Should the discretion of the Court under Part 3 of the Forfeiture Act 1995 be exercised?
50 I have set out above in par [45] the considerations to which the Court must have regard in deciding whether justice requires that the forfeiture rule be applied under s 11 of the Forfeiture Act. Those considerations include the effect of the application of the rule on the offender or any other person: s 11(3)(c). One such person is Ann Robb.
Gwendoline Ann Robb
51 Gwendoline Ann Robb is the fourth defendant and the older sister of the deceased. She furnished an affidavit and also gave oral evidence in support of her cross claim seeking an order under s 11 of the Forfeiture Act.
52 In her affidavit, Ann Robb gave the following evidence:
a. She and her father cared for the deceased until she was 6 years old whilst her mother was ill. She moved to live with her grandmother in Lidcombe when she was 16 years old, and shortly after the rest of the family moved to Westmead.
b. In 1975, she married and moved to Macquarie Fields where she lived until 1978 when she moved to Townsville. Whilst in Sydney, she had frequent contact with the deceased. In particular, the deceased came to her house in Macquarie Fields every weekend and all school holidays.
c. When the deceased was about 14 years old she came to live with her in Townsville for approximately 2 years and attended Heatley High School. The deceased began to present with some behaviour problems and in about August 1981 returned to live with her father in Sydney and soon after dropped out of school, left home and met George Fitter. In the 1990s the deceased qualified as a nurse.
d. From approximately early 1982, she spoke with the deceased on the phone and also in Sydney. On several occasions, the deceased complained of George Fitter's violence and abuse, and drunkenness and drug use.
e. In 1991 she ended her marriage and in late 1992 she met Peter Robb and they married in 1994 and have lived on the Atherton Tablelands since then.
f. On 29 February 2000, their father died and she spoke to the deceased about his death. They spoke frequently and the deceased said that her home life in Glossodia was "very bad" and she was still being abused.
g. Later in 2000, George Fitter was removed from the family and an Apprehended Violence Order (AVO) was issued against him.
h. In November 2000, the deceased told her that that George Fitter had become much more violent and intoxicated and she had made him leave the house and commenced proceedings for a further AVO. The deceased said that George Fitter had received a worker's compensation payout and he and Grant (the deceased's son) had blown it on drugs and alcohol.
i. In 2001, the deceased told her that George Fitter was stalking her and Grant was seeing him in breach of the AVOs, and that he was breaking into the house and stealing things and she was frightened for her life. The deceased did not tell her anything worrying about Kylie (the deceased's daughter). Kylie came to live with her in Far North Queensland for about a month in anticipation of the deceased also moving up. The deceased changed her mind without explanation and asked Fiona to be sent back to Glossodia. She was very distressed and upset about the deceased's predicament and feared for her life and often asked her to move up to live with her.
j. On 16 October 2001, she received a phone call from the police informing her of the deceased's murder and that three suspects were being questioned. She went to Sydney immediately to assist the police. She went to the deceased's house and found it in a state of extreme disarray. She also went to the morgue to see the deceased and observed her body was badly damaged and severely bruised. She attended to the deceased's funeral arrangements and has kept her ashes. From the time of the deceased's murder until August 2003, she did a lot of work on her behalf, including cleaning the house so that the mortgagee could sell it in August 2002.
k. Since shortly after the deceased's murder, she has been regularly involved in the Homicide Victims Support Group.
l. In February 2003, she filed proceedings to become the administrator of the deceased's estate but in August 2003 the Court ordered that the Public Trustee be administrator and she was reimbursed for her costs, including those of the funeral, from the estate. At the time, she was advised that the forfeiture rule may not apply as the defendants all avoided convictions on the ground of insanity. She could not bear the thought of the deceased's killers receiving the estate.
m. She made representations to Mr Paul Bodisco (an advisor of former Premier, Mr Bob Carr) and Alistair McConachie (advisor to the Attorney-General, Mr Bob Debus) as well as Mr Debus.
n. She is aware that during the criminal proceedings against the defendants, all of the defendants were represented by Legal Aid. In addition, the first and third defendant's are being represented by Legal Aid to defend the current proceedings in relation to the forfeiture rule. She understands that the defendants are not liable to repay the costs of any of the Legal Aid.
o. She has been paid $50,000 Victims Injury Compensation. However, she is aware that the defendants do not have to pay Victims Compensation, as they were not convicted.
p. She is aware that there is no more than a few thousand dollars in the estate after costs and outlays, although the superannuation fund trustee may pay the estate the superannuation accrued by the deceased. She understands that the superannuation trustee does not have to do this but will probably do so if the Court considers that justice requires the forfeiture rule to apply.
q. She feels strongly that the forfeiture rule should apply as it would be wrong for the defendants to receive anything from the estate of person they killed, especially given the circumstances of the killing. She is not bringing proceedings for the application for the forfeiture rule to receive inheritance from the deceased, and if she receives money she will make a significant contribution to the Homicide Victim Support Groups in New South Wales and Queensland.
53 In cross-examination, Ann Robb said that she was one of the driving forces behind the introduction of, and assent to, the amendments to the Forfeiture Act. She denied, however, that she was financially motivated to bring the cross-claim under to the new amendments and confirmed that she could not bear the thought of her sister's killers getting the money as well. She again stated that, if the claim was successful, she intended to give a substantial amount the inheritance to the Homicide Victim Support Groups in New South Wales and Queensland after paying her legal fees. She indicated that she had also commenced proceedings against "Pialla", the mental institution from which George Fitter discharged himself prior to the killing of the deceased and those proceedings had not yet been finalised.