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Australia: TJ Hickey inquest concludes
Police involvement in death of Aboriginal youth exposed
By Rick Kelly
28 July 2004
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A two-week coronial inquest into the death of 17-year-old Aboriginal
youth Thomas TJ Hickey concluded in Sydney on July
16. In the course of the proceedings, clear evidence emerged of
a systematic police cover-up of the circumstances of the youths
death. TJ died on February 14 after he came off his bicycle and
was impaled on a metal fence in the inner-city suburb of Redfern.
While police immediately denied any involvement, a number of witnesses
saw him being chased by police moments before the fatal crash.
The incident sparked a violent clash between Aboriginal residents
of Redfern and approximately 200 police.
The coronial inquest, which had a carefully limited scope and
is expected to release its findings on August 27, was intended
to create the perception of an independent investigation while
creating the conditions for a whitewash. Despite this, the evidence
presented to the coroner demolished the credibility of the police.
After TJ died, police authorities initially stated that police
had been patrolling several blocks from where the incident occurred.
But four witnesses gave evidence that at least one police vehicle
was pursuing the youth moments before his fatal crash, while the
officers evidence was marked by repeated contradictions,
inconsistencies and evasions. After weeks of denials that they
were chasing, or even following, TJ, police officers admitted
for the first time that a police vehicle had entered the Renwick
Street laneway, metres from where he crashed.
The collapse of the police cover-up has exposed not only the
four officers implicated in TJs death, and the senior New
South Wales police who facilitated their lies, but also the political
establishment. State Labor premier Bob Carr declared at the time,
I have made it very, very clear right from the start, our
full 100 percent backing for the police in Redfernthere
can be no doubt about that. Prime Minister John Howard claimed
that there was no evidence of a police chase. I think the
allegations that have been made against the police are unreasonable
and I defend very much the position of the police in a situation
like that, he said.
Police account collapses
From the outset of the coronial inquest, it was apparent that
the police version of the events surrounding TJ Hickeys
death was so implausible as to be ridiculous. On February 14,
a large number of police had been patrolling Redfern in search
of a suspect alleged to have committed a violent bag snatch outside
Redfern train station earlier that morning.
The police line, which they maintained throughout the inquest,
was that while two police vehicles crossed TJs path only
moments before his fatal crash, none of the officers involved
took any interest in the youth, and at no stage pursued or followed
him. All of the police involved argued that it was purely coincidental
that after seeing TJ, they changed route and headed in his direction.
The two vehicles involved, known as Redfern 16 and Redfern
17, were searching for an Aboriginal suspect who was wearing dark
coloured clothing. Just two minutes before they saw TJ, the four
officers in the two vehicles were told through police radio that
the suspect had been seen with another person. When they saw TJ,
who was wearing dark clothing and cycling extremely quickly without
a helmet, he was riding from the location where the bag snatcher
had been sighted. The police maintained that despite these circumstances,
they immediately dismissed TJ as a potential suspect.
TJ also had an outstanding arrest warrant, and had been previously
identified by Redfern police as a high risk suspect.
The police first compiled a profile on him last July. This was
updated just three days before his death, and was posted in the
meal room of Redfern police station. All four officers denied
having ever seen the poster, or having heard of TJ Hickey.

The officers claim that they simply continued on their
general patrol after first seeing the youth is further undermined
by the subsequent route both vehicles took. Redfern 16 was driving
north on Cope Street when TJ sped across their path, through a
car park into Renwick Street, which runs parallel to Cope. The
police vehicle then took the first available turn south into Renwick
Street, away from the location where the alleged thief had been
sighted, but toward TJ.
As Redfern 16 entered Renwick Street, they passed Redfern 17,
which had just patrolled the street. Neither of the officers in
Redfern 16 have explained why, if they were merely on general
patrol, they chose to enter a dead-end street that had just been
searched by another vehicle.
At the bottom of the Renwick Street cul-de-sac, Redfern 16
mounted the kerb, and continued down an 88-metre long pathway.
A gate at the end of this path blocked the vehicle, though TJ
was able to cycle through a pedestrian entrance, after which he
crossed the road and was then impaled on the metal fence alongside
the driveway of a high-rise public housing estate. Four separate
witnesses saw Redfern 16 approach the gate at the end of the pathway
as TJ shot through the pedestrian entrance. The police vehicle
then did a u-turn and headed back up Renwick Street.
The police in Redfern 17 had seen TJ cycling through the car
park from Cope Street as they were heading north from the bottom
of Renwick Street. After they passed Redfern 16, they also headed
south in TJs direction, and arrived alongside the metal
fence just two minutes after he had crashed.
