Sue Neill-Fraser: when justice loses appeal

By Andrew L. Urban

A murder conviction which eminent lawyers and legal experts say is quite possibly a gross miscarriage of justice has exposed serious deficiencies in Australia’s criminal justice system. Not only are the restrictive and limited appeal provisions in contravention of Australia’s international human rights obligations, but innocent people can be jailed for long terms – with no further right of appeal.

“The criminal trial and the criminal appeal system is not operating correctly,” says Dr Robert Moles, former Associate Professor of Law, who has investigated alleged miscarriages of justice for 14 years, and is a joint author of Forensic Investigations and Miscarriages of Justice, (Irwin Law, Toronto, 2010).

“The Australian Human Rights Commission has declared that the rules which govern criminal appeals do not comply with international human rights obligations. Those rules state that once a person has been convicted and has had an unsuccessful appeal, they have no legal right to any further review of their case. This is so, even where totally compelling evidence emerges to show that they are innocent or have been wrongly convicted,” says Dr Moles.

“In contrast, the UK has a Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC) which has led to the overturning of some 350 convictions over the last 15 years. Australia has had a few fairly notorious cases which have exposed the existence of serious and systemic errors. They range from the cases of Edward Splatt (South Australia) and Lindy Chamberlain (Northern Territory) over 30 years ago, to the more recent cases of Gordon Wood and Jeffrey Gilham (New South Wales), Graham Stafford (Queensland) and Andrew Mallard (Western Australia).”

But it is the current Sue Neill-Fraser case that has attracted the attention of Chester Porter QC, the former Counsel Assisting the Morling Royal Commission into the Lindy Chamberlain case, as well as the Chamberlains’ lawyer Stuart Tipple. See 2 min video “Lawyers Speak Out”

In 2010, then 56 year old Neill-Fraser was convicted and jailed for 23 years for the murder of her partner of 18 years, Bob Chappell, on board their yacht, Four Winds, on Australia Day 2009, in Hobart’s Sandy Bay. However, since Chappell’s disappearance, no body has been found, no murder weapon produced in evidence and there were no witnesses; Neill-Fraser has strenuously denied her guilt.

Melbourne filmmaker Eve Ash spent four years making an investigative documentary, Shadow of Doubt (nominated as Best Feature Documentary in the 2014 AFI|AACTA Awards), which has galvanised interest and outrage with its revelations. After reviewing the case in detail, speaking at a public screening of the film in Sydney, Porter said: “As far as I’m concerned, and I do claim to be somewhat of an expert on miscarriages of justice in the criminal area, there is no doubt in my mind that this case calls for an inquiry. There are very substantial doubts about this case. I can put it this way: it would not have been at all surprising if the jury had acquitted this lady because the evidence was so weak against her.

“But with the additional evidence that is now available, it is hard to see how any conviction could stand.”

Tipple also spoke at the screening: “I see many parallels with this case to the Chamberlain case,” he said.

Robert Richter QC is so concerned he wrote personally to the Tasmanian Attorney General, Brian Wightman, urging him to order a commission of inquiry – supported by documents that undermine the safety of the conviction. No inquiry is forthcoming.

Referring to such difficulties, Tipple said: “I also had the problem of asking the Attorney General in the NT to review the case. I was able to show him that the foetal blood spray was sound deadener, amongst a number of other things, and all I got was a letter saying that he had reviewed it after nearly 6 months of sitting on it and there was nothing cogent that required any review. So I see many parallels. It deeply disturbs me.”

After viewing Shadow of Doubt, Bill Rowlings OAM, CEO, Civil Liberties Australia, was moved to remark: “Police filter the truth. Forensic science is abused. The prosecutor invents a murder weapon, and the judge agrees. A miscarriage of justice so blatant you won’t believe it possible in 21st century Australia.”

A basic problem with Australian criminal appeals is that the appeal courts have interpreted the legislation to mean that only one appeal is allowed. If, after an unsuccessful appeal, compelling evidence emerged to show there was a wrongful conviction there is no legal right to any further appeal. But as Graham Zellick, CBE, QC, Chair of the CCRC in the UK has said: “There is no principle of finality. If it is thought that a mistake may have been made, the public interest demands that it be put right … the principle of finality has no place in the criminal law, not in our system.”

Yet in the 30-plus years since the infamous conviction and subsequent exoneration of Lindy Chamberlain, only South Australia and only this year (May 2013), has introduced legislation allowing a further right of appeal. (This was triggered by a submission to the South Australian Parliament by Dr Moles and Bibi Sangha [of Flinders University] which argued for a CCRC). The parliamentary committee which examined the issue recommended the establishment of a forensic review panel and an inquiry into the use of expert evidence in criminal trials, both of which have been rejected by the South Australian government.

