Shane Drumgold Explained

Shane Drumgold SC
Birth Name:Neville Shane Drumgold
Nationality:Australian
Occupation:Lawyer, Barrister
Period:1 January 2019 - 6 August 2023
ACT Director of Public Prosecutions
Website:https://www.dpp.act.gov.au/
Education:BEc (CSU)LLB (Hons) (UC)MIntLaw (ANU)
Alma Mater:Charles Sturt University University of Canberra Australian National University

Shane Drumgold SC (born 1965) is an Australian Barrister, Adjunct Professor of law, and was the Australian Capital Territory's fifth Director of Public Prosecutions. He was appointed to this role on 1 January 2019 by the Attorney General Gordon Ramsay, succeeding Jon White SC, and resigned from the role on 6 August 2023.

Early life and education

Shane Drumgold was born Neville Shane Drumgold in Sydney, New South Wales. Drumgold grew up in the public housing estate of Mount Druitt in Sydney’s outer western suburbs. He attended Lethbridge Park Public School, then Shalvey Public High School. In 1978 his family relocated to Taree, New South Wales. Here he attended Taree High School and then Chatham High School. Drumgold’s father Neville Drumgold suffered severe mental illness and committed suicide in 1987. This had a significant impact on Drumgold’s life. He has referenced the suicide of his father and the death of his younger brother, at three years of age, in his book Palm Tree Justice.[1] He has also spoken about both events in media interviews[2] and public speeches.[3] [4]

Drumgold commenced work for Australia Post in 1984; in 1993 he completed an Australia Post sponsored Certificate in Business Management through Charles Sturt University. In 1995 he was admitted to the Bachelor of Business Economics degree at Charles Sturt University and graduated in 1999.

In 1999, Drumgold applied to the Australian National University and the University of Canberra for admission to the Bachelor of Laws degree. He was rejected by both. Drumgold then enrolled in the Diploma of Justice Studies at the University of Canberra. After successful completion of the first semester he was admitted to the Bachelor of Laws degree at the same University in 2000. He graduated with honours in 2001. In his occasional address to a 2021 graduation class, he noted that following his graduation he was employed as both a prosecutor at the ODPP and tutor at the Australian National University:

I cannot explain the surreal experience of standing before a class of University students, teaching them criminal and evidence law, in a degree program they were accepted into the same year I was rejected. This is one of many experiences that has instilled in me the value of keeping one’s eye on the target, regardless of the external narrative. Do not outsource your sense of agency to others, because they do not know your potential like you do and have no interest in re-writing your future.

In 2001 Drumgold was accepted into the Master’s in International Law Degree at the Australian National University. He graduated in 2004.

In 2003 Drumgold was awarded a Churchill Fellowship, studying restorative justice in indigenous communities in the USA, Canada and New Zealand. He published his report in 2004.[5]

Career

Drumgold left school in 1980 at the age of fifteen, starting as a telegram boy for Australia Post in April 1984 in Penrith, New South Wales. He then worked as a postman in Gloucester, New South Wales from September 1986. He was promoted from postman to postal clerk and then to senior postal clerk. In September 1994 he was promoted to postal manager at the Canberra Parliament House post office, then the Canberra Civic post office. In September 1999 he resigned from Australia Post to pursue full time legal studies.

Between December 1999 and January 2001 Drumgold worked as a part time legal officer at the South Eastern Aboriginal Legal Services in Canberra, and in 2001 he published a study on indigenous custody rates.[6] In April 2002, Drumgold commenced working as a Prosecutor at the Australia Capital Territory Office of the Director of Public Prosecution. He worked part time as a tutor at the Australian National University. He continued this role until his appointment as Director of Public Prosecutions in January 2019.

