No psychologists to treat dangerous offenders as domestic violence rates skyrocket in WA's Kimberley
As rates of family and domestic violence skyrocket in Western Australia's far north, court proceedings have revealed there are no psychologists available to treat offenders.
In the first three months of the year, the Kimberley recorded the highest rates of family and domestic violence offences in WA with 1,702 reported incidents.
The sentencing of a "declared serial family violence offender" last week in Broome laid bare the lack of departmental psychologists for offenders in the region.
The Broome Magistrates Court heard a 38-year-old man was facing charges of unlawful assault and wounding after he threw an empty wine bottle at a woman, chased her, and hit her from behind.
Police prosecutor Mícheál Gregg told the court the woman was "lunged" into the side of a ute hard enough to leave a dent in the vehicle.
During sentencing, Magistrate Deen Potter said there were no Department of Justice psychologists in the Kimberley for offenders to access as an intervention for their behaviour.
"Intensive and regular targeted interventions are required for [the offender] … it's something required for so many individuals," he said.
Defence lawyer Paul Tobin said his client was exposed to significant trauma and had battled alcoholism since he was 15 years old.
The man was sentenced to 10 months' jail backdated to August 2023, with a six-month restraining order in place.
Mr Tobin said there was a "concerning" lack of treatment "across the board" in the Kimberley to address the root causes of people's offending behaviour despite the high need and demand.
"One solution may be a university working with locals and designing an accredited, trauma-informed counselling course for Kimberley people to undertake to fill the service gap that exists in counselling and social work," he said.
"[It needs to be] culturally appropriate and incorporate Kimberley language."
Kimberley needs 'Aboriginal-led' solutions and co-design
Professor Victoria Hovane is a Ngarluma, Jaru and Gooniyandi woman from Broome and a registered psychologist.
Dr Hovane said psychologists could provide support to offenders and create opportunities for local-led solutions.
She said while psychology could enhance Indigenous-led solutions, it needed to be assessed to determine if it was relevant to "an Aboriginal context and worldview" and not used as the only response to family violence.
"We're talking about a complex issue here — it's multi-layered, it requires us understanding the complexity of the issue we're dealing with in order to implement effective responses," Dr Hovane said.
"We need to be designing these responses with Aboriginal communities, with Aboriginal people leading those responses, its development, implementation and delivery."
Dr Hovane said, in Aboriginal culture, gender mattered and there needed to be work with Kimberley cultural leaders to advise family violence prevention strategies for both men and women.
"We need to invest heavily in prevention, Aboriginal way, using our ways of working, our leadership, cultural structures, senior people with authority … figuring in how we create or develop prevention programs," she said.
Dr Hovane said it would be unifying for government and Aboriginal systems of law to tackle substantial issues like family violence together.
"The attorney-general could and should reach out to our law bosses we still have in the Kimberley to come together to look at how we can work in a two-way law way around these sorts of issues," she said.
Psychological intervention provided 'when required'
A Department of Justice spokesperson said family and domestic violence offenders were provided psychological intervention "when required" through a forensic psychological intervention team.
The department confirmed three offenders had been provided individual psychological interventions, including family domestic violence offending, over the past six months in the Kimberley.
"Service provision to regional areas is dependent on the assessed risk of reoffending, treatment needs, and suitability of offenders to undertake intervention," they said.
"Ensuring that intervention planning and delivery is conducted in a manner that is responsive to the unique characteristics of the offender is essential to facilitating positive treatment outcomes and maintaining ethically sound and defensible practice."