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"How could a community fail so spectacularly that they created boys capable of such horror?" she asked, referring to media reports of gay beatings in Sydney being described as a sport. Rebecca Johnson, a younger sister, said the police report of suicide "made no sense." Rosemarie Johnson described the initial police failure to investigate Scott Johnson's death as "indefensible and inhumane." Scott Johnson's sisters Terry and Rebecca Johnson, his partner Michael Noone and Steve Johnson's wife Rosemarie Johnson also gave victim impact statements. If he had grasped Scott's hand and pulled him to safety, I would owe him everlasting gratitude," the brother said, his voice choked with emotion. "If he had turned himself in after his violent action, I would have had a little more sympathy. Steve Johnson said he appreciated White's guilty plea. "This man (Scott Johnson) who once told me he could never hurt someone even in self-defense died in terror," the brother added. Steve Johnson said in his victim impact statement that, "With a vicious push, Mr. She said she only became aware of a reward when the victim's brother, Steve Johnson, doubled the sum in 2020. Under cross-examination, Helen White denied she had been aware of a AU$1 million reward for information on Johnson's murder when she reported her former husband to police in 2019. "I said, 'It is if you chased him,'" Helen White told the court. "The dumb (expletive) ran off the cliff." "It's not my fault," Scott White allegedly replied. Helen White said she read a newspaper report in 2008 about Johnson's death and asked her husband if he was responsible. White's former wife Helen White told the court that her then-husband "bragged" to their children of beating gay men at the clifftop well-known for gay meetups.
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White was charged in 2020 and police say the reward will likely be collected. His Boston-based brother Steve Johnson maintained pressure for further investigation and offered his own reward of 1 million Australian dollars ($704,000) for information. Some people were also robbed.Ī coroner had ruled in 1989 that the openly gay man had taken his own life, while a second coroner in 2012 could not explain how he died. The coroner also found that gangs of men roamed various Sydney locations in search of gay men to assault, resulting in the deaths of some victims. White said in the interview he lied when he had earlier told police that he had tried to grab Johnson and prevent his fatal fall.Ī coroner ruled in 2017 that Johnson "fell from the clifftop as a result of actual or threatened violence by unidentified persons who attacked him because they perceived him to be homosexual." He went over the edge," White said in recorded police interview in 2020 that was played in court. He faces a potential sentence of life in prison. White will be sentenced by Justice Helen Wilson on Tuesday. Scott White, 51, appeared in the New South Wales state Supreme Court for a sentencing hearing after he pleaded guilty in January to the murder of the Los Angeles-born Canberra resident, whose death at the base of a North Head cliff was initially dismissed by police as suicide. In a recent poll of more than four thousand UK adults, 57 percent of 18- to 24-year-olds admitted to body-image anxieties, though that number fell to 30 percent for 45- to 54-year-olds and 20 percent for those 55 and over.CANBERRA, Australia - A man told police he killed American mathematician Scott Johnson in 1988 by pushing the 27-year-old off a Sydney cliff in what prosecutors describe as a gay hate crime, a court heard on Monday. Meanwhile, Josh Bradlow, a spokesperson for the LGBTQ+ equality organization Stonewall, told the newspaper that “stereotypical assumptions and beliefs about masculinity and femininity can be deeply damaging for how anyone-especially LGBT people-see themselves and their bodies.”Īt least these insecurities seem to fall away with age. Speaking to The Guardian in 2019, a spokesperson for the Mental Health Foundation cited research suggesting that “higher body dissatisfaction is associated with poorer quality of life, psychological distress, and risk of unhealthy eating behaviors and eating disorders.” Who among us hasn’t looked in the mirror and wished something was different? But it might be good practice to start accepting the things we can’t change, so to speak, especially since poor body image can be detrimental to our mental health.