Sydney man Luke Lazarus was found not guilty of sexual assault on appeal despite a jury and two judges finding that then-18-year-old Mullins had not consented to sex with him in an alleyway behind a Kings Cross nightclub in 2013.
The appeals judge overturned a guilty conviction, finding while Mullins had not consented to having sex, Lazarus had no reasonable basis for believing she had not.
Mullins – who now works at Rape and Sexual Assault Research and Advocacy – told The Age Victoria’s current sexual offense laws fell short of the standard set by NSW after the Perrottet government overhauled that state’s legislation last year.
“Lawyers can work in the hypothetical; as a survivor, I work in reality,” she said. “The laws are not clear, and we need to be clear on what refuses consent. It leaves it up to too much interpretation.”
Mullins said amending the laws was only part of wider reforms needed to change attitudes to sexual offending. She said governments must follow legislation up with a years-long strategy that included education to end sexual violence.
Victorian Attorney-General Jaclyn Symes said last week an affirmative consent model was an important part of changing attitudes and would help end “outdated stereotypes”.
It was also a key recommendation from the Victorian Law Reform Commission, which found sexual violence was widespread and under-reported, and victim-survivors needed better protection from trauma when seeking justice.
“The legislation deliberately allows for the courts to consider nuanced situations in addition to the minimum requirement of taking steps to obtain consent,” Symes said. “It’s the younger generation who’ve made it clear they won’t stand for these archaic ways of victim-blaming any longer – we’ve listened and are driving those reforms for them.”
Law Institute of Victoria president Tania Wolff said Victoria already had an affirmative consent model and the government’s proposed changes would achieve little in shifting the status quo.
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The Crimes Act defines consent as “free agreement” and sets out a range of scenarios that do not constitute consent. It also states a person’s belief in consent must be reasonable, which includes steps they have taken to find out whether their sexual partner has consented.
“The amendments are not changing very much and what they add doesn’t really clarify things … or make it easier to understand a complicated area,” Wolff said.
“In terms of consent, we need a focus on education rather than more words in a statute. And regarding the new image-based pornography offences, we would be better advised as a society teaching our young … than upping an imprisonment penalty.”
But Rape and Sexual Research Advocacy chief executive Dr Rachael Burgin said even the proposed legislation fell short of fully achieving an affirmative consent model.
Currently, jurors deliberating on a sexual offense case are directed to look at the circumstances and establish whether they believed the accused took reasonable steps. Burgin said under the new law, the accused must demonstrate what steps they took.
She said while the bill was good, an element of the defense that required the accused to demonstrate they had taken steps at a reasonable time before or during the sexual act could be problematic.
“A five-minute time frame may be determined by a jury to be reasonable, but in our view a lot can happen in that time,” Burgin said.
“These won’t fix the system and they’re not a silver bullet, but it does show the Victorian government is taking positive steps forward. Affirmative consent is not the be all and end all. It’s just the beginning of a road to reform.”
Kathleen Maltzahn, the chief executive of Sexual Assault Services Victoria, said last week the legislation would remove uncertainty.
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“For years, some have insisted that many sexual assaults are in fact misunderstandings, that many alleged perpetrators are led astray by victims’ mixed messages,” she said. “If you’re uncertain if the other person wants to go ahead, don’t. This clarity should be welcomed by anyone who is not a rape apologist or a rapist.”
The Victorian opposition said it was still consulting stakeholders and would determine its position on the government’s proposed law before it returned to parliament next month.
“The essential nature of positive consent to intimate relationships is not in question,” shadow attorney-general Michael O’Brien said.
“Drafting a workable bill to recognize this in law is more challenging.”
The bill would also criminalize “stealthing” (removing a condom or other protection during sex without consent) and deepfake porn (where a person’s image is altered to falsely make it appear they are doing something sexual).
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