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Australia: Coroner exonerates police over fatal Macquarie
Fields car chase
By Mike Head
2 November 2007
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Last week a coroner ruled that a high-speed police pursuit
that resulted in the deaths of two teenagers in the Sydney suburb
of Macquarie Fields in February 2005was reasonable.
The verdict not only clears police of all responsibility for the
deaths but effectively gives a green light for dangerous car chases
to continue.
Matthew Robertson, 19, and a 17-year-old young man, whose name
has been suppressed by the coroner, were killed when their car
crashed into a tree outside a house in Eucalyptus Drive, a busy
residential street. Their deaths sparked four days of protests
by local youth and residents, driven by outrage at the wanton
destruction of two young lives.
Police had no need to chase the allegedly stolen car in the
first place. The boys involved had been under close surveillance
for days beforehand and could have been charged or arrested at
any time for their alleged offence.
New South Wales Deputy State Coroner Carl Milovanovich, however,
said the decision to begin the pursuit was reasonable in the circumstances.
He declared that their actions did not breach police safe
driving policy guidelines, despite the chase occurring at
speeds of up to 140 kph through at least eight intersections in
a densely-populated area. Milovanovich ruled there was no evidence
of danger to pedestrians or residents, even though a Blue
Light disco had just finished and many teenagers were on
nearby streets.
The coroner insisted that the driver of the wanted car, Jessie
Kelly, 22, was solely responsible for the deaths. Kelly was charged
with dangerous driving causing death, and is currently serving
an eight-year jail sentence. Milovanovich also blamed the two
victims for their own deaths. Had Matthew and [the 17-year-old]
not been in the car that night we would not be here today,
he said.
For the parents and relatives of the two young men, who were
in the courtroom for the verdict, the coroners remarks were
a bitter blow. Outside the court, the father of the 17-year-old
victim expressed dismay that the police have got away with
it and that the coroner made no findings that would prevent
high-risk chases in the future.
The coroners own report confirmed that the police chase
was entirely unnecessary. The boys were living in a house which
had been subjected to electronic and video surveillance
for 11 days, and the previous night a large police contingent,
including the Highway Patrol, a helicopter and the Dog Squad,
had tailed the wanted car for five hours in an unsuccessful operation
to catch the young men in a criminal activity. Following that
failure, a high-level decision was made, involving an Assistant
Commissioner, to intercept the car at the next opportunity, even
though it was known that a potentially dangerous pursuit was likely
to occur.
Coroner Milovanovich made no recommendations to limit police
chases, despite a 2004 report that found that 54 people had died
in NSW police chases during the previous decade. Further deaths
are inevitable. Already, in March this year, another 13-year-old
boy from Macquarie Fields was killed in a high-speed chase. The
police responded by expressing satisfaction that, on this occasion,
no protests occurred, attributing this to a series of new community
policing programs in the area.
Labors police-state reaction
In his findings, the coroner ruled that the police car had
not struck the stolen car. He said wrongful rumours of such a
collision had fuelled riots by people hostile to police
and had hindered an examination of the crash scene.
In fact, the violent clashes revealed the depth of anger over
constant police harassment of young people in working class communities.
The first conflict between police and local residents broke out
within hours of the car crash. Grief-stricken family and friends
gathered at the site and denounced the police for causing the
deaths.
Over the following three days, the state Labor government mobilised
hundreds of police, including heavily-armed riot squads, in a
series of attacks that ignited nights of street clashes. As the
Socialist Equality Party said in its March 2005 statement, Macquarie
Fieldsthe political issues, the suburb became a
testing ground for new methods of suppressing social unrest. Police
cordoned off the suburb, while riot units confronted and taunted
youth on the streets. Police wielding machine guns stormed houses,
police dogs were set upon demonstrators, and helicopters buzzed
overhead, spotlighting homes and individuals.
The clashes, in one of Sydneys poorest and most disadvantaged
neighborhoods, provided a graphic picture of the class tensions
that have built up as a result of the deepening social inequality
produced by decades of free-market policies implemented by Labor
and Liberal governments alike.
For all the official claims of years of economic prosperity,
Macquarie Fields, like similar suburbs throughout western Sydney
and across Australia is home to large public housing estates where
less than half the adults have jobs, and where houses, schools,
health services and social facilities are severely run-down after
years of funding cuts.
These areas have born the heaviest brunt of the relentless
assault on jobs, conditions, living standards and welfare entitlements
of working class people in order to meet the demands of global
corporations and investment houses for lower tax rates, cheaper
labour and greater profits. Privatisation and outsourcing of public
services such as child care, education, health and welfare
to work job training has only intensified the levels of
disadvantage.
The NSW Labor government made great play of denying the social
roots of the crisis and, in the process, repudiating any conception
that changing social conditions would change social life. Premier
Bob Carr declared: Im not going to have it said that
this behaviour is caused by social disadvantage. He ruled
out any new spending commitments as a knee-jerk government
response to anti-social and criminal behaviour.
A subsequent parliamentary inquiry, conducted by the Standing
Committee on Social Issues, which included representatives of
the Liberal Party and Australian Democrats, as well as Labor,
essentially echoed this position. Its long-delayed June 2006 report,
while paying lip service to concerns about social disadvantage,
recommended no new social spending, simply backing an existing
Community Action Plan that provided no extra state
or federal funding.
The reports main thrust was to back the boosting of police
numbers, resources and equipment, together with police programs
to develop and strengthen relationships with local young
people. These programs include Camp IMPACT, a series of
boot camps for teenagers deemed to be at risk of offending,
and the establishment of close liaison with prominent local figures
in order to prevent further disturbances. The purpose of these
pro-active and community programs is to
strengthen the police surveillance and monitoring of ordinary
people.
In the two and half years since the 2005 events, the powers
of the police have been expanded further. Just last week, Bob
Carrs successor, Morris Iemma, announced the biggest-ever
shake-up of surveillance laws in NSW law enforcement history.
Police will be able to use listening and tracking devices and
hidden cameras to secretly spy on people for up to three months
at a time, and for up to five days without a judicial warrant.
In response to the Cronulla riots in December 2005, the riot
squad was deployed against Middle Eastern and Islamic youth. Again,
in 2006, it was used against residents opposing the closure of
their public housing estate in the rural city of Dubbo.
In September the state Labor government, in collaboration with
the Howard government, organised a massive police mobilisation
to block protests at the APEC summit. This was followed by the
use of riot police against sacked workers at McArthur Express
in Seven Hills, in Sydneys west. These events demonstrate
that the principal target of the new police powers is not terrorism,
but political opposition and social unrest, fuelled by militarism
and war, ever-widening social inequality, and the escalating assault
on democratic and civil rights.
Authorised by N. Beams, 100B Sydenham Rd, Marrickville,
NSW
Visit the Socialist Equality
Party Election Web Site
See Also:
Socialist Equality Party (Australia)
2007 federal election statement
A socialist program to fight war, social inequality and the
assault on democratic rights
[16 October 2007]
Australia: Sydney
suburb remains tense following four days of conflict
[3 March 2005]
Australia: teenagers
killed in high-speed police chase through working class suburb
[28 February 2005]
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