In 2006 to 2007 Drumgold took leave from the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions to work as a Public Defender in the Solomon Islands. This was part of the Regional Assistance Mission to the Solomon Islands during which time he defended murder trials:

He defended matters arguing for a stay or prosecution based on a post-civil war amnesty Regina v Su’u & Ors [2007] HCSI-CRC 333 of 2006.[8] He was lead counsel in a case seeking a High Court declaration of unlawful conduct by the then Australian dominated Solomon Islands Corrective Services in Ross & Ors v Attorney General [2006] SBHC 573 of 2005.[9] Drumgold later published a book discussing many of these cases.

Drumgold has worked as a prosecutor in the Australian Capital Territory for the last twenty years. During this time he prosecuted many of the Territories most serious murders, attempted murders, and conspiracies to murder:

The matter of R v Rappel later became the subject of the 2020 book, The First Time He Hit Her.[10] In 2019 Drumgold was appointed Senior Counsel[11] and was selected by the Australian Bar Association to deliver the Silks address at the High Court of Australia Gala Silks Dinner in February 2020.[12] An article in the New South Wales Bar Association Bar News later noted “[Drumgold] delivered a speech so inspiring and eloquent, that it drew a standing ovation. Among other things, Shane spoke of our responsibilities as role models and our obligation to build a profession that not only embraces but celebrates diversity in all of its forms.”[13]

On 1 January 2019, Drumgold was appointed the Australian Capital Territory's fifth Director of Public Prosecutions.[14] [15] Drumgold was criticised for his decision not to proceed with charges against a man who helped his wife commit suicide on public interest grounds in the matter of Police v O'Riordan.[16] [17]

Shane Drumgold retired as ACT Director of Public Prosecutions in August 2023 accepting that his position had become 'untenable' after a 600-page report of inquiry into the prosecution in the Brittany Higgins rape allegation case found 'several serious findings of misconduct' against him. Section 14B of the Inquiries Act allowed the ACT Government up to one month to consider the response and consult those mentioned in the report, however it was reported on widely by The Australian newspaper after Walter Sofronoff admitted that he provided a copy to The Australian newspaper. The ACT Government advised it was investigating whether the leak could be found to be illegal.[18] The findings included that Mr Drumgold deliberately misled the court, and misused legal professional privilege to avoid disclosing exculpatory evidence to the defence, all findings that Drumgold has strongly disputed.[19]

Drumgold challenged the Sofronoff report in a judicial review before the ACT Supreme Court.[20] The court found that extensive communications with columnist Janet Albrechtsen from The Australian newspaper gave rise to an impression of bias.[21] Evidence tendered in the judicial review, revealed that prior to prematurely providing the final report to The Australian columnist Janet Albrechtsen, Sofronoff had 273 behind the scenes communications with her, including 71 phone calls of which 51 were personally with Ms Albrechtsen totalling some 11 hours and 27 minutes in phone calls. It was further revealed that Albrechtsen flew to Brisbane for a private lunch with Sofronoff. [22] It was reported that this was in stark contrast to Sofronoff's dealings with other media.[23] On 5 April 2024, the ACT Integrity Commission published a media release, announcing that it was looking into the conduct of Sofronoff.[24] On 13 May 2024, Integrity Commissioner Michael Adams KC released a statement stating that after a preliminary examination, he suspected on reasonable grounds, that Sofronoff's conduct may constitute corrupt conduct and he had launched an investigation.[25]

Personal life

In 1983, at eighteen years of age, Drumgold married his first wife, who was 16-year-old and they subsequently had two children. Drumgold divorced in 1996.[26] In 2003 Drumgold married again and is the father two children.

