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The hanging of Ray Williams - Part 1

By Dave Smith - posted Monday, 8 August 2005


“Um … great! I think that’s good,” I said. “This means you won’t go to jail, right?”

“Well, we don’t know for sure,” he said. “But I really have no choice.”

“What do you mean?” I asked.

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"What I mean is I've accepted the fact that I am going to be found guilty, no matter what I do. So it's just a question of whether I should be found guilty now or later."

Apparently, what had happened was the prosecution had gently leaked some of their evidence against Ray to his legal team. It seemed a number of former HIH employees had made submissions that incriminated Ray. The deal was if they made these submissions, they themselves would be immune from prosecution or something like that. Evidently some of these stories were pretty damning.

“It’s just the way things are,” Ray said. “Either I’m going to be found guilty now and cop a lesser penalty, or I’m going to fight on and be found guilty a few years down the track and cop a greater penalty. And frankly, I don’t know how much longer I can keep fighting.”

Ray was right. He had no choice. This is the way our legal system works. It’s a system designed to reward the clever, the powerful and the prudent, not the honest. We all knew Ray was innocent of the charges that had been laid against him, but that wasn't even relevant. Ray was doing battle with the government, the media and a vindictive public that had been lulled into believing he was a criminal. What hope did he have?

When I was a young man, I used to think it was the role of the court to bring out the truth. How naive I was! Truth has no place in our system. What takes place in a courtroom is just a battle between two parties, with the judge playing the role of referee.

What has truth got to do with it? Perhaps those who play the legal game as professionals find it entertaining. Personally, when it comes to watching people get belted, I prefer boxing. It's a lot less pretentious, there are fewer mismatches and a lot less people get hurt.

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Read part 2 here.

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Article edited by Angela Sassone.
If you'd like to be a volunteer editor too, click here.

First published on Father Dave's website in four parts.



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About the Author

Father Dave Smith is Parish Priest, professional boxer, human-rights activist and father of four. He was part of the Mussalaha (reconciliation) delegation to Syria in May 2013. Join Dave's mailing list via his main website - www.fatherdave.org - and read his updates on Syria on www.prayersforsyria.com.

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Related Links
On Line Opinion - The hanging of Ray Williams - Part 2
On Line Opinion - The hanging of Ray Williams - Part 3

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