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Real Crime Profile

#269: See What You Made Me Do with Jess Hill, Part 4

Real Crime Profile

Real Crime Profile / Wondery

True Crime, Society & Culture, Exhibit C, Documentary

4.210.5K Ratings

🗓️ 19 August 2020

⏱️ 49 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Laura, Jim and Lisa are joined once more by investigative journalist Jess HIll, author of the award winning book See What You Made Me Do.

We discuss the harrowing murder of Charlie Mullaley, the attack on his mother, Tamica, and the racial bias and prejudice that exists in Australia against aboriginals and indigenous communities.


We also talk about all female police stations and the importance of problem solving the perpetrator's behaviour and holding them to account.


#HisNameWasCharlieMullaley

#DomesticAbuse

#ChildAbuse

#CoerciveControl


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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey, Prime Members, you can listen to Real Crime Profile ad-free on Amazon Music. Download

0:06.2

the app today.

0:08.4

Fighting for justice from murdered baby boy, claiming police failed his grandson. Charlie

0:14.2

Malaylee was killed by his stepfather. His family says officers didn't do enough to

0:19.0

protect him because he was Aboriginal.

0:22.2

It's been six years since little Charlie Malaylee was brutally murdered. The 10-month-old

0:27.6

baby was raped and killed by his stepfather in 2013. His mother, Tamika, was recovering

0:33.5

in Brum Hospital from a savage assault when Mervyn Bell abducted Charlie. The family claims

0:39.7

police allowed it to happen.

0:41.9

Ted and Tamika Malaylee believe that race did play a part in the death of Charlie Malaylee.

0:49.4

The Malaylee is now suing the force, claiming officers breached their duty of care for the

0:54.2

baby by leaving him at the scene of a domestic violence attack.

0:58.3

12 hours for police to actually go looking for the child despite the repeated pleas.

1:14.8

I got a message that there were domestic dispute up the road then and when I ran up the

1:21.6

road they saw the deceased person laying on the ground and I just broke down in tears.

1:27.2

They were families, they could have stopped it. There were parties but no one just didn't want

1:31.3

to interrupt and control it. They just thought I were too drunk and people let them go for it.

1:35.8

They're not going to harm each other but they didn't think the reality, you know what's going to happen.

1:40.9

Charlene's auntie was murdered by her partner in December last year. Aboriginal women at 10 times

1:46.4

more likely to die at the hands of their partners. At least one woman a week is killed. Indigenous

1:53.5

women experience even greater family violence. Statistics are shocking. Domestic violence as a

2:00.2

national epidemic. Women who are regularly beaten abused and killed domestic violence is a big

...

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