11.4. The Law.

The Queensland Criminal Code (1899).


Many crimes have been committed in this matter as defined by the Queensland Criminal Code (1899). The crimes which may be directly and personally applicable to individual employees of the Queensland Health as well as Queensland Health itself include, but are not limited to, the following offences:-

  1. Section 10: Accessories after the Fact.

  2. Section 26: Presumption of Sanity.

  3. Section 75: Threatening violence.

  4. Section 87: Official Corruption.

  5. Section 92: Abuse of Office.

  6. Section 132: Conspiring to Defeat Justice.

  7. Section 297: When injury or death might be prevented by proper precaution.

  8. Section 320A: Torture.

  9. Section 322: Administering poison with attempt to harm.

  10. Section 323: Wounding.

  11. Section 328: Negligent Acts causing harm.

  12. Section 355: Deprivation of Liberty.

  13. Section 339: Assault Occasioning bodily harm.

  14. Section 354: Kidnapping.

  15. Section 358: Unlawful custody of particular persons.

  16. Section 357: Concealment of matters affecting liberty.

  17. Section 359B: Unlawful stalking, intimidation, harassment or abuse.

  18. Section 399: Fraudulent concealment of particular documents.

  19. Section430: Fraudulent falsification of records.

  20. Section 408C: Fraud.

  21. Section 541: Conspiracy to commit crime.

  22. Section 544: Accessories after the fact to offences.

Any employee of the Queensland Police Service, the Queensland Ambulance Service and Queensland Health who assists another person who is, to the person’s knowledge, guilty of an offence, in order to enable the person to escape punishment, is an accessory after the fact to the offence according to Sections 10 and 544 of the Queensland Criminal Code (1899).

In addition to the above contraventions of the Queensland Criminal Code (1899), I have reason to believe that the proper investigation of this matter may very well lead to evidence of the following further very serious crimes:-

  1. Section 200: Refusal by Public Officer to Perform Duty.

  2. Section 227A: Observations or Recordings in Breach of Privacy.

  3. Section 290: Failure of Duty to do Certain Acts.

  4. Section 245: Assault.

  5. Section 300: Unlawful Homicide.

  6. Section 302: Murder.

  7. Section 303: Manslaughter.

  8. Section 306: Attempt to Murder.

  9. Section 307: Accessory after the fact to Murder.

  10. Section 309: Conspiracy to Murder.

  11. Section 320: Grievous Bodily Harm.

  12. Section 315: Disabling in order to commit indictable offence.

Therefore, any (further) attempts to conceal or unreasonably fail to act in this matter may render all persons involved as accessories after the fact to the abovementioned very serious crimes.