Keep Packer, Send us the Judge
Kerre McIvor
[Kerre McIvor had an excellent piece in the Herald On Sunday over the weekend on privilege, crime, and punishment. Ed.]
Packer was in court after pleading guilty to assaulting Enoka Time outside a Sydney bar last November. Packer had been ejected from the bar and bashed Time in a drunken rage, before stamping on his face, leaving him with facial fractures. It was a vicious, nasty assault, and the judge sentenced Packer accordingly. He described the attack as cowardly and deplorable and said he was sick and tired of alcohol-fuelled violence in the community.
He gave Packer the maximum he could under Aussie law - two years - and denied him bail while his lawyers scrambled to mount an appeal.
Team Packer was gobsmacked. After all, this is no common thug we're talking about. This is a league player, mate. A representative sportsman. Sure, give him a fine. Maybe a little bit of community service working with kiddies. If absolutely necessary, some counselling for his alcohol abuse and his anger, but come on. Jail? That's for ordinary people.
Team Packer was so confident Russ would walk from court they hadn't even brought a change of clothes, just on the off-chance he might be sent down. His dad, Russell senior, said he was devastated and saw his son as the victim.
In the past few months, Sydney has seen several people seriously injured by being king hit - punched without warning or reason - and commentators have deplored the drunken violence. So in Team Packer's alternate reality, Russ has been made an example of when, in his dad's view, people go around doing much worse things and get a slap on the hand. I don't know that there's much worse in an assault than stamping on a man's head when he's down, but Packer senior and I will just have to agree to disagree on that one.
So, shock and horror from the Packer camp. On the other side, many New Zealanders were surprised that a judge existed with the cojones to do the right thing. So often in New Zealand, we've seen high-profile people walk away from serious charges simply because ... well, because they're high profile, I suppose. And here's this Aussie judge throwing the book at an NRL player who's really nothing more than a common thug.
Given the lame sentences handed out over the years by his Kiwi counterparts to defendants with similar high profiles within sport, no wonder so many New Zealanders were surprised that Packer was being sent directly to jail, without passing Go.
Bugger deporting Packer if and when he serves his time. Let's see if the Aussies will keep him. We'll swap Packer for the judge.
1 comment:
Couldn't agree more with the point that too many celebrities get slapped on the hand. There's an attitude that because they're big and tough they can do what they like, when basically they're just bullies. If they weren't in League or Rugby, it's hard to know where they'd find an outlet for all their thuggishness. And they're no example to the young players coming up, who see these guys as examples of how to behave on and off the field. Put more of them away and we might finally get some decent behaviour from them.
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