THE LEGAL LIE THAT MEN KILL FOR LOVE
It's four years since I chose Parliamentary
Question Time to ask the then Labor Attorney-General, Michael Lavarch,
to condemn the anti-female bias of the law of provocation. Now a
Federal government report endorsed by Coalition Justice Minister,
Amanda Vanstone, who courageously describes provocation "as an excuse
for the murder of women", has finally emerged. Fatal Offences
Against the Person is unequivocal in declaring that provocation
"was designed for male patterns of aggression...discriminates against
women...(and)....operates unjustly in a modern society".
What remains to be answered is why a
defence which had its origins in the male violence of drunken brawls
and duels has, in modernity, been so readily offered to men who
kill their ex-partners, and whether the patriarchal assumptions
which drive judges in these cases will disappear with the proposed
abolition of the law.
My own struggle against the law began
on August 26, 1987 when the crackling voice of my brother announced
over the phone that our 25 year old sister, Vicki, had been stabbed
by her ex-boyfriend and that I should go straight to the Melbourne
Hospital. In my recently released book, Cleary Independent, I describe
the aftermath as follows:
When the surgeon arrived, sister
by his side, at the waiting room door, there was no escaping what
had happened. The words, "I'm sorry we couldn't stop the bleeding"
were virtually redundant, lost somewhere in the mayhem. There
was nowhere to turn. God was irrelevant. Vicki hadn't died in
an accident brought about by hers or someone else's carelessness.
Her life had been violently taken from her.
"She'll be with us, Mum, she'll
be with us," I said, cuddling and stroking a mother recoiling
at the thought that the life of the child she'd brought into the
world could be stolen by some other mother's son.
Outside there were buds on the
trees and everywhere spring was preparing to emerge from the dark
of winter. People were walking and talking, and the traffic gently
continued to crawl towards the suburbs, oblivious to this mysterious
act of savagery. No Angelus bell rang out to announce the passing
of one of God's children. In the newsrooms they were preparing
to show the aftermath, bloodstains on the car and pavement, and
the blurred image of Peter Raymond Keogh whisked out of Russell
Street. "Footballer's sister stabbed to death," they said. But
they didn't understand. Ron and Lorna had lost their soul..
A little while before that phone call
I'd rung Vicki to ask if everything was all right.
"Don't worry, he won't do anything," she'd said. I live to regret
that someone hadn't told me about the murderer's documented 27 year
history of violence against women.
Although Peter
Keogh was armed with a carving knife when he emerged from his hiding
spot and confronted Vicki outside the kindergarten where she worked
at 8.00 am, four months after they'd separated, Justice George Hampel
granted a defence of provocation because, he told the jury:....it
is said that such a state existed where there were acts and circumstances
existing for some time beforehand which, in culmination,.. produced
a loss of self-control because of the trigger comment that occurred
that day by the deceased lady.
The 'trigger comment' was an exclamation
allegedly uttered by my sister upon being confronted at the driver's
side door of her car. The circumstances were her refusal to return
to a violent relationship. An earlier appearance at the kindergarten
by the aggressive Keogh was described by the judge as:...part
of a realistic situation...(where)....one person is intense about
seeing the other.
After my family expressed its outrage
at the "not guilty of murder, guilty of manslaughter" verdict, a
head-line "Family Fury at Sentence" appeared above a tabloid story.
The truth was that although Peter Keogh was sentenced to a mere
three and a half years gaol, it was the granting of a defence of
provocation by George Hampel, and the jury's acquiescence which
outraged us. To accept a defence of provocation and the absurd line
that a hypothetical ordinary man, even one with the alleged depression
of the killer, might have done what this man did, was to cast my
sister and, by definition, any woman leaving a man, as provocateur
and chattel.
Despite our enshrining in law the right
to separate and divorce, many courts continue to act barbarically
when they sit in judgement on violent men who murder the women who
flee them. And as long as the media run headlines such as, "Love
pulls the trigger", or "He did it out of love", and judges recite
homilies such as "jealousy is the rage of man, and adultery is
the highest invasion of property" (R v Mawgridge) to account
for these acts of revenge, they will remain implicated in the culture
of violence against women.
Witness, Giuseppe Piccolo, unwittingly
captured the ideology which pervades so many courts when he said:
The lady at that stage was screaming and the male... he had
his hand over her mouth,. it looked like he was punching her .
I didn't hear any words . It sort of looked like they were just
having an argument .So I just assumed he was beating her up.
The manslaughter verdicts following the stabbing murder of the
school girl Zerrin Dincer by her Turkish father in 1981 and the
1987 shot-gun murder of Christine Boyce and stabbing of Vicki Cleary
were but the tip of the iceberg. Prior to Christmas 1996 the murder
of two women and the two children of another woman by the men in
their lives passed almost without notice. Had the men chosen a court
appearance rather than suicide it's a fair bet a defence of provocation
would have found its way into proceedings.
While this report argues that the culpability
of a killer convicted under provocation is often no less than one
convicted of murder, and that therefore provocation has no real
place in the criminal code, it is silent on why Judges allow a partial
defence in cases such as my sister's. In suggesting that once freed
from 'provocation' Judges will be able to address the issue of culpability
in sentencing, the report may well leave the deep-seated assumption
of woman as provocateur and chattel, an assumption which underpins
many of the pronouncements of our learned judiciary, well entrenched.
Until the legal profession, the media
and the bloke down the pub confront this assumption, the renovated
law will simply camouflage the injustice and continue to demean
those ordinary men who would never dream that estrangement might
be an excuse for killing a woman, or that men kill out of love.
Philip Cleary
The Age 19/8/98
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