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King-hit deaths prompt new law push
''One-punch'' assaults have claimed 90 Australian lives since 2000, mostly
in booze-fuelled bashings, a new study has found.
The victims were killed either by a single blow to the head or when falling and
smashing their heads against the hard ground after being knocked unconscious.The findings have intensified calls for
Victoria to adopt tough king-hit laws, despite resistance from the state
government.
Jennifer Pilgrim, a researcher at Monash University's
Department of Forensic Medicine, said alcohol was involved in almost
three-quarters of deaths recorded between 2000 and 2012. Dr Pilgrim said most
of the victims were knocked unconscious when they were at a licensed venue,
outside the venue or on their way home from the venue.
In more than a third of killings, the deceased and the attacker did not know
each other.
''There was a brief altercation with someone they just met five minutes ago,''
Dr Pilgrim said.
''One person throws a punch. A person goes down, hits their head and never
again regains consciousness.''
NSW had the highest number of king-hits (28), followed by Victoria and
Queensland (24 cases each).
Recently, the NSW government joined Western Australia and the Northern
Territory in pursuing one-punch laws.
The move came after widespread public disgust at the four-year minimum sentence
given to the killer of 18-year-old Thomas Kelly, who was king-hit by a young
man on a Kings Cross bashing spree.
But Victoria's Attorney-General Robert Clark said the government had no plans
for change because existing dangerous-act manslaughter laws already carried a
penalty of up to 20 years in jail.
Despite the government's opposition, Victorian families of king-hit victims are
calling for immediate law reform to ensure hefty prison sentences for
offenders.
They will rally at Manningham City Square on December
15 to demand that judges be allowed to hand down the maximum 20-year sentence
for manslaughter in king-hit cases.
''STOP. One Punch Can Kill'' rally organiser Michelle
Kleinert is close friends with a family devastated by
an alleged king-hit.
Ms Kleinert said two years spent in prison did not
equate to a life taken, yet some young people seemed to have an attitude that
''if you do something and someone dies, you'll get a couple of years and we'll
get a tattoo in jail''.
''We need to start educating people that are coming up because I think the
culture of king-hits is strengthening,'' she said.
Last weekend, three people in Queensland were charged with murder over the
alleged king-hit and bashing of a man, 45, outside a Maroochydore
kebab shop.
Missing from the 90 deaths listed in the coroner's study are recent suspected one-punch
deaths yet to be finalised in the courts.
Among the incidents not listed is the alleged manslaughter of David Cassai, 22, while he was on his way home from the Portsea Hotel last New Year's Eve.
More than 40 per cent of fatal punches happened between midnight and 6am,
according to the latest data.
Victoria Police Superintendent Rod Wilson said he had observed problems when
patrons ''hit the air'' outside after leaving bars.
Superintendent Wilson said it was the responsibility of venue operators to make
sure partygoers were consuming alcohol responsibly and screening patrons before
they were let in. ''You've got to talk to people. It's not good enough to look
at them and say 'come in','' he said.
NSW Police Superintendent Pat Paroz said perpetrators
had only themselves to blame.
''It is not 'normal to get intoxicated and then beat someone up, and we
shouldn't accept that because a person was intoxicated it somehow reduces their
level of accountability for their actions,'' Superintendent Paroz
said.
St Vincent Hospital's emergency department director Gordian Fulde
said he treated four or five ''absolutely obvious'' king-hits while working at
the Sydney hospital each Friday and Saturday night.
Professor Fulde is a supporter of a move to force pubs
and clubs to close earlier, with experts pointing to evidence that bringing
forward closing times to 3am reduces assaults by more than 30 per cent.
(2.12.2012 Sydney Morning Herald)
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