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Dr Muriel Newman
Contact Muriel:
Email: muriel@nzcpr.com
Phone 09 4343 836
or 021 800 111
PO Box 984, Whangarei
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“On the afternoon of Monday, 13 June
2006 Auckland Police received a telephone call from a staff
member of Kidz First Children’s Hospital, situated adjacent
to Middlemore Hospital in Otahuhu, advising that hospital
staff were treating two seriously injured twin infants. Their
names were Christopher Arepa Kahui and Cru Omeka Kahui. Police
went immediately to the hospital to investigate the causes and
circumstances of the twins’ injuries. That evening, the
twins were admitted to the Paediatric Intensive Care Unit at
Starship Hospital. There, the true nature and extent of their
injuries became known. On Sunday 18 June 2006, following the
withdrawal of life-support intervention, the twins died as a
result of the injuries they had received.”
This
is how the newly released Coroner’s Report into the violent
deaths of three month old Chris and Cru Kahui begins.[1] In
2006, their deaths sparked national outrage, which escalated
when family members closed ranks as the “tight 12”,
refusing to cooperate with the Police. Over a year later, in
August 2007, their father Chris Kahui was charged with their
murder, but in May 2008, a Jury found him not guilty.
In
cases like this, where there was a violent death with no-one
held responsible, the Coroners Act enables a Coroner to step
in. His role is to investigate cases where a death has
occurred in unusual or suspicious circumstances in order to
“prevent deaths and to promote justice”. The Coroner is
charged with making specific recommendations or comments that,
if drawn to the attention of the public, may reduce the chance
of future deaths in occurrences similar to those in which the
investigated deaths occurred.
In general, a Coroner will open up an inquiry
to establish the identity, time, place and circumstances of a
death, but if the case warrants further investigation, an inquest
will be held. An inquest is a judicial hearing that uses an
inquisitorial process to investigate the evidence surrounding
a death in order to find out the cause. Since the objective is
not to apportion blame, the Coroner is able to question
suspects including those who may have chosen to invoke the
“right of silence” in their criminal trial. A right to
silence does not exist in the Coroner’s Court, since its
purpose is to find out the truth behind a death rather than to
establish criminal culpability. As a result, the Coroner is
able to reach a decision based on a “balance of
probabilities”, rather than the higher “beyond reasonable
doubt” test that is central to criminal trials.
Many
countries have based their whole criminal justice systems on
this type of inquisitorial system - rather than the
adversarial criminal justice system New Zealand inherited from
Britain. France is the best known, but similar systems can be
found in Europe, Africa, South America, and Asia, with some
countries like Italy, using a combination of both types of
system.
Essentially
an adversarial justice system like our own uses a neutral
Judge (and Jury) to evaluate the evidence of a case and
determine whether, beyond a reasonable doubt, an accused is
guilty of a crime. It is the responsibility of the police and
the defence to gather the evidence and present it to the Judge
during the course of the trial, making their case for the
guilt or innocence of the accused. The system enables
discretion, including the ability for the prosecution to
decide not to proceed with a case - even if there is ample
evidence to support a criminal charge - and for the defendant
to plead guilty to avoid a trial. The court’s role is
confined to overseeing the process by which the evidence is
given, and to weighing up that evidence to determine whether
or not there is reasonable doubt. There are strict rules to
prevent the admission of evidence that may prejudice the Judge
or Jury.
In
contrast, in an inquisitorial justice system, an investigation
is usually carried out by an “independent” prosecutor or
an examining magistrate who can undertake particular lines of
inquiry that are favourable to either the prosecution or
defence in order to determine whether there is sufficient
evidence to take a case to trial. The process depends on the
integrity of this pre-trial process to seek out the truth. By
the time a case reaches trial, there is a greater presumption
of guilt than in an adversarial model. The conduct of the
trial is largely in the hands of the court, with the trial
Judge determining what witnesses to call and the order in
which they are to be heard. There are far fewer rules of
evidence and much more information is available to the court
at the outset, including an offender’s criminal history.[2]
The
right to silence is
central to an adversarial criminal justice system. It is based
on the principle that no person should be compelled to
incriminate themselves. When the right to silence is
exercised, convention holds that the Judge will instruct the
jury that they are not to draw any adverse inferences from the
fact that the accused has not testified. It is fair to say
that this rule causes significant public angst especially in
high profile cases such as the Kahui trial where Chris Kahui
chose not to testify. In comparison, in Britain the right to
silence has been downgraded so that if an accused refuses to
give evidence, the court is instructed that it "may draw
such inferences as appear proper".
Another
long-standing right that caused significant public concern was
the law relating to double
jeopardy. It meant that if new incriminating evidence
emerged after a trial in which a defendant was acquitted - or
if it became known that an acquittal had been obtained by
perjury or some illegal means - the accused could not be tried
for the same crime a second time. However, the law has now
been changed so that under such circumstances, an accused may
be tried again - providing the acquittal occurred after 26th
June 2008 when the new law came into effect. Chris Kahui’s
acquittal was on 22nd May 2008.
Notwithstanding
the ins and outs of the different approaches to criminal
justice used in the adversarial and inquisitorial systems, the
Coroner has the responsibility to look into the deeper public
policy issues surrounding the deaths under investigation in
order to make recommendations to prevent such outcomes
occurring in the future.
In
the case of the deaths of Chris and Cru Kahui, the summary of
findings showed that the twins had suffered blunt force trauma
to their heads causing traumatic brain injury. Both had
fractures to their ribs, consistent with injuries inflicted
some two weeks before their death. In addition, Chris had
fresh rib fractures and a severe fracture to his upper thigh,
while Chris was suffering from acute colitis and peritonitis.
