Search
This area does not yet contain any content.
Justinian News

Movement at the station ... Judges messing with the priestly defendants ... Pell-mell ... Elaborate, if eye-glazing, events mark the arrival of the Apple Isle's new CJ ... Slow shuffle at the top of the Federales delayed ... Celebrity fee dispute goes feral ... Dogs allowed in chambers ... Barrister slapped for pro-Hamas Tweets ... India's no rush judgments regime ... Goings on with Theodora ... More >>

Politics Media Law Society


Pale, male and stale ... Trump’s George III revival … Change the channel … No news about George Pell is the preferred news … ACT corruption investigation into the Cossack and Planet Show gets closer to the finishing line … How to empty an old house with a chainsaw ... Read on ... 

Free Newsletter
Justinian Columnists

Rome is burning ... Giorgia Meloni's right-wing populist regime threatens judicial independence ... Moves to strip constitutional independence of La Magistratura ... Judges on the ramparts ... The Osama Almasri affair ... Silvana Olivetti reports ... Read more >> 

Blow the whistle

 

News snips ...


The Charities Commission provides details of the staggering amounts of loot in which the College of Knowledge is wallowing ... Little wonder Bell CJ and others are on the warpath ... More >> 

Justinian's Bloggers

Letter from London ... T.S Eliot gets it wrong ... Harry cleans up in a fresh round with Murdoch's hacking hacks ... All aboard Rebekah Brooks' "clean ship" ... Windy woman restrained from further flatulent abuse ... Trump claims "sovereign immunity" to skip paying legal costs of £300,000 ... Floyd Alexander-Hunt reports from Blighty ... Read more >> 

"Creative Australia is an advocate for freedom of artistic expression and is not an adjudicator on the interpretation of art. However, the Board believes a prolonged and divisive debate about the 2026 selection outcome poses an unacceptable risk to public support for Australia's artistic community and could undermine our goal of bringing Australians together through art and creativity."

Statement from Creative Australia following its decision to cancel Khaled Sabsabi and curator Michael Dagostino as the creative team to represent Australia at the Venice Biennale 2026, February 13, 2025 ... Read more flatulence ... 


Justinian Featurettes

Damien Carrick ... For 23 years Carrick has presented the Law Report on ABC Radio National ... An insight into the man behind the microphone ... Law and media ... Pursuit of the story ... Pressing topics ... Informative guests ... On The Couch ... Read more >> 


Justinian's archive

The Saints Go Marching In ... Cash cow has to claw its way back to the LCA's inner sanctum ... Stephen Estcourt cleans up in Mercury settlement ... Amex rides two horses in expiring guarantee cases ... Simmo bins the paperwork ... Attorneys General should not come from the solicitors' branch ... Goings On from February 9, 2009 ... Read more >>


 

 

« Cunneen - latest round | Main | Bar council royalists collapse »
Wednesday
Nov192014

Letter from the Map

Ellis hanging on for pre-Christmas appeal decision ... Law Society misses out on seminar bonanza ... Solicitor involved in toilet scuffle now on trial for tickling the till ... The Map of Tasmania 

Bearing-up in the Apple Isle

Regency period

Things are bubbling along beautifully in The Map. Chinese president Xi Jinping was greeted by a Tassie Devil and Madam Peng Liyuan was presented with a purple lavender-scented toy bear at Hobart airport. 

Taswegians couldn't have been more proud as local law shops leaped aboard the China Free Trade Express, rushing to open branches in Zhengzhou, Changchun and Qingdao. 

Legal academics have been dancing in the street following Prof. Kate Warner's appointment to Government House. The new governor is keen on Tasmania's national parks and bushwalking, which makes us wonder how her elevation slipped past kingmaker Erich Abetzz, who would like to do away with as much bush as possible. 

Naturally, there is a lot of grieving that CJ Alan Blow wasn't sent to the pile on Lower Domain Road because if that had happened there would have been an opportunity for food blogger Stephen Estcourt to seize the judicial crown. 

