‘Torturous behaviour’: hundreds join class action against Western Australian juvenile justice centre

Current and former Banksia Hill inmates allege they were subjected to human rights breaches including forcible strip-searches

Hundreds of current and former detainees of Western Australia’s only juvenile justice centre will take part in a class action against the state government, alleging they were subjected to forcible strip-searches and prolonged solitary confinement, and that one girl was forced to have a contraceptive implant.

The government has faced harsh criticism over conditions at Banksia Hill detention centre, amid ongoing reports of self-harm and suicide attempts. In July, 17 children were transferred to a special wing, known as Unit 18, of the maximum security Casuarina men’s prison, after cells were destroyed.

Lawyers for Levitt and Robinson solicitors, who have filed the lawsuit in the federal court, said compensation could run into the tens of millions of dollars, with 600 active claimants.

Solicitor Stewart Levitt argued the state government has breached its duty of care to thousands of children between 1997 and June 2020, the date of the complaint.

“There are potentially 6,000 claimants and of those about 600 have been directly in touch with us on this and provided statements and registered as clients,” Stewart Robinson said.

“If you took 6,000 people at $50,000 each; you’re looking at a lot of money,”

He said that children had been subjected to “torturous behaviour” including lockdowns, a lack of education and a lack of care for those with disabilities.

He said one teenage girl was forcibly given a contraceptive implant while at Banksia Hill and other detainees were strip-searched.

“It includes extremely protracted periods of sensory deprivation, being confined to small cells without clothes – just a smock – food delivered on the floor and, sometimes, even less than an hour outside of their cell a day. This is for months on end.”

Levitt said they are alleging the government breached the human rights of children as young as 10, a majority of whom are Aboriginal, contravened the Disability Act and was counter to the state’s Young Offender Act.

“They did so by failing to assess the children when they entered the facility and failing to report or diagnose the conditions for which they were suffering and to treat those conditions appropriately,” he said.

The mother of one of the claimants said her 14-year son was subjected to trauma, solitary confinement and “abuse” as well a lack of support while inside Banksia Hill and Unit 18.

Her teenage son was the young boy shown being forcibly restrained and “folded up” by youth justice officers in footage recently broadcast by the ABC and the West Australian.

The practice is being phased out after concerns over safety risks.

“Seeing that footage made me sick to my stomach,” said the woman, who cannot be named as it would identify her son.

She welcomed the class action but said no amount of money will compensate for what her son endured. She said her son was subjected to prolonged lockdowns and lack of care while inside the detention centre, and that he had self-harmed.

“Money ain’t gonna recover what happened to my son, from the trauma that he suffered. I am going to work with him on that now.

“He was a bright light, an outgoing young boy [but] as soon as he went inside [Banksia Hill] from 12 to 14, I sort of lost my son,” she said.

She said her son’s mental health deteriorated in Banksia Hill and he became withdrawn.

“I noticed his injuries and seen his cut marks. I tried to help him out as best as I can while he was in that place … I thought I lost him, I told him that he had a whole family that loved him, that supported him and he didn’t do it again.”

The boy, who turns 15 in January, will spend his first Christmas and birthday at home with his family since his release.

“He’s doing OK … he’s doing online study every second day and he’s trying.”

A spokesperson for the Department of Justice declined to comment, saying “it would be inappropriate to comment as the matter is before the court”.

Contributor

Sarah Collard

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Aboriginal children ‘kept in detention’ despite being granted bail in Western Australia
Exclusive: Aboriginal Legal Service says it has ‘grave concerns’ government department failed in duty to find the children suitable accommodation

Calla Wahlquist

28, Dec, 2021 @2:46 AM

Article image
Children locked in cells and security footage taped over at youth detention centre
In a damning report, Western Australia’s inspector of custodial service finds conditions at Perth centre similar to those at Don Dale

Calla Wahlquist

18, Jul, 2017 @8:10 PM

Article image
Indigenous incarceration: turning the tide on colonisation's cruel third act
In a new Guardian series, we explore what can and is being done to change the statistics that shame Australia

Calla Wahlquist

20, Feb, 2017 @3:08 AM

Article image
Indigenous groups welcome Northern Territory raising criminal age but say 12 still too young
NT first jurisdiction in Australia to lift age while Aboriginal advocates and human rights experts continue push for at least 14

Sarah Collard

30, Nov, 2022 @4:07 AM

Article image
‘The system’s broken’: the crisis gripping Australia’s juvenile justice centres
There are calls for urgent reforms across the country, where some jurisdictions incarcerate children as young as 10

Sarah Collard

09, Oct, 2022 @4:30 PM

Article image
Keeping clear of prison: 'I can't go back in there'
Noongar 18-year-old Ben Hurst finally has a clean slate after being under youth justice orders for most of his teenage years

Calla Wahlquist

21, Feb, 2017 @12:13 AM

Article image
Funding for communities, not prisons: the promise of justice reinvestment
Preventing crime starts with data-informed, community-led solutions that address issues of grief and loss, and reconnecting to culture and country

Alistair Ferguson and Sarah Hopkins

23, Feb, 2017 @1:49 AM

Article image
Western Australia rolls out lifesaving hotline to address Indigenous deaths in custody
State adopts royal commission recommendation requiring police who detain an Indigenous person to call the Aboriginal Legal Service

Calla Wahlquist

01, Oct, 2019 @2:01 PM

Article image
Indigenous 11-year-old released from Don Dale detention centre as lawyer slams incarceration of children
Lawyer calls for ‘lawful, peaceful civil disobedience’ in response to ‘disgraceful’ locking up of children around the country

Stephanie Convery

21, Dec, 2021 @3:58 AM

Article image
'I realised I never was able to help one child': where the justice system fails
Cathy McLennan, who represented Indigenous young offenders as a barrister for two decades, says real solutions can only be found outside the courtroom

Joshua Robertson

21, Feb, 2017 @12:19 AM