<i>Mentally ill people can be very troublesome, very dangerous to themselves and others
The family of a Geraldton woman shot dead by a Western Australian police officer has said there is “no equality” and “no justice” for Aboriginal people after the constable was acquitted of her murder on Friday.
“In terms of Aboriginal people, we don’t get no fairness, there’s no equality and this is evidence with what’s happened here,” Bernadette Clarke, the sister of the victim, known as JC for cultural reasons, said on the steps outside Perth’s district court.
The 29-year-old Yamatji woman JC was fatally shot by a WA police first-class constable in a suburban Geraldton street in 2019. The constable, the first police officer to be charged with murder in WA for nearly a century, and who is still a serving officer, cannot be named for legal reasons.
JC was shot and killed after police responded to a welfare call from JC’s sister, who had told them she was concerned JC was walking down a street holding a knife and pair of scissors.
JC had experienced significant mental health and drug problems and recently been released from prison.
The defence lawyer, Linda Black SC, told the court JC had ignored repeated requests to drop the knife from the officers at the scene.
The jury was shown CCTV footage, taken from a home about 65 metres away, of JC being shot while surrounded by police vehicles.
The director of public prosecutions, Amanda Forrester SC, argued the footage showed JC did not move towards the officers.
Black said her client had acted correctly by drawing his gun, rather than a Taser, when confronting a person armed with a knife.
She said the officer had never fired his gun while on duty and had less than a second to decide whether to pull the trigger given his proximity to JC.
“He was not some trigger-happy constable ... he was a brave and careful officer who took pride in his job,” Black said.
“[JC] was never, ever going to drop the weapons. She needed to be taken down; she was never going to surrender.”
After a three-week trial in the Perth district court, a jury deliberated for just over three hours on Friday before returning not guilty verdicts to both murder and manslaughter charges.
The acquitted officer – cleared of all criminal wrongdoing – remains a serving member of the WA police force, but was stood down after the shooting. A decision has not yet been made on his future.
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2021/oct/23/it-hurts-and-its-wrong-family-of-aboriginal-woman-shot-dead-by-wa-police-officer-speak-out-after-acquittal
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