Aboriginal Legal Service of Western Australia


The Aboriginal Legal Service of Western Australia or ALSWA is an organisation in Western Australia, founded in the early 1970s, that provides legal services to Aboriginal Australians and Torres Strait Islanders. It receives financial grants from the Commonwealth Department of the Australian Attorney General and follows conditions required by that Department. Since 2011, the organization has held special consultative status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council.

History

The Western Aboriginal Legal Service was founded by Essie Coffey, George Winterton, Robert French and others. Winterton had previously been involved in providing pro bono legal advice to Aboriginals. The poverty and legal injustices suffered by Aboriginals in the area were a contributing factor in the founders becoming involved in legal representation and advocacy for them; in 1969 Aboriginals constituted 25% of the prison population in Western Australia, while being only 2.5% of the population. Curfews directed against Aboriginals were common in some areas until the early 1970s, and detention without cause and unprovoked physical attacks by the police also occurred.
In 1972 the group wrote to the Australian government asking for a small amount of money to enable a roster of lawyers to be available to represent Aboriginals locally. To their surprise, the newly appointed minister for Aboriginal affairs, Gordon Bryant, eventually responded asking how much financial support would be required from the government to provide legal representation for Aboriginals in the whole of the state of Western Australia. The service initially operated from the Aboriginal Centre located on Beaufort Street in Perth. In 1973 it had "2 lawyers, 3 Aboriginal court officers and a secretary".

Modern era

was CEO of the organisation from 1990 to 1995. By the 21st century, Aboriginals make up 40% of the prison population in Western Australia, despite still only constituting 3.5% of the population, and 65% of juveniles detained within the legal system are Aboriginals.
In 2009 the ALSWA represented a 12-year-old Aboriginal boy who was charged with receiving stolen goods after he had been given a chocolate Freddo frog stolen from a shop in Northam near Perth; Colin Barnett, the Premier of Western Australia, subsequently said that the frog had "held the whole police system up to ridicule". After missing a court date in connection with the matter, the boy, who had no previous convictions, had been arrested and held for several hours in a police cell. Peter Collins, director of the ALSWA at the time, suggested that the charges were because the boy was Aboriginal, and that the same action would not have been taken against a "non-Aboriginal kid from an affluent Perth suburb with professional parents". Northam police denied this, and said the boy had come to their attention in the past.
The charges were subsequently dropped, and an order for legal costs of one thousand Australian dollars was made in the boy's favour. The chocolate Freddo frog itself was not recovered because it had been eaten. The ALSWA maintained that the case was typical of over-policing of Aboriginal communities and especially an inappropriate eagerness to bring Aboriginal juveniles into the legal system and possible detention. It also highlighted the frequency of Aboriginal children being incarcerated solely due to failure to meet the basic juvenile bail condition of a "responsible adult" being present into whose custody they could be released.
Another case on which the ALSWA spoke out was the death in custody on 3 April 2009 of the Aboriginal community leader Mr. Ward, who was "a renowned artist and senior in customary law", as well as being chosen to represent his people on a mission to China. After being arrested in Laverton, he died of heatstroke in a van driven by a private security firm, which had been the subject of complaints over several years previously, after the temperature around him reached between on a journey of. The coroner described it as "a terrible death while in custody which was wholly unnecessary and avoidable". The Chief Executive Officer of ALSWA, Dennis Eggington, noted his disgust, stating that "We don’t treat animals like that". The security guards driving the van were fined a few thousand Australian dollars each, and no other action was taken.
Criticisms of ALSWA have included suggestions that the service works to defend Aboriginal men against all manner of charges, while doing little to help Aboriginal women and children who are sometimes the victims of violence and abuse from their menfolk. Some within the Aboriginal communities also suggested that the ALSWA did not do enough to prevent arrests of Aboriginals; and some police organisations, conservative politicians and newspapers have also spoken out against the ALSWA. There have also been political divisions within the organisation itself. The ALSWA has worked to improve interpreting services for Aboriginal defendants, although such services are still "nowhere near as comprehensive as they need to be". Despite its origins when lawyers were mainly white, ALSWA now claims to employ "the highest number of Aboriginal lawyers of any legal service in Australia".
Fiona Skyring's book describing the history of the organisation won the Western Australian Premier's Book Awards for 2011.
On 21 May 2018, it was announced that the WA state government had reconsidered the offer from the federal government to fund a Custody Notification Scheme, and that the service would be operational by the end of the year. The Custody Notification Scheme was entered into as a result of the inquest into the 2014 death of Ms Dhu. ALSWA will operate the service. In November 2018 it was announced the service would be operational in the first half of 2019. The service will cost $952,000 per year, with the Federal Government and State Government contributing $750,000 and $202,000 respectively. ALSWA will employ five lawyers and two support staff to run the service.