Justitia, wearing a sash in Latin, which translated says "Justice must also be seen."

Padding out the Invoices – Norman O’Bryan

“In a nutshell, at the expense of debenture holders, the defendants sought to achieve and then divide up ill-gotten spoils from the Bolitho litigation and then to thwart the proper administration of justice and retain their illegitimate financial gains,” Justice Dixon said.

“Once they achieved court approval of their settlement scheme through breach of their duties to the proper administration of justice, there was a concerted campaign, over the course of two years and three months, to conceal their misconduct.”

To the points of the matter – Marcus Einfeld

“I lied. I can’t say it any simpler than that. I told a lie, which was a disgraceful thing to do and for which I have been paying ever since.”

~ Marcus Einfeld, Four Corners: The Dishonouring of Marcus Einfeld, 30 March 2009. ~

The Insider – Nicola Gobbo

“Her behaviour in concert with Victoria Police undermined the administration of justice, compromised criminal convictions, and damaged the standing of Victoria Police officers uninvolved in this debacle. It has shaken public trust and confidence in Victoria’s legal profession and criminal justice system.”

“Gobbo’s actions in purporting to act as counsel for the Convicted Persons while covertly informing against them were fundamental and appalling breaches of Gobbo’s obligations as counsel to her clients and of Gobbo ‘s duties to the court. Likewise, Victoria Police were guilty of reprehensible conduct in knowingly encouraging EF to do as she did and were involved in sanctioning atrocious breaches of the sworn duty of every police officer to discharge all duties imposed on them faithfully and according to law without favour or affection, malice or ill-will. As a result, the prosecution of each Convicted Person was corrupted in a manner which debased fundamental premises of the criminal justice system.”

See no evil, hear no evil – Bernard Collaery

FARCE VERSUS FACTS – JUST-US IN THE AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL TERRITORY

So sue us – Katherine Law-Jamieson

The long and winding Solicitor-General – Peter Garrisson

Three for the prize … or perhaps not – David Mossop

“…procedural propriety in the administration of justice is sacred; it is the bedrock of the judicial oath which has been taken by judges for centuries and requires them to try cases without “fear or favour, affection or ill-will”, a phrase which reinforces the impartiality and independence of the judiciary, and the obligation on judges to conduct themselves and their business free from any interference.”

Preserving the future, even if it’s just for yourself – Tu Pham

This Post Has 6 Comments

  1. Jen

    Justice must not only be done — it must be seen to be done.
    A century after Lord Chief Justice Hewart’s landmark ruling, Blak and Black examines what happens when lawyers become the ones who need to face the law — and what happens when they don’t.
    From Marcus Einfeld’s $77 lie that cost him everything, to the ACT Government’s treatment of an Indigenous family over more than a decade, this is a story about accountability, power, and the rule of law.

  2. Paulo

    The Australian Capital Territory — a jurisdiction that prides itself on Australia’s first human rights legislation, yet whose legal practitioners have, in the matters involving Bakchos, behaved with what can only be described as impunity. Fabricated affidavits. Lies to a court on the record. A sitting judge who failed in his fundamental duty to ensure a fair trial. And not one of those responsible has been held to account.
    The jury acquitted on all 16 charges. Justice, in the narrow sense, was done. But it has never been seen to be done — not for those who engineered a fit-up of an Indigenous man and his family over more than a decade.
    The rule of law is only as strong as the willingness to apply it to those who administer it. Where that willingness fails, what remains is not justice — it is just power.

    1. Watershedd

      “The rule of law is only as strong as the willingness to apply it to those who administer it.” Perfectly stated, Paulo.

  3. Kelly Conrad

    The rule of law doesn’t exist in the ACT. Bakchos and his family were treated like dirt by the Australian Federal Police simply because they’re Indigenous.

  4. Aaron

    There is no such thing as the rule of law for Indigenous people in Australia.

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