WA court open to manslaughter acquittal for cognitively impaired man

A cognitively impaired Aboriginal man jailed for killing a 21-year-old man in Western Australia's north looks set for acquittal after appealing.

Gene Gibson

Gene Gibson was sentenced to seven years in jail for a crime he didn't commit. He's now looking at suing the police. Source: Nine Network

Gene Gibson, who is from the remote desert community of Kiwirrkurra and speaks a dialect, is serving seven-and-a-half years behind bars for fatally striking Josh Warneke from behind as he walked home from a night out in Broome in 2010.

A series of flawed police interviews more than two years later were deemed inadmissible, forcing prosecutors to drop a murder charge and accept Gibson's guilty plea to manslaughter.
Gibson's conviction was appealed on the basis he suffered a miscarriage of justice because he did not have the cognitive ability or language skills to understand what was happening, with the 25-year-old claiming he gave a false confession.

His appeal hearing concluded in the WA Court of Appeal on Thursday, when the state told the full bench of three judges it was open to a verdict in Gibson's favour and an acquittal without a re-trial.

The judges reserved their decision.
AAP


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Published 7 April 2017 8:46am


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