The watered down result is “a step in the right direction,” says Dr Moles, but the Australian Human Rights Commission said it was concerned that ‘the current systems of criminal appeals in Australia, including in South Australia, may not adequately meet Australia’s obligations under the ICCPR* in relation to the procedural aspects of the right to a fair trial. More particularly, the Commission has concerns that the current system of criminal appeals does not provide an adequate process for a person who has been wrongfully convicted or who has been the subject of a gross miscarriage of justice to challenge their conviction.’
* International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights

It is questionable whether South Australia enjoys a slightly safer criminal justice system than the rest of Australia, given that the Legal Services Commission has refused all legal aid funding for such appeals. The first case under the new right of appeal in South Australia, that of Henry Keogh, has been set down for hearing in February 2014.

Some background, from Dr Moles: “On 25 March 1992 Graham Stafford was convicted on the verdict of a jury of the murder of a young woman. For eighteen years Stafford has protested his innocence. In 1993 and again in 1998 the High Court of Australia found there was nothing wrong with the legal process which led to his conviction. On 24 December 2009 the Queensland Court of Appeal (QCA) set aside Stafford’s conviction. The QCA considered further evidence which undermined the prosecution case put to the jury at the trial and found that Stafford had been denied a fair trial.

“The effect of the decision of the QCA was that the proper administration of criminal justice depends on the fairness of the trial process.

“The legal profession and the judges in South Australia have taken a very different view. The view they hold is that any deficiencies in the trial process are of no consequence if in their assessment an accused person was properly convicted.”

Nearly 20 years ago in South Australia, Henry Keogh was convicted of the murder of a young woman. Since then, Keogh has protested his innocence. Like Stafford, the High Court in 1997 without knowing any of the new facts, refused to review the case which led to his conviction. Unlike Stafford, however, Keogh has never been provided with an opportunity to place the new facts before any Court – he has never had an opportunity to establish that he was denied a fair trial.

But over the past 10 years there has emerged a cascade of evidence that Keogh’s conviction was based on often dodgy science and misleading evidence which was claimed by the lawyers in his earlier petitions to amount to fraud.

Now, after her appeal to Tasmania’s Court of Criminal Appeal was inexplicably denied and leave to appeal to the High Court was refused (on technical grounds), Neill-Fraser – as those in similar circumstances around Australia – has only one option: a wrongly convicted person must obtain a referral to the courts from an Attorney-General or else serve out the rest of the sentence and remain a convicted criminal.

“For a person sentenced to life imprisonment,” notes Dr. Moles, “the torment will not end at the end of the non-parole period set by the court. On an application for parole the person will be asked about how they feel about what they were convicted for. If the person responds by saying, “I didn’t do it” that will be taken to show a lack of contrition and a failure to accept responsibility for their crime. The parole will be refused. Life imprisonment in their case will mean “life”.

Neill-Fraser will be eligible for parole in 9 years from now (13 years after being taken into custody in 2009); but if she maintains her innocence – showing no contrition for a crime she denies – parole may well be refused and she’ll be in jail until 2032.

Neill-Fraser’s case is not unique. In 2008, Gordon Wood was convicted of the murder of his girlfriend by throwing her off The Gap in Sydney. After the trial it took Wood’s new legal team a painstaking three years to research the errors at his trial for presentation to the appeal court. In his appeal judgment the Chief Justice was scathing about every aspect of the evidence given at the trial.

The scientific evidence was found to be inadmissible on the appeal because it didn’t address the situation before the court.

In his submissions the prosecutor suggested that the woman may have been thrown by a “shot put throw”. The judge said this proposition “was extraordinary and should never have been made”. The submission was entirely unsupported by any evidence and was “an invention of the prosecutor”. As the judge said, in this and other critical matters, the prosecutor argued for conclusions based on his own speculative propositions.

Similarly, in the Neill-Fraser trial, the prosecution speculated that Neill-Fraser hit Chappell on the head with a heavy wrench – once or maybe twice. No wrench was produced in evidence. Indeed, no body was found, hence no wounds to match the speculation. What would an appeals judge say about that? And what would he say about the trial judge’s summation to the jury in which he mentions the wrench eight times?

