Monthly Archives: December 2009

The killing of little John Ashfield: the details that the legal system managed keep unpublished to protect him – and his killers.

I have already provided a link to this story previously but decided to reproduce it here because it is relative to something I have had issues with for a long time. Suppressing details to supposedly ‘protect’ the victim ( a child) when actually the only one’s who profit are the killers. John Ashfield was only six years old when he was beaten to death and one of the many outrages following this evil crime was the law passed in NSW in 2004 that made it an offence to publish details about a child victim who had died. In doing this the killer/s also received anonymity and thus protection. We have the wonderful NSW Homicide Victims Support Group to thank for lobbying for the abolition of this disgraceful Act – and it now has been. John is no longer around to be hurt anymore – but we can make damn sure his killers will pay for their evil behaviour for the rest of their lives. This is the story of what happened to six year old John in his own home at Shorland Place, Nowra, on that afternoon of  August 5th, 1993. John’s sister, Melissa, gives the details of his ordeal – I wish this brave young lady the very best and all our support in her fight to keep her mother behind bars:

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Source: The Australian, June 30 2007 by Caroline Overington…

In August 1993, a little boy – John Ashfield, aged 6 – was beaten to death with a hammer to his head.

His mother, Gunn-Britt Ashfield, then 25, led the assault; her boyfriend, Austin Allan Hughes, then 20, was a keen participant.

According to evidence presented to court in December 1993, Ashfield became enraged when she heard that John, who was in Year 1 at East Nowra primary school on the NSW south coast, touched his three-year-old sister in an inappropriate way. Her boyfriend agreed the boy could not be allowed to “get away with it”.

He didn’t. Less than 24 hours later he died in Shoalhaven Hospital, his tiny body covered in more than 100 bruises from his parents’s savage beating — a beating that ended with Hughes putting the Nowra telephone book against John’s head, and hitting him with a hammer.

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They were each sentenced to 21 years in jail, reduced to 19 years on appeal, with a minimum of 14 years.

Next Thursday, 14 years since she beat John to death, his mother, who has changed her name in prison and now calls herself Anjelic Karstrom, will apply for parole. Hughes has also applied for parole. His case will also be heard next Thursday.

In 2004, the NSW Parliament passed laws that made it an offence for media outlets to publish the name of a dead child who had been the victim of a crime, no matter what the circumstances.

This law prevented The Weekend Australian from printing this story, ostensibly to protect the victim, John.

The newspaper’s parent company, News Limited, backed by groups including the NSW Homicide Victims Support Group, and the Victims of Crime Assistance League, has lobbied against this law since it was enacted, believing that it protects only the killers from being identified.

On Thursday night, the NSW Parliament passed a bill amending the law, making publication permissible in some circumstances, such as if the next of kin agrees. The changes come into effect next Wednesday.

John’s sister Melissa, 17, does not want her mother released. “I have not seen my mother since I was 11,” she said. “The last time I saw her (in prison) I pulled her hair and slapped her. I have flashbacks to what happened. She tried to blame me. She tried to get us to help her bash John. She tried to say that John touched me. He never touched me.”

Melissa says she remembers the day John was beaten, “clear as anything”. When he swang in from school that day, August 5, Hughes confronted him in the kitchen. He told police he kicked John on the bottom with the side of his foot “the way you kick a soccer ball”, slapped him around the head and sent him to his room.

But that was not the end of it: Ashfield and Hughes decided John needed to be taught a lesson. They went into his bedroom and started beating him.

A frenzy soon developed: they punched him with their fists, and beat him with the white aluminium rod that held up a curtain.

John was sobbing: “I’m really sorry, don’t do this to me, I’m sore, I’m sorry.”

Hughes mocked him, saying: “You scream like a little girl.”

When John continued to sob, Hughes took a girl’s dress out of the cupboard and shoved it over the crying boy’s head, forcing his arms through the sleeves.

“He started crying and carrying on,” Hughes would later say, in a statement to police.

“He was crying: ‘Get it off, get it off, I’m not a girl’.”

Death came slowly: Ashfield would later tell police that Hughes had put the phone book against John’s head, and repeatedly beat him with a hammer, until John was limp and dazed, unable to sit up on the bed.

When it became apparent that John had lost consciousness, his mother dunked him under a cold shower, then a hot shower.

Several hours passed before Ashfield took her son to Shoalhaven Hospital. In the meantime, she told her other children to tell police John had been beaten by a gang of teenagers while walking through a park.

Her oldest boy, then aged eight, went on national television to back up the story.

In a shaky voice, he said: “We were going to buy milk and bread when four boys said, ‘Come here. We want to bash you up’.”

The story was never going to stack up: John was cold and bleeding from the nostrils when he was airlifted to Westmead hospital in Sydney.

Doctor Barry Wilkins would later tell the court he had more than 100 different coloured bruises, suggesting “repeated, non-accidental beating”.

His small hands were swollen and bruised, which suggested he had “attempted to fend off an assault”. He had suffered a very serious brain injury.

John died the next day, Friday, August 6, 1993. His mother and her boyfriend were charged with murder shortly afterwards.

