queensland there have been three such deaths - one at Townsville prison (22QLD), and two at the Sir David Longlands Prison (34QLD, 88QLD). It is therefore disturbing to hear of funding being removed from alternative programs. The Piabun Aboriginal Corporation operates a farm in the Sunshine Coast Hinterland for Aboriginal Juvenile Offenders who are about to be released. Unfortunately, funding to this successful program was stopped in 1996 after elders refused to allow the Community Services Department control of the program. 25 In Western Australia, the State Government in 1994 stopped funding for the Aboriginal Corporation Lake Jasper Project, one of the few non-government programmes established by Aboriginal people to provide an alternative to custody for young juvenile offenders. 26 Recommendation 239 - Cautioning Rather Than Arrest All jurisdictions except Tasmania claimed to have fully implemented this recommendation. However, the available evidence does not appear to support these claims. The incident which led to the arrest of the 18 year old who died in police custody in Brisbane (53QLD) was sparked by police surveillance in an area traditionally used by Aboriginal people. 27 A group of youths swore at police, saying they should leave them alone. The swearing and abuse in a public street was held to constitute offensive behaviour under section 7 (e) of the Vagrants, Gaming and Other Offences Act 1931 (Qld). The Aboriginal Legal Service argued that the offensive behaviour was merely a response to inappropriate scrutiny of a group of young people in an area traditionally used by Aboriginal people. The case was certainly one in which a caution could have been used. The history of local police-Aboriginal relations was not addressed in the investigation into the death, even though police were sufficiently familiar with the youths to know that they were heading back to a certain hostel. In Queensland Aboriginal juveniles make up 45 per cent of the juvenile remand population, and 60 per cent of juveniles detained in watch houses for longer than one day. 28These figures strongly suggest that the recommendation is not being followed. In Western Australia, there is overwhelming evidence that police discretions are exercised to the disadvantage of Aboriginal youth: 15 per cent of Aboriginal youth are cautioned or referred to juvenile justice teams, whereas Aboriginal juveniles account for 40 per cent of all juvenile arrests and 47 per cent of all juveniles detained in police lockups. 29 Aboriginal youth comprise 65 per cent of juveniles in detention. 30 Aboriginal youth comprise 4% of the Western Australian youth population. Despite the indicators, the State Government claims that this recommendation has been implemented. 31 Again, the move to give police in Queensland the power to detain a child who is not committing any offence and seek a care and control order before a magistrate is an extremely disturbing recent development. Recommendation 240 - Police Discretion b. Wherever possible the police caution be given in the presence of a parent, adult relative or person having care and responsibility for the juvenile; and c. If a police caution is given other than in the presence of any such person having care and responsibility for the juvenile, such person be notified in writing of the fact and details of the cautions. Tasmania is the only jurisdiction which did not claim to have implemented this recommendation in full. The circumstances of several of the cases throws significant doubt on these claims. The recommendation is pertinent to the case of the 18 year old who died in police custody after being arrested for disorderly conduct (53QLD). The decision to mount an operation to arrest a group of youths was made very early, when the offending behaviour was limited to expressing in robust terms their disapproval of police scrutiny. The case of the juvenile who died from AIDS in Townsville prison begs the question of why police engaged with the deceased in any manner other than with the care needed when any person is displaying signs of mental illness (22QLD). He was obviously disturbed. The court of appeal judgment records the fact that he had smeared excrement on himself and was masturbating on a veranda when police approached him. He was convicted of wilful exposure, two charges of assaulting police. He was also convicted of wilful damage to property (attempting to escape from police custody) and break and enter (stole $123 worth of goods while on bail). The circumstances of the offence included smearing some of the excrement already on his body in the face of a police officer. It happened on the spur of the moment. While the police officer suffered considerable anxiety, no injury was caused. The judgment is unclear, but is seems that only police officers witnessed the exposure. The deceased made an early plea of guilty, had no previous convictions and expressed remorse, but was sentenced to nearly three years in prison. He was only expected to live for two years. Many of the Aboriginal adults who died in custody had long histories of incarceration as juveniles. In the case of a 20 year old man who died in Rockhampton prison (14QLD), the deceased had convictions for over sixty offences. Although there was one conviction for assault occasioning bodily harm, a few convictions for unlawfully using motor vehicles and breaking and entering, typically the convictions were for minor street offences, The first conviction was recorded when he was 12 years old. In the case of the 20 year old man who died in the Arthur Gorrie Remand Centre (45QLD) the deceased also had convictions relating for over sixty offences. The 19 year old who died in the police lockup in Ceduna had been convicted for minor offences as a juvenile, and the man who died in Yatala prison in 1994 (60SA) had first appeared in the Childrens Court aged fifteen. In another case the Coroner commented that the deceased had a history of incarceration for minor offences, appearing in the Children's Court aged nine and serving his first sentence of imprisonment when he was fourteen (23WA). The reality is that the arrest procedure is used in the vast majority of cases. The Western Australian government reported in 1994 that 'Much of police resources and time are spent on the summons process. From a strict policing point of view, the process is not effective or efficient.' 