When
it comes to responsibility for these injuries, the Coroner was
very clear: “The Court
is satisfied, on all the evidence before it, to the required
standard of proof, that the traumatic brain injuries suffered
by Chris and Cru Kahui were incurred by them during the
afternoon/early evening of 12 June 2006, whilst they were in
the sole custody, care and control of their father at 22
Courtenay Crescent, Mangere, Auckland.”
The
public policy issue at the heart of the Kahui case is the
scourge of New Zealand society – child abuse. The report
states: “Dr Nick Baker, Chair, Child and Youth Mortality
Review Committee says injury is the leading cause of death
amongst New Zealand children. Out of 24 OECD countries, New
Zealand has the highest rate for deaths from accidents or
injuries in children under 19 years. Our rate of death from
maltreatment of children under 15 years is the 5th highest out
of 26 OECD countries, with the largest proportion occurring in
infants less than 1 year of age.”
According
to the New Zealand Herald, Ministry of Health data shows that
babies under a year old accounted for half of all
hospital-recorded suspected abuse cases involving young
children in the past year. Of the 71 cases where children
younger than 4 years old were recorded as being assaulted, 44
percent of the cases were classified as Maori and 41 percent
as European. 36 of the cases involved babies younger than a
year old. These figures underestimate the real extent of child
abuse in New Zealand, since they do not record "short
stays" in emergency departments, nor the many cases that
do not make it to a hospital, let alone a doctor.[3]
The
Coroner’s findings outline a number of worthwhile public
policy changes. These include strengthening the laws to
protect children through the establishment of specialist
multidisciplinary Child Protection Teams in each Health Board
District, better training in recognising child abuse for
health and education professionals who have close contact with
children, and the mandatory reporting of child abuse by these
groups. However, much of the focus of such recommendations is
to help children once abuse has occurred. What we also need
are strategies to prevent abuse from occurring in the first
place.
Factors
that create the environment for child abuse to flourish are
well known. The report outlines some of them including poor
parental education, inadequate housing, low income, long-term
unemployment, solo parenthood, high residential mobility, poor
health, alcohol and drug dependency, poor parenting,
involvement in criminal behaviour, and young motherhood.
More
specifically, the Coroner found that CYFS had previously been
involved with both parents - Macsyna King and Chris Kahui -
before their twins were born. A range of risk factors were
identified as contributing to their tragic deaths:
-
A couple in a brief informal
relationship which led quickly to the birth of 3 children
in under a year.
-
A mother who had failed to parent
three previous children from previous relationships.
-
A history of abuse and/or neglect
pertaining to both parents when they were children
themselves
-
An unwanted pregnancy resulting in
premature twins.
-
A lack of bonding evidenced by
both parents while the twins were in hospital following
their birth but most worryingly for medical staff a lack
of bonding evidenced by the mother who would usually be
the primary caregiver.
-
An episode in hospital which was
not reported where the mother was observed reacting
angrily to her partner and being rough with a baby.
-
Financial stress.
-
Unstable living arrangements with
the family sharing a three bedroom house with another
couple and their baby.
-
A lack of support and assistance
for the mother on a day to day basis.
-
A mother who used methamphetamine
while caring for the twins.
-
A father who was often absent
because he was visiting his critically ill mother.
-
A mother who walked out on three
occasions, staying out all night and leaving her partner
to care for three children under thirteen months by
himself.
This
week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator, Dr Anthony Daniels - a
retired British doctor and prison psychiatrist - is an
acclaimed English writer and fellow of the Manhatten
Institute. Under the pen name of Theodore Dalrymple, he has
long exposed the public policy failures that create the
underclass. Dr Daniels visited New Zealand in 2006 just after
the Kahui twins were murdered and his article Family
Structure Matters was written for the NZCPR in response to
the Coroner’s report. In it he condemns the state’s
continual attack on the traditional family:
“Immense
intellectual, or at least mental, efforts have gone and
continue to go into denying the obvious, that on the whole
family stability is better for children than instability, and
that not all forms of family, or perhaps I should say
household, life are equal from the point of view of
children’s welfare. The terrible saga of the Kahui twins is
but another illustration of the obvious.”
He
concludes: “What few people will doubt is that the state, in
New Zealand as much as almost anywhere in the world, has
progressively undermined the basis of stable family life. It
has turned what was once a limited problem, the plight of the
single mother and her child or children, into a mass
condition; it is now constantly attempting to sweep up the
mess that it has left behind, by the same means that it
created the mess in the first place. The statistics show,
again for very understandable reasons, that instability of
family life is associated with all kinds of abuse of children.
The state is to much of that abuse what the pimp is to the
prostitute”. To read the full article
click here
>>>
It is an
indictment of our political system that so many of those in
leadership positions have for decades turned a blind eye to
the fragmentation of the family caused by welfare and other
misguided social policies. The results have devastated
generations of children. While the present benefit reforms
seek to discourage sole parenthood and unplanned pregnancies,
whether they will be effective enough remains to be seen. With
the government’s White Paper on child abuse due to be
released next month, one can only hope that for the sake of
our children a significant focus of future policy change is on
strengthening the family – and marriage, which still remains
the safest institution in which to raise children.
This
week’s poll asks: Do
you support a greater public policy focus on child abuse
prevention? Click here for poll >>>
FOOTNOTES:
1.Coroner G Evans, Inquest
into the death of Chris and Cru Kahui
2. Law Commission, Adversarial
and Inquisitorial Systems: A Brief Overview of Key Features
3. NZ Herald, Babies
make up half of abuse cases
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