Drumgold was involved in the sport of boxing; winning a national gold medal at the Australian Masters Games in Adelaide, South Australia in the light welterweight division in 2011 and in 2013 in Geelong, Victoria in the welterweight division.[27] He is a former director of referees and judges for boxing, Australia Capital Territory and has officiated at national boxing competitions. He retired from the sport after the 2015 National Championships in the Gold Coast, Queensland Australia.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Drumgold, Shane. Palm tree justice : inside the Regional Assistance Mission to the Solomon Islands (RAMSI). 2011. S. Drumgold. Gil Garcon. 978-0-646-56772-3. Amaroo, A.C.T.. 775600466.
  2. Web site: Pryor. Sally. 2018-08-18. Plato helped Shane move from childhood trauma to a law career. 2021-07-01. The Canberra Times. en-AU.
  3. Web site: Occasional Address, University of Canberra April 2021.
  4. Web site: 2020 Silks Dinner – Speeches. 2021-07-01. austbar.asn.au.
  5. Web site: Churchill Trust. 2021-07-01. www.churchilltrust.com.au.
  6. Web site: Drumgold, Shane --- "State and Territory Implementation of the Recommendations of the Royal Commission: Australian Capital Territory" [2001] IndigLawB 30; (2001) 5(8) Indigenous Law Bulletin 7]. 2021-07-01. www5.austlii.edu.au.
  7. Web site: Regina v Yamalo [2006] SBHC 85; HCSI-CRC 169 of 2005 (23 May 2006)]. 2021-07-01. www.paclii.org.
  8. Web site: Regina v Su'u [2007] SBHC 144; HCSI-CRC 333 of 2006 (1 March 2007)]. 2021-07-01. www.paclii.org.
  9. Web site: Ross v Attorney General [2006] SBHC 141; HCSI-CC 573 of 2005 (21 November 2006)]. 2021-07-01. www.paclii.org.
  10. Book: Lemon, Heidi. The first time he hit her. 2020. 978-0-7336-4376-7. Sydney, N.S.W.. 1152881340.
  11. Web site: Media Release 2019 Silk announcement.
  12. Web site: 2020 Silks Dinner – Speeches. 2021-07-01. austbar.asn.au.
  13. Web site: Australian Bar Association High Court Silk Bows – 3 Feb 2020 BarNews. 2021-07-01. barnews.nswbar.asn.au.
  14. Web site: Corporate=. ACT Director of Public Prosecutions; PositionTitle=Web Manager; SectionName=. 2019-08-01. The Director of Public Prosecutions. 2021-07-01. www.dpp.act.gov.au. en.
  15. Web site: Back. Alexandra. 2018-12-11. Shane Drumgold announced as new ACT DPP. 2021-07-01. The Canberra Times. en-AU.
  16. Web site: Williams. Elliot. 2019-07-02. Dropped assisted suicide case not a green light for mercy killings. 2021-07-01. The Canberra Times. en-AU.
  17. Web site: 2019-07-02. Husband who helped terminally ill wife 'have a quick and painless' death cleared. 2021-07-01. www.abc.net.au. en-AU.
  18. https://www.afr.com/politics/federal/sofronoff-could-face-integrity-commission-probe-and-charges-20230807-p5dugc
  19. News: Karp . Paul . 2023-08-07 . Sofronoff report: ACT inquiry makes serious misconduct findings against former DPP Shane Drumgold . en-GB . The Guardian . 2023-08-21 . 0261-3077.
  20. https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2023/aug/29/shane-drumgold-is-taking-legal-action-over-the-sofronoff-inquiry-what-could-happen-next
  21. https://www.courts.act.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0003/2408133/Drumgold-v-Board-of-Inquiry-Ors-No.-3-2024-ACTSC-58-certified.pdf
  22. Web site: Could Janet Albrechtsen have swayed Walter Sofronoff? . 17 February 2024 .
  23. https://the-riotact.com/letter-from-the-editor-the-judge-the-journalist-and-the-teenage-crush-paid-for-by-the-act/745230
  24. https://www.integrity.act.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0005/2428754/Media-Alert-5-April-2024.pdf
  25. https://www.integrity.act.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0007/2450419/Media-Update-13-May-2024.pdf
  26. Web site: Late Risers: School Dropouts Who Made It Anyway . 2021-08-04 . en-AU.
  27. Web site: Boxing .