The Weekend Post

SHE DIDN’T WANT TO GO

Murder victim’s sister welcomes DV laws

- MATTHEW NEWTON

THE grieving sister of a woman killed by her expartner hopes coercive control laws to be introduced to state parliament will give more women the strength to escape manipulati­ve relationsh­ips. Melissa Ratcliffe, the sister of mother-of-two Crystal Ratcliffe who was murdered by her de facto Ricky James Cowan, said it can be hard to get family members to safety. “She didn’t want to go,” Ms Ratcliffe recalled.

THE grieving sister of a woman brutally killed by her ex-partner hopes new coercive control laws to be introduced to parliament this year will give more women the strength to escape emotionall­y and psychologi­cally manipulati­ve relationsh­ips.

Melissa Ratcliffe, the sister of slain mother-of-two Crystal Ratcliffe, murdered at the hands of her de facto of 18 years Ricky James Cowan, hoped the laws announced this week would provide women with the tools to leave their abusive partners.

Crystal’s murder tore her family apart and rendered her two children effectivel­y orphans.

Cowan’s conduct was a textbook example of coercive control behaviour.

In the months prior to her murder, Cowan began to call Crystal incessantl­y, he would arrive at her home unannounce­d and would repeatedly threaten to kill himself.

That behaviour escalated after she told him on October 7, 2016, that she was permanentl­y ending their relationsh­ip.

There was a barrage of phone calls from Cowan, and over the next few days, in

weeks Don’t leave it for and and weeks, months and years. months, years away You’ve got to straight be on it.

Melissa Ratcliffe

passive-aggressive, jealousy-laced and at times suicidal communicat­ions and interactio­ns.

Crystal tried everything to placate him.

Two nights before her death, Ms Ratcliffe said Crystal told her eldest brother Robert “that she had a funny feeling that he was going to kill her, because he threatened her”.

“And Robert just told her to pack all her bags and everything, he’d come and get her,” Ms Ratcliffe recalled.

“And then she didn’t want to go. He couldn’t force her.”

Within a week of telling Cowan the relationsh­ip was over, Crystal was murdered in what Justice Jim Henry described as a “rage-filled” knife attack.

Cowan received 20 years imprisonme­nt in the Cairns Supreme Court in March this year in exchange for his guilty plea.

Now, in what is Domestic and Family Violence Prevention month and off the back of the state government announcing it will criminalis­e by the year’s end coercive control behaviours of the type Cowan ruthlessly subjected Crystal to, Ms Ratcliffe is speaking out in the hope that it will help others.

She understand­s how hard it can be to leave an abusive partner.

She understand­s that some people have nowhere else to go.

But she said it was important for women to take note of the first instance of manipulati­on, and leave the relationsh­ip immediatel­y if they could.

“Don’t leave it for weeks and weeks, months and months, years and years,” she said.

“You’ve got to straight away be on to it, I think. Reach out to family and friends.”

She recalled how her and Crystal and Cowan used to go nightclubb­ing when they were younger.

“It’s just funny because I didn’t see anything whatsoever, any violence from him or any bad words you know, towards her in front of me and that,” she said.

“And I think she just, you know, kept it to herself and didn’t want to tell anybody about it.

“But I think it had been going on for years.”

Crystal’s murder was especially cruel for Melissa, who had a falling out with her sister the year prior to her death.

Their fractured relationcr­easingly

ship meant Ms Ratcliffe had to have extensive counsellin­g.

“All I wanted to do is say sorry to her, and I can’t now,” she said.

Despite pleading guilty to Crystal’s murder, Cowan never answered the question that was on everybody’s lips. Why?

Ms Ratcliffe said that now, she doesn’t want to know.

She said other victims of murder and trauma want to know why. “They want to go and see that person to ask them. I don’t think I’d want to do that. In the end, we’ll never know why,” she mused.

It took more than five years to get justice for Crystal.

Despite that passage of time, Cowan didn’t have the guts to get up and explain himself in court, leaving it all up to his barrister.

“He couldn’t even turn around (in the dock) and say sorry to the children,” she said.

She wasn’t sure she would get up and read her victim impact statement at his sentencing but when she saw his cowardice, that made her want to do it even more.

“After my victim impact statement and I looked him in the eye and called him a piece of s**t, I just felt 80 per cent better,” she said.

“I don’t know – it doesn’t bring Crystal back or anything but I just felt I needed to face him and say something.”

Crystal is now buried in the Mount Sheridan Cemetery, next to her mum and dad. Ms Ratcliffe is grateful they weren’t alive to see what happened to their daughter.

“So they’re all together there. That gives me hope you know that they’re together and they’re looking after each other,” she said.

 ?? ?? Melissa Ratcliffe (left) and her murdered sister Crystal Ratcliffe. Picture: Supplied
Melissa Ratcliffe (left) and her murdered sister Crystal Ratcliffe. Picture: Supplied
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 ?? ?? Police establish a crime scene at a Woomoola St residence in Woree where Crystal Ratcliffe died after being attacked by her ex-partner Ricky Cowan in 2016. Picture: Marc McCormack
Melissa Ratcliffe (left) and her murdered sister Crystal Ratcliffe (right).
Police establish a crime scene at a Woomoola St residence in Woree where Crystal Ratcliffe died after being attacked by her ex-partner Ricky Cowan in 2016. Picture: Marc McCormack Melissa Ratcliffe (left) and her murdered sister Crystal Ratcliffe (right).

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