Sat. Nov 2nd, 2024
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The first Aboriginal court judge of the Northern Territory has paid tribute to his Stolen Generations parents and grandparents as he was sworn into the role in a ceremony this morning, surrounded by family.

David Woodroffe, a long-term and decorated NT legal professional who has been acting as a local court judge since July 2022, signed the documents formalising his position on Tuesday.

“I am truly humbled and I will cherish this moment,” Judge Woodroffe said.

“I think back to my grandmother, at Kahlin [Compound], and I think back to my father who’s no longer here, for his love and encouragement to me throughout my life, and to all of my family.

“I also think of the future – to play a small part in the greater diversity of the justice system of the Northern Territory, and the inclusion of Aboriginal people within it.”

Judge Woodroffe’s parents grew up in Kahlin Compound and later, Retta Dixon – two now-notorious homes where Aboriginal people were forced to live in Darwin during the Stolen Generations last century.

He enters the jurisdiction’s justice system with the odds stacked against his people: First Nations incarceration statistics in the NT are among the worst in the world, per capita.

Chief Minister Natasha Fyles said Judge Woodroffe’s inclusion on the bench was a “first in the territory’s history”.

A young woman and a man in glasses and a collared shirt, standing together inside a room and smiling.
Judge Woodroffe has been an acting judge since last July. (ABC News: Tristan Hooft)

“I think it is particularly important when you look at the rates of Aboriginal incarceration – but we have an Aboriginal Attorney-General, and [now an] Aboriginal local court judge,” she said.

“You can’t be what you can’t see.

“So yes, we need a strong justice system, but we also need that diversity of representation.”

Family pays tribute to their ‘shy boy’

Judge Woodroffe’s mother Gillian Emmerson paid tribute to the son she remembered growing up as a “shy little boy”, who has now risen to the highest rungs of the NT’s legal system.

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