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CORONIAL ADVOCACY CORONIAL ADVOCACY Hugh Dillon, Deputy State Coroner & Kirsten Edwards, Barrister Criminal CLE Conference, Sydney 15 September 2012
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CORONIAL ADVOCACY Hugh Dillon, Deputy State Coroner & Kirsten Edwards, Barrister Criminal CLE Conference, Sydney 15 September 2012.

Jan 18, 2016

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Page 1: CORONIAL ADVOCACY Hugh Dillon, Deputy State Coroner & Kirsten Edwards, Barrister Criminal CLE Conference, Sydney 15 September 2012.

CORONIAL CORONIAL ADVOCACYADVOCACY

Hugh Dillon, Deputy State Coroner & Kirsten Edwards, Barrister

Criminal CLE Conference, Sydney 15 September 2012

Page 2: CORONIAL ADVOCACY Hugh Dillon, Deputy State Coroner & Kirsten Edwards, Barrister Criminal CLE Conference, Sydney 15 September 2012.

Deaths Reported in Deaths Reported in NSWNSW

•50,000 persons die annually.

•6000 reportable to the Coroner.

•240 inquests per annum.

•In 2011, 174 matters were suspended

•5600 findings made in chambers -- inquests are dispensed with.

Page 3: CORONIAL ADVOCACY Hugh Dillon, Deputy State Coroner & Kirsten Edwards, Barrister Criminal CLE Conference, Sydney 15 September 2012.

Should there be an Should there be an inquest?inquest?

Page 4: CORONIAL ADVOCACY Hugh Dillon, Deputy State Coroner & Kirsten Edwards, Barrister Criminal CLE Conference, Sydney 15 September 2012.

Six Key Statutory Six Key Statutory Issues Issues

• 1. Has someone died?

• 2. Who?

• 3. When?

• 4. Where?

• 5. Physical cause of death?

• 6. Manner? (how? circumstances?)

Page 5: CORONIAL ADVOCACY Hugh Dillon, Deputy State Coroner & Kirsten Edwards, Barrister Criminal CLE Conference, Sydney 15 September 2012.

Arguing for an inquestArguing for an inquest

Page 6: CORONIAL ADVOCACY Hugh Dillon, Deputy State Coroner & Kirsten Edwards, Barrister Criminal CLE Conference, Sydney 15 September 2012.

PreparationPreparation

Page 7: CORONIAL ADVOCACY Hugh Dillon, Deputy State Coroner & Kirsten Edwards, Barrister Criminal CLE Conference, Sydney 15 September 2012.

Roles of advocatesRoles of advocates

• Counsel Assisting• Counsel for family• Counsel for POIs• Counsel for interested

parties

Page 8: CORONIAL ADVOCACY Hugh Dillon, Deputy State Coroner & Kirsten Edwards, Barrister Criminal CLE Conference, Sydney 15 September 2012.

Three important Three important principlesprinciples

1. Fairness, natural justice

2. Relevance – limited scope of inquest

3. No judgments – fact-finding only

Page 9: CORONIAL ADVOCACY Hugh Dillon, Deputy State Coroner & Kirsten Edwards, Barrister Criminal CLE Conference, Sydney 15 September 2012.

Zero in on the issuesZero in on the issues

Page 10: CORONIAL ADVOCACY Hugh Dillon, Deputy State Coroner & Kirsten Edwards, Barrister Criminal CLE Conference, Sydney 15 September 2012.

What an inquest should What an inquest should notnot be… be…

Page 11: CORONIAL ADVOCACY Hugh Dillon, Deputy State Coroner & Kirsten Edwards, Barrister Criminal CLE Conference, Sydney 15 September 2012.

You are being watched…You are being watched…

Page 12: CORONIAL ADVOCACY Hugh Dillon, Deputy State Coroner & Kirsten Edwards, Barrister Criminal CLE Conference, Sydney 15 September 2012.

What are we on about?What are we on about?

Page 13: CORONIAL ADVOCACY Hugh Dillon, Deputy State Coroner & Kirsten Edwards, Barrister Criminal CLE Conference, Sydney 15 September 2012.

“A question which is raised by the case is how a society which would like to think of itself as being civilised, could allow a human being to be transported in such circumstances”

Alistair Hope, State Coroner Western Australia. Findings on the death of Ian Ward, March 2009