On the day of John’s funeral, his natural father, Brian Ashfield, wailed over the white coffin.

Brian is now dead but he told reporters at the time of his son’s murder that he had warned the NSW Department of Community Services that his wife was violent, and that she intended to hurt the children. In fact, DoCS had about 35 notifications that all was not well at Ashfield’s home.

Ashfield asked DoCS to take the kids away from her, saying she “felt violent” towards them.

Melissa’s life since her brother was killed has been chaotic: she was fostered into the care of DoCS after her mother went to prison but ran away at 11. She bounced around foster homes, and was briefly placed in a nunnery in Grafton, until she fell pregnant at 16, and lost the baby. She admits to “drinking alcohol, doing crazy stuff” to deal with anger and grief but is trying to steady her path. She now lives with her boyfriend, Jason, 33, and is in counselling.

John’s uncle, Andrew Ashfield, said the law banning publication of John’s story had “protected the people who killed him, and the social workers who let it happen”.

“DoCS knew that she was violent, and knew that she was troubled,” he said. “But they didn’t take the kids until after she killed one of them.”

Wendy Campbell, who was Brian’s fiance at the time of John’s death, wants the case to get media attention because she “promised Brian, if they ever apply for parole, I will be there, and I will stop it”.

Copyright © 2007-2012 Cultured Views. All rights reserved.

British drug smuggler Akmal Shaikh: while Amnesty wring their hands the victims of his evil trade fight alone

Akmal Shaik is a father of five who is currently awaiting execution in China for smuggling 4kg of heroin into the country. Apparently he is British – and so the British Govt are involved in talks to try and get this man released from his sentence due to be carried out in a matter of hours. I don’t like their chances – and I abhor Akmal Shaik’s actions.

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The Chinese are one of the few nations who take drug smuggling seriously enough to warrant executing those who are caught redhanded doing it. I applaud this and so would any family whose lives have been destroyed by drugs. Mr Shaikh is supposedly ‘bi-polar’ – as claimed by his family and Amnesty officials - but yet has been well enough to travel extensively around Asia without his condition causing itself to be an issue.  He has made travel arrangements, booked accommodation, financed his travels with money from dubious sources without hassle – but now he has been caught traffiking drugs he is declared ‘vulnerable’…?

Does anyone else buy into this…?

China is not a nation to pander to outsiders, they fear no-one and have nothing to lose by sticking to their guns (excuse the pun) and applying their laws to those who break them. They also have a human rights abuses record that defies description and is one that will never be addressed…why? because the rest of the world are too scared of them! but this fact remains – 4kg’s of heroin is a hell of a lot of overdoses, deaths and human destruction and Mr Shaikh was found with the bang lot in his possession. There’s no excuses for what he did anymore, we all know the penalties when we travel and we all know how this crime is dealt with in most parts of Asia. Yet still there are individuals who try to get away with it and get caught – if this man is as ill as he is claimed to be then why was he where he was and why had his family done nothing about it earlier…?

Mr Shaikh has a lot of people fighting to free him right now – the people whose bodies his evil cargo was destined for end up dead regardless.

Copyright © 2007-2012 Cultured Views. All rights reserved.

Child-killer Austin Allan Hughes: released from jail and coming to a Northern Rivers town near you…

I had read an article just recently regarding the parole of child murderer Austin Allan Hughes where a small appendix to it reported that his release was to be held over until January 2010 for review. I wish I had copied the link to that story but it would be of no use now – the NSW State Parole Board has released Hughes and given him a second shot at a life he should not have. Unbelievably State Parole Authority secretary Paul Byrnes has declared that it was in the “community’s best interests to release him”. What??? this guy bashed a six year old boy to death, and did it over a period of hours so that the child endured what was a long drawn out torturous death. While his mother, Gunn-Britt Ashfield (Angelic Karstrom) stood by ignoring his pleas and cries – and participated in his torture, and this clown says it is in OUR best interests to free this mongrel??? anyway, here’s what the bastard looks like at the age of 36 and on his first day of freedom…

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Not that much different from the day when he walked into custody at  just 20 years of age – obviously prison has not been all that hard on him at all. Sixteen years in prison and he comes out looking like he has been backpacking around Bali – his six year old victim, John, looked decidely worse after his ordeal of several hours with his mother and Hughes…

His uncle, Linden Hughes, a Queensland estate agent, has confirmed he is buying a farm in the Northern Rivers region of NSW (Mullumbimby, Ballina, Kyogle…) where he and his family will reside with this murdering piece of scum. Hughes has been banned from working with children – one would hope that also covers living with any female who has children. He also hopes that the family of little John Ashfield will “forgive him one day…”

It is not up to John’s family to forgive anyone.

The other half of this murdering couple, John’s mother Gunn-Britt, will qualify for parole once again in May 2010 – I am hoping that the media will raise enough community outrage by reminding the public just what happened to this little boy, so that authorities will know that we have not forgotten. People can speak about the possible ‘rehabilitation’ of Hughes…but how on earth do you rehabilitate a woman who willingly stood and watched her own child being beaten to death?

You cannot – you just punish as harshly as possible.

Copyright © 2007-2012 Cultured Views. All rights reserved.