32 The undertaking to improve procedures so that the summons could be used more frequently has not been reflected in lower watch house detention rates. The proportions of total juvenile watch house detainees who are Aboriginal in Western Australia (61.5 per cent) and Queensland (60 per cent) indicates that cautioning schemes are not benefitting Aboriginal juveniles. The South Australian Government's implementation report indicates that police refer 61 per cent of Aboriginal Juveniles to Court, 15 per cent to family conferences, and that 17 per cent are formally cautioned. By comparison, 42 per cent of non-Aboriginal juveniles are referred to court, 17 per cent are referred to family conferences and 35 per cent are cautioned. 33 Recommendation 241 - Aboriginal Involvement in Childrens Panels a. That the fact of arrest is not be taken into account in determining whether a child is referred to a Children's Court as opposed to an alternative body such as a Children's Aid Panel; b. That the decision to proceed by way of summons or attendance notice rather than by cautioning a juvenile should not be influenced by the existence of such panels; c. That there should be adequate representation of Aboriginal people on the list of panel members; d. That the panels should be so constituted that there be adequate representation of Aboriginal members of the panel on any occasion in which an Aboriginal juvenile's case is being considered; e. That in no case should there be consideration of the case of an Aboriginal juvenile unless one member, at least, of the panel is an Aboriginal person; f. That an Aboriginal juvenile should not be denied consideration by a Children's Aid Panel by virtue of the juvenile's inability, on financial grounds, to make restitution for property lost, stolen or damaged. This recommendation is not reflected in juvenile justice legislation in any state or territory. In Western Australia, for example, while 33 per cent of non-Aboriginal youth were dealt with by panels before they were abolished in 1995, only 14 per cent of Aboriginal youth were so dealt with. 34 Only 15 per cent of youth receiving cautions or referrals to Juvenile Justice Teams under the new legislation are Aboriginal. 35 Various profiles reveal the patterns of arrest for minor offences which lead to entanglement in the prison system. The 19 year old who died in Long Bay Gaol (19NSW) was first sentenced to six months' imprisonment on 5 January 1990 when he was 18 years old for using offensive language; resisting arrest; assaulting a police officer; maliciously destroying property; malicious damage; and simple larceny. A recent study found that between 1990 and 1992 the only people imprisoned in New South Wales for malicious damage to property were Aboriginal. 36 Six months' imprisonment rather than an appropriate alternative seems difficult to justify in light of the nature of the offences, the deceased's age, his psychiatric problems (he had received head injuries in a car accident) and the absence of any criminal record. The subsequent sentence of two years' imprisonment for burglary also seems unreasonable. Recommendation 242 - Bail, Juveniles Not to be Placed in Police Lockups That, except in exceptional circumstances, juveniles should not be detained in police lockups. In order to avoid such an outcome in places where alternative juvenile detention facilities do not exist, the following administrative and, where necessary, legislative steps should be taken: a. Police officers in charge of lockups should be instructed that consideration of bail in such cases be expedited as a matter of urgency; b. If the juvenile is not released as a result of a grant of bail by a police officer or Justice of the Peace then the question of bail should be immediately referred (telephone referral being permitted) to a magistrate, clerk of Court or such other person as shall be given appropriate jurisdiction so that bail can be reconsidered; c. Government should approve informal juvenile holding homes, particularly the homes of aboriginal people, in which juveniles can lawfully be placed by police officers if bail is in fact not allowed; and d. If in the event a juvenile is detained overnight in a police lock-up every effort should be made to arrange for a parent or visitor to attend and remain with the juvenile whether pursuant to the terms of a formal cell visitor scheme or otherwise. Such steps should be in addition to notice that the officer in charge of the station should give to parents, the Aboriginal Legal Service or its representative. South Australia, Tasmania and the Northern Territory professed to have implemented this recommendation in full, while the other jurisdictions only claimed to have done so to a partial extent. There are indications that significant action remains necessary in relation to this issue. Unfortunately the coroners did not examine whether the juveniles who died in adult prisons had been detained in police lockups after their arrests. However, a recent report by a House of Representatives committee noted alarming and extensive breaches of this recommendation. 37 The breaches included:
Recommendation 245 Only South Australia and the Northern Territory professed to have fully implemented this recommendation. The case of the deceased youth who was arrested with an even younger friend for disorderly conduct in a Brisbane park (see profile 53QLD) discloses a failure to implement juvenile recommendations through legislation or police standing orders 42. The officers' conduct in mounting the arrest operation was found to be justified because the supervisor would have agreed to an arrest operation had he been contacted. The officers' actions would clearly have breached police standing orders requiring compliance with the Royal Commission recommendations. ENDNOTES
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A Report prepared by the Office of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner for the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission |