Mandatory murder / Steven Schubert.
Publication details: Sydney : ABC Books, 2019.Description: 306 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : colour illustrations ; 24 cmISBN:- 9780733339394
- Mandatory murder : a true story of homicide and injustice in an outback town
- Grieve, Zak
- Nicefero, Ray
- Aboriginal Australians -- Legal status, laws, etc -- Northern Territory
- Sentences (Criminal procedure) -- Northern Territory
- Justice
- Trials (Murder) -- Northern Territory
- Murder -- Investigation
- Mandatory sentences -- Northern Territory
- Murder -- Northern Territory -- Katherine
- 364.1523099429 23
- 345.9429/0253099429 23
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item reserves | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | Melbourne Athenaeum Library | Non-Fiction | 364.152 SCH | Available | 069552 |
"A true story of homicide and injustice in an outback town" -- Cover.
"At first it looked like a swag," said the grader driver who found the body just off the road outside the outback town of Katherine. Police identify the dead man as Ray Nicefero, who'd recently appeared in court for aggravated assault and breaching a domestic violence order. Three days later, the constabulary rounds up three young local suspects: Christopher Malyschko, 24, Darren 'Spider' Halfpenny, 22, and 19-year-old Zak Grieve, who happens to be Indigenous. A month later, Bronwyn Buttery, Ray's former partner and Christopher's mother, is arrested. But when the accused face court in the rough justice system of the Northern Territory, it soon becomes apparent there are few certain, provable facts to be had. The outcome of the case is no less murky, thanks to the NT's mandatory sentencing laws, which, the judge says himself, "brings about injustice". What is indisputable is that the only man that the judge believed to have not been at the scene of the crime receives the longest sentence. "Mandatory Murder" is the compelling true story of a murder in an outback town in 21st century Australia and the extraordinary aftermath. The book raises important questions, including how a man who didn't attend a murder can go to jail for 20 years.