Metro Australia – July 2019

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

The police and institutional prejudice


In 1978,Sydneywasfarfromtoday’ssanctuaryofanonymity
andfreedomforitsgayandlesbianinhabitants.Talkingabout
theeveningofthearrests,Marrrecallsthatthecity‘could
notbelievethehatethatwasin theairthatnight.’^14 In many
ways, the policebrutalityinflictedon the 78ers was a disturb-
ingbarometerofthewidespreadhomophobiaandclimateof
persecutionthatpervadedAustraliansocietyat thetime.
In the decadesprecedingthe first Mardi Gras, the police
werefrontandcentrein a seriesofincidentsacrossthe
countrythatemphasisedtheextentofthispersecution– a
patternofabusethatsawgaymenin particularsingledout
for systemicmistreatment.Even in the supposedlymore so-
ciallyprogressivecitiesofMelbourneandSydney,thepolice
deployedalarmingtacticsthatactivelyunderminedtherights
ofgaymenwithinbothpublicandprivatespaces.Underthe
rathervague‘solicitingforimmoralpurposes’clause,police
wereabletotargetgaymenin theirownenvironments.An
ACONreviewofgayandtransgenderprejudicekillingsin
NSW pointsout the historicalrole of police as the guard-
ians of homophobic sentiment:

And the police,as enforcersof the law and reflectingprevail­
ing socialattitudes,had little tolerationfor what they saw as
perverts,degenerates,effeminates,and paedophiles[...] And
it wouldseem that they were given unofficialblessingfor this
when the RomanCatholicSuperintendentof Policein Sydney
and later PoliceCommissioner,Colin Delaney,declaredin
thelate1950sthathomosexuality was ‘the greatest social
menace facing Australia.’^15

Homosexualitywas illegal in NSW until 1984, and the police
routinelyemployeddeceptivetechniquestoentrapgaymen
andthenarrestthematestablished‘beats’(gaymeeting
places).Unsurprisingly,the reviewfound that, in NSW, ‘hom-
ophobiashapedthedevelopmentandenforcementoflaws
thathadviolentandlastingimpactsonthecommunity’.^16
Victorianpolicewerejustasdiscriminatory,evenresort-
ingtotheexpulsionofa gaycoupleafterpolice‘discovered’
they were cohabiting:in 1975,TheAgereportedthatLindsay
andJohnwerearrestedandchargedwith‘theancientcrime
ofbuggery’.Thecouplewereforcedtoleavetheirjobs,family
andfriends,andrelocatetoSouthAustralia,wherehomosexu-
alitywaslegal.^17 Duringthesummerof1976–1977,Victorian
policethencarriedoutundercoveroperationsata number
of establishedbeats,with an emphasison Melbourne’sBlack
RockBeach.In a bidtoenforcethelawagainsthomosexuality,
young officers were schooled in ‘gay mannerisms’, and then

sentin toentrapandarrestmenforloitering,solicitingforsex
orevensunbathingnaked.More than 100 men were arrested
at BlackRockBeach.^18
Theprovocativelevelofdeceptionusedbypoliceat
BlackRockdid,however,becomea talkingpointin themedia,
sparkingwidespreadpublicdebate.^19 Similarly,thetoneofthe
earlierAgepieceis contemptuousoftheroleofthepolice,
suggestingtheemergenceofmoreliberalattitudestogay
andlesbianrightswhileunderscoringthe police’s reluctance
to adopt more progressive policies:

As a result of the magistrate’sextraordinarysentence,they’ll
havetoleavetheirjobsandfriends.Allbecausesomeonein
the VictoriaPolice– thosemen of uprightmoralsand trun­
cheons– disapproved of what was going on behind their
venetianblinds.^20

Territorialisingspace: Queering the streets
and the screen

Duringthelate1970s,thesuburbsaroundSydney’sOxford
Streetbecameestablishedgayprecincts,withbars,clubs
andotherbusinessesexplicitlytargetinggayandlesbian
consumers.Thisareabecameknownasthe‘goldenmile’.
In tandemwith this socialstratification,the ‘pink press’
emerged:publicationslikeCampaign,OutRageandStar
Observerallcontributedtothesenseofa ‘gayidentity’and
the developmentof a queer communitywithin a geographi-
callylocalisedurbanspace.^21 Atthesametime,gayand
lesbianactivismhadbecomeanincreasinglypublicpres-
ence,withdemonstrationsontherise.Themore‘liberal’
sectorsof societywere startingto take noticeof the inequal-
ity and speakup in supportof law reform.Queergrassroots
organisationsliketheamusinglynamedCAMP(Campaign
AgainstMoral Persecution)in Sydney,the HomosexualLaw
ReformSocietyin CanberraandSocietyFivein Melbourne
were all workingto influencepoliticiansand lawmakers,and
toincreasethevisibilityofthegayandlesbiancommunity.^22
Againstthisemergingbackdropofa slowlylegitimising
non-heterosexualidentity,thekindofsymbolictransgression
ofpublicspaceenactedbythepoliceprovedevenmore
incendiary;the policeoperationsclearlyset out to infiltrate
andrepossess‘queer’locations.Thisnotionofreclaiming
queerspaceis centraltotheeventsdepictedinWitchesand
Faggots,Dykesand Poofters. Theaggressivepolicetactics
andprotesterarrests(manyofwhichwerelatercondemned
asarbitraryandeffectively‘illegal’)highlightthepoliticisation
of publicspace:the streetsof Sydneywere sites of visibility
forthegayandlesbiancommunityand,assuch,weresites
transformingfroma ‘regulated’(heteronormative,patriarchal)
publicspacetoa perceived ‘unregulated’ (homosexual,
dangerous)one.
Towardsthe end of the film, we see activistsholdinga
posterthat reads,‘We are the peopleour parentswarned
usagainst.’Thisprovocativeengagementwithanoutsider
statusspeaksto the politicsof marginalisation:those denied
a presencein mainstreampubliclifeclaiminganidentity.The
notionofspacealsoalignswiththepoliticsofqueeractivism
andtheactofmobilisingthecameraeffectivelyto‘claim’the
sociopoliticalterritorythatis beingdeniedtoitssubjects.
Writingabout the film, historianScott McKinnonrefers to the
‘weaponising’ofthecameraasa meansofself-regulationand
control of the ‘messages which were presented about them’:

112 • Metro Magazine 201 | © ATOM

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