There’s a law that allows men to murder their wives and serve minimal time in prison. Like five years.
It’s called the provocation defence and it’s based on the idea of women “asking for it.” It’s an excuse used by men who kill women (or in many cases gay men) because they supposedly ‘provoked’ by something they did or said (it can be used by women too but this is far more rare). Like the case of Peter Keogh. He killed his ex-partner Vicki by stabbing her at least a dozen times.
But when he faced a jury in the wake of his death, all 12 jurors accepted his excuse that she provoked him by swearing. Mr Keogh served just three years and 11 months in jail.
A few moths ago, we ran a post on Mamamia on the provocation defence after Channel 9’s 60 minutes ran an in-depth segment on the defence (which is banned in Tasmania, Victoria and Western Australia, and is one of the subjects being explored in a current NSW parliamentary inquiry into the law.)
The response was to the post was so that we decided to look into it further. We spoke Dr Danielle Tyson from Monash University’s Department of Criminology. She’s recently written a book called Sex, Culpability and the Defence of Provocation.
MM: Can you explain what the provocation defence is?
DT: In those jurisdictions where it is still able to be raised, provocation is a partial defence that operates to reduce murder to manslaughter. It applies to situations where the accused ‘understandably’ loses self-control owing to the allegedly provocative words and/or behaviour of the deceased.