I
look forward to this particular individual getting his comeuppance
Cameron
Slater, fearless crusader against name suppression, just had his name
suppression lifted
ANTI-NAME SUPPRESSION CAMPAIGNER CAMERON SLATER. PHOTO / GETTY
10
May, 2016
It’s
like 10,000 Whales when all you need is a knife. However Alanis
would have styled it, today is a day for irony.
For
today is the day when we can finally report that Cameron Slater, arch
defender of open justice,has
failed in his attempt to get permanent name suppression,
after accepting diversion for charges that he tried to get a
small-time hacker to pry open a left-wing website.
Yes,
you read that right. The man who has multiple convictions for
breaching name suppression. The man who’s argued that justice
should be public. The man who claims he changed the law to make
suppression harder to get. He applied for permanent name suppression.
The
saga of The Whale, The Cops, The Hacker and His Superego was a
bizarre post-script to 2014’s Dirty Politics saga. As the hunt for
Nicky Hager’s hacker friend continued, Slater was charged with
asking Ben Rachinger to hack into The Standard blog to find out the
real identities of the pseudonymous keyboard warriors posting there.
Rachinger was charged with accepting money from Slater by deception –
ostensibly by agreeing to the hack, but then not carrying it out.
this might have languished fairly quietly in the comments section of
a blog somewhere had not Rachinger decided to go for the glory
option. He publicly claimed to be a whistleblower, convinced a TV
programme to do a story about him and claimed to have been a police
informant. Both dispute the other’s version of events. Both were
offered diversion. Slater took it. Rachinger didn’t, and his case
continues. Interim name suppression was granted. And then Slater
decided he wanted it to be made permanent. The media weren’t having
that.
Slater
argued he and his family would face extreme hardship if the
suppression were to be lifted. He said Rachinger was orchestrating a
campaign to discredit him. Claims were made about the impact on his
income, abuse he and his family would suffer, and – as he put it –
the issues that arise when the media “come for you”. But Judge
McIlraith held it did not reach the required standard of extreme
hardship, and politely declined.
Now,
I’m a generous person. Leaving aside the issue of whether Rachinger
is capable of orchestrating anything much – or even managing to get
a scientific calculator to spell out “boobies” if you turn it
upside down – perhaps Cam Slater has a point. Maybe people are out
to get him. Maybe there is a campaign to destroy his livelihood. It
must be awful some days, knowing people wish you ill. It’s hard not
to feel a tiny scintilla of sympathy.
But
then, there are Slater’s own thoughts on suppression. And his utter
lack of sympathy for others who’ve fought the same fight. His
clever-clogs attempts to flout the law, and his subsequent
convictions.
Sure,
some of the people he’s complained about were accused and convicted
of some utterly repellent crimes. And, yes, you can argue all the
live-long day about the rights and wrongs of our suppression laws –
but, right now, they are as they are.
Here
are five of Slater’s very best critiques of suppression:
“Everyone
has family. If that was a reason to provide name suppression, then
everyone should get it.”
“Continued
name suppression based on what is essentially a minor embarrassment
is only going to make media and the public want to have their pound
of flesh. This isn’t what suppression is for.”
“At
least let the oldest punishment of all – public shame – try to do
the job where nobody else has succeeded thus far.”
“Embarrassment
is part of the justice process so it can act as a deterrent.”
“Justice
must be seen to be done. This has a public component to it. And
society will enter its own judgement against the defendant along with
the legal one arrived at by the court.”
Let’s
leave the final word to the great open justice campaigner himself:
It is an essential part of a free and open society that we shall know those who have done wrong, what they’ve done, and why.
The world does not come to an end. The shame stings mind you. And it follows you for the rest of your life, as it should. Ask those two ferals that beat the crap out of Jesse Ryder for instance. But I can assure you their families still love them, they still have jobs, and their communities haven’t cast them out as outsiders.
Name suppression to protect the victims. Name suppression to protect the vulnerable. But no name suppression for anyone who may otherwise be judged by society. That is kind of the whole point of the justice system – to confess, to be contrite, to pay your dues, and to start a path of redemption.
In public.
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