Lies and evasions
The police officers who saw TJ in the moments before his death
failed to provide the coronial inquest with any plausible explanation
for their actions. Supported by their senior officers, the four
police determinedly stuck to their story that they were not following
TJ, despite all the contrary evidence.
On the fourth day of the hearings, by which time it was apparent
that things were not going well for the police, Senior Constable
Michael Hollingsworth, the driver of Redfern 16, abruptly refused
to testify on the grounds that he may incriminate himself. The
state coroner John Abernathy issued an order under the Coroners
Act that Hollingsworths objection to testifying could only
be reported if the media stated that the officers fear of
self-incrimination related only to the possibility of disciplinary
action by the Police Commissioner. Abernathys order specified
that: No inference adverse to Senior Constable Hollingsworth
is permitted to be drawn from his refusal to give evidence in
the inquest.
The coroner refused to force the witness to testify, on the
grounds that there was no point in the court hearing Hollingsworths
evidence because his three previous statements contained contradictions.
There is always the need for an honest, accurate and reliable
account from material witnesses, the coroner declared. Would
I be confident that I get that, should he step into the witness
box? Frankly, it is difficult to feel confident that I would,
because the versions he has given are self-contradictory and not
susceptible to resolution to an appropriate standard.
Among the unresolved contradictions in Hollingsworths
statements is the question of whether he ever saw TJ in Renwick
Street. In his initial statement, made just hours after TJs
crash, Hollingsworth wrote that he saw the youth approximately
50 metres ahead, as he entered the cul-de-sac. In an interview
with investigating police conducted a week later, the officer
denied seeing the youth in Renwick Street. In a video-recorded
reenactment conducted shortly after this interview, he claimed
that he could not remember whether he had seen TJ.
The inquest heard that both Hollingsworth and his partner in
Redfern 16, Constable Maree Reynolds, falsely claimed in their
initial statements that they had performed a u-turn at the bottom
of the Renwick Street cul-de-sac. Both officers attempted to cover
up the fact that they had mounted the kerb at the bottom of the
street and continued down the pedestrian pathway in TJs
direction.
This was a critical omission, the importance of which both
officers well understood. By the time the two constables typed
up their initial statements, they knew that witnesses, including
TJs cousin Roy Hickey, had told the Hickey family that they
had seen police chasing TJ.
Constable Reynolds denied that she and Hollingsworth had conspired
to provide matching false statements. The omission, she maintained,
was simply an oversight. It was a coincidence
that both she and her partner made the same mistake.
Reynolds, and her colleagues in Redfern 17, Constables Ruth
Rocha and Alan Rimmell, admitted that, together with Hollingsworth,
they all had a discussion about what they would include in their
statements. Rocha conceded that a detective-sergeant at Redfern
station gave them advice on how to best refute the allegation
of a pursuit. The four officers then typed up their statements
at the same time and in the same room at the police station.
Senior police played a critical role in assisting the cover-up.
Inspector Robert Emery had arrived at the metal fence approximately
10 minutes after the first police were at the scene. After speaking
with Superintendent Dennis Smith, the two men made the important
decision not to classify TJs crash as a critical incident.
Any case where police are involved in a death or serious injury
is routinely classified as a critical incident. Once this classification
is decided upon, every officer involved is immediately separated,
and a recorded interview is conducted. These measures are designed
to reduce the possibility of police collusion.
Under cross examination, Inspector Emery admitted that his
decision not to classify TJs crash as a critical incident
was made on the basis of the four officers denials that
they had been chasing the youth. The inspectors assessment
was made before he had even spoken with any of the civilians on
the scene, which included one of the key witnesses, Roy Hickey.
Also in the crowd was Danny Allen, who had seen TJ catapult
off his bike onto the fence. Allen told the coroner that he had
asked one of the female officers who first arrived at the scene
whether they had been chasing the youth. The officer reportedly
replied that they had been following him in an attempt to determine
who he was. Both Rocha and Reynolds denied making such a statement.
The inquests bias in favour of the police was strikingly
demonstrated in the contrasting treatment of the police and the
witnesses. The police officers testimony was never seriously
challenged by the counsel assisting the coroner, Elizabeth Fullerton,
and only briefly examined by the Hickey familys lawyer,
John Stratton.
In sharp contrast, the counsel for the NSW police service,
Patrick Saidi, was permitted to aggressively challenge every witness.
Danny Allen was accused of being a liar and publicity seeker.
