OMXUS Press

The Case for Common Sense: An Action Plan for Justice Reform in Australia

A. C. Applebee and L. N. Combe

2026

3,417 words ~13 min read 7 chapters
Read Now

Abstract

Contents

How to Use This Document Step 1: Tell the Story Step 2: The Common Sense System Step 3: How We Erode the Antiquated System Step 4: The New System — With Evidence The Timeline The Bottom Line

How to Use This Document

This document is for people with the power to act — politicians, media, academics, advocates. It is not a complaint. It is a plan backed by evidence, with a human story at its centre (shared separately, with consent), and a clear path from where we are to where the evidence says we should be.


Step 1: Tell the Story

Why the Story Matters

The Australian justice system costs $32 billion per year and fails 45% of the time. That statistic has been published, presented, and ignored for decades.

Statistics don't change systems. People do. And people don't move for numbers — they move when they can see themselves in someone else's pain.

There is a woman in Western Australia whose daughter drowned. She performed CPR under direction from emergency services. The state investigated and cleared her of any wrongdoing. Then a police officer, months later, asked her to relive the worst moment of her life. When her trauma response made it impossible for her to speak — when she put her head down and covered her ears — the officer read her grief as disrespect and charged her on the spot.

She was already cleared. She was charged anyway. What followed was a cascade of systemic failure: three days without bail, placement in the care of a family member who had abused her, a misdiagnosis in a mental health ward driven by that same abuser's narrative, forced medication with suicidal ideation as a known side effect, and a legal battle to fight a charge that should never have existed.

Her full story exists in a separate document. It is hers. She controls it. If she consents to share it, it becomes the centrepiece of this campaign — because no one who reads it and has children can look away.

What We Need

A politician — ideally Senator David Shoebridge (Greens, justice portfolio, Senate Legal & Constitutional Affairs Committee) or Senator Lidia Thorpe (independent, justice and accountability) — to tell her story in parliament, with her consent, so it enters the public record and the national conversation.

A media outlet — ideally Four Corners (ABC) or Background Briefing (ABC Radio National) — to investigate and tell the story with the depth it deserves. Not a tabloid piece. An investigation that connects one woman's experience to the systemic evidence.

Why These People

Person / OutletWhy them
Senator David ShoebridgeGreens justice spokesperson. Sits on Senate Legal & Constitutional Affairs Committee. Can refer an inquiry. Has championed wrongful conviction cases.
Senator Lidia ThorpeIndependent. Vocal on police accountability and institutional abuse. Will not soften the story for political comfort.
Four Corners (ABC)The program that changes things in Australia. Carly Hennessy investigation led to Royal Commission into institutional abuse.
Background Briefing (ABC RN)Long-form investigative. Takes stories other outlets won't touch.

How to Approach Them

Do not mass-email. Do not send the document cold.

  1. Contact the politician's office by phone. Ask for the justice policy adviser. Say: "I have a documented case and peer-reviewed evidence showing credibility assessment tools used in Australian courts are 54% accurate. The case involves a grieving mother charged after a trauma response was misread as disrespect. Can I send a brief to the adviser?"
  1. Contact Four Corners via fourcorners@abc.net.au. Subject line: "Evidence: credibility assessment in Australian courts is 54% accurate — documented case." Keep the email to 5 sentences. Offer the document. Don't attach it unsolicited.
  1. Wait for a response before sending anything. Let them come to the story. People engage with what they choose to look at, not what's pushed on them.

Step 2: The Common Sense System

What Needs to Change (and Why No One Can Argue Against It)

Every reform below follows one principle: if the evidence says the current approach doesn't work, stop doing it.

2.1 Trauma-Informed Police Training

The problem: