The Guardian Australia

Former judge to investigat­e death of Adelaide woman Ann Marie Smith in fulltime care

- Luke Henriques-Gomes

A former federal court judge will investigat­e the shocking death of Ann Marie Smith, an Adelaide woman with cerebral palsy who police say died in “disgusting and degrading” conditions last month.

The NDIS minister, Stuart Robert, on Tuesday confirmed Alan Robertson SC would lead an investigat­ion into the adequacy of the regulation of the supports and services provided to Smith, whose death has provoked outrage across the country and calls from Labor for an independen­t investigat­ion.

Smith’s death is already the focus of a South Australian police manslaught­er investigat­ion, which the force launched after detectives were shocked by the conditions in which she was found. The 54-year-old was receiving full-time care, but police have alleged she had been left in a cane chair for more than a year.

No charges have been laid, but

Smith’s carer has been sacked by the NDIS provider Integrity Care. The provider has also been fined $12,000 by the NDIS watchdog, the Quality and Safeguards Commission.

On Tuesday, Robert said Smith’s death was “absolutely shocking” and vowed the “circumstan­ces that led to her death must never be allowed to happen again”.

The inquiry will examine the “adequacy of the regulation of the supports and services provided to Ms Smith, including regulation in relation to quality and safeguardi­ng pursuant to the functions and powers of the commission­er of the NDIS Commission”.

“It is important to note the review is to be conducted in a manner that avoids prejudice to any pending or current criminal or civil proceeding­s,” Robert said.

“I welcome and fully support the actions of the NDIS commission­er and

the comprehens­ive terms of reference establishe­d for this inquiry.”

On 6 April, Smith died at the Royal Adelaide hospital from septic shock, multiple organ failures from severe pressure sores, and malnourish­ment.

A South Australian parliament­ary inquiry heard on Monday Smith’s carer appeared not to have been screened by her employer until after her death. Integrity Care had also failed four performanc­e audits in 2017, the inquiry was told. The carer had been banned from working for one state government agency, officials said.

The independen­t inquiry was announced as Robert faced criticism from Labor’s NDIS spokesman, Bill Shorten, who had called for an independen­t inquiry and said it was not good enough to “blithely handball” the case to the commission, particular­ly if its own role needed to be scrutinise­d.

Shorten welcomed the inquiry on Tuesday, but said the “devil will be in the detail”.

He said Robert should guarantee the “full findings will be released to the public” and called for the inquiry to be broadened to also examine the case of David Harris, an NDIS participan­t “who was found dead in his house more than two months after his supports had been cut off”.

The NDIA has vigorously denied any link between Smith’s death and his NDIS funding.

In a statement that outlined his knowledge of the case, Robert said on Tuesday the investigat­ion to be led by Robertson was announced by the quality and safeguards commission­er, Graeme Head.

Robert said the NDIA Act meant he had been prevented from directing the NDIS commission­er “in relation to a particular individual or provider” and that the commission’s independen­ce was “integral”.

“I was first briefed on the tragic death of Ms Smith on 14 May 2020,” he said. “Since this time, the NDIS commission­er has kept me informed of the proposed course of action.”

In response to Shorten’s criticisms and calls for an inquiry, Robert was quoted by the Sydney Morning Herald last week as saying it was “disappoint­ing Bill Shorten chooses to use the tragic deaths of people with disability to make cheap political points”.

Shorten said the inquiry should also look at whether the NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission was a “toothless watchdog”.

“There also remains a clear residual conflict of the Commission appointing the investigat­or and the investigat­or reporting back to the subject of his inquiry,” he said.

The disability royal commission chair, Ronald Sackville, said last week Smith’s treatment and death would form part of the inquiry’s work.

Anyone with informatio­n about Smiths’s death has been urged to contact Crime Stoppers on 800 333 000 or report online at www.crimestopp­erssa.com.au.

 ?? Photograph: Ben Macmahon/AAP ?? Former federal court judge Alan Robertson will lead an investigat­ion into the death in care of Adelaide woman Ann Marie Smith.
Photograph: Ben Macmahon/AAP Former federal court judge Alan Robertson will lead an investigat­ion into the death in care of Adelaide woman Ann Marie Smith.

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