Victor Chang

According to the office of NSW Corrective Services Minister John Robertson between 1200 and 1400 people are granted parole in NSW each month.

Phillip Choon Tee Lim before his conviction.

For the first time yesterday Mr Robertson, egged on by a frenzied shadow attorney general and a public baying for blood, demanded a parole ruling be “vacated”.

Eighteen years ago on November 11 Phillip Choon Tee Lim was sentenced to 24 years in jail, with a non-parole period of 18 years for his part in the murder of heart surgeon Victor Chang.

At a recent hearing the State Parole Authority, considering reports of his good behaviour, granted his parole application and ordered he be released from Parramatta Jail on that date. John Robertson says “I don’t think it’s enough,” and in doing so has tried to change the rules forever.

Latest 2 of 30 comments

View all comments
 
  • westie says:

    07:40pm | 29/10/09

    @Harvey, go back and read what I said, which was not that both of them should never be released. I said that the crim who deliberately twice shot the victim in the head and was directly responsible for premeditated murder should never be released.  The fact that Victor Chang was… Read more »

  • Sam says:

    11:16am | 29/10/09

    Revenge, exactly. That’s justice and no need for lawyers to get paid along the way. Read more »

 

Facebook Recommendations

Read all about it

Punch live

Up to the minute Twitter chatter

Anthony Sharwood

In light of today's news, I eagerly await the empassioned calls for polygaymarriage

ToryShepherd

Marc Glasby says he's the 'meat in the sandwich' - he loves two women. And they're identical twins... http://t.co/kL2jL1RK via @sharethis

Daniel Piotrowski

RT @ThePunchHQ: COMING SOON to a suburb near you: A controversial #NT intervention policy. @drpiotrowski explains http://t.co/MYjvaAy6#auspol

ToryShepherd

RT @saline: Touche Miriam. Touche Barry. Wicked old thespians taking the pith. #qanda

Recent posts

The latest and greatest

On a hiding to tweet nothing over mining jobs

On a hiding to tweet nothing over mining jobs

You know you’re in strife as a political leader when you must rely on the almost uniformly vacuous…

An NT intervention policy coming to a suburb near you

An NT intervention policy coming to a suburb near you

A controversial policy from the Northern Territory intervention has managed to get through the atrocious…

An insight into a particularly tricky relationship

An insight into a particularly tricky relationship

Marc Glasby has been married to his wife Belle for over thirty years. Three years ago, Belle was reunited…

Nosebleed Section

choice ringside rantings

From: They must pay for one’s bitter disappointments

Michael S says:

"A teacher at Geelong Grammar had criticised her for using words that were too long, which had left her confused and had made her doubt her ability to write essays. She became ''quite distressed'' when her English marks began to fall." I can sympathise. My scholastic mentors conveyed to me a causal relationship… [read more]

From: Welfare for breeders is a bonus for everyone

Change Up! says:

I have no problem paying my taxes. As a single, childless person on a very decent income, I can afford it and not have my life severely altered. Plus I understand that my taxes paying for things like schools, childcare and infrastructure is ultimately a good thing. A better community is better for me… [read more]

Gentle jabs to the ribs

They must pay for one’s bitter disappointments

They must pay for one’s bitter disappointments

A private school girl’s family is sueing her elite, extremely expensive private school for not… Read more

243 comments

Newsletter

Read all about it

Sign up to the free daily Punch newsletter