Meanwhile, Timsy Ellis is hanging on for word from acting justice David Harper who was brought in from Victoria to hear the appeal against the DPP's conviction for negligent driving causing death. 

Viceroy-in-Waiting with Willy Hodgman

Ellis hired Yarra barrister Paul Holdenson as his brief, while NSW deputy DPP John Pickering put the crown's case. 

Pickering, in August, drew a pointed comment from the High Court for his submission in Honeysett v The Queen 

The High Court quashed Honeysett's conviction for armed robbery and said, start again.

The problem was prosecution evidence from a professor of anthropological and comparative anatomy, Maciej Hennenberg, who examined the characteristics of "Offender One" - picked up on CCTV. 

During the robbery Offender One was covered, save for a small gap between sleeve and glove. 

The prof told the trial that there were anatomical characteristics of the offender that matched Honeysett's wrist area. The CCA said that the prof's evidence was admissible because it was based on his "specialised knowledge", within s.79(1) of the Evidence Act 

The High Court said that the expert's opinion was based on his subjective impression, which gave an unwarranted appearance of science to the prosecution case. The evidence did not fall within the "opinion exception" under the Act and it was an error to admit it. 

Pickering told French CJ, Kiefel, Bell, Gagler and Keane that specialist evidence given at the trial had only been adduced to prove the appellant was not excluded as Offender One. 

However, that was not the basis on which it was submitted at the trial. 

The High Court said: 

"In this court the respondent submitted the fact that Professor Henneberg's evidence had been adduced to prove that the appellant was not excluded as Offender One. The submission should not go unremarked. The contention that Professor Henneberg's evidence was adduced to prove no more than that the appellant could not be excluded as the offender was not the basis on which it was tendered. As earlier noted, the evidence was admitted as an item of circumstantial evidence to support a conclusion of identity. This was the use made of the evidence by the prosecutor at the trial. In her closing address, the prosecutor took the jury through each of the physical characteristics of Offender One identified by Professor Henneberg ..." 

Unfortunately, none of this information about the respondent's counsel in his appeal is much direct help to Timsey. 

Cash moves across Bass Strait 

The massive Legalwise 10-pint all-day seminar last week in Hobart left many locals seething.  

Why isn't the local Law and Order Society running these seminars rather than a private enterprise outfit that sees profits leave the island kingdom and head back to Sydney (apart from a "percentage of each registration" going to the Australian Indigenous Mentoring Experience)? 

Hords of Tassie bigwigs were roped in to vent their expertise: David Gunson on ethics, Justice Helen Wood on drafting affidavits, Ass J Steve Holt on interlocutory applications, etc. 

A gift of a flash bottle of wine would have got the presenters to the podium, while the punters had to stump up $595 for the 10 points. 

Knocking off an entire year's worth of CLE in one day for under $600 rather makes a joke of the concept ongoing professional education. 

But the real angst is that the money doesn't stay in cash-strapped Taswegia. 

Allegation that solicitor tickled the till 

Hall: on his way to court

Why don't they leave Adrian Hall alone? 

Last time we reported on poor Adrian he was pitted against the cruel machinery of the Legal Aid Commission, so much so that he promised to act pro bono for a Devonport man accused of murdering someone on Christmas Day. 

Justice Stephen Estcourt later slotted the accused for 21 years, with 12 on the bottom. 

The same report mentioned that Hall has also been involved in a domestic dispute and pleaded not guilty to three counts of common assault and 24 charges of breaching police family violence orders.

It related to an alleged Christmas Eve domestic rumble in 2012 as a result of which he was accused, among other things, of grabbing his ex-partner by the ankles and pulling her off the toilet.

Now there's a fresh dispatch from northern Tassie that Hall is on trial accused of nicking $18,000 from Grant Tucker's Launceston law shop

Who said things were quiet in The Map? 

Reader Comments

There are no comments for this journal entry. To create a new comment, use the form below.
Editor Permission Required
You must have editing permission for this entry in order to post comments.