The police lawyer repeatedly tried to confuse and trip up the
witnesses, who were forced to pinpoint exactly when and where
they saw various things. While the police repeatedly answered
I cant recall to even the most straightforward
questions, witnesses who failed to remember a single precise detail
had their entire credibility challenged.
Saidi argued that the police should not be condemned,
they should be commended, and that the minor inconsistencies
in their accounts should be attributed to frailties of the
human mind. A more sophisticated but no less insidious summation
was provided by Fullerton, who told the coroner that it was likely
that at some point ... [the police] decided to follow him
as a subject of genuine interest, but at no time were the
police chasing or pursuing TJ. She declared that there was no
evidence that the youth was conscious of their presence
at all and the probabilities do not favour that police
activities had either directly or indirectly led to the death.
These comments, which are likely to form the core of the coroners
ruling, demonstrate the real nature of the coronial court. Far
from being a neutral and objective body, it is in fact another
component of the state apparatus that enforces the oppression
of Aboriginal and working class youth like TJ Hickey.
Australian history is marked by periodic state investigations
into Aboriginal deaths, none of which provide justice, and all
of which serve as mechanisms to cover over the central historical
issues of poverty and dispossession. The Hickey inquest is part
of a long line of state cover-ups, taking its place alongside
the 1989 Royal Commission into Aboriginal deaths in custody, and
the 1994 Criminal Justice Commission investigation into the police
murder of 18-year-old Brisbane youth, Daniel Yock.
Social crisis concealed
The coronial inquest, which purported to be a thorough investigation
of the causes of TJ Hickeys death, gave no consideration
to the social and economic crisis facing Aboriginal youth in Sydney.
To raise these matters would necessitate the indictment not just
of the police officers immediately involved, but of the entire
political establishment.
The inquest heard nothing about TJs impoverished life.
He had moved to Sydney just months before his death, from the
impoverished country town of Walgett. After struggling to develop
his reading and writing skills, TJ dropped out of school early.
The only work he found in Walgett were casual and menial agricultural
and labouring jobs. In Sydney, he was unemployed.
The inquest also failed to hear any testimony from Redfern
Aborigines about the constant harassment and intimidation inflicted
on the community by the police. TJ Hickey experienced first-hand
the police brutality that is the states response to social
inequality and mass unemployment among young people. After he
arrived in Sydney last year, he was picked up for a crime he did
not commit, and was assaulted by the police.
TJs past experiences explain why he was cycling away
from the police like a bat out of hell, as one witness
put it. The coroner, however, heard his assistant maintain that
there was no evidence that TJ was even aware of the police following
him, while Hollingsworths lawyer claimed that the youth
had a particular type of personality for which thrill
seeking was the aim of the game.
The inquests failure to even acknowledge the possibility
that poverty, social disadvantage and the long record of police
brutality were factors in TJs death is a result not merely
of the strictly constrained role of the coroners court,
but is more fundamentally a reflection of the death of social
reformism in Australia. The official response to TJ Hickeys
death and the subsequent riot, from the media and from every established
political party, was to vilify the Aboriginal people for their
own plight, and to reject the very idea that the events in Redfern
were an expression of underlying social and economic problems.
All capitalism now has to offer young Aboriginal and working
class people is the promise of further police repression. Before
the inquest had even finished its hearings, the state Labor government
announced a massive increase in police numbers and resources for
Redfern. Under the so-called Redfern crime plan, 56 additional
officers will be sent to the suburb, and a new $6 million, seven-storey
police super station will be constructed.
The government also announced the formation of a 46-member
riot squad, available to respond en masse to incidents of
civil disorder, public order management and major incidents as
required. Additional riot training and equipment will be
provided to Redfern police, as well as neighbouring commands.
The government will review its Redfern police plan in six months,
and has promised to further increase spending and resources if
it is deemed necessary. Police Minister John Watkins said additional
spending may be announced even earlier. There will be recommendations
that come from the coroner and also from the Upper Houses
inquiry [into policing in Redfern] and due consideration and action
will be given to those recommendations, he declared.
See Also:
Interview with Bowie Hickey: There's
67 percent poor people-"we need our own government"
[28 July 2004]
TJ Hickey and the plight of
young Aboriginal Australians
[6 May 2004]
Australia: Hundreds mourn
the death of TJ Hickey
[25 February 2004]
Australia: Police victimisation
stepped up following Redfern riot
[23 February 2004]
Australia: Government and
media attack Aboriginal community after Redfern riot
[20 February 2004]
Australia: Riots in Sydney
as police blamed for death of 17-year-old Aboriginal boy
[17 February 2004]
The death of TJ
Hickeythe social and economic circumstances
[17 February 2004]
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