Dr Moles is adamant: “It is clear that there is not a scintilla of evidence which implicates Ms Neill-Fraser in the murder of her partner. It is equally clear that there is no evidence to show that he has in fact been murdered.”

As Dr Moles points out, it is the same faulty evidence and procedures which convicted Splatt and Chamberlain have been used recently to convict Mallard (Western Australia), Stafford (Queensland), as well as Wood and Gilham (New South Wales). “There are a significant number of cases yet to be resolved in South Australia and no doubt pressure will continue to build until the case of Ms Neill-Fraser has been properly resolved.

“Clearly,” says Dr Moles, “there needs to be a national CCRC. Investigators, prosecutors and expert witnesses in all states and territories must be required to adhere to their professional ethics and their own codes of conduct.”

This article (above) first appeared in The Australian, Monday, Dec. 30, 2013

OTHER EXAMPLES OF MISCARRIAGES OF JUSTICE IN AUSTRALIA
Edited extracts from a paper by Dr Bob Moles, Networked Knowledge, “Australia Needs a National Response to Miscarriages of Justice”

Edward Splatt
In 1978 Splatt was convicted of the murder of an elderly woman who had been badly beaten, sexually assaulted and strangled in her bedroom. The only evidence leading to the identification of Splatt was “scientific evidence”. No one had ever seen him with the victim or in her house. However, the police investigator had collected trace evidence (bird seed, wood particles and tiny spicules of paint) from the scene.

Splatt lived nearby, had an aviary in his back garden and he worked as a spray painter at a nearby factory; the police investigators became committed to the idea that he was the perpetrator. He protested that incriminating materials found at his home had been taken from the turnups of his trousers. However, he said, because he had put on so much weight, he had been unable to get into those trousers for several years.

The case ended up in a Royal Commission. Although the trial lasted for just 11 days, the Royal Commission which sat for 196 hearing days and brought in experts from around the globe. The Commissioner, in finding the conviction to be unsafe, criticized all aspects of the scientific evidence. He was particularly critical of the role of the police officer who headed the investigation.

Lindy Chamberlain
Convicted of the murder of her baby in the outback in 1980, the evidence at trial looked fairly compelling.

However, by the time the Royal Commission completed its report, not a shred of the evidence given at trial was left standing. The “foetal blood” turned out to be traces of sound deadener from under the wheel arches. The “spray” turned out to be traces of the residue as blown through a small hole dividing the passenger from the engine compartment. The textile experts were simply wrong when they said that signs of scissors would be distinctively different from the cutting action of dingo teeth. The hand print in blood? Well nobody was able to see such a thing at the Commission and the bloody mark turned out to be red sand from the outback.

Also:
Jeffrey Gilham
In 2008 he was convicted of the murder of both his parents. As with Gordon Wood, the appeals court said that Gilham would be entitled to a verdict of acquittal. In effect, it meant that the prosecution case was so defective that it could not be fixed up so as to enable a retrial.

Andrew Mallard
In 1995 Andrew Mallard was convicted of the murder of a woman in a jewellery shop in Perth. She had been violently assaulted with a heavy instrument which was never found.

Because of his psychiatric condition, he thought he was being used as an advisor to help the police work out what had happened. In giving his “advice” to the police he even went to the trouble of sketching a “wrench” which he supposed might have been used in the assault.

Despite knowing that it was unlikely to be the cause of the injuries, the prosecutor still suggested to the jury that the weapon sketched by Mallard might have been used in the assault.

In 2008, the police investigators and the prosecutor were the subject of adverse findings by a Crime and Corruption Commission inquiry for withholding information about the experiments they carried out and for misrepresenting the significance of the possible weapon.

Graham Stafford
Mr Stafford was convicted of the murder of a young girl in 1991. His case is unusual in that his appeal had already been rejected by the Court of Appeal and the High Court in 1992-3. In 1997 the case was referred back to the Court of Appeal by the Attorney-General. It was then rejected by the Court of Appeal and the High Court again. Unusually, it was then referred back to the Court of Appeal by the Attorney-General in 2008. On this occasion the appeal was successful.

In the case, the judge held that the trial was unfair in a way which was apt to deprive Stafford of the consideration by the jury of the real case which could fairly be made against him rather than a theoretical case important aspects of which were not sustainable on a fair view of the evidence.

 

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One Response to Sue Neill-Fraser: when justice loses appeal

  1. DM Kolos says:

    It leaves one with a feeling of hopelessness and helplessness. I don’t know the answer. We would be safer with academic committes of experts, rather than the untrained jury system which served well in the past, but has not kept up with the knowledge of the present.

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