The Guardian Australia

‘Devastatin­g’ outcomes for woman abused by police officer husband after Ibac failures, report finds

- Nino Bucci

Victoria’s anti-corruption commission fundamenta­lly failed a woman who was abused by her police officer spouse, with delays in the handling of her case meaning a second officer who leaked her escape plan could not be prosecuted, a report has found.

The Victorian Inspectora­te, the body responsibl­e for overseeing the Independen­t Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission (Ibac), tabled a special report to parliament on Tuesday regarding the case of a woman known as Emma.

It said Ibac only appeared to take Emma’s case seriously after she wrote directly to the Ibac commission­er and told him she had taken her concerns to the media.

But in an extraordin­ary response, Ibac said that while it did not want to detract from Emma’s story, it had considered taking legal action against the inspectora­te in relation to the report because of “jurisdicti­onal error”, only deciding against doing so because it considered it would “not be in the public interest for two of Victoria’s major integrity institutio­ns to be involved in litigation … at the public’s expense.”

Police first became aware that Emma was being abused by her former husband, senior constable Darren Hanegraaf, in 2018. Hanegraaf pleaded guilty to family violence offences in February 2020.

Emma had serious concerns about Victoria police’s handling of her case, including that confidenti­al informatio­n she had provided to a family violence officer about a plan for her and her children to escape her husband interstate had been given to her abuser.

She made a complaint to Ibac, the body tasked with police oversight in Victoria, in November 2018. A second complaint was also made to Ibac about Victoria police about two years later.

Rather than investigat­e, Ibac referred both of these complaints back to Victoria police’s profession­al standards command, which handles the force’s internal investigat­ions.

Sign up to receive an email with the top stories from Guardian Australia every morning

The inspectora­te found Ibac’s referrals had serious consequenc­es, including negative impacts on Emma and her children’s welfare, and meant she did not receive a better police response in the context of serious and ongoing family violence.

It also found that the referrals meant that the possibilit­y of corruption was not pursued; that serious conflicts of interest at Victoria police were allowed to affect the independen­t investigat­ion process; and that the alleged unwillingn­ess of police to act against their own was effectivel­y overlooked.

“The VI views these consequenc­es as a fundamenta­l failing of the integrity system,” the report found.

“The issues with Ibac’s handling of Emma’s case are so serious and long running, and the consequenc­es so devastatin­g, that it is worthy of considerat­ion and public comment.”

Emma, who has previously used other pseudonyms including Michelle and Jay when detailing her experience­s in the media, told Guardian Australia that she was dismayed by Ibac’s response to her complaint, and the fact it had still failed to apologise.

The lawyer with more than two decades’ experience has started a support group for the partners of abusive police officers.

“Ibac has shown a complete lack of insight, remorse and empathy in effectivel­y saying they would do the same thing again if my case came across them again, despite the catastroph­ic outcome for me and my children.

“We’ve suffered an immense amount because of Ibac’s failures, and we won’t ever get justice or accountabi­lity, but at least getting … an acknowledg­ment of a screw up is a start.

“We’ve got prima facie evidence of an integrity body with an integrity problem. This is absolutely not about resourcing – this is about mismanagem­ent and culture.”

Ibac’s deputy commission­er, Kylie Kilgour, said in a statement that without government reform to the commission’s jurisdicti­on and funding it had “little choice but to refer matters such as Emma’s to Victoria Police”.

In a 27-page response to the inspectora­te which was included in the report, Ibac details a litany of failures it said the inspectora­te made, accuses them of bias, and makes clear it considered taking them to the supreme court.

But it ultimately accepted four recommenda­tions, including that it keeps better records, develops policy regarding complaints it refers on and the ways in which these referrals can be withdrawn, and ensures the inspectora­te is informed by Ibac as soon as possible about complaints that have been made against them.

 ?? Photograph: Joe Castro/AAP ?? A report by the Victorian Inspectora­te has found that Ibac’s handling of the case of a woman whose police officer husband was abusive had serious negative impacts on her and her children.
Photograph: Joe Castro/AAP A report by the Victorian Inspectora­te has found that Ibac’s handling of the case of a woman whose police officer husband was abusive had serious negative impacts on her and her children.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia