OFF THE WIRE
Queensland Premier Campbell Newman's government is getting tough on bikies.
They are the 1 per cent which have dominated almost 100 per cent of the government's time for the past two weeks.
And
now they could spend up to 30 years in a supermax prison, where they
will remain in their cell for 23 hours a day, without a television or
gym, and allowed just one supervised visit a week with family. All for a
charge that would net non-gang members less than half that time.
"This
will be the toughest experience that one can have in the jail system in
Australia, while still compiling with our international obligations,"
Premier Campbell Newman said.
"We have been very clear about
that, very conscious about that, but it will be a tough prison
experience and the reason is, that if we allow these people to get
together and socialise, they will subvert the prisons.
"If we allow them constant contact with relatives, they will find ways to smuggle stuff in, it happens.
"And
we are not going to allow that. We are going to do everything we can to
make sure that they go to prison and they can not conduct their
activities from behind bars and that they are ultimately controlled as a
very dangerous group of people within the Queensland prison system."
Unless they turn against their club.
If
the Crime and Misconduct Commission can't get an answer during a 'star
chamber' hearing and the five-year sentence for contempt doesn't help
loosen lips, the government is counting on its mandatory sentencing to
do the trick.
A jury will have to decide whether or not someone
is a member of a criminal motorcycle gxxg or as the government have
labelled them, a vicious lawless associate.
If they find they
are, that member will receive a sentence for whatever crime they have
been convicted of, and even if that sentence is suspended, they will
receive a mandatory 15 years on top of any other penalty.
If they are found to be an office bearer, that's another 10 years.
If
their original head sentence was for 10 years, a common penalty handed
down for drug crimes, a club president could feasibly spend up to 35
years in jail, which is longer than triple-murderer, Max Sica.
The only way out of the mandatory additional sentence is to turn informer.
"The
only way that people will not have these tough mandatory sentences
applicable to them is if they come up with information that leads to the
arrest or prosecution of others within these organisations,"
Attorney-General Jarrod Bleijie said.
"As a group they know that
if they work in a group they have protection as a group. We want them to
know that protection is no longer there. We want people to come forward
with information and we think that people will because of the deterrent
in terms of these mandatory sentences."
But Queensland Council
for Civil Liberties vice-president Terry O'Gorman said not only did the
mandatory sentencing laws turn judges into "cardboard cutouts sitting at
benches wearing wigs", they would not reap the information the
government says it wants.
"First of all, it is up to the
commissioner of police to decide whether the information an informer
offers is attractive enough - then they have to apply to have the
sentence reconsidered," Mr O'Gorman said.
"But they won't turn informer because the danger of them, or their family or friends, being killed is so great."
But
Mr Newman, who says "you would have to be mad to remain in a criminal
motorcycle gxxg in Queensland" by the end of this week, added there was a
simple fix.
"It is not worth it," he said.
"Get an honest job, hand in your colours, join a real motorcycle enthusiasts' club and just enjoy riding.
"That is what we ask you to do."
http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/queensland/new-legislation-to-make-life-hell-for-bikies-20131015-2vkyn.html