Scott Johnson's family relive terror and tragedy of Sydney gay hate murder

Family members of Scott Johnson travelled from the US to Sydney to speak at the sentencing hearing over the 1988 gay hate murder.

Three women walking outside

(L-R) Rebecca Johnson, Rosemary Johnson, and Terry Johnson - who are family members of Scott Johnson - attend the NSW Supreme Court on 2 May 2022. Source: AAP / AAP

This article contains language stated during court testimony that may offend some readers.

Family members of Scott Johnson, whose body was found at the bottom of a Manly cliff in 1988, have spoken in court on the horror, terror, tragedy and heartbreak that the past 34 years have brought them.

Mr Johnson's sister Terry Johnson told a sentencing hearing in the NSW Supreme Court that Scott White, who pleaded guilty to the murder in January this year, had taken away decades from her brother's life.

"The hateful person who killed Scott has been walking free on this earth for the past 33 years. Thirty-three years that he took away from my baby brother. I believe [White] deserves life in prison, " she said.
With White looking on from the court dock wearing his prison greens, sister Rebecca Johnson talked about how society in the 1980s had also let down teenagers who thought violence against gay men was acceptable.

"Parents, brothers and sisters, teachers and classmates, authority, culture, somehow Mr White's world reinforced that violence and even killing was OK and maybe that gay men weren't human. That is a profound tragedy," she said on Monday.

Brother Steve Johnson described the death as being too huge and awful to be true, saying his mother had reacted with a wailing cry at the news.

"The wailing is a reliving, it's a howl of death and despair and loss and grief that signifies that a piece of us has departed. It never goes away."

Scott Johnson's partner Michael Noone also gave a statement describing the sheer horror of receiving a call from the police about the death of a loved one.
Scott Johnson is pictured climbing Mt Monadnock in the US state of New Hampshire in August 1988.
Scott Johnson is pictured climbing Mt Monadnock in the US state of New Hampshire in August 1988. Credit: NSW Police/Supplied
These victim statements were heard after White's former partner Helen White took the stand and described a conversation she claims she had with her ex-husband about "poofter bashing" in the 1980s.

"He said 'the only good poofter is a dead poofter', to which I said, 'So you threw him off the cliff'. And he said, 'It's not my fault the dumb c*** ran off the cliff'," she said.

Ms White denied suggestions by White's barrister Belinda Rigg SC that she had only gone to the police because of a $1 million reward offered for information about Mr Johnson's death, and rejected claims she had made up the conversations with her then husband.

Ms Rigg argued that White should receive a lesser sentence because he had only turned 18 at the time, saying that sentences for murder were significantly lower in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

White's intellectual impairments meant he had suffered stress, anxiety and panic attacks while in custody. During the 1980s, White was a gay man who had lived with his homophobic brother and alcoholic parents, Ms Rigg said.
The prosecution pointed to the seriousness of the offence, saying it was targeted towards the victim's sexuality.

"This was a grave and serious murder which entailed a high degree of criminality," crown prosecutor Brett Hatfield said.

In January, White pleaded guilty to the murder before his defence team unsuccessfully tried to reverse the plea. An appeal of White's conviction was filed last month.

While the initial police inquest in 1989 found Mr Johnson's death was a suicide, the case was reopened in 2012. Another inquest returned an open finding in June 2012, but a third in 2017 found Mr Johnson fell from the clifftops as a result of violence by an unidentified attacker who perceived him to be gay.

Justice Helen Wilson will hand down her sentence on Tuesday.

Readers seeking support can contact counselling and support services on on 13 14 11, on on 1800 184 527 and on on (02) 9206 2000.

Share
4 min read
Published 2 May 2022 4:05pm
Updated 2 May 2022 4:29pm
Source: AAP, SBS


Share this with family and friends