Craig Minogue

Craig Minogue

Craig William John Minogue
Born

1962 (age 5354)


Australia

Occupation Convicted felon
Criminal charge Murder
Criminal penalty Life imprisonment with 30-year minimum.

Craig Minogue (born 1962) is an Australian prisoner, convicted for the Easter Thursday 27 March 1986 bombing of the Russell Street Police Headquarters in Russell Street, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, Minogue was sentenced to life imprisonment, with a non-parole period of 30 years. Minogue is currently serving his sentence at Marngoneet Correctional Centre, in Lara, near Geelong, about one hour's drive from Melbourne. In 2012 Craig was awarded his PhD in applied ethics, human and social services by La Trobe University.[1]

Russell Street Bombing

The Russell Street Bombing for which Minogue was initially imprisoned occurred at 1 pm on 27 March 1986. The blast killed 21-year-old Constable Angela Taylor and left 22 people injured and caused massive amounts of damage to the Russell Street Police Headquarters and surrounding buildings, with damage estimated at over a million dollars.

Prison life

Minogue has initiated many legal challenges against the Victorian government, mostly concerning his treatment while imprisoned. In 2002 Minogue applied unsuccessfully to the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal (VCAT) seeking copies of prison management and operation manuals.[2] His request was refused, but he was granted access to limited information and restricted to viewing such information while within the prison library. This decision has been widely criticized by academics and lawyers as promoting a lack of administrative transparency in the prison system and creating a situation where the rules that prisoners are supposed to abide by are concealed from them.[3]

In 2005 Minogue, who entered the prison system illiterate, completed his Bachelor of Arts Degree with Honours from Deakin University. In the same year he was accepted as a PhD. student at La Trobe University, the first prisoner in Australia and one of the few in the world to do so.[4][5] Minogue uses his web site to post information about his academic work.

In a coronial inquest into deaths in the fire at the prison Minogue gave evidence over three days. At the completion of the inquest the State Coroner found Corrections Victoria was, in his words, "moribund and corrupt". A book by Monash University academic and historian Dr. Bree Carlton, Imprisoning Resistance, examines the prisoner resistance which led to the Jika Jika fire.[6]

Other publications

Human Rights Test Cases

References

  1. It is currently unavailable to the public
  2. Minogue v Department of Justice (2004) VCAT 1194 (25 June 2004)
  3. Edney, Richard,(2005) 'Importance of administrative transparency in the correctional context: Knowing the rules', Australian Journal of Administrative Law, Vol 12, pp. 163–174
  4. 'Russell St bomber seeks transfer for PhD', the Age, 2004
  5. "PhD prisoner won't leave maximum security". Age. Fairfax. 8 November 2004.
  6. Imprisoning Resistance, Life and Death in an Australian Supermax, Sydney Institute of Criminology, Sydney 2007

External links

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