The Cairns Post

UNBEARABLE PROCESS FOR CRIME VICTIMS

Are my rights less because of the year it happened? Is my trauma any less because of the years I was abused.

- Bronwyn Farr Leesa Michaud

Cairns woman Leesa Michaud bravely came forward to police and shared a horrific story of sexual abuse by her stepfather in Innisfail lasting from 1972 to 1982 – and found herself in a quagmire trying to access victim assistance.

The state government inquiry into support provided to victims of crime, instigated by State MP for Cooper, Jonty Bush, whose sister was murdered, sat in Cairns on Wednesday and Ms Michaud was among those to give evidence.

She said she was told because the offences took place before 2009, a guilty verdict was required – after 2009 it became sufficient to have reported the crime.

Ms Michaud said she was savagely cross-examined in a prerecorde­d interview before the court case of her abuser, who died earlier this year just weeks

before facing court on 10 sex abuse charges.

She said she was not warned defence counsel had access to all of the prosecutio­n material, including her medical history and that of her two autistic children, and that a lawyer should have been appointed for her.

“They said I’m not entitled to apply to victims assistance for anything, not even mental health treatment – it shouldn’t matter what year it happened, are my rights less because of the year it happened?” she said.

“Is my trauma any less because of the years I was abused.

“You finally get the courage to seek justice only to be told ‘sorry, you’re on your own’.

She said while giving evidence at the pre-hearing, she felt “very confused and very alone” and a lawyer had since made disparagin­g remarks about her on social media.

“He is telling the world my story keeps changing and I am not to be believed, but I thought it was a closed court room and there were suppressio­n orders,” she said.

Ms Michaud said she was seeing a psychiatri­st but stopped because she feared it would be used against her.

She also slammed the court system for light sentences for domestic violence offences.

“How many times do you keep arresting somebody?”

Another woman gave harrowing evidence where she alleged her nine-year-old son was among several children in the neighbourh­ood repeatedly violated by a child who was in residentia­l care but subsequent­ly returned to his family.

She said two detectives arrived at her unit and told her that her son had been the victim of repeated attacks over a year.

“My son made a statement, there was no support, no help, he was just a number and still is,” she said.

She said the police did not make her aware of support services available.

“The predator’s family is together, mine is torn apart, he has a home, I am homeless,” she said.

“I have not been told what the charges are, I can’t even get hold of the detective.

“I found up he was locked up and released after three months, and I found out because he sent an Instagram message to my niece.

“My son’s rapist has more rights that my son does – child safety massively failed my child,” she said.

Victims of crime who attended complained the event had been poorly publicised and they were not aware they could attend and make submission­s.

The inquiry panel almost outnumbere­d members of the public, with nine MPs and other bureaucrat­s in the small boardroom at the Pullman Internatio­nal. Aaron McLeod of the Crime and Justice Action Group also gave evidence.

My son’s rapist has more rights than my son does. Child safety massively failed my child. Inquiry attendee

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