Rex Jackson | |
Motive: | Gambling debts |
Charge: | Conspiring over the release of prisoners[1] |
Conviction: | Guilty |
Conviction Penalty: | Ten years custody with a five years non-parole period (on appeal by The Crown to the Court of Criminal Appeal) |
Conviction Status: | Released |
Rex Jackson | |
Office: | NSW Minister for Corrective Services |
Term Start: | 2 October 1981 |
Term End: | 27 October 1983 |
Premier: | Neville Wran |
Predecessor: | Bill Haigh |
Successor: | Peter Anderson |
Office1: | NSW Minister for Roads |
Term Start1: | 1 February 1983 |
Term End1: | 27 October 1983 |
Premier1: | Neville Wran |
Predecessor1: | Paul Whelan |
Successor1: | Laurie Brereton |
Office2: | NSW Minister for Youth and Community Services |
Term Start2: | 14 May 1976 |
Term End2: | 2 October 1981 |
Premier2: | Neville Wran |
Predecessor2: | Jim Clough |
Successor2: | Kevin Stewart |
Constituency Am4: | Bulli |
Assembly4: | New South Wales Legislative |
Term4: | 9 July 1955 – 13 February 1971 |
Predecessor4: | Lawrence Kelly |
Successor4: | Seat abolished |
Constituency Am3: | Heathcote |
Assembly3: | New South Wales Legislative |
Term3: | 13 February 1971 – 13 August 1986 |
Predecessor3: | New seat |
Successor3: | Ian McManus |
Birth Date: | 1928 10, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Wagga Wagga, New South Wales, Australia |
Death Place: | New South Wales[2] |
Spouse: | Irene Jackson |
Rex Frederick Jackson (7 October 192831 December 2011) was an Australian politician, elected as a member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly and subsequently imprisoned for conspiracy.
Jackson was born in Wagga Wagga, New South Wales, the son of a railway fettler. He was educated at Harefield Public School and Junee, and Sutherland High Schools. He married his wife, Irene, in 1949.[3]
Jackson was a rail employee, professional boxer and printer. He was the member for Bulli from 1955 to 1971, and the member for Heathcote from 1971 to 1986, representing the Labor Party. He was Minister for Youth and Community Services from May 1976 to October 1981. Under his tenure, the department began funding youth refuges located in NSW, including Caretakers Cottage, Young People's Refuge and Taldamunde Youth Services.[4]
Jackson was then Minister for Corrective Services from October 1981 to October 1983. He was also Minister for Roads from February to October 1983.[5] He resigned his ministerial portfolios on 27 October 1983 and from parliament on 13 August 1986. He was charged with corruption and sent to trial in 1987. The District Court found that Jackson accepted a bribe of 12,000 in 1983 and that he conspired to organise the early release of three prisoners from Broken Hill Correctional Centre to meet gambling debts.[1] He was initially sentenced to serve seven and a half years in custody (with three years without parole). However, in 1988 The Crown appealed to the Court of Criminal Appeal against the leniency of the sentence. Jackson was subsequently sent to prison for ten years, with a non-parole period of five years,[1] [6] [7] serving time at Berrima Correctional Centre.
Following his early release from prison in November 1990, after serving three years and two months of his 10-year term, he returned to his Helensburgh home and was welcomed back by many in his community.[8]
For some years, Jackson operated an ice cream van with business partner Col Alexander, called "Col and Rex's Hot Dogs and Ice Cream" which regularly parked at the top of Bald Hill, a popular hang-gliding spot in Stanwell Tops, south of Sydney. Jackson's wife Irene suffered from arthritis and diabetes, and had a stroke just six weeks after his homecoming. She was hospitalised and then placed in a nursing home, dying in early 1993.[3]
Jackson died on 31 December 2011, aged 83.[9]