UPDATE: Paul McCuskey, the man who was given a bravery award for his work in the black Saturday bushfires, has been stripped of his award after it was revealed he was in jail for beating his wife.
The Royal Humane Society voted unanimously to strip the Country Fire Authority volunteer Mr McCuskey of his medal on the back of a petition signed by 18,000 people and a call for action from Governor General Quentin Bryce.
Mamamia previously reported:
He hit his wife in the head, dragged her from a car and kicked her pregnant stomach while she screamed: “Stop it Paul, the baby!” She later miscarried. He kicked her in the head and mopped blood from the floor but not from her face. He kicked so hard she was left permanently blinded in the left eye.
But he also saved the life of a 73-year-old woman and her pets during the Black Saturday fires.
So should he keep the bravery award he received for his efforts?
The Governor General doesn’t think so.
Quentin Bryce has written to the Royal Humane Society asking them to review their decision to give Paul Francis McCuskey an award for bravery. Mr McCuskey was among a group of firefighters who braved treacherous, life threatening conditions and used handsaws to clear burning trees in an effort to save the woman during the 2009 fires.
He was in jail serving a minimum three years when he received the honour this year.