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

Judicial shockers ... Latest from the trouble prone Queensland branch of the Federales ... Administrative law upsets ... Sandy Street overturned ... On the level in Canberra ... Missing aged care accountant ... Law shop managing director skewered ... Ginger Snatch reports from courtrooms around the nation ... Read more >> 

Politics Media Law Society


Polly gets a cracker ... The Parrot falls from his bully pulpit … Performances … The end of the Wharf Revue … Bruce McClintock on stage at The Onion Club … Freaks on the loose in Washington ... Read on ... 

Free Newsletter
Justinian Columnists

It's Hitlerish ... Reelection of a charlatan ... Republicans take popular vote for the first time in 20 years ... Amnesia ... Trashing a democracy ... Trump and his team of troubled men ... Mainstream media wilts in the eye of the storm ... Depravity, greed and revenge are the new normal ... Roger Fitch files from Washington ... Read more >> 

Blow the whistle

 

News snips ...


The life, loves, triumphs and disappointments of Frosty Tom Hughes ... 1923-2024 ... More >> 

Justinian's Bloggers

A trial for France ... French teacher beheaded after showing caricatures of Mohammed to the class ... Young student's false claim ends in tragedy ... Misinformation takes off on social media ... Media storm ... Religion infiltrates public life ... Trials unfold ... Hugh Vuillier reports ... Read more >> 

"Over many years, certain journalists employed by Nine (formerly Fairfax) newspapers have been resentful of our client’s prominence as a commentator on many political and cultural issues, and the malicious and concocted allegations giving rise to the imputations constitute a concerted attempt to destroy our client’s reputation. 

Following the Sydney Morning Herald's exposure ... Mark O'Brien, Alan Jones' solicitor, December 12, 2023  ... Read more flatulence ... 


Justinian Featurettes

The great interceptor ... Rugby League ... Dennis Tutty and the try he shouldn't have scored ... Case that changed the face of professional sport ... Growth of the player associations, courtesy of the Barwick High Court ... Free kick ... Restraint of trade ... Braham Dabscheck comments ... Read more ... 


Justinian's archive

Rosenblum v Foreman ... From Justinian's archive ... March 1995 ... When Rupert Rosenblum went to court over a missing house ... Memories of Carol Foreman and her backdated document ... Rocking the foundations of the admin of justice ... Read more ..


 

 

« Queen's committee sifts submissions in NSW | Main | The horizontal effect »
Wednesday
Mar122014

Stacking the deck 

Payback time in Queensland ... Attorney General's scheme to get criminal appeal judges of the right flavour ... Splitting the Court of Appeal ... Sidelining Margaret McMurdo ... Nothing very subtle here 

McMurdo P: sidelined

THERE was an interesting story in today's Bowen Hill Bugle about a scheme of Queensland attorney general, (Jiving) Jarrod Bleijie, to split the Court of Appeal.  

It's devilish stuff. 

The split would reduce the authority and remit of Court of Appeal President Margaret McMurdo. 

Apparently, the idea is to create a Court of Criminal Appeal (à la NSW). 

This would reverse the earlier consolidation of the appeal courts with the aim of allowing Bleijie to plant a judicial pal as president of the new CCA. 

Margaret McMurdo has not been consulted by the Sunshine Coast conveyancer. She has written to him saying she was "anxious to discuss the matter". 

There's been no response from Bleijieville. 

The creation of a separate Court of Criminal Appeal was floated at the bar conference on the weekend. 

There's a decided pong about the whole thing, with every indication that the scheme is "to get" McMurdo P and install a second president on a relative small bench of six appeal judges. 

In due course, we'll see an appeal court with two divisions, two chiefs, one of which is sidelined from doing criminal appeals (the area where McMurdo excels) with the other branch in step with the government's lawn-order agenda. 

The bar and the government are in furious agreement about the need for a split appeal court. 

Given the primitive quality of the Newman government's sense of wild justice this can be seen as little more than a payback for the appeal court's temerity in refusing Bleijie's appeal in the Fardon case and declaring his executive detention law unconstitutional. 

The fact that husband Philip McMurdo is president of the Judicial Conference of Australia probably doesn't help. 

The JCA issued media releases ever so gently chiding the government's pet chief magistrate Tim Carmody and Jarrod's legislation for executive detention of sex offenders. 

Come back Denver Beanland. All is forgiven. 

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.